THE "GUARDIAN. cuanwrrerowiy I and A illoticesi Mm” man 8001:; Norwegian i A 3o.polnc Canadian moose . had, once exhibited at the W6!!!- ? bley Exhibition in Ensllnd. his I been presented to the 3nd BOI- iun Troop. Oslo. N0l'WIy- by SM!” ley G. MacDonald. Commercial .seu-gtgry of the Canadian Leg- slion in Oslo. The moose head was accepted for the Butt!!! Scouts by their Scoutmastcr. Cap- lain Olav Reed-Olson. who or- ganized and directed a Scout an-gap on Toronto's waterfront during World War 1!. on Duty Ag World Church Meet During the World Conference of Churches in Toronto this month. Boy Scouts from Toronto Troops are on duty as messenge . and ushers. Some 5.000 people are at- tending the sessions. Rags To Riches By collecting rags. Fort William. iOnt.. Boy Scouts raised 5400 for the Manitoba Flood Relief Fund. They washed the rags and sold them to garages and various in- dustrial plants. General Spry to England and Portugal Mai.-Gen. D. C. Spry. Chief Ex- .-cutlve C issloner of Canada's Boy Scouts will attend a meet- ing at the International Training Team at Gilweli Park. England from Sept. 5 to 7. General Spry will also attend a meeting of the international Scout Committee at Lisbon. Portugal. September 17 and 13. . Iapan and Uruguay Accepted In World Scouting The applications of the Boy Iscouts of Japan and the Boy Scouts Del Uruguay have been approved by the International Committee. Both these Associa- itlons are new members of the Boy Scouts international Bureau. governing body of Scouting throughout, the world. wastc Paper Builds Scout llall At Medicine Hat. Alberta. a S15.- 000 Boy Scout hall. built from the proceeds of Scout waste paper collections and untirlng labour by some 70 boys of the Riverside Boy Scouts Association. has lust been officially opened by the Hon. N. l. Tanner. Alberta's Provincial Scout Commissioner and Resources Minister. IN MEMORIAM in loving nrssnssry of Bruce soar- Irl. Bradalbana,.who passed away hrust ssra. me. My heart is sad and lonely. For the wound was very sore. and althcf four years have passed V and gone. lmlss him more and more. He was taken without warning To brighiar mansions of blast, But though he is gone from amongst us. lnlnyhcsrt hswillslwaysremain. git is not the tears at the moment N shod 5ThI0lollofthahsarithaiIaias-n. .-Int the secret tearsin the after 7 non. . "51"! thosrioflhatiasiianiiy barns. Sadly Milatllbylils-Wife. cmloi Thanks The family of the p... .. gr org;-,'-ivy, a 4.5;, . - Hospital who attended Mrs. Iraham in her last illness. Also all 3 d friends and acquaintances wh: t flowers. telegrams. cards and 9!-Ell ympsthy of P. B. Is- , M and Ottawa. ont.. Also their neighbours and all who help- '94 t-Ilium in their time of sorrow -- oss. , . IPIING VALLEY W. L 4. , ' Mrs. Gordon nryantcn was host- to the qn-ing Vail W.1. for 5" Ausust meeting. s most- Glitnsd with the ode and creed p" unison. Fifteen members and .2: visitors were present. one sick "11 was made. New sick commit- ! '.Nl1llII. del- convsntion, gave an of the meetings. IADIATOI ltlty. Ida.1Istt'a Battery Service. . Do Ont; Betty of the Queen THE lCE3N'l'lIgiAgL. GUARDIAN rhlssoluahrssuvssfasasn Iflosalistsrsstpbaiadvilmgsf anowonahranay bailulssl dIuuIhI”&dd&gp ablciaadvaasa U00I'I for Photographs JIIIEUI TAXI. Phone - DI. rill!!!)cesspoo- llllndlll. Harrington supper. AllI'lII 28rd. starting 5 o'clock. aowaao ssscsmus soon was at in Queen strut. V I v MI8. JOIINITONB l.AD1l8' WltAB. - Goods clearing below cos . cuanaxcs sans. all stock suits and top coats. J. P. Mac- Pherson st Son. Queen Street. one s x 1 nrlnaaoesssrrr given with every roll of film. lin- lshed at Burke's Portrait studio. Charlottetown. SEPT. 2131', and and 23rd, Trade and Industries Fair at Charlottetown Armourles. A Y's Men's project. UNLOADING COAL-A. Pick- srd dz Co. are unloading cars of lnverncss, Springhiil, Albion and lntercolonlai screened coal. DO YOU WANT A LAUGH. Fol- low the crowd to Donkey Baseball Game. Provincial Exhibition Grounds, Thursday evening. CITY POLICE covwr - At the stipendiary Magistrates Court yesterday. a case of summary ejectmcnt. which was adjourned for two weeks was the only case to be heard. - HOME ON VISIT-Mr. Alger B. Pollard returned from Halifax Sat- urday night on a short visit to his home in New Haven. a will return Tuesday to join his unit for train- ing elsewhere. Mr. Pollard is am- ong the first group of thirty six applicants to leave for Halifax. IN MEEQRIAM LEIGH MANDIBBON ' bitlon Grounds. 6 There passed away at the home of his sister in Sault ate. Marla, Ont... on Tuesday, August lbth. I-welsh Mulder . and as. He was stricken on Sunday with Pullomy- aims and was given immediate treatment including the use of an iron lung and the services of three nurses and two doctors. Despite all human aid his condition became. more grave as the hours passed ant. the end came swiftly at the above named date. The remains were sent home and on Friday at 5 o'clock a service was held in the United Church at Cen- tral, Lot l6. which was his former home. A beautiful service was con- ducted by Rev. Dr. 3. 17.. Prime who read the 23rd Psalm. Prince spoke feelingly of the youns man who was so often seen in a boat on the river and bow now he had. ruched an area of calm. Ks quoted from Tcnnyscn's beautiful and familiar poem. Oroasing the Bar. several stsnsss which were touch- lllgly fitted to that rt of the young man's life will had to do with the sea. Hymns, Jesus. Lover of My soul and Nearer My God to Thee were sung. He had been in Bault Ste. Marie only a month and worked in the steel mill there. There is lsft to mourn his early passing his sor- rowing mother. sewn sistsrs namely. Jean, Ilrs. Alvin Webb. 0'Lsary: Eva. Mrs. J. A. Msc(Irag- or. aummsrslde: Ann. Mrs. Camp- bell of Montreal; Maude. Mrs. Ber Gssparro of sault Ste. Marie. Mary Veterans Hospital. Montreal: Mar- ion. Mrs. s. H. Doohsrty of among moulds and Lily. Mrs. I-imohd Compton. st. Elsanors. and one brotlnr John of not 10. Floral tributes which were many and beautiful were given by the. following:- The Family. violet and Arch Mscarcgor. Ines and Jimmie Smith. Bertha and Frank Iholaurin. John flruseil and Family. Aunt Jean Taylor. . Lily and Edmond I Aunt Priscilla and Joe. Mrs. Roy I. Macbcan and Family Mrs. Ann Brooknsld. ' on o Nursing sisters Associati Montreal and the following nursing sisters of Montreal Veterans nos- pltal who are all formerly from P. I. 1.. nos Rankin. Mary blac- Donald. Kay Maolaod. l-felon Mo Phat. nslen i-lammil and Lillian Donald. Pallbearers wars Jabea Lldstone. Leigh Clarbc. Alden Ramsay. James Campbell Gerald lfso and Ken- noth Madman. - Interment in the Central int 16' United Church Cemetery. card. (it Thanks I We wish to extend heartfelt thanks to all relatives. neilnhourd and friends for their many acts of kindness and oxpsauions of syst- pathy during our recent ssd bar- samnsnt. Park. R. O. A. F. Station, Bum-f Inljlandcrsaaaad D- s 'l .r. W v.-. '4 a IIIIIIII Harrington aupper, August 28rd. am 5 o'clock - 'l'lI.IIl FLIGHT! WIIILY to lydsuy, Nova lootia. Plums Mars tints Central Airways Limited. Nil ssaanozuan RADIO vsoa. ll) Kent St. Radio 'rsnairs. sound equipment. Disc recording. Closed a'llLday Wednesday. July and Aug- us IIIIIVI. THURSDAY EVEN- ING ralcons and Abblss Donlrev Baseball Games. Provincial Exhi- P. M. PROFESSIONAL MASSAGE by Mrs. C. V. Hill. 10 Water Street. Charlottetown. 20 years experience in London. England. Write or call. "IAClAM.EN'I' OF THE L0l.D'8 IUPPIII will be observed. Sabbath 27th. at Churchill at 10.30 A M and 1.30 P. M. Preparatory services on Thursday and Baburdav at S P. M. Rev. Donald Nicholson. Min- later. Personals Miss Jane Sibley of Welsley Hills is visiting her grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Charles crews in scarle- town. Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. John- ston of Boston. Mass.. have arriv- ed in Charlottetown. They will visit relatives and friends. The many friends of Mr. Maurice Redmond of Redmond Electric are sorry to hear he has undergone a serious operation in the Charlotte- town Hospital. Miss Ethel Bagnall of Ottawa. who has been visiting with her sister. Mrs. James A. Rodd left by plane Monday for Montreal where she will enter the Ross Memorial as a patient. Mr. and Mrs. Denton Cs-ewe (nee Lens. Burrows of winsioe. P. E. I.) are visiting from Chicago" the guests of Mr. crewe's brother. Mr. Charles Crewe and Mrs. Crewe of Searletcwn. TORONTO. Aug. lll-(oPl- ont- ario' civil servants were assured by the Ontario cabinet today that any Government employee enlisting in the special service force would re- tain seniority with guaranteed rein- ststiment on return. During his ab- sence the Government will assume the cost of superannuation pay- ments. KINCBVILLE. Ont., Aug. 17 - (CP)-l-lealth authorities in this Essex County community are taking what steps they can to combat I severe summertime outbreak of poliomyeiitls. A doctor from the Ontario Department of Health will arrive soon to lend assists . Load has been produced in Can- ada since lain. and is obtained largely from the ores of British Columbia. TTTTTTTTTT NOTICE Final notice is hereby given to all ratepayers who are in arrears in taxes In school Unit No. 1. Taxes lanai be paid”by September 4, nu. By order of the Trustees' Ollec. Partdals lchsol. - GORDON lifclAl. leeretary. Plain fill-I. After aI1'Is said and done; I 4 . owdoes it taste in chi. 'c'up? That is what, ;C0untsI. a . It was the United States alrforcs which prevented an early Dunker- one in Korea. But even then, the overall results of the use of air- power fell far short of expectat- ions. There likely will be a lot of revised thinking on use of air and types of planes that are now need- ed as a result of this campaign. By hammering the advancing North Koreans with rockets and machine guns. beating up roads, hitting tanks and striking at am- munition dumps and troop con- centrations, planes of the Ameri- can Fifth alrforce did slow down the advance of the North Koreans. But despite the blitz that went on, the advance was not halted by air attack. The enemy was kept off the roads by day but somehow succeeds in making big moves at night. Skliifui Communist use of camouflage also has been a factor limiting air success.' The fighter-bomber force that was thrown into the battle has not been as successful as was hoped in close support to the ground troops. The pilots of the American F-80 jet planes. Navy Corsairs and Mus- tangs and the Australian Mustang pilots have been virtually unop- posed in the air but still they have not been able to put in anything like a knock-out blow. Targets Hard to Locate It is another of those mystify- ing features of the Korean cam- paign. I've watched light.cr-bombers- Corsairs off aircraft carriers-try to rocket enemy gun positions in the hills and valleys and tile ex- plosicns would make you think the mountains were collapsing. But the planes would hardly be gone when the guns would open up again. In that rough country, targets have been extremely hard to lo- cate, despite air contact teams on the ground that keep in radio con- tact with plsnes hovering over? head and also the use of fleets of aerial observation planes for ar- tillery spotting and for direction of planes to targets. missions convinced that they are doing a whale of a job. But the ultimate results have been disap- pointing. The reason may be that the USAF has tended since the war to emphasize the strategic bombing role of the airforce at the expense of ground support. Few new planes have been developed that can do an adequata job backing up the ground forces right along a battle line. no Jets The F-80 jets were put into the fight to attack lines of communi- cations and also to operate as fighter-bombers in ground sup- port. This plane, which can travel more than 600 miles an hour. is nominally an interceptor. it is sup- posed to be used to meet and de- stroy encmy bombers. It was not supposed to be used in ground support. Nevertheless. it has done better than most authori- ties expected it would do. It needs to have a lot of help in locating t because it travels so fast; Electrical contractor wmmo n 'a.I.PAl.lIN0 IBNISI I BAMBAI, III III! A". Photo 10031 Korea Testing Ground for Strategic Use of Airpower ilpseialtolhatiuardisnbylossninnro) The fighter pilots return from 1 but with practise the pilots have been getting better. In fact. the USAF is going to get a couple of hundred "hot" jet combat pilots out of this. A big limiting factor for the Jets is the fact that they have to fly from bases in southern Japan. They need long surfaced runways for take-off and landing and there -are none left in Korea.- So the F-80: fly 200 miles across the Sea of Japan to the front, can only spend 30 to 40 minutes find- ing a target and then have to zip home with the last bit of their fuel. Because of the distance. they can only carry two five-inch rockets. ' Canadian Joia - Long-range jets such as the Can- adian "Csnuck" being made now at Melton. Ont. would be a boon on this long-ha-ul Jet air war. But the Canuck is billed as an inter- ceptor and may not be the thing for ground support, which is some- thing the R. C. A. F; may have io.. consider seriously now. The Mustang planes operate from Korean airfields, as well as from Japan and they can spend considerably more time over the front. However. if there was any enemy air opposition of jet nature, the much slower Mustang would be Ehot out of the sky. Airforce authorities simply con- sider the Mustang es a fill-in-a lucky one - in Korea. No one ex- pecis that it would be used in a campaign when the enemy had an airforce in action. One of the welcome features of the F-80': performances has been its maintenance reconl. These planes have been flying week after at key cities, railway centres and MT - hmkdcwns and the manufacturers and the pilots feel that it is a win. her in this rsspoct. If the other new Canadian let-the American type 1"-86-stands up to punlgh. manta as well as the 1-30, the 3. C. A. P. will really have a plane for which maintenance is not 5 big concern. - I talked to many Jet pilots and I119! "'08-? by the F-00. "I like it" said one young pilot. "because it gets me home to base. When planes do that. you like 'em." ' Big Mistake Most observers in the Korean til i have concluded how that a big mistake was made in the first phase of the campaign in the use of-the strategic sirforcc-the rs PAGE THREE Speclalhinglin Llfolnsur-ancaAnsiy,sls' andProgs-asnmlng II. c. li0lIAl(Ell Unit Supervisor BUN LIFE OF CANADA Charlottetown, P. l. 1. Phone 885 8-30 superfort bombers. GHQ. '-N370. ordered the mea- sive planes to be used in what amounted to a close support role to the American division when they were reeling back from south of Souel. As a result, the B-29': went out on missions to bomb bridges and roads in the immediate battle area. "I even saw some trying to hit culverts," said one officer. After several weeks of this, the B-29': now flying from Japan, were ordered into their normal role-bombing attacks against major targets far back in enemy territory in North Korea. .They hit big supply dumps to follow the (Continued on Page 10) Tile Jenkins Pharmacy THE EEXALL STORE will be the only Drug Store open this afternoon and evening. Telephone 319 week without many ” IE1 "Ins rnuru srnrnns FAST FIIIEND TELLS FRIEND all films from an ever-widening circle people keep flocking In for sale values that. is view of present world conilitloss. MAY NEIIEII BE IIEPEATED Men's Suits to 69.50 - now . . . . . . Men's Suits to 59.50 - now . . . . . . Men's Suits to 29.50 - now Men's Sport Coats to 29.50-now . . Men's Sport Coats to 24.50-now - 14.95 Men's Topcoofs to 34.50-now -- 16.95 Men's Topcocrs to 44.50-now . . . . 24.50 Men's Pants values - 3.33 . 5.93 - 7.39 - 9.33 - 12.ce 9-. 15.95 39.50 -2 .50 22.50 19.50 Owing to railway . However we will while our supply lasts. We will continue feeds. Beaton & WInsIoo asrosrliaiir laws? to array lssraning Omen, Iallavssa Ildg., Spring Garden lead, HALIFAX. N.S. DspsssspsaIA.M.ta10P.M.daly. IhgsssHsnssafqsndehsduwDIysI to suspend delivery on our usual routes. .and grinding for hog. poultry and dairy, BIGGER AND BE'I'l'ER TRADE and INDUSTRIES ram at the - CHARLOTTETOWN ABMOURIES SEPT. 21st, 22nd, and 23rd. A Y's Men's Project Al&I-III strike we are forced accept phone orders to do custom mixing Phone 22l4 NOTICE srscuu. . MEN'S WORK BOOTS Values to 5.00 . . . . 2.89 Men's Sport Shirts 6.95-now . Men's Sport Shirts 5.95-now . . . . 3.95 Men's" Sport Shirts 3.95--now . . . . . . 2.95 Men's Sport Shirts 2.95-now . . . . . . 1.95 Men's 1'-Sllirfs . . . 79: - 1.00 - 1.25 - 1.50 Men's Combinations. short slat ;es. 1 A Long Legs 2.00-now ... . . . . .. 1.49 Men's Socks 44c- 59:-'64: Men's Purple Top Work Socks ....... 29:” Men's Combinations . '. . . . . . . . . . . Boys' 1'-Shirts 54: - 79: Boys'AnItlsHose 29ci Boys' Braces 35:1 Boys'SlIori'Ponfs 1.00" ..... 4.95 now suns 1 and 2 pairs of Pants 510.00. and S1235 144 Great Geo. St. The GREEIIDAI. co. Ltd. physically Iii. Dcfensively and odensively, artillery forms a solid Backing in operations of the modern army. Keeping pace with the sp - and ilexibility of the Canadian Army, it includes airborne air transportable artillery and many other of the new developl mcnts of modern warfare. ' I There's important work for young men in the Royal Canaaia Artillery. It calls for young men who are quick-thinking on YOU All ILIGIILI IF YOU All -l .1. A Canadian citizen or Irltisb sablaaa 2. 11 to 29 years of ago. Is SIIQII. 4. Able to meet Artsy fast nqsiranaatsi I. Willing to volunteer. for. service aaywbsrl, ' G0 ACIIVII-SNIVIYOIIK COIIIIIY-. bywnsglhsahgcasadfsdomsdfnushdsytsbaldag svasywlstoa lhadsfaassssglisstaggnulsa ISANAIJA I NEEDS . MEN T0 TBAINAS FIELD GIINNEIIS IN TIII ROYAL CANADIAN AIl'l'II.l.IRY :3 2