aPRlL__23. __1948 iiS___ Fritz wesrean GUARDIAN - ; shears. J. Elmer Murphy. 188 Hanover Street. IF‘ George Clow, 125 Oltlwl Street- - SUMMIJRSIDE and rnmca cons-rs ~ News, Subscription], Advertlilnl- uardian may be bought It Ill! 0f 4310 following stores tn Summer-side: 't Str t; Gourllea D 5'" Bookfimre’ “ll/Eler Slieet; Mark Gau et. 61 Granville Street: Russell Street; Alyre Douoette'a Grocery, Second Street; Island Motor Transport, Water Street. ‘om, 1,, Bakery. “my; Grocery. store. Bl Central Street; d1 y or 18o per week. m- glff? Your ..c0.u.\|uNl1\ FQQHS Bros. mars. p911 sate-toss MastcrChev- a, Sedan, with 1948 license and Elam; Everett Donald. 1491151118" lon- __wANTED. - Married {um “Cry; Good wages. Henderson. Bedeql1°~ i'lJ\'l‘E and 184T Sold by Moase Jew- man for Argold A-‘Oit SALE-Ballad shavings. Urloadxug 0i- Kensmgw“ Thug’ d... and Friday. Colin Waugh. wtlrnot. 43110801! 0F ENGLAND-N" Londun Pfl-Yllll. Amll 25th, (Ollfbll Sunday alter Easter, 2.30, evening pra,.9,.‘5~__ staphens Church, Bur- Lnggoll. The Wardens. 4.01s OF ALARM CLOCKS. ‘my rocket Watches made by Westlox, All models and prices. at Moose Jewellers. .40 RENT-Newly renovated house, Comor- Poplar Avenue and mks Street, Summerside. Apply 11.1‘. Morrison Co. Summerside. will be delivered to any home in Summerslde by Carrier Phone 288 or zto-z for this service order to the boy msponaible for delivery on your route. '-cnn.nanu's Print. Dresses. sizes 3-7, at Pearson's Ready-to- Wear, Remington. -LOADING lIOGS at Northam every Monday and Tuesday morn- ing until train time. Contact char- les MacKay for detailed inform- ation. -BEDEQUE UNITED CHURCH Charge-Services Sunday. April 25th: Bedeque ll. a.m.; Borden 3 p.m.; Albany 7.30 pm. Rev. W.B. Crowe, B.A., Minister. .—ISI..ANDER DEAD-RC. Hayes of Tyne Valley received word from Calgary recently that his brother- in-lsrv, Montague Robertson. died at his home in that city on Mon- day, April 12th. aged eighty-seven years. Mr. Robertson was a native of Montague and was at one time Postmaster there. He moved to Calgary in 1912. and in i913 he married Maud Hayes of Ellerslie who predeceased h'im on March 20th, 1947. There is left to mbum his passing. a daughter. Margaret. a nurse. who was with hirn during: hls illness. -LOADlNG DOGS at Alberton every Monday. For detailed in- formation contact J.W.D. Camp- bell. ‘ -LOADING DOGS at Olen-r! every Monday. For detailed infor- mation contact Ralph Adams. -LOADI.NG HOG! ovary Mon- day at Conway. Ibr detailed in- formation contact H. E. Phillips. —LOADLNG IIOGS at Wellifll- ton every Monday. For detailed information contact Fidele Gal- lant. ' —EMPLOYMENT OFFICE liti- PROVED-Slnce the offices oi tne Unemployment Insurance Com mission have been moved to the former Masonic section of the Journal Building a number of im- provements have been made. Form- erly the offices were separated at opposite ends of the building with no connection between them. Now they are all Wflether occupying two floors. The upstairs section has been redecorated and it ts expect- ed that the lower floor will be done as well. There is now a large reception office for the puoil»: where a number of people can gather with no crowding. New counters have been added and the latest. addition to the furnishings is venetian blinds for all the win- dows winch add greatly to the appearance of the offlces.-S. Personals -Mr. and Mrs. George Key and their son, Mr. George Key. J11. motored from Summerside to Moncton, on Wednesday. there Mr. George Key. Jr». proceed by train to Belleville and Toronto on business-S. SUNKIST 344's Reg. 26c Doz. doz. 45¢ NEWTON‘S Eating 100's Regular 75c Doz. t... lifts: Ponriaurfs BONELESS "Regular 69c lb. 50¢ corrncc ROLL MAPLE LEAF Regular 69c lb. ,»60o coerce CHASE and SANBORN l lb. Bog, Regular 67c <63c~ Regular 3 For 25c SP ECIAL__ Per Dozen Tins Only _, 92c HEINZ 5T SAIIDE Regular 28c 25c X. L. ensue Regulor 32 DELICIOUS KRAFT IIIIIIIERS Regular 21c 18c l Lb. Tin mesa seer, Regulor 42c 37c PEACHES ARKELL, Choice Quality Regular 32c Tin .. 2 tins 57¢ IlILL PI GKLES SPICY, 24 oz. bottle Regular 32c . . . . . . . 14¢ JDIIP ' Clerk's TOMATO l0 oz. Tin. Regular l0c 3 tins 23¢ JAM l Swonsdown i cuts _FLDlllt . SEGULAR . 5c Pkg. 4 Regular 39c lb.;. SPECIAL- Lb m w 32c llard lllxod Dandy 29c X. L. RASPBERRY, 32 oz. bottle. Regular 59c . .. lien: _.l_lllDE KEL Crushed 20 oz. Tin . ... 2 Shit! tins 21¢ ' she finally succumbed. The ma evaporate. “chansons-rows: To Add Domestic Science Doursc At S'sidc School A course in domestic science will be added to the subiects taught at the Surmnorside lllgh School next year, it has been learned, and Miss Ruby McNcilJ, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. John F. McNeill of Summer- slde has been appointed as the first teacher of that deparment. This is the second departure from the regular courses taught .n r. island schools. 'I\he flrsfPwas W0 Year! ago when a music wacher was added tcrthe staff. Mia McNeill graduated from Acaria University in 1941 with her Bachelor of Science Degree in home economics. Since that time she has worked with the Consumers Branch ‘of the Department o! Agriculture. Ottawa, and taught) for one year at Bransccmbe Hail, Tononln. one year at Acadia University as a substitute wihile a member of the regular faculty, Miss Balsa: was engaged in post- graduate work. and also fortwo years at Ontario Ladies College. Whitby, Ont. She now has an assistantship at Macdonald College while she is working on a. Master's Degree in Nutrition, which she will receive from McGlll University this summer. The school is already supplied with most oi the equipment necessary for this course. There is a large kitchen in the basement which oon-tains adequate cupboards, a coal range, an electric refrigerator (which was donated this year by the Y's Men's Club) and a sink. The kitchen was reconditioned last. fall after several years as a storage room and has been in constant use in connection with the hot lunch program which was innovated this year. -S Former Grand River Woman Dies Suddenly. Mrs. Cornelius MacLellan passed away unexpectedly just before noon yesterday at the home of Dr. and Mrs. A. R. Grant, Summersitle. She had endured a. hear‘. condition for some years and it was to this la'e Mrs. Macliellan wasup and about as usual yesterday morning and after eating breakfast did some sewing, trimming a hat among other things. Since shortly-after the death. of her husband twelve years ago the late Mrs. MacLellan has lived with her son-ln-law and daugIh-ter, Dr. and Mrs. A. R. Grant and also made extended visits to her second daughter, Mrs. Russell Crockett Windsor? N. S. She. had returned to Summetside only a week before her’ death after having spent the winter in Windsor. ' ‘Mrs. MuLellan was a member of one of the pioneer ‘amillcs which has left its mark upon the parish of Grand River, Lot l4, being before marriage Rosella Mac- Kinncn. Slhe resided most of her life in her native parish. or until 1923 when she and her husband vacated their homestead farm (now occupied by their son Alphonsus, with l1.is wife and frmily) ".0 move to Mlscouche. Her husband died in Mlscouohe in 1935 and after that she moved 7.0 Surnmerside with her daughter, Mrs. Grant. The late Mrs. MacLellan was a gracious hostess and her home in Grand River and in Miscouche. was a delightful place w visit. Many social and community functions took place in the Mac- bcllan home where friend or stranger received a hearty wel- come and enjoyed iull liospitalitv and entertainment. Her lovable " position endeared her to all with whom she came in contact and her friendly nature and fine character will ever remain a pleasant and enabling memory ‘o her relatives and friends. The following sons and daughters mourn: Alphonsus. John Roy, Sask- smhqwan; Mrs. A. R. Grant. Suynznerslda and Mrs. R- ‘M- Crockett. Wnidsor, N. S. Also the following sisters: Mrs. Frank Gillls, Bayslde; Mrs. Joseph J. Mac- Lellan, Grand River; Reverend Sister Mary Ignatius and Rever- end Sister Gertrude Leo. both of the Order of the Sisters of Charity 0f St. Vincent's De Paul in Nflw Jersey. Two other sisters, Reverend Sister Dolorlne of the Order of Si. Vincent De Paul and lvirs. Venintius Morrison. Bayside 019' deceased her. The funeral will are elm from the residence of Dr. A. R. Grant on Saturday morning. leavlnz i119 house at 8:45 o'clock fol‘ GN-ld River where the funeral mass will be celebrated at l0 661ml!- ___________ BU SEAN D FIT-BED rum-cumin LAKE. om.- Avril n - (or) - rem 1mm“- huabsnd o! Lucille Lamarche - dtarged with murder after I191‘ g Ila-old son was burned t0 death -- was free today. A charge of “gg-gnqv against him was withdrawn." He had been at 3111"‘ 4y on go property ball follow- lnq the death of his son. ' _ smr and; 1-0 lit-JSSIA 'wN-mm_ April 22 - (Reutersl rm thousand tons of llfhl “all! ‘vlth the n Ir KWQQW" “s have been nhipped b! 3W1"! ‘t soviet Russia, Harold Wlllfm- ecldent oftho Board 0f T“!!! ‘d the House. of Commons to- iy.’ Another 0.890 tons are beln: leaded. I ~ < IP19 DEMON! The first motorist to be fined for weeding paid $10 for driving at l0 miles an hour. tslmmcnsinlefl” tom (FRL) and m. Dunyl F Zunurk potent, Hill AHUHEWS ANE WYAll ~ IEE l. COBB Dnctll-d by [lli Rl-Iil Produced h. lDUISu: RliEillNllN A cmruav For TRIUMPH‘ u Also Laurel-Hardy Comedy Shows 7:l5-9:l5 Matinee Saturday 2530 REGENT FRIDAY and SATURDAY All’, viewer "All - MeLAGLIN llIA may " JOHNSON-DIVINE ___ A UNIVERSAL rlcwn: Shows 7:15 and 9:15 Matinee Friday 3:30 GRAPAIIII TII EATRE IASIED IAIDIIS W" '- IIP FRONTIER Iii AISOI-IIIRMI WAVE! m .._<._ JAMES WARREN ,, If!!! ILDEI » STEVE lllllli. _ Also Two Comedy Reels Shows Fri-Sat. 8zl5 =>co~ai>oo%co<>co§co<§o GIIWiEO TiiEATIlE NSINGTON Friday 7-D Saturday Matinee 2:30; Evening 7-9 E-‘illlflslyc drama of a man's Court- room fight for his life. Robert Young In “THEY WON'T BELIEVE ME" lie admitted too many Romances, but not Murder. Also starring 5115311 Hayward, June Greer and ' Rita. Johnson. Also Serial and News flboo-isw-oo-Q-soau-oo-t-ooc Well Known Commercial Traveller Dies The death of Arthur L. Mac- Lebd 1t his home In Port Elgln YQ-Bifirdfly will be learned wiuh. regret by many friends through- out the Maritlmes. Mr. McLeod was a commercial ‘traveller in New Brunswick. Prince Edward Island and the Gaspe coast for the W. R. Brock Company Limited of Montreal and was a director of the firm prior to 1945. He was honored ‘by the firm and his associates in 1945 on “the complet- ion of forty years service and shortly afterwards went into retirement. l-le continued however to maintain connections with many of his older customers up until the time of his death. A son of the late John and Mary McLeod and pioneer stock of New Brunswick. he was an ardent member of the Presbyterian Church and was a member of the board of management of St. James Presby- térim Church in Port Elgln a: ‘the time of his death. He was s keen hortlculturist and cultivated a widely adcnired flower garden at his home and maintain- ed an almost universal interest In flowers. Mrs. Fred Magec and Miss Grace McLeod of Port Elgin and Mrs. Frank Raw-orth of Upper Cape. and two brothers. F. E. McLeod of Lacombc, Alberta and Clarence Mc- Leod of Imherst. The funeral will be held from ‘ahe- St. James Presbyterian Church in Port Elgin on Saturday at 2:30 pm. with burial in Fernwood Cemetery. rm; causes 01am COBURO. Ont. April 32 ~40?) -A mmouidering fire. believed to have started from a clgaret, suf- focated Melville Bowen 40. at his home here today. Ilrctnen were ‘called by a neighbor who earw the moire but Bowen was dead when they arrived . I". v - QOOQCOOOOOO-OQ-QOO-QQ Q§OOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOQO4 l-le is survived by three sisters. r P A fill} ELEVEN Spring’: Coot is fitted and o: tltesilliouel-fe beneath I slander sheath or foshio furn buck cull. fashion of '48. SIIIIRTIES LIIIIGS 22.50 Spring’: coat is cut with brevity, short and shorp and usually bright or styled with o geiitle line, a softened shoulder, u dept-h of collar and a These Spring Coors appear of Smollrncn’: in o great selection fashioned with the floir, the grace, the individual chat... flrof is o port of i-he romantic 24.75 to 59.50 ‘The and SHORT 0i it! flared - if; wrapped It ned softly, Icoss or lull. to 49.50 Mal! Store Section Where Price With Quality Matched Dover Still Bears Many ‘Scars Df War (By Norman Crlbhensi DOVER. Kent. England. April 22 —(CPl—When residents of "Hed- fire Corner" on England's south- east tip look back on their war experiences they remember that. their hottest times came nhen Canadian troops were storming German gun emplacements on the - French coast. In that autumn of 1944. the Ger- mans hurled all the arnmunitiov they had at hand across the Eng- lish Channel before retreating. "We lived in a state of night- mare for nearly a iveek," said F. G. Simpson, Dover's buildingnn» spector, "Most of us grew fatalistic. It was either your house, the housr. neat door or the house across the way. The shells were thrown hzgh, over the channel so that they (ell on us like bombs and we did not hear them coming." Nearly four years after, Dover still bears heavy scars. Outside the battered railway station. one of its entrances heaped with broken bricks, is the skeleton of a once- prosperotiifcomrxierclal hotel. Near- by is’ Fburnt-out dry goods store and. yards along the street, a damaged Wesleyan Church. its own oak porch lying flat across the entrance, where lt fell in Novem- ber. i944. t One in every six or seven houses is shell-holed; one in every 20 a uln. Dover's pre-war population of 45.000 had shrunk to 17.000 in i844 and even today it is only 32.000. The last shell to [all on Dover —on Nov. l2. IBM-demolished 1n umbrella repair shop In the high street. - , Though repair of shelled houses proceeds slowly. hundreds of tiew bungalows-most of them pre- fsbrlcnted-mavc sprung up around the city on what used to be icrthe farmland. Weather May Dause Minc Disaster (By Frank Carey) WASHINGTON, April 22—(AP) -Mine disasters may be caused by the weather, a Pennsylvania scien- tist said today. Dr. Charles L. l-losler of Pennsyl- vania state College told of research which "strongly indicates a re- lationship between the occurrence of coal mine explosions and the pressure changes accompanying certain (weather) situations." He said -the research shows "the feasibility of forecasting periods of dangerous accumulation of corn- bustlble gas mixtures in cos. mines." Hosler prepared his report for the 29th annual meeting of ‘he American Geophysical Union. l-le said his conclusions were based on a study of weather coo ditions preceding all 4,1 msjsr mine explosions in the United States during the last l2 years. ‘Three disasters-including such explosions as the one at Cent-rails, 111-. March 26. Did-killed 725 men. Records of weather stations closest to the explosion sites seem to indicate, Hoslcr said, that, n: general. mine explosions "occur {when the (barometric) pressure is 0w." He said that explosive gases come from spaces between layers of coal. They also are being pro- duced constantly by chemical changes within the coal itself. They escape slowly from some sites and in greater volume trim others. ventilating systems are de- signed to eliminate them. But Hosler said his research in- dicates that sharp falls in baro- metric pressure conceivably cmnd cause a more rapid release of gas. setting up conditions for an u- ploslon in the presence of a spars or other igniting source. —-G. l-l. M.- Tho E. D. Smith Pure Jams are stocked in the Grocery Department ...These Jams are made of the choicest fruits and sugar-to which n1 pectin, no artificial coloring or no preservative has been added. in the Zi-ounee glass Jars you will find Damoon Jam or Grape Jam priced at 46 ecnts...ln the lZ-ounce Jars is Black Currant Jam priced at t0 cents and Cherry Jam priced at 36 cents. These E. D. Smith Products are delicious and so different from the usual run of commercial tama- you should try them. Grocery Department. For Teenag with Tunamies the Junior Nemo sensation Elastic Girdle will smooth out unnecessary and unwanted bulges and bumps. These two-way stretch Junior Glrdles are short and light-weight, they are in sires 25 to 28, colors white and tea rose and the price ls 3.00. llere, you will also find white and tea role Nylon Garter Delta with hook fasteners and an elastic Insert. These are in sites small and medium. priced at 1.29 each. Young girls will like these garments and their dresses will look smarter and neater one a Junior Foundation Garment. Youth Centre. May the 9th ls getting closer and eloser—of course you know that May the 9th Is Mother's Day. the one day in all the year that ts spoo- lully set aside for remembering YOUR, MOTHER. The Contts Mother's flay Cards on display in the China Department are there for 1011.... You'll be able to choose Just the Card that your Mother will love. Come ln today and see them-they're priced from 5 to M cents each. DIVER, RESCUE!) mew some April 22 - (CPiI - lldovard Christensen, s liver imprisoned for three hours under York harbor, was freed broughl m the surface Iodm‘. and i a ton: of mud cn the bottom of New l ‘ the 9th will soon he here-so choose the Card for YOUR MOTHER. China Departnsmt. I'm sure that you need a new Wool Ito; for your the Dry Goods Dqit. are genuine Scottish Tartan Car Rags of the finest brushed wool; these are ln two rises-JED x B! priced at 0,50 sub. and 58 x ‘l0 priced at 9.00 each. You'll be proud to have any one of then warm wool ltugs for your ear...'l'here is only a limited lumber b slnck — so, shop early. Dry Goods Depurtlnent.