- i radii!!!‘ "l! OHABLOTTETOWN Glllllllllll Illllllll Dilly (Iblllldoll In 1887) President: Ueut. Col. W. Chester S. MeLuro Vleo-Pruldenl: l. B. Burnett. FJJ. ' A. Mlclflnnou, 0.8.0. in; Director: J. H. Burnett. ltJJ. Aloelnte Editors: Frank Walker and Lleul. ha A Burnett, B-(LNJIJL (On Aetlve Service) ‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker TM! the Weakest Ink.’ sarummv, nan. 29. um Mr. Howe Makes Progress Munitions Minister Howe has at least one qualification for a. philosopher: he considers that a politician, like a woman, should have the privilege of changing his mind. He quoted an illustrious namesake in the House of Commons this week in support of his coiricnlroir. "l think it was Hon. joseph llnwe who said there was nothing he Villtlfifl so lrille as his lJ\\'ll opinion of yesterday,” he stated. “I think that is a very sound position to take.” It is well that .\lr. llowe is of this opinion. otherwise our war effort would not be ucarlv as far advanced as it is in many directions. One case in point was his refusal, in the early days of the war, to believe that Canada could cou- struct tanks. llou. llr. llruce and other Con- servative menrbcrs urged that a tank program be tindcrtakcn, and .\lr. lll3\\'\"5 reply \\'£\S that we could not produce or obtain the kind oi xleCl ilating required. There was also some alibi advanced about tank designs not being obtain- able front the British (loverninent. Rut the logic of events forced .\lr. IlOwe to charlgc his mind on this subject; and there was no one proudcr than the Munitions Minister when he had his picture taken alongside the first Cair- adian tank as it rolled off the assembly lines. Many other Opposition suggestions. at first treated with scorn by .\lr. llowe, have since been adopted, \\'itl1 beneficial results. If all our politicians would follow .\Ir. Howe's example in this respect, we would get ahead faster with the things that itiaiter. As limer- son said, there is nothing to be ashamed of in admitting that one is wiser today than 11c was yesterday. Two Strong Recruits The reaction throughout Canada has been highly favourable to the announcement that llon. Charles P. .\lcTaguc, noted jurist and former chairman of the National \\i'ar Labor Board, has become national chairman of the Progressive Conservative party and that .\lr. Henry‘ llortlcn, K.C., former Director of Controls, Department 0f Munitions and Supply, and nephew of the late Sir Robert Borden, has been nniued to act for the party in an advisory capacity. Vitally important to more than a single party Ire appOillillleilts such as thesc, says the Ot- tawa journal. They bring to Progressive Con- servative ranks two men of outslairding prestige, and they reveal Mr. Bracltt-rfs high conception of politics; but more than ilrzu, what these ap- pointments tell, in tho largcr- iniiionzll scnsc, is a new hope for dcmilrrzilic govcrniuciit in this country. Mr. Bracken has been criticized for failure to take a scat in Parliament. llut if .\lr. llraclcen, deciding to fulfill his pubhc trust in his own way, has been able to Il('\'llll‘ liiinsclf lo inducing the best brains of the country‘ to take part in public affairs-a. thing he plainly is doing-the criticism fails badly. Only recently he was able to announce that one of the leading economists of Canada, an outstanding authoritv on agricul- ture, had become one of his advisers; still latcr he was able to tell that P. I), .\lc;\rthtrr, former president of the Dairy Farmers of Canada, had become president of the Progressive Conserva- tive Association; and now comes the-appoint- ments of Messrs. McTague and Borden. And it is nOt merely in the matter of advisers lind chiefs of staff that .\lr. Bracken is introduc- ing this new, healthy note into our politics. All over Canada he has been scctrring candidates oi the highest calibre; men ivho, successful in their various walks of life, have bccn induced to sec the challenge to democratic government and to freedom and have determined to play their part in practical politics. Japanese Population The Tokyo radio recently comforted the ja- pancse with the thought that “no matter ivhar stormy winds may blow, japan will hzrvc power and standing as a nation bcczursc of hcr increas- ing birth rate." Prof. jcsse l’. Slciircr in The American journal of SOCiol0gv takes issue ivitli this optimism and presents an analysis which shows that the population trend in japan is no different than in the \\'cst. Though japan doubled her population from X880 to 1940, the rate was not ilnprcttctlcntccl. Between I811 and i871. for example, the pop- ulation of England and Wales increased 125 per cent. The United States and java showed com- parable increases. After having failctl to expand numerically in the first three quarters of the nineteenth century — a period when many coun- tries recorded remarkable increases -— the ja- panese abandoned feudalism, which enlarged their opportunities and encouraged the large fam- ily system. Commentators have been misled by the fact that japan thus began to increase hcr "population at a time when European countries were entering on a decline. According to Pro- fessor Steiner, the crude birth rate of japan has been slipping since, the latter part of the ninetwn twenties. Only falling mortality rates have made it possible for her to maintain her rate of population growth. A report of the official Institute for Research of Population Problems indicates the concern of the japancsc Government. War tends to lcceleraic the (lcclinc in the birth rate and thus makfs it difficult to overrtrmr losses caused by war deaths. The author of the report is disturb- ‘good business at this moment. and Wadham College, Oxford; daughter of Dr. Charles S. Welles, New York. disease will not be enough to ltop e decline that has already set in. Hence the official concern with population problems and the measures that have been taken to encourage early marriage, lighten the tax for large families and the pro- vision of better hospitals. The Japanese Gov- ernment faces the same economic problem that has engrossed the nations of the West. EDITORIAL NOTES -. _Col. Hooper reminds us that Professor Wat- kll. long Organist and choir director of St. james Church, Charlottetown, was piano ac- companist for Mdc. Laura Tetrazzini, Italian soprano, on her world tour, after her visit to London in r907. n u a 4- France’: most recent bluebeard, Dr. Marcel Pctiot, has been captured in Spain towhich he fled on the discovery of his morgue at 21 Rue Leseur, Paris, at which he consigned to a lime pit more than a score of persons whom he had poisoned and partially dissected. ‘He has been returned to the French police‘ at Bordeux. ‘I i Ill . It may seem passing strange but is neverthe- less a fact that though we have the Minister of Defence representing us in the Cabinet, and liltentise the Assistant Minister of Air, who has as his Assistant Deputy Minister another ls- landcr, and also as Intelligence Officer still an- other brilliant Islander, yct, notwithstanding the lwholc gang of them, we are tinable even lu get ‘an additional 100 yards added to Charloiictoivn runway. Suppose its a case of too manv cooks spoiling the broth. For Quebec, the Minister of justice got $2,500,000 to improve a wharf just for the asking. 1k Ii U i There is no investment in the world as good as Canadian Government Bonds —— assuming that we have reasonably gOOd government, says- the Letter-Review In any event, not only is the purchase of Sixth Victory Loan an imperative duty for every citizen, it is also the simplest com- nron sense for every citizen, remembering that taxation to meet the service of the National Debt will be a. first charge on his affairs, to make sure that he holds his share of this Debt. To buy Victory Bonds and to hold them, uniil such time as the War is over and peacetime pros- perity has returned, is both good patriotism and To secure a lasting value of those Bonds by insisting on el- licicnt, economical and common sense (lovem- rnent, both during the \\’ar and afterwards, is equally both patriotic and wise. m a u v Saving of 25 minutes in the esatbound run of the Maritime Express between ‘Montreal-blah- fax is announced in the list of timetable changes of the Canadian National Railways, effective Sun- day, tomorrow, according to Mr. C. W. johnston, general passenger traffic manager. Leaving at l2 o'clock noon. daily, except Saturday, from the Central Station, the Maritime Express, pre- sently arriving at; Halifax at 7.55 p.m. will, al- tcr April 3o, arrive at the eastern seaport at 7.30 pm. No changes are contemplated in the ar- rival and departure times of either The Ocean Limited or The Scotian in the ‘Montreal to Ilali- fax service or in other main line trains. Sca- sonal connecting trains for Prince Edward ls- land, effective Sunday, May 21, are also an- notinced. At present, connection with the Is- land is made only from the Maritime Express, eastbound, and The Ocean Limited, westbound. After May 21, travellers to and from Prince Edward Island will be able to make connections married a by ivhom he has two sons; his father became a millionaire in the pill manufacturing business, but Sir Thomas never showed the slightest 1n- cliestral director in the world, conducting all the famous orchestras at times in both Europe and America; has a poor opinion of the professional concert organizers who “are in it for what money they can get out of it," and not for the love of music and ilrc development of nursical taste; he himself sacrificed a fortune and life of ease to “follow the beam” inherited through his mother; cannot stand the lack of apprecia- tion of the average audience which buys tickets and attends "bcratisc it is the right thing to do" but lacks true appreciation of what is provider‘. for them by the musicians. i it i i The days of individual airplanes must almost be round the corner judging by the following letter just received from an Ontario firm: _ “We intend to offer for sale, a Canadian built Personal Aeroplane in the very near future. Our proposed plane, the "Noury", is a fully approved high wing monoplane, with two side by side seats, a luggage compartment, and a sr-t of flight instruments. Powered by a. 65 11.1’. motor and cruising at 95 hLlTI-I. itlwill prove to be a very economical plane for either business or pleasure. “Should a plane of this type flt into your sales or service program, let us know, and we will do everything in our power to assist you in making your decision as to how best to utilize aircraft. "There is another possible use for aircraft in your organization, if you maintain branches In other cities, and that is, for expediting all liaison work. Flying from one point to another will reduce costs, save time, and create a closer con- tact. “Then there is also another point worth men- tioning, in these days of Company-sponsored entertainment for leisure time of the personnel -—a Flying Association would definitely arouse ed by the greater fertility of other Asiatic peo- ples. The Government has established a goal of one hundred million, which mcans that the average annual rate of increase in japan be- tween i940 and i060 cannot fall bclmv 1.8 pcr to assist in the organizing, and whether the Club is formed by the Company or by private per- sons, we would supply the aeroplanes as cheap- ly as would be possible. “Regardless of the conditions 0r circum- qnflhn cl ID Olnlllllloulol recoil; enlenefiellhleu MUIOR BUS TRAFFIC - u BlIr-"OIHOOKBP." 1n I letter l0- oeei-lnl 1n the Guardian of April 27, agrees that the upaseengers of A motor buses cause q te a conges- tlon and hulbbub on Queen Street. tn a. nnrruw contested area the buses endanger the llves or auto drivers and base era. Surely this should be suffl ent reason for removlnz the buses. If the bus owners are allowed the prl- vlleize of occunylntz the east side of the Library and are able to rent the rest room ln the Market building- whlch is much better equipped 1n every DflTflOUlflT-Jhé amount de- rlvcd from such rental wlll help to finance the City. On the other hand, on no consideration should the Cltv allow the bus owners the use of this position on the Market 911 coloured bare About t. The moment, the notes Of a laughing ‘they my! eune 111a 1i 11d wn ll.” 6.. $.91‘. mam 151F114 of things Flutter: and splnl and drlfta, Like mu lo rang pine needles seeing agaln 1| never Nufllilf; M9110 awn . And only the thought remains. A tune recalled the Can you hear them Voices rlalng lrl the late night alr, A moon, a fire, and the hlgn thin 511181118 ung harmonica- Burnt marahma lows. mustard. Andhthe smoky satisfaction of a at dos. Can you hear them sing?- ct. mualc gone. too ? _ ‘s. ‘ April ZS-Tlgnlsh April 28-Hunter River May 1—Murray Harbour May l-.-York I - May Z-Murray Rive;- ._- IMPORTANT , LOAN ‘MEETINGS May 2—Vernon River May 3—Morell May 3-New Glasgow May 4-St. Peters May 5-Eldo Prominent speakers, Including men with Overseas Ser- vice in this war, will be present. An entirely new sci-leg of W“ Loan films wlll be shown Everyone who can possibly do so ls urgently reqllellled to attend these extremely important meetings- THE NATIONAL WAR FINANCE COMMITTEE APRILLZB, 1944 We Have the Proper tunate enong V. h t We have lust received a ms. o r wear a Trim p; Are you uthfl meat 0f new vle Trusses, "III cue '1 tn In Ill h ‘P Doe; an " d Stomach Mixture lllflylhll at Drleec to lult Dr. Evans I F It! t] ullgllflltf vii-ii.» are uflg, h e with the one you urn weaerd III It fl , ' or Ia It an qt slfrtllfl‘: everyho Ever ,~ i, ~ _ led wrlr.‘"’f.‘.°'l..”ti.". ‘Ztalilllll. Square without rocelvlng reason- able revenue from the bus owners. I am, Str, etc. TAXPAYER. TIIE POTATO IIOLDUP Sin-Why is it that nothing L! being said about the great loss the farmers are making 1n potatoes this spring? Today the dealers will take the potatoes at the sta- tlon but will not. quot-c a prlo!‘ to the farmer. The dealers say that they cannot net any market for the potatoes The reason ls that the Government. let ln Maine otntoe: and flooded the markets nille the car ferry was not running this winter. Why not. investigate this matter and let the farmers know the reason they cannot sell their potatoes. Seconds will be worth- less and the cron this year was more than half seconds. The explanation was izliten in our yesterday's lssue.—Ed. G. Notes By The Way Llienusts have devised a paint that won t, burn. lvow let uicin get u...» uuuhuie us a paint that. won't. peen~rutcliezier lvowra, llltler is reported to he fielding trims iviui ltelcli leaders. uoooncs. Alli/us trio-y have plenty of things to 1.11.1.5. uooub-ueieats. olsasters. cat- astrounles, lulu me promise o1 worse to some. — Ottawa. Journal. The Chinese think they should be allowed w take over toe uurpq uilese navy at. me conclusion of llUSlsUli-llfx. Ii. sounds like an excel- lent. lucu, but. we doubt 1f will be much left.—.vfontreal Gaz- ette. speed M. any Lime. Respect the rights ol others. Do not. practice cutting in. Where there are child- ren playing or irralklniz on the road- way, think of them. At all tlmcs urrve Wlill yotu cur uncer control." -Niaguru bulls Review. Arrangements having been made to buv part of the Algerian crop oi peanuts, Canadians are assured that. tlicv will have at. their dis- posal a much larqcr quantity of peanut. butbcr than has been avail- able tor- ilie last two years. The Ctinntiian consuimtzl‘ won't. care a. I um, Slr, etc., ,, _. _ FARM , H4; is not here any more. R1chrn0nd\R(‘)l§T"A-‘l I“ A song is left, and the memory there Ech 1n " here the graceful white swan oes gliding along Like a maid ln l ea .. dr m , 0131i the songs. the dearest. ll. The heart's melody, and a wan- derer‘: word.s— The history of loneliness brenthr tng 10w In a solitary llne: "O give me I. home." heavenly I II The ways diverge, inevitably, And our way la thus. And his la . But yet he says we ltve Within his mind, whereto he can withdraw To seek the old communion. "Believe the heart." be Cried- So now. believing it. We turn to new strange faces. And answer when they ask, "No, he is gone HWW HOW- of a 5011B.‘ Can you hear hlrn slng ll: still. When the blackblrds winged for home And the trout curled 1n the pan? "Life with its sorrow. Life with its fear, Fades into dreams when I feel you are near, I. For I love you truly. truly deli!‘ Now drums beat and engines roar. From this hell's symphony of Godlgrarfi. he may return to sing again. III The twisted yellow slowy In the mfndk October; Andi ditays creep past on crippled ee leaves fall We wall: and work and watt. Hearln their songs and their dear los stnglng, o iz echolng Dlstantly and far away In the labyrinthine bra n. And the golden corn. dipped 1n 1h, golden butter? Thlisr song, ‘a natlorrsmgaflgyef. A eam o peace, so From the Pole Star to the South- ern Cross, I On the wlngs of hearts desire. “No matter where I roam. On land or sea or foam. You wlll always he“ me fllnslns this song. Show me the way l0 1Z0 hOmB-n Show me the W81’ Y0 B0 110mg- -—John MacEwen. PER/L and Edith, Mrs. Herbert Coles. all once of Milton but now deceased: and surviving members» Mrs. Henry Coles: and T. Ambrose Rodd of Mllton and John Ambrose Rodd of Edmonton, Al 3. Jarnu Rodd who was - born September 9, 1038 at Brackley Point Road, dled in Nanulmo, 8.0., on the izathuflbiluaiyét “i? a a n"... marred aro e B11116, an - was the father of four chldrent James Wnttell Rodd. Sarah Jane Kennedy Rodd, Minnie Rodd, and John Thomas Rodd. Jr On the sea, on land, peril of fire, llglllllllffi falling aircraft, of automobiles, of accid- ent, of sickness, of war. In our modern life we are surrounded by perils, andjhat ls why we employ the BY!- tem of insurance to protect us financially. We are in a position to provide a complete insurance service, and welcome your ln- quiries for advice and information. No obligation. Hyndman & Co, Limited Insurance Since 1872 Offices: Charlottetown, Summer-side, Montague Wallace Rodd‘: aorta also add-id . John Thomas Rodd w... horn Alberta. April 2, 1914. ton and was married first: in 1858 to Ann McLaughlin by had one dang , George B. McNutt, now deceased. John Thomas Rodd married a sec- 1834 and dled September _ To Be Continued) He was a resident of Mll- whom lie ter, Annie Mr!- h it. t. h r? 0f traffic rules there ls no end‘, 3:: 3Y8: he‘? "I mZZhQf’ “m and gggghlglg! Ofl-QAIELZS-gsgihsteitaexfl-Ygi M E S but time is how‘ a hrgnwuy olflclal sweetheart Brmkle Point’ and men. children StAIIS nu me case lot. safety and when the home]and.3°enfgd gpfucg “dude , Margaret Mm Joseph 5N1) courtesy on the roads: "Do not. blaze crackled’ ca, Limp Mtg term-e, soles: York-Monday Snrlh. Vernon River-Tuesday. Freetown-Thursday, Meetings in Victory Loan Committees, berm. He was National Film card VICTORY LOAN SPEAKERS New Glasgow-Wednesday. co-opcrltlou wl 1h b ‘b'ln'n‘ How Are and howes b h] tla of “Dr. "zirllns-u-l,,',‘,,,,,,,h " and see how oulckly Ill relieve all distressing q. it w will um r.l‘-?&l'laf"hl..ilt:af“'.::: l Stomn h. IL rtb . stomadll lrllTlablflurIgrlkrld ca!‘ i TllE 2 MAGS H" Great George tree; Mull Orders Given Fromm Attention. i‘ ‘ Professional Oarus McLeod £4 Bentley w l. neuron. n o. J. A. eanruzv n, C, Blrrlaten and Attorney-u. LII l“ Prince Street l will; yrrlrgarcit peuimscgtcn glrl tlllgtlnctjon to the {piggy gimme. The J-"LT " ‘ "'—-—~ W 0 8 em 8T8 9 W 61' fill"- E El’. 811198 A. 0 . QHLEWB ents from Annan in 1821. ‘me chll- gls director of fish culture for PA‘ Mt R ‘s “Asl-AM dren of Thomas Rodd and his wife Canada, and the younger, Robert; A. J. HASLAM, B, A,’ LL n. Margaret Bell were:— Thompson Rodd, or Victoria, n.0, BARRISTE "c, . sax-an Rodd, born 13th Feb. who upheld the Rodd military trl- “Ill 0| Nov: 8w Chambers 1882 married John MecGougan dltlon by vervlng 1n France dur- Charlottetown I. 5.1 (1817-1906) and died Nth Mbmh in; the last. Great War, w“ a MONEY. 1'0 LOAN legs without issue, former anemi- of flaherles m BIL." P-Oflorlj BELL 6. MAI HIESUN noun m 1.01m Cameron Block Chlrlotlalowl u. F. Mcphee B.A.. Kc. nannibgitlfznysoiiiw-ron I Elle: Bnfldlnr Charlottetown Morrellsna Company ll. F. ARBIIIBALII Chartered Abeollnllnb Intern Trlus Bllllllllll Charlottetown “r1111 both the Maritime Express and The Ocean 55$; dggllnlvrgeligxéhgsrgymrpltéiifigl Chflrhmww" nLIAdnm Rodd, born 1n ram dled our E es r) Limited. ter loses lta dlsttnoflm as a. rare s, wqum Igmug] m“ who w“ Y e u e e ltmg-Broclcvtlla Recorder and born Jenni. 1842.1 arid, who died i, Sir Thomas Beecham, znchbaronet, _ conduc- m‘? ' THE RODDS niiid? rhsblflolseFgflflg "lf:::';re_n:v1 “gnarl? tor, composer and operatic imprcssario, born h Tvkw "ps1? r: 31111 ‘tjhuaflnlv l Brackley Point Road and was s". M mum," __ ‘can; . this dam I8 . so“ of the first bamnet and l“; llmvruua M l5 0n B 5P T1659 v marrlcd to Janet Margaret. Thomp- lpgirlflllg‘ , » 79' radio broadcast services. ' Last , I ND so“, 5 daughger 0g 15a“ mom‘). M u‘ wife, joseplnne Burnett; educated at Rossall “.691; a broadcast came out o; PRINCE EDWARD 1S .A son and Margaret Rodin“! who your service ‘wit! veers- ol’ experience M. ALBAN FARM ER B. L. LLB. BARRISTEK. QOLIUITOR. ITO. Canadian Bank of Commerce Blah. MONEY T0 LOAN ALEX W. MAIHIESON tcrest in business, devoting his time and talents Comic Slrilldsludyisoclggg" for the . - ~ , . " 'l.h - to music, becoming the most outstanding or- glgfgif’ .901“? 3601a,“, 9.2a flfglée dubs were so numerous that, ac- huusen. ety batches released. Bombs some- time; are jettisoned when bomb- d5: are heavily attacked, though ln been only a slngle interceptor - interest in your staff. Would the idea be worth lggxlflffnsfilisnfoltlkfg: glggmifé; putting in front of them? We would be ivilling obviously are sabotage or plain carelessnea the manufacture or iverhaps the bo that. if the bombs for any reason, many more of those stored ln England also may be, and that this fact. might drive to bring the enemy to their knees wlll commence." Quite clear- ly they forget that. we have Super- man, Popeye, Donald Duck and Mickey Mouse already on our side. The battle, no doubt, will be ter- rlflc.~llnllfax Chronicle. One should not. live to eat, but neither should one cat merely to live. Eailmz can and should be an art. n refinement. a pleasure to be relished. Shakespeare had the rlcht of lt when he wrote: "Now qpod digestion unit. on an- pc And health on both!" Even that spare ascetic. Bernard bdldiw, 1ODEOI. I115 ltfllbll-S. ILLHICG and hme-Jluce long enough to say: "int-re is no love sincercr than the love of loou." One might. prefer the rotundlty of lvalstan‘ to the lean anti hungry look of Cassius any day, but. artistry ln eating leads to a happy mean between these deplorable €XWElll€-§.—BIB-Xllb- ford Expositor. - The new: from Switzerland that a reportedly large number of the bGmlJs dropped on schaffhaiusen failed to explode makes the recent. tragic error doubly dlsturbtng. The cording to Swiss report, fifty to sixty were found unexploded in one outlying section of Schaff- Thls doubtless kept. the Swiss death toll from being even larger but, apart from that fortun- ate result, the question raised as to the quality of American bombs ls one obviously requlrlng the most. searching kind of lnqulry. Such an investigation probably h“ al- ready been started. There Ls l. bare possibility, suggested by the pparent grouping of the duds iat, they were dropped wlthou being "aimed" _ that ls, the mf- Lq case there appears to have store e of the mba. It, la a disturb ng thou ht were defee‘ ye Esq. the early landlord ln to shlp No. 83. The lease w ed tha 27th June 1831 with a of three pence (be) per acre. This a?! la still ln lng In ehlldbed, was survived on y taln John Rodd (1767-1842) 01 Charlottetown and his wife Eliza- beth Shaw. Thelr children, the two eldest of whom were born ln London, were as follows: 1st,. Thomas Rodd. born in 1804. and dled May 12, 1888. resided at the Brackley Point Road, and was man-led first on the 26th Decem- ber 1826 to Hannah Howel (1803- 1928) and secondly 1n March of 1829 to Margaret L. Bell i180!- 1879). 2nd. Charles Rodd who was born ln 1806 died July 4 1885. He resided at Little York and was married on 24th December, 1827 to Marla Barret. 3rd. John Rodd born 30th May 1800 ln Charlottetown, place or date of death unknown. 4th Edmund Rodd born 20th January 1813 dled October 12. 1898. H, was married first to Elizabeth Young on the 21st November 1833, and secondly to Marv Martin. 5th. Marianne Rodd born 1n Charlottetown, married 29th Sep- tember IKM to Nicholas Morshead of North River. 6th. Theophllur Deebrlsey Rodd who was born 29th May 161B. dled December 7, 1851. He resided ln Charlottetown and was married 6th Mgyo 1841 b0 Lucy Pepper-ell (1801-1 l. There la l certain Lradltlon 1n the farntly that. John Rodd wu employed ln vernment. ser- vloe" of this Ialnn , with no sup- porting proof says that grants of overnment land seem to have been respectively from Lfeut. Gov. Ready giants of nature lots Number an containing twelve acres each; and two years later John Rodd Jr. received a grant of Lot No. 361 in the ‘Royalty. ‘Phomu, the eldest son of the first Rodd fnrnlly, early moved from the Royalty out to the cross road between Brackley arid Win- sloe leasing a farm of sevent five acres from John Hodges Wnsloe, m. u sign- rents possession of the do, being fanned today by Guy Rudd. ‘Thomas Rodd was married twice. Hts first wife, d - never have cent. In the last two census ycars that mic was only 1.1 P01" ccut. Success in the fight :ig.-iinst stances, if you are interested in knowing morc . . - . about nut’ tirrcraft, write for the details.‘ been discovered but for the accid- t-nt of their being dropped on neu- tral territory. — Detroit News, Thomas William Howell Rodd who Thomas Rodd took for e second a few days by their eldest son dled 18th Feb. i828 aged ten days. and Janet (Mrs, Dr. Melville Kro- llk) of Montreal, served as nurs- lng sisters in the First Great War. Two other dairghters, Mrs. Francis Brazil of High River,‘ Alberta, and Georgina, NLi-s. W. B. stratton of Seattle are both de- rerfect Bluebird 1 i both to hl l1’ d - ,,',°°h1’,",$',§§‘_ on m, 6,',§“f)c,,§b',‘,,. Beautifully fashioned Blue- iaao ti». two eldest sons, Thomas 1""! vellum - . . wlm Rodd and Charles mad received "Intrude- 1847 Rogers Bros. $34.75 Choose from the beautiful First patterns In services for 6. TQRYB which ullflfly takes the b - came to Charlottetown from Scot- curt. The Japs lt. declared, have B’ E‘ 5'1)‘ land in m“ or ‘ma. Three refrartlnl centre. :| decided to use the nrvpflsendu __.._ daughters of the Wallace Rodd c!" l" 1M 11ml» rum: possibilities of comic strips lo 1v family. Anni... Elizabeth. of Vnn- Clint-um» wrm or uhona for- order to boost. the people's fighting muven 5Q, (and m“. dsccnud) lllllfllfllml-‘llll- :- suuit- They are. moreover. about m, first Rodd family on Prince Mrs. Dr. '1'. K. McAlplne of Van- I l" Qslflbllsh i‘ "Grealler E551 A51“ Edward Island consisted of Cap- couver. B0,, and now deceased) : I AND SUN I. G IIUTCIIESON O. l‘. IIUTCIIEBON Margaret, rlnl, wed gngement remembrance nnnlverslry Mother's just ‘what vim want here. for the! greater depends‘ y. Love and Adoration Jewelers G. F. llutchesun Give GIFTS From . . . . WELLNEIPS For the gift: that will best ex-- press your sentiment see Well- nefi large seleetlonl. . .Whe- ther It's a flawless diamond en- dtnx lift. Day gift you'll flnd r Smart BIILOWIS Famous lroin cont to cont r ~ nnnrt liltyllng and W]. Wallner Ltd. Since I868 Money lo Lem Oolleetlnnl BARBIBTEB. SOLICITOB. BTO- Offlce: 90 Greli George Street ms sxmmeu GLASSES rum , .1. s. TAYLOR I OPTOMETRIST Curnrr Kent and Queen Stu. Phone Residence I01! l Evenings by Apnolnlmenle _ Phone 1956 was . ""_""-——:: , "COMPLETE I INSURANCE SERVIC ” Agencies Ltd. Phone 540-541 w. .1 1......