y-"wn-w-mrhlrrl! I r l Q l l I \ s i l l i . ., . s.- ._. .. .,._=-_.rd.~_-.,-l>-.~... r < r,-. 1,‘, ~ -= <2 m-ta»: -::.::.=et:~:<e:a:z 2255s: accuses -: >»- _~>v~,-,--,- F "lday, Dec. 6d ALBANY _ _ _ - s .951 ALBERTON -- _ - _ 2.60 = can: RIVER _ - _ 1.25 : BLOOMFIELD _ - -- 23s ; 502cm __ _ _ _ no 1 BRADALBANE _ _ __ .70 . CONWAY _ -- _ - 1.90 | ELLERSLIE _ _ - _ 1.80 ELMIRA _ _ - _ _1.ss EMERALD JCT. _ _ _ so rusnzucrou _ _ - .60 FREETOWt-l _ _ _ _ .85 , stances - _ _ _ .50 .1 szorerrowu _ _ 1.20 i GRANDVLEW — — - so HARMONY JCT. _ _ 1.40 I HUNTER RlVER -— - .50 l Oorvetiltollraunched At Eastern Port AN aasr COAST CANADIAN PORT, Dec. 5 (CP) -— A Corvette. type of little warShiP designed m? patrol work and dealing with ene- my submarines, was hunched here today amid the cheers of hundreds of shipyard workers. Dmmineni? V15" ltors, naval and military officials Mrs. RF. Mothers, wife of the Lleutenant- Governor of Nova $00- tia, christened the vessel in the traditional manner with a bottle of champagne. Rev. HJ-f. I-Ioxt, naval chaplain pronounced a blessiri! X71101‘ ‘to the christening. The ceremony went off without a hitch. Among the spectators were Vice- Admirai A. E. Evans, C. B. 5.. R- B. chief cf the British naval tech- Gical mission in Canada and the nited Stateel Daymaster command- er E. S. Satterthwaitk. and D. B. Carswell. comptroller of ship repair and shipbuilding in Canada. Later Mrs. Mather-s was present- ed with an engraved sterling silver coffee pct. She was accompanied by Lieutenant-Governor Mather-s’ alde- de- comp, Lt-Col. W. B. Almon. MemorialfiService IN HONOUR. OF GUNNER. L. E. E ART S A memorial scrrvice in memory of the latte Gunner Laughlin Elwoodi Stewart, R.C.N.R., who was killed in agtion November 5, 1940, while serving with the Merchantshlp Ben- "verford, was hcld in the Little Sands United Church, on Sunday after- inoon. Dcocmbcr 1st, and despite in- , , clement “rather was largely nt- , tended. This is the church he had attend- Qd ~11 m..- 1m- - C. N. R. Offers you Round Trip Bargain F ares T0 Charlottetown PROPORTIONATELY LOW FARES FROM oruzu STATIONS Ilse This Opportunity to Visit the Store of Ten Thousand Gifts MiLEOD illié Buy War Savings Stamps To-day- THE CHARLOTTETO WN GUARDIAN Sees Time Coming For Recognition of Women’s Units OTTAWA, Dec. 4 —(OP) -Wo- mcn who are organizing themselves ' into voluntary service crrps tn Can- udu have a strong supporter in Hoivuzd C. Green, conservariye M. P. [or Vancouver South. Canada. he told The Canadian P485 in an interview, is going to need every one of her trained wom. en before the end of the war and the fact women have organized vol- untary service corps without offi- cial encouragement is evidence of their vision. 1.. Sat. Dec. 7th- KENSINGTON —- —- $ 1.00 KINKORA —- —- ~— — .90 MELVILLE — -- -- -~ .80 MISCOUCHE -_ _ -_ 1.35 MONTAGUE —- -— -— 1.20 MONTAGUE JCT. -— — 1.05 MT. STEWART JCT. -—- .60 MURRAY HARBOR -—- 1.20 O'LEARY — — —— — 2.20 RICHMOND - - - 1.60 ST PETERS — -- — — 1.00 SCOTCHFORT — —- — .50 SCURIS — —— — — —— 1.55 SUMMERSIDE — -- --1.20 TIGNISH — — — —— 2-90 WELLINGTON ——— 1.50 41' The service was in charge of the pastor, Rev. W. C. Picket/ti. B- A- The hymns sung were, O God Our Help in Ages Past. "Jesus Saviour Pilot Mc." The choir rendered "Throw Om. the Life Linc." ind Mrs. SlitLS .\IacKn,v sang as a s0- lc, "The Old Rugged Cross." The pastor minounoeci his name and rank paying a high tfibllw W his heroism, and the Congregation stood and dutifully observed two minutes of silence in honor of his memory. The address was based on fhc appropriate text, "Greater love hath no man than this that a man fay down his life for his friends." The entire service was marked with great solemnity. ’I‘hosr- left to moum are his fath- cr, step-mother, two broihers:— Laurence, White Sands, Malcolm N. Westen Ontario; two sisters, Mrs. Joseph Bell and Mrs. John Bell. both of Murray Harbor, two half- bothers William S. and Norman 15.. four half-sisters, Evelyn 0., Janet Mary and Betty, all at home. The sincere sympathy of the community goes out to the family in their sorrow. WATCII ALL STORED VEGETABLES CLOSELY Periodical examination of stoflfd vegetables should be made thFOUEh- out thc winter. Specimens which are affected will be detected and should be removed bzrfcre the trouble has lime to spread. Potatoes in largo maps quicklv grow out, to the dcttimcnt. or the tubers. if t-htiyam not promptly taken away. If any arc not perfectly dry, sprinkle a little dry lime among them when turning them over. D. Alex Skelf n. chief of the r0- ": dc" in m l’: Bu k of ' has lvvn apzonifrl W0- retniy of the Domihion-ltrovincial confcimicc called for January 14 YWXT» officially recognized 1n time ap- pears a fozegone conclusion to Mr. i Green. “Public opinion will fcroe it." he said. “And if the women wait until they are called llpCh, it will only mean anothe" ' waiting until they are tr . Mr. Green said he personally had no preiudice against women in uni- iorm adding. “as a matter of ‘act I think they look smart if it Ls a qseztion of GPDBXYBJIOC-“Blld to do h:ir job the uniform is practical." The Vancouver member wag of ‘he opinion that women had show- 1Z1 considerable gumptlcn is going =hcad with their organization when they did so in the face of ridicule from various quarters. “Men! wouldn't have been able to stand, _ the gaff," he said. “I don't believe men could have ‘taken it’ as the women have." 1 NI‘ G een praised the inteflgent loud ..iip of the wcmen‘s corir in Vancouver. It was one of the first Catnrdian women's emergency 01" ganizatlons in the present war. Theie are {our comoames in the Vancouver" corps of 1200 members. One company is clerical, its mem- be bfii: being trained to handic- all kinds of clerical work to release men from such tasks. Already sfme of the women in this group have done clerical work for the armed services. 1 Th= second group, said Mr. Green’ is a transport company. These wo- men have studied motor-mechanics are expert drivers and are rapible cf repairing motor vehicles. "A me- chanized wiar calls away skiled men’ and these women may be required to take charge o; the arsenal, Green pointed out. A t-nird group in the Vancouver corps handles nursing and first aid. They have st-udléd dietetics. mass buying and cooking. The are ready to drive ambulances look after wounded. Special attention has been Paid to the study of air raid precautions. _ A fourth group is crmmissai-iat. TIGNISH ctnrnivf Honor Roll for November. Grade X A:—l. Jean Donahue. 2. Marcella Le Clair. 3. Nellie Perry. Grade X Bz-l. Harriet Gavin. 2. Reta. Broderick. Grade IX:— 1. Clarice Cormier. Grade VIII:-1. Frances DeRoche. 2. Margaret Gaudet. 3. Florence Mc- Innis. Grade VII: --l. Gloria Bernard. 2. Frances Gaudet. 3. Doris Harper. Grade VI: 1. Reta Gaudet. 2. Reta McDonald. 3. Stella Richard and Lena Doucette, equal. Grade V: -—1. Mildred Harper. 2. Betty Kinch. 3. Teresa Gaudet. Grade IV:- 1. Lena Gavin. 2. Lorraine Arsenault. 3. Rita. Harper. I Grade lII:-— 1. Aldona Perry. 2. Cora. Harper. 3. Evelyn Skefry. Grade II:— 1. Frances Perry. 2. Jeanette Pen-y. 3. Iris MacDonald. HAZELBROOK SCHOOL The following is the report for the month of November: Grade X-l. Harold Wood. I. Pearle Coady. Grade IX Sr.—-l. Ray Matthews. Grade IX Jr.—-1. Blake Livingston. rode VlII—1. mm Drake. 2. Keith Jones. Grade III-l. Hollis Wood. 2. Colin Myers. Grade II-l. Alma Myers. I. Glen Drake. 3. Rena Wood. Grade I A:—l. Wendell Myers. 2. Lloyd Myers. Gracie I B:- 1. with Myers. Grade I Cz-l. Thelma. Living- ston. Perfect Aftendunce:- Alma. My- PPS. Prize for neatest work book —Al- m a Myers . Marjorie Lowther. Te acher. Rrprcsrntailve Iilariln Dies seems quite at‘ ease in on, infurmll um u he w» Interviewer! Iron h!‘ return to Wrshinyton from Ms Orange, Tex., home following I telegram from President Roosevelt Mll- tloning hm against premature GIUCIDSIIYQ! of his un- American Activity committee's flndingl. to stop publlclznlg propaganda groups. Seen behind Din b bll 000N087, ncwsmcn re could not agree Robert Stripllng. "i »*nu‘"$v:o~w:-u-- " Ila loll That these women's 1min will be] i sidn I r 1 reapec {Winnipeg Man Takes Legion Post In West - UITAWA, Dec, l: -T. A, Mc- Masfor, M. A.. widely known Winnipeg mucationist, has been up. pointed assisfant field secretary for western Canada of the Canadian Legion War Services’ education pro. gram for enlisted men, it was an- noimced today. l Mr. McizeMasfe’ r, £110 was fines:- on organ r or e Legion t e Manitoba urea, will now have charge of activities in Manitoba Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia. He will make his head- quarters at Regina. where he will handle part of the large volume 01’ studied by the troops. The Regina office will also serve as a point 0f distribution of supplies. Associated with Mr. McMaster, in advisory capacities, will be Dr. Smith, president. or the Un. lvversi y of Manitoba; Dr, James 3. Thomson. .of the University of saskatchewsn; Lfeut-CoL-G. M. Shrum, dlrcetor of extension, Unl- versity of British Columbia, and Prof. Donald Cameron, director of r." * ~'"i1 "nil-P's 1v of Allbrrta. ‘Iihe Legions education activities a t- . lu, _ 1.1.11 und" arms in Canada and overseas to toke up 01‘ to continue studies in sccrrs of silb- jects with a. view to improving 111111- tary efficient: and preparing for eventual re-es ablishment into civil life. The undertaking is being oper- - ated on a non-profit making basis and has the official endozsatlon 0i the Dgpgztment of National Dc- fence. HARRINGTON SCHOOL Standing for October and Novem- r:— Grade X-l. Olediinc Phillips. 2. Anita Cudmore. Grade IX Sin-l. George Oudmore. Grade IX Jr.— 1. Glen Newson. 2. Herby Phillips. Grade Vlfz- 1. Roland Heron. Grade VI Srz-l. Jessica Heron. -Gra,de VI Jr:—1. Lois Jones. 2. Stella Dodds. 3. Velda Walker. Grade V:—1. Mervyn Phillips. Grade IV Sr.—1. Edith Morrow. 2. Jack Maclntyre. 3. Bobby Dodds. Grade IV Jrr-l. Alden Rodd. 2. Billy McFurlane. Grade III:- 1. Harold Morrow. Grade III Jr:— 1. Raymond Dodds. 2. Brian MncFarlane. 3. Boott Walker. Grade Ilz-l. Bessie Rodd. 2. Bud- dy Heron. ~ Grade I:-1. Maigiory Walker. 2 Jimmy Heron. S. Audrey MacFar- 8.119. Hazel G. Stewart. Teacher. RECORD NUMBERS VISIT CANADA'S NATIONAL PARKS National parks in Canada regist- ered an all-time higih in the num- ber of visitors during the summer tourist season this year according to C. K. Howard, manager of the tourist and convention bureau of the Canadian National Railways. a. adlan Rockies, Canada's largest ha- ticnal playground. had a total of 90,054 visitors. In the heart of the park is Jasper Park Lodge, one of the world's outstanding mountain resorts. Rince Edward Island National Park, officially opened in i939, at- tracted 35,415 visitors and Ca Breton Highlands National Park. Nova Scotia, not yst officially opened, 19,006. Among national historic sites. Fort Beausejour National Park. just east of Backville, in New Brun- swick. and Fort Anne National Park in Armspolis Royal, Nova 500th, had 7,314 and 5,782 visitors tively, many of whom were Americans. These historic sites have many contacts of interest with early American history, having been captured by forces from New EH8- lend before the Revolutionary War. NATIONAL SYSTEM war]. PREPARED HANDLE nu. - wan rain-no MOiNCTON. NB. Dec-B —“We anticipate that railway traffic this coming season will be considerably heavier then last year and there will be greatly accelerated move- ment flowing tin-crush Pfirls on Canada's eastern seaboard during the coming winter", declared Allst- air Fraser. K.C., vice president in charge of traffic for the Canadian National Railways on his return i0 Montreal on the Maritime Express following on inspection trip to Hal- ifax and Saint John. Business generally throughout. Canard-a, Mr. Fraser stattd, Ls being canted on at o. greatly increased u Japs Find Chinese Can Morale Still High in Spite Of Three Years Pitiless War (By GEOIIGE‘; FITCH) NBA lenioo Special Correspondent All over China. today they are singing a song: "We have no shoes, we have no bread. we have no guns; "But wait- the enemy will give them to us." The heavy Chinese broadsword I brought home with me from Chunk- king is such a "gift." It is hand- forged from a length of steel rail stolen at night by Chinese guerrillas who risked their lives to get it. They had -fo tear up the tracks and curry the rail away under the very noses of Japanese troops patrolling the north-south railway in "oc- cupied territory" from Hankow to Peking. Almost all the steel used by the famous Eighth Route Army and that of Marshal en Shi-san, the “model governor" of Shansi, is obtained from the Japanese in just this way". I have seen three differ- ent types of revolvers made from such stolen steel mils, some crude' and awkward, some beautiful pieces of mechanism. All were made to use Japancso ammunition. for they count on the enemy to "give" Jasper National Park in the Can- them the bullets, too. When I was in the Northwest of China. they offered to stage a raid for me, to show me how this was done. Unfortunately I could not wait the week they said was necessary to journey to the rail- road and back. _ - Today the steel rails are still bola: forged into weapons, but the guerrillas now complain that Japa- nese shoes and uniforms are so worn and ratrg-fd and their food so poor that it hardly pays to risk life and limb to obtain them. That is a s‘riklng contrast with “that. I saw in Nanking two and a half years arm. Then the Japanese armv was ixell clothed and shod, and fed with rice and fish and other foodstuffs. imported from Japan. NEVER A COMPLAINT quarters of the Eighth Route forces is still pitifull ui d m4 fed and clothed. Hogplegilspgi-c like those of the Crimean War. Millions of civilians wander homeless over their Good Earth. Yet I have never heard a complaint. From the wife of the official 1n and all her household possessions were shattered by a bomb through her roof —-no complaint. From the grain merchant whose stores for the year disappeared in fl Single blaze —no complaint. From the river boatman whose entire family was wiped out in an air raid —no complaint. From the whole Chinese people in the fourth year of war —no murmur of discouragement, no whisper cf anything but complete faith in the justice of their cause and the integrity of their leaders. The surge of national morale is like a tidal wave. It is the strong- est single factor in China's chance of victory. There is some conscious organization behind it, of course. Morale is built by streamlined agencies, chiefly the Kuomingtang (Nationalist party), the Three- Peopleks-Principles Youth Corps. and the Resist Japan University .of the Eighth Route Army.. The first has an office in every county seat and provincial capi- tal; the second is a non-political organization of some B000 young men and women trained to edu- cate the people in wartime du- ties and precautions. Both bor- row tactics from the Resist Japan University, which is training thou- sands of men and women in Yenan A great part of‘ China's armed to hisiher 998k! with no indication Of any lag. The railways, he said, were exceedingly busy and dicing a remarkably good job in carrying Out 141811‘ volt of the national war effozt and were making a. notable contribution in this respect. "I arm satisfied", Mr. Fraser con. U-Bllvd. "that there will be no hold up of traffic by reason of any fail- ure due to inadequacy of railway faculties." _._______________ NOT GOING TO ENGLAND LONDON. Dec. -i—-An a/uthorita- tive Netherlands source said today there is no likelihood of Princess Juliana and her daughters coming to Britain for Christmas 0'1 a rvlsit. to Queen Wilhelmina and Prince Bernhard. temrimd it is steadily__ going on OUT OUR WAY new’, ROOKIE, YOUR scanner A group of Youth Corps girl;- He said there has been no con. By J- ‘11-\A"l"5 FINE .’ THEY-S WHERE I'LL NEED IT lkl ANOTHER and other other centers to iv.- leaders in the military and po- Chungking whose American piano DECEMBER is, 19.“, TkeTlif The old drum lower at the Chinese city of Yenln still stench though Army, has been leveled. People live George A. Fitch with a broadsword rail stolen at night on a Japanese iftlcal situation. In Yewm, site of the university, and in other aci- ters, artists, writers, dramatists and musicians are de- _voting their talents to the win- the-war effort. Posters and car- toons, in s country where so many are illiterate, an especially effective. ' SONGS, PLAYS BOOST MORALE Singing has taken the country by storm. Soldiers sing lustlly u they man"! w we from I shall never forflt a concert I heard in Northwest China last summer. ‘There was a make-shift orchestra of a dozen pieces, the cello made from an American five- gallon can. ‘Ihey played well en- ough, but it was the chorus of c hundred mixed voices which held me spellbound. They sang the ‘Yellow River," a recently oom- posed cantata in ten parts. It was like nothing I had ever heard before, neither classical Chinese, nor western, but something new which they had created themselves. It was born of infinite suffering, the voices of the river, the workers, famine. exiles, the grief of women. Some of those plaintive and stirring strains still ring in my ears. The radio is widely used. Ev- ery town and hamlet has its public loudspeaker where the people gather to hear the news from h H‘. ' ghurligking and Kunming and fifififigqwfg .1 3.1.0.0., ‘ _ hewgyang’ and me pethtalks from "China will Win." Tho won“ ‘.‘\‘.‘r‘v a quarters“ translated for hcr. But t-he theater is most lnter- The little girl both o’ chum wins and Powerful pronasandlst- parent! were killed bv w..- .11,“- The audiences go wild, soldiers draw deep inspiration from plays of patriotic sacrifice. I recall es- pecially one given in Chungking ‘uatu ready to start for front, pictured with Madame Chlang Kai-slick, center. the flrmation of a report published in the London Star that the trio might leave Canada to rejoin the remainder of the Royal Family. A gossip cclum in the Star said “There is a likelihood that Juliana and her daughters may be in England by Chzlstmas, if only on a visit." He recalled that Juliana was married Jan. 7, 1937, and that her lealaitger daughter was born Jan. (It has been reported Princess Juliana is to visit Washington this month, which would seem to be a. further indication that an Atlantic voyage is unlikely.) CLOCKS UNITING WARTORN FAMILY REGINA, Dec. 5 —(CP) —Pei»er Ffirjgy, 11, is far from home, but n. Williams M 1 EDDAWM l‘! linulsf t our: BOARDING noose 17w; MUET eucz ‘rune wiu. as DANGEROUSLY CL06E fl RT OF THE "éHOCK" REATMEMTW by a group of Japanese captives, about. how three brothers went my he has received some reminders of war from his Middlesex home where his patents have s, map of Saskatchewan and a. clock on the mantel set at Regina. time. when it. is 11 p.m. Middleaex time. Peter's mother can visualize him eating supper at 5 o'clock in Regina. Peter's parents cent him a tin box filled with a. jagged piece 0f copper shrapnel. a. piece oLbraided parachute cord and a stout piece ofgmenish Gennan parachute cloth which was foimd in the den of his home. A delayed wton land-' mine floated to the garden with the parachute and was detonated by an engineers’ recaution uad. Peter is in for the - tion. staying with his great-aunt imd uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Fed Fhn; my. _- oovou ¢ f . 1o rue JUGULAR p’ 114mm we i, EXPERlENCE no / 1 "ruiuk vewhcocroa! / pane RVBK t? moon sacu 0F ,, Z rr, oocroa? : euaesmr, ~. v5 QHOUI-D “"2 % -,- A r», oocroa! HAvETATHE 210E605“: ’/ * '/ TT/l-élfé , DocToR! WHiGPERS " v . journalists. -~und~end W58 ll modest fellow, '1". vvivo so covered he would be ha: matic performnvicc n1 lu- ' Academy. A lilflc not l»: autograph book to M101‘ who sat beside m; {hen MY FIRGT badly battered. The 1i ' In caves (arrows), c '\' made the rallroadhyinto champs“ M“ “ Chins to fight, became dislllu. cloned about their Japanese cause. ed converts to (he Claim-go principle that "all men nrc brom- ers." Such "converted prlsoncrs" m the authors of leaflets distributed among Japanese troops in Chins, It is hard to say how much ef- fect this propaganda has lmd. but I have talked with Jnpuirsc p115. oners who complained " up "glory had gone out of un- ‘X1?’ EVEN WOUND! AID SPIRIT On the other hand. Chime morale is rising. I talked m a young officer in Irhaivz who ind hem wounded five times. f t/rrvi. him lying for the fifth time on n lins- pital “bed" which was c1112‘ a few boards covered with lllfl"l'lfl in an abandoned movlo hour», ye many similar men \\""li. talked. and he said if‘ way that as soon as i/‘lr I m. ' I‘. W‘- the front. “Each wound," lie suid "has given me mm“ dcnce than I had bzifw-c Itn Yenan I was :1 cw ously asked "the foroimwr nese not. long lrr-fnrz: ‘ her nose in teririm- .=' inwards mc ivilh . "Why docs iv.‘ ivviiv 11v asked. "Of course China wzii Elie was 8 yicnrs 0V1. 111’) Illllfi OF M HAMILTON. 01th, Di‘ GUEST CIIILDS ELeven-year-old Ann (i! 111w- who came to Canada H11 h" mother‘ and younger sij v1‘ film‘- weeks ago to cscnpe bomlmi: 11116035 on Enagiand, died liviv hid" from meningitis H r fu 11 a --1 (i1 Bramley..Pe.<ni';<io1:!‘. iiir: M11 ____ __T_1 Y: urn qnn coil!