e 1m: WESTERNGUARDIAN Pr”? ==~ k subserl tio Adv should be loft with Mn. Pond. m euialan may M Mush; dull: 1:9»: of the following store: In ‘Iummersi :'£“m4)|;al:le’:,y S?“ Gourliee Drum W le t Mari Gaude 01 fauna“: Guardiln will be delivered to any home in Gummereid by cuflTffmy at 2o per any. or 10c per weal. Phone m m» this "rim. fl ‘m you; order to the boy responsible for deliveries on your route, lumn ls reserved fornewni’ —N0 APPETITE _ Tag, Rexaii ‘fihlfihl Interest. but advcrtlalnl Cod Liver Oil. Taylor plug ca. all neusy nature may be M59110‘! lKenelntllon. ‘Hams a word. strictly payable .._..___ ' THE Gay Puree this week in advance. —A'.l‘ _',,____-_-—-? 25% off all goods in stock, A150 PI?” {showing of new fur coats by rep- _ATT|3,\‘TI0N FISIIERMEN. —- resentative of Perley Fur Coni- um bllVlil! snielts as usual at m! Pally. Montreal. L-236-1-13-2i. l mwyy Sllllllllefilfig. A got" élliéllfislt . ._ 312m? Ii re B lire. _DEA W‘ W“ L-6B9-12-2l-lmth. Mtmw Jqgeggf fggglgd Daftfflf; , _, Ere 0i 6 68th 0f John Delaney Jill-I 5_T=\|‘l‘1‘§\lvell‘g°ln1i€fél§lg§fé§ of Lower Freetown, who passed oacieieclvl 19,1‘ m“ awa in the Prince County Hos- lilsslls lidlcitlsen lkua-l-lbu ita on Saturda evening. Mr. De- . Wiggly‘! glflfiw su fired a Pilléfllytlt! ."‘—-‘ _ wee s azo an _0v1~ af-_li_ulrNB—wFlllgglgisggf ‘lbrought m the hospital for Mfg? leased to all’ A out-er being Con: intent. Mr. Delaney was a. native of __Olll rll-m“ e for wme time |Fieetown and was well known as filled l0 tliflvllilllllfillflueilzfl _s Pl mall 03 llprlghlt character and rlui all allllc o l . . géyéiegfilddcaliog. Llge gas 85 i/leiars of _‘;*f—- _ upo emeof .lt _Bl;l‘l.‘ll.\_I-.ll rlvoililrhglgjsTgalg .iiiness was quite active ch21 gt- Jlallllll" “mfwfe ‘ Bu eh ‘tended to his duties at the farm. itlllrlirfl loll-l» ‘Hallie Otherlll-lMll rs He was a member of the Baptist pile fliit" '>_llllb_ ll5 mt “hm ls- ,Church at Central Bedeque. H “iqpuoncblisoli in B05 0n, leaves to mourn three sons. John qllllé l’ ' ilsntagéestielm gareéida; iEimer ——-—— l n . . ' ..FU.\‘llil.~\L POSTPONED-Thetoniy ydalighteis n HS wife and lvos for the lute John plredoceased him (unfrlll _ 4 _ v some years ago. Tie uneral is t penile-i‘ “PP-ill “me 1° Pa"? bielzl take place on Wednesday after- plli llilh ‘rllwlllly flllfiqllloilllal Rust noon at z o'clock from the Bflp- p, ni. ill ilie Central Bl) H tist Church at Central Bedequc. Chump lifl\(‘ lwcn postponed uni i ‘vedneydjly at the sninc time and place-S. o o Personals ——Miss Betty Sinclai; 2s visiting llllgf) of pulpits foi- her sister. Mrs. Donald Campbell 1mm; me prayer took in Charlottetown-S. We o“ 5n Sunllncrside __*. my m; in. oi _Prcsbyterizln _ -Seilator Creclntmi fvlncArthur ' ll\{-{ V160. REV L. .1185 returned t0 Slliiilncrside from a short visit to Montreal-S. , g. Rev. L. E. G. , —Captain Leith Crue who has ies, cvcillil Chris in Church. been Siwlldllli! l‘ {PW dflys at. his will, t zlvoll‘. 1110i‘ mg; Rev. home in slimmevside left on Sat- _c evening sc . Uni- urday for Halifax.-S. morning scry ‘e, Rev. —--— , _ k.s and Rev. Wm. Vcr- —-Rev. Wm. Rhoad. D.D.. Mrs. v‘ lfl lilo mining. In spite of the Rhoad ‘and their daliciitei" Pliscillu ppm tiic services were well at- were visitor-z to Slllninersdlc on undtdrs Monday. guests of Rev. and Mrs. Wm. Verwolf at the Parsonage. —1t is pleasing to report that Mr. O. C. MacNelil is able to be out and about again after his re- cen/t illness.—S. A ; evening Rev. F. lVll- - Church, Rev. F. -C\\'.L. {MEETING-The Jan- oliiig of the Summerside 5p vision of the Catholic W0- iiielis lmglic was held in the K. nfC. Home oti January 8th. The Pm cm. Mrs. Joseph Callaghan, p d. The meeting opened with .tl.e league 1)l'£l_'y'0l‘._Tllt! minutes of ti: previous meeting were read ado ecl and also the Treas- Sociai Service t... s . '. Pilrneli McMahon. ilpflfifll on the Christmas activi- tits or tilt! League. Large hampers oliood lind been packed and dis- triliilied to many needy families in tile tolvn and, as usual a box was uni to Si. Vincent's Orphanage in C‘ rlotletulvil. in addition many | of clothing for needy ii llilfl been purchased in lhlepu niuiitli. The sewing club lcr "ct , r cluidren had on dis- meeting several com- . of clothing for these . .zlltli:)ll;ili the club had been incctiii for a short Aftvr some discussion on the rirlnie aclivitlcs of the League the meeting adjourned-S. =- ll. S. Liberal M. P. Sees Sirois Report A future guide BRIDGEWATER, N. S., Jon. 13- (CP) — J. J. Kiiiloy, lllrzui iilrzii- bar of Parliament for Queens- Lun- enblirg. told the Brl<|;lc\vllt-.-i' iii- wanis Club today the Sirois report “looks like the foundation for a real forward movemeiil.....tiic light to guide our future lcadcrs.“ He saw a benefit for the Muri- times in that, under the report, “some of the advantages of the tar- iff to them (the provinces of Qve- bec and Ontario) will go into the pool of taxation for the general good of Canada." If. as under the plan. Ottawa wore allowed to control income tax- ation, succession duties and business profit taxes. Mr. Klnley held, "we can readily see how a redistribution of wealth as between the provinces and as between the citizens of the country would silently and melltod- ically take place." The “surplus wealth" would fl‘l'llI‘i- ly be drawn from Ontario iillft Que- ‘W. M. S. MEETING- The sn- nuii lll°tllitill of the Kenslnglton Unrcd C llzvii W. M S was held o" llflll‘ 81h at 2 30 P M. The . Mit- D. McKenzie pre- s‘.__ . Tltc opening hymn 570 lyzls f010\\'(“.l with prayer by the Presl- dent. ‘The cisvotionzli period was than coilciliclcd by Mrs. McKenzie ill the fl "cure lhl‘0ll"ll illness of tjgcc v. of. "Living he Christian 11.6" is tiic thrive of the W. M. 5 ' l Canada for Nil‘ titcm" for Janu- t'ie Vlrv Through " " R“*l7°“‘l"9 "hill"? bec and deposited in a pool from "l" PH“ ' ‘ll’ H" "ll 33~ which all provinces vlr "i be fed . " "e ulvcn hv _?__..___'..__ ' P l-‘snlieliy. “"4 MYS TEXAS "HIGH" MUCH ltlAllRll-Jl) Pfforliii: ivrls i? i F] "lglh PORT ARTHUR, Tex. Jun. i0 ._ ' veil’ "lg fnllniv- (CP) —School Board cfficaia, we“; "'l“‘l "i7 “Picaks slurpristd to learn i5 ruiiis in d c’ If“ r~ln=crl the Th" business oer- - of hvicf rencwls of tlic ‘ I nil" “lo "“""""f~fi‘l 0f - i" “r "cNirf (Wer- "c‘c- "lid F“ meeting h licordlzrtlori. Tliomcs Jefferson hf~il school were married but they decided the-e was notfhing thcv could do libcllt it. They annoyed a notice deal-gird to cast "o_'fici~l drcwrravement" upon the situation bcrnlls" s"c‘l marl- clz"s have “a bad effect" upon other . cvlaVflvpvy N ‘t. Flying” ‘ "lllllcnt site at the controls of a Link trainer at one of the school! "l lln in (‘anadn under the Commonwealth Air Train n! Pllm- n"! “valor-s device 1mm the rudimente of mum" flyinr without the "ml"! of leaving the ground _ 511d - did not disregard ___._._._..__._ SUMMERSIDE GUARDIA AND PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE Nazis renew Activity in Bulgaria BONA. Bulimia. Jen. lt-(AP) -Germanv renewed diplomatic ec- tivity here tonight amid indications of a stronger Russian stand e net ible transit of German DI hroligh Bulgaria for an attack on Greece 0r Turkey. The German Minister. Baron Her- bert von Richbofen. called on Pre- mier Bogdan Philoff and Foreign Minister Ivan Popoff in conferences considered important in the wake of the denial by Tass. Russian news agency. of reports that the Soviet Union hpd given consent to German entrv into Bulgaria. - Rlchtofen and his wife accompan- ied Philoff on recent "health trip" to Vienna and the German minister was reported to have gone to Berlin before returning to Solid Saturday- , The Tass denial and Phiioffs speech Sunday. in which he assert- ed Bulgarians “would not forgive anyone who tried to make Bulgaria National Socialist (Nazi). Commun- ist or Fascist" were regarded as not likely to Diease the Nazis. German circles hinted that Phil- off and Richtofen might shortly go to Berlin together. Although the Tass statement. which newspapers did not publish. was held to indicate a stronger So- viet stand. some informed sources the possibility fmat Russia. in the interest of its non-aggression pact with Germany. might. overlook German entry into Bulgaria. Meanwhile. Bulgaria and Russia. opened negotiations for renewal of their 1940 trade treaty involving goods valued at $10.000.000. In line with the preparedness note in Philoffs speech. Bulgaria order- ed youths designated for. but ex- cused from artillery training last year, to report by Jan. 15. The pub- lished notices said _onlv a few hun- dred for whom equipment wasmck- ilnz during normal training periods were involved. Alherton Rev. Dr, W.V. MacDonald. was a rcccnt visitor to Charlottetown. Private Frank A-hearn. of the P. Ell-l. who was home on furlough has returned to his unit at Dart- mouth Mr. Emerson Matthews, was a recent visitor to Summersicle. Mrs. James Whelan was a week- end visitor to Charlottetown. Mrs. Everett McKendrick was a recent visitor to Summerslde. Mr. Russell Matthews ‘ivas a re- cent vizilor to Summcrslde Private Amos Ramsay of the P. E. 1H. who was home on furlough has returned to his uiiit at Dart- mouth, N. S Mr. SCililUlli‘ Young left recently’ to join tile R.C.A.F. as motor boat cve \\' m a ii Miss Elizabeth Clark. ‘Bloomfield. was a weekend visitor to her heme here. Mrs. John Wallace was a recent visitor to Summerslde. Among those called in for the thirty day training were the fol- lowing from here. Messrs. Bruce Mc- Tieiizii-hk. ilfont Hlitt. Richard lof- frey. J".. Hilary Kinoh, Justin Mor- riseil, Clifford Cahlll. Mrs. Erskine Campbell. Summer- sidc was a recent visitor to Alber- lmi, the guest of rec parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hunter Weeks. Corporal Watson of the R. C. M P. Albsrten Detachment. was a recent visitor to Summerside. Mrssrs. Alfred Gavin. Donald Mc- ‘cwn. who have been emnlovrd in Whit Jnhn. N. 8., are visiting their homes here. ~A ‘Tryon Farmers Institute Makes Strong Protest Al. the annual meeting of the Try- ou Farmers‘ Institute held in 17PM Hall, January 10th, 194,1, the follow- ing resolutimi was moved by J. George MacKay, seconded by John H. Myers and unanimously adopt- ccl by the meeting, copies to be sent to the Department of Agriculture and to the Prince County represen- tative at Ottawa, Hon. J. L. Rais- ton. “We, the members of the Tryon Farmers‘ Institute of Prince Edward Island do hereby vigorously protest as unjust and arbitrary the actions of the Wartime Prices and supply Board in t-lie pegging and price set- ting oi farm products at a rela- tively low basis in respect to farm production costs. especially in regard to the setting of the maximum price for butter. We would suggest that a. minimum price of thirty cents a pound be set. We feel that these actions will be very detrimen- tal to farm production and the needs of our Empire at e time when government works. wai- equipment manufactures. war training. eto,. are paying high wages. mil-till! greater purchasing power and thus attracting all abor from the farms, which tinder present produc- tion prlces cannot in any way com- pete with said wages. We also con- demn this action at a time when munitions manufacturers are allow- ed practically their freedom in price setting and would not sub- mit to a cost pills basis. which step la not even granted food produc- ers whose products are lust as nec- essary as munitions. "We the farmers are willing to sacrifice providing other industries an doing likewise, but we ind!!- l British liquidate Stocks for war Purchases in ll. S. NEW YORK. Jan. IL-(AP) —lA block of 80.000 shares of common stock of Montgomery Ward. and Co. was sold “over-the-oounter" after the close of the New York Stock Ex- change today in what brokerage cir- cles said was s continuation of Brit- ish liquidation of United States se- curities to raise dollar exchange for war purchases. The Montgomery Ward stock. worth about 83.120000 at current market quotations, was offered by the investment firms of Dominick and Lehman Brothers at $39.00 a share. closing price on the ex- 8e. Other houses were reported plan- ning to sell later in the week 40,000 mares of Union Pacific and 50.000 shares of F. W. Woolworth in the speed-up of British seles. French Freighter ls frustrated in Blockade running MONTEVIDEO. Jan. 13 -—(AP)— The 8.000-ton French freighter Men- doza was reported steaming back to Montevideo tonight from an appar- ently frustrated sccond attempt to run the British Atlantic blockade. A report from Plmta Del Esme, 100 miles east of Montevideo. said the Mendoza was seen retllming to this port after she had put out from Maldonado Bay about noon. The British auxiliary cruiser As- turias, whose challenge of the Men- doza last night drove it back. had been reported lying Outside ‘in: molllh of the River Plate, ready to givc pure: it. _ i. The lVfcndozJ. rst. left here ias‘. lllF-fllt with a caiuo cf chilled beet‘. canned meat. and wool. The Uruiltlzivnn foreicn lll;‘l=5%"‘l‘ Alberto Guani. promptly protested to Britiliii against the hnlllhtl; of the ivfuidozu within the sc-cclllci Pan-American llf'\ltl‘fl“ty zone. British officiccs swirl iii" Mm- dozas l'£‘i)!‘(‘.°(‘lli’\tlil€S ilud no! "skel for a ritlvicert. tile naval ccrtificzitc which would icl her pas: the bioc- kade. They added that if the lifeli- rloza had Sll"C5‘P".“(i in rlinolzig the blocktfie fclii- other Frelvh iv":- chmilmm new at. Bllevscs llircs would have iron orrlwcfl nut in all effort tn duollcwe the feat. pSelassie plans ,'To head army Against Fascists KHAIFTOUTMIiGTdJn. Juli. 10- tDeluycLlr-Wltjl’ RMHUIISI -- Hllile osehlssle, £'.\'llf‘(l Eniiicrui" of Elli- lopln, told new. ")L‘l'lll('ll tudllv the time is not tlll-illllt lihcn he will ielnl nil llrliiy 01' lltiiiopluil ])'c\-tl'lOlS_2lgZlillSl the llllliuiis who drove-plum from his llivl c. Sllllllg on a purple silk-covered wooden throne, lic stud he was pleased with progress in training of his army and added that revolt among Ethiopian tribesmen is making great headway. "The days of my former Italian ally who betrayed my country are numbered.“ he sllld. "They built fine roads hut killed and enslaved thousands of my people. although they failed to break their spirit. I look forward to the liberation of Ethiopia and the establishment of a ust, constitutional government." he Emperor said the royal war drums are beating nightly. "Hun- dreds of my former soldiers riolv forced to fight for the Italians un- derstand the message of the drums and now are descrting and rally- ing to the standard raised at G61’- jam by the faithful commander Ras Mongaslia." He said a number of chiefs in the interior have offered alleg- iance. l-fe plans some day to lead his victorious troops into Midis Ababs. his capital. Says Finlalid Faces famine Unless helped HELSINKI. Finland. Jan. i3 - (AP) — Supply Minister Vnino Ko- tilolnen told correspondents today that Finland faces fziiiiiiic by next summer unless food shipments from the United States are received to augment the nations grain stocks. now down to s four-month supply. The Minister said that Finland could be tided over by $7.000,000 worth of food sought in the United States, but that the government's request for a lcmi in that amount. as suggested by the American Mili- iatier to Finland. had been rejected by the United States Koltlalnen expressed amazement at this action. "Surely the Finns proved their good faith in paying their (wan debts," he said. l-Ie attributed Wash- ington's refusal to "malicious re- ports abroad" to the effect that Finland export-s food to Germany. The Minister added that Finland is the only country using the far northern port of Petsamo and that imports are passing through the-"e to nobody but the Finns and llfilgil- g Sweden. nantly recent being sacrificed to their profit. "We would respectfully urge our Provincial Department of Agricul- ture to take any steps 11cc: to combat any such scheme which has been put In force wititout. their approval as the aforesaid which is injurious to the fanncrs and the country as a whole. C. D. Wright. President. Clue. Lord, Secretary. Breaks vision Important gains In Albania By Mn lhrreinon Associated Press Staff Writer Ali-KENS, Jan. l3 —(AP) -Greek soldiers, reporting scant resistance. stabbed deeper into Italian defence positions below Valona today and Greek spokesmen expressed hope this might prove the ggggest offen- sive of the war in Al a. Altnouglh Fascist lines were crumb- ling at solmelpolirécil-s. fiiigilifrrllelieS n} Athens s ac con rma on o reports from the Yugoslav frontier that Tepelenl, fortified mountain town guarding an Italian-built high- way to the port of Valona, had fall- en. Capture of ‘Iiepelenl would give the Greeks a. jumping-off place for a. renewed thrust toward Valona, sole southern Albania port in Ital- ian hands. A companion drive northward r- iong the coast brought the Greeks within 30 miles of Valona. New gains were made also by forces which swept on northward from Kiisura, a strategic central front point tak- en last. week. A government spokesman said the Italians had strengthened their lines with reserves poured into Albania by sea and air but that news from the front showed the situation as "very satisfactory" for the Greeks. More prisoners and many abandon - ed Italian wounded were captured by Greek patrols, he added. "Italian wounded and prisoners belong mostly to troops sent to Al- balnia recently by ship and plane." the spokesman said. A delayed dispatch from an As- sociated Press correspondent ac- companying the Greeks beyond Kli- sura said the Italians there. driven from naturally fonnidabie mountain positions, were compelled to defend much lrss favorable terrain. Tile Greek infclntiyrnen. equipped with automatic rifles and machine Pllns, have bc"n tlrolvn into the action there. the correspondent said, iii hope of chasing the Italians from the southern Dfllf o! Albania. Greek progress was reported so swift that Italian drad still iitfered the ‘athle- field. Behind the front, 600 sclzed lldlizln motor trucks were assembled. interpreting The War y KIRKETTKIDIPS N nitcd Prrss Staff Writer Amendments to British aid Bill introduced Administration Lead- ers Express Willing- ness to Accept Some Restrictions. (By Richard L. Turner, Associated Press Staff Writer) WASHINGTON, Jan. ill-MP)- Amendments to the British ani bill reflecting, in part at least, the ideas of Wendell L. Wilikie, were introduced in the United States House of Representatives today soon after administration leaders had expressed a willingness to ac- cept some restrictions on the polv- ers the measure would give Prc- i sident Roosevelt. After ttllklng with the defeated , Republican presidential nominee by telephone. Representative Ken- neth Simpson (Rep-N. Y.) pro-, posed that the bills grant of l authority be limited to two years and that the legislation specifically name the nations which the Uni- ted States is to assist with loans of war equipment. Simpson. a new member of the House but long prominent in n tional Republican affairs, said i had talked with Willkle before’ presenting his proposals. but did not wish to commit Willklc to them. However, in announcing his general ap roval of the British did bill ysster av. Willkie asked that a time limit be included. Meanwhile Treasury Secretary Morgenthau disclosed that the Bri- | tish Government. in order to gct' dollars to finance the war. negotiating with American invest- ment trusts for sale of an undis- closed amount of British invest- ments in the United States. While the bill. as introduced byy administration leaders ivollld pen. mit the President to lend or otlicr- i wise furnish military supplies to‘ any nation whose defence he con-l siders essential to defence of tliel United states. simpson‘s amend-l merit would authorize help onlv in England. Ireland and members of the British Commonwealth of Na- tions. Before assisting any otllcr nation. he explained, Mr. Roosm‘ velt would have to come back to, Congress for special authowzcltionflt Earlier. Speaker Sam_ Rayburn said he had no opposition to al time limit if it covered the fore- seeable extent of the emergencyni A 60 or 90-day restriction. he ill-i dicated, would not do. Rcpresenta~ tive John McCormuck tDem-l Mass). majority floor leader", W110i attended Rayburns press confer-. ence, added that "some sligges-l lions" for amending the measure . 'bcs_ol LCflillll-Z Italy an- ." blow lll Alianizi bclole, Crrnllillv can gt» effectively to lll0l llc lvcrc stimulated by Romels rc-snufilng 0t‘ tlic FY-ISCiSL army comlilann in rllbaiiia. DisiiitlcfillCllt cf Gen. Soddu for rcllsoiis of" "health" indicates that Rollie fill y recognizes the gravilv [of llic Greek break-through at Kli- . .llr.l. it hints tit :1 ccspcrute cffcit: bv Ml ." ' ta escape ixrscnlal bl" u- til‘ lvnnt might haDDcn to all _ l s. 1st forces iii southern and south t central Albania. i l‘Ul' tin- sclroini time. he has lop- l pcd oil the official head ol__a top- i t. flight Ifasrlst gviielal for fal ure .n the lta 0-0 k campaign. It may his.) be significant that he replaced Soddu with Gen. Ugo Cavalerro i chief of the Fascist army staff, without freeing the latter of his staff , responsibilities. Cavaolero was stepped up to chief ‘cf staff when Marshal Pietro Bado- gho rcsigiiecl. allegedly’ at. his own ‘request. There were many indica- illOllS that Badogllo actually had op- ‘posed the attempted invasion of Greece. In the circumstances. his successor cannot be viewed as other ‘than a Mussolini “yes man." l Soddus "healt "canscaroelyhave become so bad overnight as to call for his removal and resultant staff- ,coiifusloii at so critical a time. He nippears to be a Mussolini scapegoat ‘for the Kiisura break-through. It is a Mussolini habit to visit vengeance quickly on generals who fail him. If Marshal Graziani, com- lniandinr: in Africa. were not virtu- ially isolated, it. seems likely his head also would now be in Ii Duoe's bas- ket of discards. His retention of command after the stunning defeat cf his forces bv the British at Sldi Bari-mil and Bardia may merely. iiiloun that he has been left to his‘ a e. fixplosive Ink ‘There is an inventor in the United States wlho recently received his 753rd patent—one for an ink which has an interesting history (states the New York Times). y A few years ago Mr. Ellis turned fzom his favorite field of synthetic resins and lacquers to printing inks. The late Henry Wise wood. inven- tor and builder of high speed news- paper presses. had told him that an ink was wanted which would dry instantly. With such an ink, ress speeds could be considerably creased. Fired by this suggestion Mr. Ellis began to experiment. His first hik set with the suddennem of all cXploslon and blasted the an. paratus in which it was llSBd. - Ellis was as delighted as Desel when his first engine blew up. The principle was right, but. the pro- cess of setting too fast. Mr. Ellis thcn decided to work backward from his explosive ink and slow down its setting. Out of his work came the newly patented ink, a thermal settng lirk. it may be called. fOr it stays d-v at normal te-mperatuzm but dries very rapidly when slight- ly heated. Mr. Elllsis ink is alarmingly des- cribed as “a. dihydric alcohol poly- ester oi an unsaturated dlcarboxy- Iic acid selected from the I-“fllll? consisting of fumes-is malclc cit- rncaconc and itaconlc acids." which information is thrown out for the mils-fit of the chemists who rind this. Certain catalysts are incor- porated which speed up the drying at increased tiempsrattite. Just to put the do-t 0n th~ "i" of his work Mr. Ellis sat down and wrote a book on printing inks. l" had been offered "from the con-j,“ strllclive uncle." lt- appeared probable to maiiv in.‘ close touch with the dcvclopingl . tuation that there is an evcciiciit‘ prospect tllc measure will include‘ a time limitation, at least. It was! obvious the administration hild re- " sorted to the familial" wrnleuv o tlFkiilq for more than it fcit it.‘ really needed. so that it might b!‘ in a position to linrmlin some of its proposals alvcll" dill-inc con-‘ gressional discussion of the legisla- tlOll. 1 lPnris is the F ’ ii‘. a niiiitnryl zone, under military e rule administered by a triumphant army, whose frontiers and whose only exit is one bottle- Representatives At Conference OTTAWA. Jan. 13-(CP)—The Dominion Government's official representatives to the Dominion- Provinclai conference opening her t tomorrow morning will be a members of the cabinet. headed by i Prime Minister Mackenzie King as general conference chairman, a conference directory issued by the Government showed tonight. Following are the Dominion committee members:- Finance Chairman: Finance Minister Lslcy- Secretary: R. B. Bryce, fili- ancial investigator, Finance De- partment. Dominion representative: Rev- enue Minister Gibson, Public Works Minister Cardin. Mines Minister Crerar. Navy Minister Macdoiiaid, and Air Minister Power. Labor and unemployment Chairman: Labor Minister Mc- Larty; secretary: A. MacNamara, associate deputy labor minister. Dominion representatives: Pen- sion Minister Mackenzie, Hoii. P. F. Cusgraln. Secretary of State, and Afurlitiolis Minister Howe who IJIYsllIESS for some weeks. Special problems Chairman: Agriculture Minister Gardiner; secretary: J. F. Muc- IJv-lli. department of justice. General Mulock. _ Constitutional: Justice Minister ALBIIRRY PLAINS t; i. The regular li aQ-igv, of the Al- berry Plains W. l. has held at tilt‘ home of Mrs. Slvilv McMillan on Tuesday. January 7th. The meeting opened by singing "O Ca-nmh" Co!- lowed by repeating the Crccd in unison. Roll call was answcrcll by naming a vitamin and its chief source of supply. The Secretary was asked to write for a Tfmlltil‘! bu“ - le. Next meeting to be held at. thc roll home of Mrs. E. D. Pl"ll§7’l call to be answered by oxen.‘ valentines. Miss Louise was asked to make on‘. iivxt lnoll‘. program. The program consisted cf a read- ing by Mrs. Norrnnn Mrlchlliiun ni-d a contest by Miss Louise M"cLcn-i. dental equipment is from the Unit/ed 51.8098. the prize being awrardrd in W's G. Ncirlv three-fourths of Cliinakfil Pfllfslll. Th’: siu"i:i~ of ti" N ~- Honal Anthem brought the niceiliig to a close. ‘zliiolvcci for dinner. liar: of this latter to aid in trans- Lisbon. side were established. muny people would decline to leave. But the_v‘d like to know fir-s been in Britain on government '=. Dominion representatives: Tracie i“ lvliiiistcr MacKinnon. fisheries , Miruster Miciiaud, Postmaster ; Paris has had ifiase of ‘jitters’ From occupation IAssociated Press Correspondent Roy P. Porter has just returned to the United States after a 3 1-2 year assignment in Europe, rin- cipally in Paris. l-le was here when the Germans entered. He has lived for six months under the German military rule. In this _fli- ticlc he. tells how the occupation has affected the French.) (By Roy P. Porter, Associated Press staff Writer) NEW YORK. _Jan. l3—fAP\-—_ Paris ulas suffering from a bad case of “occupation Jitters" under German military rule when I left there the second week in Decem- i. There was no famine. but there were deficiency diseases and dl es- tive troubles. ‘There were recurr n3. temporary shortages of some food- stuffs. _ 'I'liere was no general disorder. ‘There were isolated localized "iri- cidents," largely provoked by La- lll'l tempers. sometimes heightened by ton much wine. There was no organized resistance to the Ger- man occupation. It's not fun to live in occupied France any more than it's fun for any people to live under any kind f . o Kensmirton And Vicinity Mr. T. W. Bentiey 4f Charlotte town was lIl Kciisington on Sat iirday on busines. Among the many business V1.51- tors to Charlottetown on Saturday were Messrs. William Profitt, Ei- pier Bernard and Ftedrrick Dav- FOR Mrs. Altrrt l‘ ll;..\ ir- luiiild to her ilflilll lll Fl'f€t"\\f'i after a we v..e.t wllh iicr daughter, Mr. ‘Isaac “laiker here. Pie. J lin S Burns cf tile Valer- ‘is’ Home Guard iii ‘ ll'l’li5‘~ iO\\ll arrived iiitiie Hutu ly on a lfolirreeii (lav fllrlr all lziizl l.) ic- cziving a viaini \\ came. Mrs. Albeit hicmarl SfiFlit the weekend in Cilfll‘i.'}l"i'.')\\'l’l the gues: of Mr. and 1.: Alislln Trainer Mi‘. Arthur Ready win lllfl bccn empiqved on the Cllfl"'i‘l'€if‘"'ll Airport job during the "post [HE months, due to unfavorable iv 1k- iiig COIidiIZOIIS. arrived h'me Sal- urday evening and will rennin, Lill- til called back. ‘I'm. Misses Agnes McKenna and Roma Kilbride spent the weekerd of military occupation authority. . l -. _ A serious transport problem has rejmues and ‘fiends m B“ result-ed in intermittent food 5h°11“"g°5- " Mr. George Brokins arrived Leather Scarce Leather is short because many taiiiieries were damaged or are unable to get skins in from the unoccupied parts of the country. Soap is scarce because the oils liscd in its manufacture come from North Africa to factories in unoccupied France. Sugar is beginning to be lacking because the beetfields in the north nil-cultivated and torn up by mili- taiy operations, will Produce only about 25 per cent o the normal c. f . The most strictly rationed food is mutt, because it's difficult to move in large quantities and more difficult to kccp in a country where there is little refrigeration. But any Parisian, if he manages wcll. can eat enough to keep hmllliy for the present. Molidrlv. Tuesday and Wednes- duy 0t each week are nominally nlecttiess dais. Thursday beefsteaks a pear ag- ain. while Friday is stii a meat day, evcn fci" the Catholics who have been granted a special dis- penslll ion. lrclnv and Sunday you can almost HilKiillIlE you please. if i s available. Bllt there are addi- tional complications. If You order meat for lunch in a restaurant. you coil‘: also have cheese for the same nieni. And on only one night \v.<k-Slllidn_v-are meat dishes 9ft RflilOlllilV is strictly supervised by the Ccrlnnns who have slir- vcyed existing food stocks. Actual cnforccnicrt is left to the French ndniiliistrntion. mflll army units have all the l" fiiev need, part of it, lc from tllPll‘ own country, l'ic i-cst from stocks seized in P2111161‘. Nolv they are releasing a lic<~vlitinn of foodstuffs. The worst of all symptoms in depression fear. un- zlvolzlulaie feeling of being caught are sealed neck for all continental Europe- If a wide gate toward the out- that it's open-just in case. Doubt U. S. can Produce 50,000 Planes annually WASHINGTON, Jan. 13 —(AP)- Doubt was expressed today that the United States can ever attain the mass-production basis needed to produce 50.000 aircraft annually. the goal sit by the Roosevelt adminis- trulion. The reason such a goal may be unattainable, said Cari Vinson. Georgia Democrat who heads the Hausa of ROQTGSBDLBUVBS Naval committee. is that it is necessary to improve continually military and "naval plzliics. Ho made the statement after a rmss at a committee study of pro- ss on the national defence pro- gram said mass production in the future appeared doubtful because of ncqllciit. changes in dcslin to in- criiorate lessons learn/ii in the there and r. "Tint means,“ Vinson said, "that it will be iriipossible to achieve 50.- 000 planes of the very latest dell-l n flllfl type because by the time they actually went on the line they would dance under the auspices of C.W.L. and sponsored by Mrs. Wil- Iiam Hickey". Miss Lellan and Miss Imelda was held in the McMahon House ei-t, have returned where thev had gone in search o: employment. fiome on Saturday evening from a business trip to Amherst, N. S. Miss Rena. Kennedy spent the weekend with friends in Char- lotto-town. Mr. George Bukiiali. employee of t-he Bank of Nova Scotxi. who is at present relelving Mr. B yd Bear- lsto, in the branch office here, spcm the weekend at his home in Charlottetown. Mr. Gerald MacLmri local car- penter emplcyed in Charlottetown, spent the weekend ivizii hi5 wife and family in Kensingtcn card part-y and the A successful Augusta Mc- McLeiian last Friday evening. Mrs. Percy McCarveil carried vff the ladieg prize and Mr. Daniel Giiils was the winner of the gentleman's prize The government snow icw after several days of snow f.g. Lug ar- rived ln Kcnszngton on Saturday afternoon and contirivied on u: Summerside once again opening mDtTX‘ traffic, TheKensington Rink is the gathering place for al; the _\'1'Jlll‘.‘l0I' set and many of our older fclkg {i s week. H. the highway t Bristol and Vicinity Mrs. Fulton Dougim, Savage Han bor. spent the week-end in Bristol. the guest of her sister. Mrs. Effir McEwen. Miss May Mosher has returned t4 work in the city. after spending a few days at her home here. Mr. Alex Birt. has gone to the city where he is employed on the buildl léii! bglng erected for the Veterans‘ uur . Several cars were stalled here on Sunday in the storm. Palmer was in thl Miss Mary city Saturday on business. Mr. Walter Squires and son Rob- from Halifax, The Morell Rink opened for thc first skate on Saturday night. The boys had the open air rink i-eadv some time ago. but t-iie recent thaw swept the ice sheet away. The first hockey game is expect- ed this week, when the boys will play hosts to Hoimairs in a return game. Friends of Mrs. B. W. IVlcEwcn. Morell, will be ‘picascd she is re- ported much improved in the lice- Dltal. Friends here and in Mount Stew- art will learn with regret that Mr. D. McDoiinld had his leg crushed in the lumber woods fast week. Mr. McDonald llllfl bccii home for rize holiday season and had (lliv bcen back to work a few days when the accident happened. The iillllred man was removed to the hospital at Truro. N S E . International At A Glance ~ . a me i r o nvia- j x ' Y. , ment for Montreal-St. LMNlTilCP-i B“.“1“l°.WYIFht-.“Ce presld‘j’.nt°l 5g Gem- e_ ‘Cllrliss-Wi-ignt s ilirplalic division. Domin on reprQsentativfsf Dc- iliicl other witnesses said production fence Minister Raiston who has l0! Na“ Tm” ("PM Blllflill 118d soil" been in Britain (alternate, Navy ‘lolly-old nlore rapidly than had TWO" Minister Macdoilaid), ,flllC'llO‘ll for the United States arm, and navy because British engineers lnuric fclvcr revisions iii design. _ Whcii coliiinitlec members riske: ‘about the yiosslbilltics nf increased; prccillc ion if the industry snould go 10h a se'ce';i-da_t' vvcck, Wright e.\'— prcssed the opinion that continuous operation would b; ginwise. ‘liiiil- for liiucniiic maintenance iwolild be iniidcqunlc he said. A110 thc pare would “burn out" execu- tive, ndliiitiistiitlive and superna- _ul'_\' pclsoiiiici. Wright declined to express an ‘flpilllfil on the qlirsxion of wnzn 1,(lt"l"‘l the Liiiitcd States could sill‘- clllrllire its planes alirl u". c itroductisn." M"ny changes, , llci-s still bring mare. l inll problii" T." il”\'f‘l' go- ‘ilv: in hit m-lss mull-mien?" Rep- : e C. Vi. Drlrciexl (Deni.- , iv (i(‘.'*-.i\ liok likc it now,“ the wit- liiess replied. ‘wry (lJFbflllil it certatn- . By The Oa-iiadinn Press LONDOX-Nnzis nick solnhivc-s wonstnl town for concentrated al.- dark" R..\.l~“. uiulouncas lands on ‘ A. shipping and oi. rcsluios. A.\l\ARA.—'l‘urkoy secs Bulgaril 511s striving to kccp nut of war: lur- klsh rnmlnamiers l-mlfcr with Brit- isli military lenders. _ . SOFL-M-Gclini-in diplomatic ac- ltlvity in Bulgarian rapitnblntrlisl flollnwlng silltening of Soviet atti- tude on Bahcillis. i (YAlRO.—-R.A.l-‘. gains air surre- rnncy in Libvn as far west as Ben» at; army . s nrmiml Tobruk. TIIENS. reeks push on to guard \aln|in. hoping in turn pre {sent advance into greatest opera ltlon of the war. ROME-Mussolini replaces ltuli tan commander in Albania. appoint ing (tr-n. (‘zlvalicro to task of slow in; itn isms‘ retreat. i I\ZONTE\'IDEO.—FreIirh shin at iteinpting in run British brockadl flivvs up and stcams buck to Men ievidro as British auxiliary cruisei keeps ivntch. Pidv .2 of music by Civliill. flit 1 Poiisli immortal, has been balm-- P l Poland.