fliURSDAY. L: "Mary's such u young- looking Mother!" S, like her parents and grandparents, Mary realizes what a help Boo’: ‘Fruit Salt‘ can be to healthful vitality. n. day to 43y ma. of a mother really require fitness. lino helps to cleanse the system of wastes and excess gastric acids that most always bring on sluggishness, indigestion and a listless Iéelin g that take the edge 08' life. lino is pleasant to take -is free of harsh bitter salts, gentle but efiective in its action; Buy a bottle today and take be- fore breakfast. when needed. en 0's ‘Fruit Salt’ 150.00: vln Re-instatsd In illd Jobs ecutions under the Civil Employ- by the Labor Depsrtiment. The Act. which applies to both men and women. requires employers to absorb former employees who have been discharged from me forces. providing they hue been employed steadily for three months prior to their enlistment. Application for re-instatement must be made within three months of discharge from the forces or from a hospital immediately after military service. lf the vetemn was discharged overseas, he is allowed four months to report to his em- ployer. An extension o! nix months may be made in exceptional cues on application m a fictional Employ- ment oiiice. Labor Department figures that to June 29. 150.808 veterans had been re-instated in then Jobs with 4,271 seeking assistance in getting their jobs bask. In a maim- ity of those uses. It was lourri they had no actual claim under the Act. The statistics also showed that l5,6-il veterans eligible for re-in- statement had not made applica- tion. Included in that group would be veterans who had undertaken special training or who had decad- ed to taice new jobs. From Aug. 1. i945, to May 3i, 1946 a total cf 595,683 were discharged from the three services and 143.330. or 24 per cent, were re-instated in pre~ vious jobs. RE. In order to assist. this measure, the schools of our Province have been closed. 1t is recommended by the Department of Health and Welfare that children be prevented from attending halls, theatres, and all other cen- tres of communlt gathering, until further notice. The local Boards of Health are instructed to actively enlist the oo-operation of those responsible for such gatherings and to exclude from attendance all children below the age of l6 years. Although authority exists J. H. SHAW. M. D. Acting Chief Health Officer. Para. MD....('I'he local Boards cf Health may close any school would be made in INFANTILE PARALYSIS [POLIOMYELITIS] Current medical opinion on the spread of Infantile Paralysis shin that children should be protected from groups or crowds of individuals, HDi-‘clllly where such gstherings nre held indoors. _ (Public Health Act. 1046. para. 48D) for cluswig these places of assembly by local Boards of Health, it is felt that such co-operation can be obtained in each munici out recourse to the Act. Jor other place of assemblage which it decides may be a means cf dis~ SPEPd "D ‘he “wk "5 1h? ~'~’"f°1" laminating disease. the closing of which is required in the interest of “m” ' the public health.) polity with» wireless operators. 5 DIVISIDNAL SIGNALS (Reserve) The authorized establishment of this new unit i; 21 officer; and 485 other ranks. RECRUITING lsch Friday evehing during August commencing 9th August -between the hours 1.30 p.m. and 9 p.rn. at the Armouries - All officer- w hr lllliuintcd will be present on first evening. Tile function of the unit is to provide all intercommunlos- line iaelegraphy u D. N. BELL, lit-Col" The type of men we require are returned veterans who served in R. C. Sign. Men who hold qualifications in trade; shown above. Young men of l’! year; and above, these especially who have a 5M1" to 181m One or more of the trades listed above. 0.6., 5th Divisional Signal; (Ilepgrvgl lion within the 5th Division in the field by means of telephone. wireless, despatnh rider and other means on required. out this necessary function we require good oflicen. good N001, and Mlcpholle operators, lwifchbolrd operators, linemen. instrument mechanics, vehicle mechani . drivers. despstch riders, storemen. cipher operators. clerks, baimen, cooks etc. To carry Bevin Returns To Conference (By Pamela Matthews) LONDON, Aug. 27-iReu_ters)— Foreign Secretary Bevin Wrli re- turn to the Paris peace conference tomorrow, taking with him British cabinet views on a number oi’ topics, it was learned authnrrtai- lvc-iy hrre tonight. Mr. Bevin flow back to London during the week-end to with Prime Minister with the Colonial and Foreign Of- iices. Paris. reports that Mr. Bevin and State Secretary Byrnes of lilPi United Ztates had agreed i.) call a meet-mg of the Foreign Minisicrsi Council Thursday were confirm-ed ‘m London. Sources here said the resumption of Big Four meetings an effort to During his London trip Mr, B \"Cl discussed with Mr. Allie? sucni Lhorney problems as Palestine‘ and the Balkans. , No decision, it was understood. lwas taken on the request of the Palestine Arab higher Pxeruilve that Haj Anrin El Husseini. Mufti. of Jerusalem, should form yarl. of! its delegatirn to the September] conference in London u‘! Poles-l tine. l Well-informed quarters beiievel that derpite rumor; to the conirnryl it is unlikely that the Mufti will be accepted as an Arab represen- tative. Acceptance of the Mufti. in view oi his pro-German wartime record. would make in difficult for Britain to oppose the selection of Jewish leaders now detained in Palestine as representatives of the! Jewish Agency, There is good reason to believe that the British Government will continue to oppose the selection of at least some of the Jews now under arrest, in Palestine and w ll st the same time oppose the Arab - request that the Mufti come to London. ‘Muskux Squadron To Be Disbanded UITAWA, Aug. 2'7 -- (C?) -- Air Minister Gibson today announ- oed that. No. 104 Squadron of the R.C.A.F. which supplied last win- ter's Muskox Exercise and made wartime transport flights to 8J1‘- ports at Goose Bay, Labrador and Gander, Nflci, will be disbanded and replaced by No. 485 (Ohinthe) ‘Transport Squadron. In s statement he slid the Chin- the "‘ ‘on would be based at should rllssjsnsnrcts ms 2w sums I m l was originated so combine a cleaning action and the polish- ing, action of a we: fi flllhillnillllnlill, "IIIII\II"H\"II |\\\‘ / | \\ Ileve You Made/flu fest? Shine one shoe with 2 IN I . . . shine the other with the polish you're using “i F08 M08851! Edmonton under command of Wing Cmdr. P.J. Grant, who formerly commanded No, 12 communications squadron at Rookcliffe, Ont. The Chinthes. named for the mythical Burmese half-dog. hail- lion, was formed in August. 1944 and. equipogéi ‘W112i tDakotl sir- iuit. carr "r . "loll and mail in inclia and unnez carried Gurkha paratrooper: to the ca ture oi Rangoon. e squadron returned to Osn- ada by way of lirglnrd lsst spring. liorse Moat Posing lit “Boneless iissi" To BeShippsd iim HALIFAX; Aus. 1i - (OP)- lfsyor J. E. Ahe said today he was instructing Health Depart- ment officials to keep a careful wstch on the ssle of meat after yesterdays disclosures that thous- ands of pounds of hone meat had le authorities were holding 80. pounds of the melt under seizure. It will be shipped goedPrinee Edward Inland for fox e . Prices Board officials said the meat was fit for human consump- tion but it had been shipped to Halifax labelled as “bonelezsbeefP Little, it any of the meat had been sold on the rntail market. of- ficials said. and none was on the market now. l ‘ms anon Ion vliu d should have 0.1! adult GI OTrAWA. Aug. 2'! - (C!) — The majority of ezc-service men - lng back to their old jobs are s- ing re-employcd without argument and there have been oniy two pros-- ment Rc-instaternent Act, it was disclosed today in figures complied ......:°?.§S.§;To Be Appointed i , we CHARLOTTETOWN cuanolsnl " Elections Being Viewed As Barometer Red Influence B EDWIN SHANKI‘) B , Aug. 27- (AM-the Local elections in the Russian oe- In the end. they cupation sons. starting supt. i, the Communist propagandr of "Winning the Germans" has Germany, Alli-ed political analysts slid iodfly» Normally these communal elec- fiions. i0 be held in stages begin- nir-g Sunday in Saxony, would at- tract only passing notice. An out- come heavliy -n invor of the Sov- let-bucked Socialist Unity Party. Germany. has hem chosen oy a merger of first elections in the formed recently Communists imd Socialists 2n the Russian pone only. is turn for tions granted by American snd British Brandenburg, n . observers. Looking ahead, they visunlioe an will demonstrate how effectively establishing an eastern 001ml“! Hm Bsgqllgt a western German taken hold and consolidated the lined in mirnoogrnphed lmlflmflom [Communist position in eastern to Socialist Unity officilll. "eastern version of dengu- ' in ssddle for ‘lire next twyieors ldduptosiotsmfitlltihowij Y (Xuzununist view was out. "The elect-ion must demarcate-ate that the Party. ls the cl-oal pel- itical force for rcoom tioz, p0‘. sesses the oonii n; u“ mares." the rib-eagle: said, ’ xony. recogn as tit moat solidly leftist province in 2mm, for the On successive Sunday; gimp,” 33:1 will be held m uringie a Pomeraia interested In Purchasing St. Main Shops (By {he Canadian Press) QUEBEC. Aug. 27-h group of American and Canadian financiers today offered to purchase the St. Malo shops. huge wartime Do- minion arsenals and munition fac- tories in lowertown 8t. Malo ward. from the City of Quebec for the establishment oi a major lndusirial enterprise, it wasleflrn- ed at City Hall tonight. ‘Ihe shop-s. the property of the War Assets OOTDOrei-ion. were re- centl oflered to the city of Que- bec or a reported price of $500.- 000 and it is eitipected that the deal between the Federal Govern- merit and the Quebec municipal government will be completed b!‘ fore the end of the week. Representatives oi the Holilinger North Shore iVililii-HE Company 0i’ Ungava were reported to be among those interested in making the purchase. liver-ail Fuel Research Board OTTAWA. Aug. 27- (CPw-Rc- sourrcs Ministry Glen today told the Commons tho Government ilild (luclded L0 appoint a fut‘. FJSEZiYCil board in iinc with a recommen- daiion that one should be s91 up to “direct an over-ail program of fuel research." Piloting departmental csllmites. the Minister said the recommenda- tion had horn made by n special rommiiloc which reported;- “Having in mind ‘he hnsic im- portance in Canadians -.~f iuel problems in general and the fact that research work m ihc field of _ nllteiic liqvI-J fuels is closely rc- lnicd io and common to oihcr fuel prnhlrms, _\'"' ' ' ~ "" vomménti the establishment of a fuel research hoard representative . II than under of the Department of Mines and Resources. the National Research Council, the Research Council of Alberta, and private industry which should direct. an overall program of fuel research. Synthe- tic liquid fuel is one of the must ur ent roblems to be dealt "Pith." . Cl en told Clarie Gilli; (Qqp- Cape Breton South) the govern- ment had planned building o! a hydrogenation plant but had ap- pointed the committee whcn doubts began to crop up about, l" advisability. A previous item of more than 8700.000 had been dro ped in view of the irecommendst on of the committee that further study should precede development of plans for a synthetic liquid fuel pilot plant, Only $501110 was [19- cesssry for maintaining the eqlhp- "W"! llfefldl’ procured. That amount was voted. Mr. Glen told Mr. Gilli: study had been made of low temper“. tune carbonizatlon. The whole field’ of fuel porbietns was bebng studied. John R. MacNlcol (PC-Toronto Davenport) recalled that the in- teniion behind the plan m- a hydrokenatlon plant was to extract oil from the tar sandg of Alberta Mid l0 B 1v the same process to Nova Scot a coal, CASH IN ON LAMBS BEFORE SEPTEIHER I In view of the fact; that the Drown! lamb carcass ceiling price txuirfls on August 3i next. and live lambs marketed after that dale may Sell from inree to four cents per pound live weight less the present ceiling, lamb raisers are urged in take advaniage of the market previous to September l and make an ef- fort in connection with the feed. ins and iiniming cf the lambs. While the ewes are still nursing their lambs. lamb creeps may be rovided into which the lambs may mass and feed upon specially prepared concentrate without. be- lug molested by the other sheep. A creep is simnlv a slatted pen with slats sufficiently far enough Emir! i0 Demzii the lambs to go through but close ensuzh to pre- vent the larger sheep from enter- inir. Following ihe weaning oi the lambs. iiiev should be ircuied for internal parasites and dipped for eradication of ilxterhal parasites. Tlbev should ilicn be placed on auousr 29 194s , ,, ..,.= I‘. ., .. Babfi Teeilh Are There Before You Know it ' HATS mu - when baby's born, he actually has all rwoguy of his first teeth, and four of the permanent onea.'l‘hey're hidden, of course, and still growing. Doesn't that emphasize the importance of starting to build fine, sound teeth very, very early? That's when Carnation Miikeanbeimportsnc. Itlsrichintheboneancitootbbuiid- ing minerals. It's an excellent source of essential vimnin D. It provides all the other food values of good, pasteurized milk. Ask your doctor about a Carnation formula for you: baby. And write for a free copy of the fine Carnation book "Your C- nten i Baby”. Address The Carnation Co. Limited, at Toronto or Vancouver. Carnation Milk A CANADlAN PRODUCT "fmnCoIIrnIrJCeIM Listen to the Contented l-lour Mondays CFCY-ll P.M. and Dominion Network t‘ a aftermath of rape. snd given sc- cess to a trough in which at the beginning o! the feeding period whole oats should be placed. Lat- er some barley and oil cake may be added in the proportion 0i tomorrow. "The club owners seemed to be receptive to our 88119161 Pi"? Murphy said, ‘At least. they know where we stand from the flag pols in centre field to all our contract batisfactory Results Are 21:11:38 olilaflciluamhrrigi-yhair “d? a “Rfigfi clubs in the major Mew- one pan. Where salt i. provid- headed by Pbrd mick. resident <1! ed under shelter from the weaih- the National Lennie an Will Har- fldge, ppe5id9nf. o! the American ~ o er. a mixture oi ten Pounds 5&1 League‘ as we“ as m “not ma“. and one pound Ptienoiiiiazine may ~ , ' id i lied b Commission- l: ssi.‘.’.§§li;Z?i'. 13?; “dill. giiggld Tfmoficio-l mg- fr‘ "éflm; gi-{ehliltiiyeéhaliiifllen wgm represented be available at all times. and. e {Iii-kill gflilelfil i5 mi w‘ l“ M iodays session. during exlrem-e heal. provision l" c9 9c 1V9 ‘T333 "K W ’ i753 PRAIRIE CEREAL CROPS In the June survey on “"11" seeded to ilcld croPS in u“ Pr“ ers’ produced ‘very satisfactory :0- sulis." pitcher Johnny Mu-cmy. of New York Yankees, said innay ai- ter emerging from a 90-minute discussion wiah American league for shade will add much i0 the comfort oi lambs and sheep. In the special pamphlet. N0. fl- "Tiie Prevention of D1588“ in Sheep," full directions are given Provinces, it is estimated i-hfli- concerning the control of inter- club owners. 178,000 acres have 5521;‘; ggwsgfim nal and external parasites in wheat in 1946 M BB I ' liiurph is chairman Qt the Am- erican league player group of which Joe Kuhel. Chicago While Sox first baseman, am M=l Har- der. ‘retcrrn (Jievclapd pitcher also are members. Kuhel and l-irrJer also rwpearcd bcicre the lvperican Lzuguc club owners. who will hold a joint ses- sion with the National beriguers acres in 1945--an iliqffifi" °i 12 P“ cent. The area seeded to oatsd: ggtlmied at 9.610.000 acres. alw CrTBse of ll per cent belt: l. and barley oi 9 per wit W‘ decrease. 6.269.000 "T" i“ been seeded in 1946- Th9 m*“de_ area at 990.000 acres shawls“; crease o! 4 {Kr cent. from - sheen and lambs. A conv of the pamphlet may be obtained frvm the Dominion Department oi’ Agriculture. Ottawa. on request. ENGLISH oupTzr. In i399 Helix-y TV 0i England fresh pastures. such as meadow Canadian Wrens De mobilized After Four Years Service founded the Order of the Beth. Canada's girls in navy blue, the Wrens. are all reiurnllll to shill“ life. ActivO 1mm dutlu of the Women's Mei Olnsdim New l"- vics came to an end on Wednesday. July ll. lhl flliih Wrln uniform! as may be seen across Osnlda during the caning weeks will be than worn by Wrens on demobilization lssve or examining their right i0 W" the uniform for 90 am alter finally leaving the service. myvm LIP!‘- with s kit bag on her shoulder and a nulls on hn ma. loading I Wren June Whiting. of lelieville. Ont. is seen u she arrived overseas for duty in the United Kingdom. For a considerable period the Woman's lvery chll uart of passeuriled milk every Royal Canadian Naval let-vice had s thousand Wrens outside as-every m oiaaaannmmaiaas..mauaiussumtaamon'fsi%ml. Bcrubbing seen w“ o... as the less romantic antics which Wrens undertook vhiiO serving their country. The two girls pictured hsrl. Wren Ohril Grill. of llfllig"i-wm Wren Bally Hawkins. of Ffiriotistovn. one sivlns l "Mi wlilh "i "it "W ‘ residence in Ottawa u the building was vacated io return to civilian mu- UPPIII. RIGHT- Wrens did many jobs which had previously o been done by nmi. ih WI 95m (Ia-Indian Wrens in a signal tower high above the arbor at. it. Johns Newfoun hub msssunenslnea msssaeeteawanhipuymesns ofAidisiarupflrbevintsr winds w ins around their lofty signll atfonn must have made home seem a ions WI! l"; Wrens Harlan Winglte. at toria._l.0.. and Margaret uttis. of lclnsmn. hi" - 10W!!! norm- “ m. . The first atomic bombs had fallen and so bad Japan when this picture "u! _ Irena saluti His Ihcsiiency the Governor-General. the Dari-sf Athlons. Ill on VJ-Day Ottawa. 4-0!- WV”