. Mary 2-1--...,......,,......,.&.., - U H 2 'i"a.oq,oa.uno.uu Death Saiirday of Mr. M. MacPiiail ”” Thom psuod any st the Prince Edward Island Hmpitsl on ast- uxday, October 23. Mr. Ilslcolsn Mac!-"he'll of North River. follow- Dixon. Fort William, Ontario. Also three sons. Aubrey, York Point; Rev. W. B. Ma.cPhail, Bndsibsne; Dr. P. L. M.iwPha.il. Montreal. A son Colin pf d 1 d four years ago. A sister. Mrs. Boomer Inman lives at Desable. The funeral will be held this (Tuesday) afternoon from Com- wall United Church. service start- ing at 2.30 pm. Halloweien Party At Sunset Lodge The guests at Sunset Lodge were given their annual I-lallow'en pzil'Ly by members of the Rainbow Club in the assembly hall at the lodge last evening. Entertainment was provided by a number of local artists who were welcomed by the President of the Rainbow Club. Mrs. N. H. DeBiois. Major Irene Henderson. superin- tendent and her asistsnt, Major Stevcns Taking part in the pro- ::r.m ii ere piper Bruce MacLai-en. Fll7.11l)ELll Haywood, Andrea Duvar. Norma Duvar and Virginia Show. in scottish reels and dances. Ma- jor Henderson was heard in a piano solo and Dick Turpin gave tun rs-ndiiigs. Mrs. M. Bcvyer sang in coslume and was followed by Mrs. W. C. M.-icLeod. Mr. and Mrs. 1lncl..aren. Elizabeth Haywood in group singing of gaelic songs. Mrs. MacLaren was pianist. Following the entertainment fea- tzires. refreshments were served by members of the Rainbow Club HOWARD MCINNIS FITTED FOOTWEAR 115 Queen st. - Currie Bldg. BIRTHS. MARRIAGES. ' DEATHS 50:: Per Insertion BIRTHS GAUTIIIER - At the P. E. Island Hospital on October 33rd. 1954, to Mr. and Mrs. Eric Gauthier. s daughter. Weighing 8 lbs. 8 cu. SKILLICORN - At the P. E. 1.. Hospital. October 25th. 1954, to Mr. and Mrs. Roy H. Skillicom. nee Jill MacEachern. a daughter, Pamela Helen, 6 lbs. 0 cu. MURPHY-At the City Hospita. on-Oct. 21. i95-1. to Mr. and Mrs. Albert Murphy. 2nd Strsst. Park- dale, a son, Joseph Francis, 7 lbs, 802:. MIJII-LEY-At ital on Oct. 23rd. to Mr. fdrs. William Murley, a Oliver Borden, 8 lbs. 6 ozs. '- DEATHS HAINES - At the Massachusetts General Hospital. Boston. Mass. Oct. 25. 1954. Mrs. Maude Haines. the P. E. I. Hos- and S011, gformeriy of French River in her 64th year. Interment will be in the Newton Cemetery, Newton. Mass. BARIHALILT-At Prince Hospital. October 25th. 1954. Louise Bnrriauit, wife of Cpl. Joseph Syivere Barriault of St. l-Jivanors in her Mth year. The remains will be shipped from the Compton Funeral Home in Sum- l'flPFSl(IP. on October mth to Kent- ville. N.S.. for burial. )IiicKiH'-At the P E. Island Hospital on Sunday. October 24. 195-1. l..A.C. Clive MacKay. Re- mains resting at his late resi- dence, 22 Grafton Street. Funeral from Zion Church tomorrow Iii”:-rinc-(day) SPTVICP commencing " o'clock. Interment in the HI A Pmjiles CI-nwtery, County CHARLOTTETOWN FUNERAL HOME 78 Euston St. nun. um Complete Funeral and ' Ambulance Scrvlco - Director - IOBEBT E. BRADLEY N. o. MacLEAN IJNDEBIAKEB mmsmmn coal-iocmown and North Wllishirs DIAL sue ID!'I'.l'AXl. IIAIIQ-OCH 0IAlWILIa&IIQl'Pho&- OIIIIVI-S BIRTHDAY -Rlch- cl Hupcr. little GI-I-ughtoc of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Harper. Mush- field. celebrated her second birth- dny Wednesday Oct. 1) when she received many lovely gifts. EICEIVS SAD NEWS - Mrs. William Matthews. Mount Edward Road. Charlottetown has received the sad news of the death of her mothsvr. Mn. Mauds mines in Boston, Muss ME. AND MRS. James Roper. Central Royalty. will be at homo- to their friends at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roper on October 27. from three to six p.m. on the occasion of their fif- tis-.th wedding anniversary. GUEST PREACHER-Rev. H. R. Bell, retired pastor of Red Point. preached to -good congreilat-1005 at New Glasgow. Bradalbane and Fredericton churches on Sunday. Mrs. Leigh Warren of Charlotte- town was guest soloist at the three services. Personals Mrs. Leo McKenna. Brighton. Mass. arrived on the Island re- cently on a visit to relatives. and her father Mr. William C. Smith. Miliview. P. E. I Mr. and Mrs. Irving Beaton. Brighton. Mass. arrived in the city last Thursday evening on a' visit to relatives and friends in Mill- view and Charlottetown. Mr. John A. MCKIIIDOH. Ottawa. and Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Mc- Carviiie and family of Charlotte- town. were visltrirs to Pisquid. the guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. McKin- non. Rev. W. 0. l-logg and Mrs. I-logg returned on Saturday from a visit to their son Dr. Robert Hogg and his family at Louis. Virginia They also visited Washington. New York. Toronto and Montreal. RochflirCclISljimr'e ii. & S. Meeting The, opening meeting of Roch- ford Square Home and Siiiiouii Association was held last night if the school auditorium. The pro sident. Mr. J. R. St. John presid- ed. Dr. Frank Mackinnon. principal of Prince of Wales College WE'- the guest speaker. His talk wa. replete with valuable suggestions for both parents and teachers and he held the large audience at at- tention for more than an houi. At the conclusion of Dr. Mac- Kinncin's remarks the thanks of the meeting were extended him by Messrs. J. E. Cullen and Frank MacDonald. The secretary. Sister St. An- tionetfe read correspondence from Mrs. Gordon MacDonald, provin- cial president for Home and School. Mrs. J. J. Callaghan gave an interesting report of the, an- nual meeting of the Provincial Home and School Association. Reports of the entertainment and membership committee; were giv on by Mrs. William Dowling and Mr. W, .l, Brown, respec-tivi-ly. After the three new members of the teaching staff were intro- duced. Sister St. Clair briefly out lined the work she is doing in the home economics department which has been re-organized in meat the curriculum changes Then followed an interesting question box. conducted by following teachers: Sister Elaine. grade X; Sister St. cius. grade Vlll: Sister St. nardine. grade VI and Mrs. Duffy, grade III. The large meeting shows a comm-ndiibie interest in educa- tional matters on the part of the parentii and augurs well for the comlng school year. To Stress Tgalther Recruitment At a recent meeting of the P E. Island Home and School As- sociation. it was agreed that teacher recruitment would be adopted as a major project this year. following the example of the Canadian Home and School and Parent Teacher Federation. Streas was laid on the shortage of teachers in the province and the increasing demand for them. Figures submitted st the meet- ing indicated 45 newly qualified teachers trained last year and 277 former teachers. now married were now back in the priofaicn. Pan-mlt tcsdhevrs num- ber one hundred. Qualified ex- perienced teachers 388. or 44 per cent. About seventeen percent of these leave the profssdgori each year. the report said. St Lu- Ber- Leo Continued from page i Plan Imii got-y's fund contributions by em- ployers and employees might be boosted to 10 cents a day from the current nine cents. Ths federal gov- cmment contributes one-fifth of employer-employ-.. contributions and also pays the cost of admin- istering the insurance schema IN MEMORIAM In loving lllemory of Mrs. Alex uscoonsid. Min-rsy lliver. who psusil away October 25th. 1948. llsqionlcsronclthssbconslx yuan 13 you left our hearts lined with sadness. tun was s heart that was blithe- ssns III y lcsilci-lug ssush.i.ne on along the .. .'I1. fbaghoolioskyosfnnu Wcsssacvorfsrgot. stun Isms-bsns by I3&sIl!Idiy. the W” The preliminary hearing of John ntncis Cecil Molynesux ahsrgod with msnslsughtsr was held yu- tarday before Mszlstrste Gilbert Gaudet at the Court Home in Charlottetown and was further ad- journed until Wcdnesday. Mr. J. P. Nicholson represented the Crown. Counsel for the accused was Mr. R. R. Bell. Q.C. The charge arose from the result of the findings at the inquest in which the jury reported that "John Joseph Mclienna came to his death on September 27. 1954 on the Prince Nova while enroute to Camp Hill Hospital, Halifax. N.S.. as aresult of head injuries. Sep- tember 15. 1954. at Roy Molyneaux's fiu-m. Bradalbane. P. E. I.. when engaged in fighting with Cecil Molyneaux.” A total of 13 witnesses were ex- amined yesterday. ten of whom had previously testified at the inquest. The evidence heard from the ten was similar to that given st the inquest with nothing contradictory in any instance. They were Doc- tors MacLeud. Bonshaw; Murchi- son. Hunter River; Lea and Laid- law, Charlottetown; Emmett Noon- an. Mrs. Emmet Noonan. Wallace McKenna. Mrs. Erwin Cousins. ROY Moiyneaux. Harold Hennessey. Mrs. Roy Molyneaux .Winnifred Mathe- son. and Georgina Richards. Mrs. Roy Molyneaux. mother of the accused. stated that her son. Cecil had never caused any trou- ble. He was not d-rininng on Sep- tember I5; he was engaged in hauling in gram and threshing. She said that she saw McKenna be- gin to spar with Cer-il uho kept backing away telling McKenna all the time that he d.d not want to fight with him. Mrs. Molyneaux further related that M:-Kenna was out 3. oisriiicr 'PlIElMIIIRIhEIlIIIGYESTERDAY iii CHARGE OF MANSLAIJGIITER in his undsnvssr with one of hi! sboss off. He tried in get into the house in this condition and I119 booked tbs door. keeping him out- ahs testified that although she saw sparring. she saw no blows struck between the two men. Lat- er she saw Mcxcnna MD! 011 '3” Winifred Matheson. who lives with her father and mother at Inker- msn. said that she was at the Molynesux farm on September 15. She told the Court that she did not see any fighting but could hear u lot of shouting and swearing. she later saw M.cKenna lying in the yard. partly clothed. Georgina Richards. whose home is in Kinkora and who teaches school at Inkerman. said that she boarded with the Molyneaux film- ily. She saw Cecil Molyneaux and Jack McKenna with a "hold" on each other and later saw them fall to the ground. After this she saw Mcxenna backing Cecil around the yard. she went to the field where the threshing was going on be- cause she was afraid to go into the house. In reply to Mr. Bell's question. Miss Richards was of the opinion that both Emmett Noon- an and John McKenna were in- toxicated. She talked with Cecil Molyneaux and said that he was sober. On completion of the evidence Mr. Gaudet asked the witness if he had anything to say or if he wish- ed to give evidence on his own be- half. cautlcning him that anything he might say could be used against him at a future hearing. He was also given the opportunity of call- ing witnesses on his own behalf. On motion of Mr. Bell. the Magistrate adjourned the hearing until to- .mol'row morning at 9.30. Poland frees One M Seeks To Improve I Egg Pioiiuction Di". :t. S. Liowe, gcni:'..c.st with! the (,c.i..ai r.xperline.ita. f.i.in.i .oul.i-y iJ...sion, 0t.'.awa. leaves to-l ..iy a..ci' uun.eri.i;g x...li All. B. Tillll.;-' and o in p..ii...,iiien at .iie Ciiax'loLtetu..ii xLhp.l'.lllenL8l faim. I some time ago thf Ceiitral Ex- j.lEl'.l1Ielliai i-.i.m at O..i.l..d, a.u..gi vnth rlivisional Faims tiiiuughout .lie Provinces. began a stucj 'ol methods which would improve thel shell strength and interior quality of eggs with respect to the breed- ing of better strains of birds. They- are also trying to study.the rela- tionship between egg productioiil and shell strength in regmd top inferior egg quality to see if thnyl aradpositively or negatively co-re-l I Another important point being investigated is what relation en- vironment bears to the incidence of blood and meat spots in eggsi and the difference various strains make on this defect. if any. t It has been pointed out that the matter of thin shells, watery, whites. meat and blood spots in eggs. presents a very serious prob-i lem to the consumer Dr. Dovve is: mAKmlz a survey of the results ob-l tamed from Experimental Farms across Canada in an effort to re. move these defects and improve the qaullty of eggs in general. Continued from page 1 iifsurprlsas Opposing him are Progressive Conservative Egan Chambers. 33- year-oid insurance salesman; Mrs. L-ouise Harvey. 41, Labor-Prcgrer SW6. the only woman nominated. and Independent Joseph Lcder. Four candidates are also in the running in St. Lawrence-St. George. opened by the resignation of De- fence Minister Ciaxton to enter the insurance business. They are Lib- eral Claude Richardson. 54. s law. yer and tax expert; David de Voipi Progressive Conservative, 1.! business man; Albert Renaud, 30. CCF. a union organize-progressive, a 38-year-old office manager. TWO-PARTY ISSUE The third riding vacated by s minister-Siormont-produced the only straight fight between the two major parties in search of the seat left by transport minister Chevricr to become 'president of the St. Lawrence seaway authority. The Stormont candidates are Lib- eral Albert Lavigne, 46, and Don. lid R. Dick. 55. Progressive Con. servstive. In Selkirk. William Bryce, a former member of the Commons is trying to regain the out he lost to a Liberal in the 1953 general election. His opponsnts for the nest left vacant by the death of R. J. Wood. sre John Shanskl, Liberal. and David Veitch. Conservative, The only Conservative-held con- stituency in the by-elections is York West. where four candidates will fight to succeed Rodney Adam- son. who died in a plane crash last spring. CON ACHEW! RIDING They are Robert Campbell. Lib- ersi: John 3. Hamilton, Conserva- tive; Bruce Evans. CCF; and Les- lie Morris. Labor-Progressive. Another four-way contest occurs in Trinity. opened by the death oft Liberal Lionel Conacher, Canada”: athlete ii the half century. in a parliamentary softball game last May. The Liberal candidate is Don- old Cari-ick, 41; Conservstlvs Will- son Woodslde; Herman Vosdsn. CCF; and William Ksshtan, LPP. Libero! now hold 168 of the 25 Commons nests. Progreuivs Con- osrvstfvs hold 50; CCF. 13; Socisi Credit. lb. and Independent, I. HENDON. England (CP) - The chairman of the town court. Mrs. V. Cuton. said "we are fighting a losing battle" as s pnsunntic rosd drill started outside. The case was adjourned to another court mm on the far side of the build- ember of Family Which Vanished Behind Iron Curtain VIENNA. (AP) Communist Poland announced Monday it has need Cleveland architect Hermann Field. one of four members of the Field family who disappeared in turn behind the Iron Curtain in a five-year period. Twelve hours after the announce- nicnt was broadcast by Radio War- saw. a U. S. embassy spokesman in Polzilld said in s telephone inter- view "we still don't know his vhrreabouts." But the release of Field apparently was no surprise to Washington. H15 i-eappeui-aiice after five years in prison may throw much light on one of the puzzles of the post- war Elia in Europe. This began in May. 1949. when Noel Field, Her- mann's brother. was seized by the Communists in Prague. Czechoslo- vakia. as a spy. RELATIVES VANISH Four months later Noel Fieldis wife. I-lerta. left for Prague to look for him. She disappeared. In Aug- ust. 1949. Hermann went. to War- saw to seek news of his brother and sister-in-law. He boarded a plane in Warsaw. bound for Pro- gue. snd vanished. In 1950 Noel Field's adopted daughter, Mrs. Erica Glaser Wal- lach. set out to search for the vanishing Fields. She disappeared in Berlin. Warsaw! broadcast said an of- ficial investigation had shown that Hermann Field. now 44. was the victim of a "frame-up by an Amer- ican agent" in the Polish security service. and that therefore he has "been ieleased and full satisfac- tion has been given him." This referred to the defection from Poland of Jozef Swiatlo. a top official of the Polish secret police. Swiatla appeared at in press con- ferenre in Washington Sept. 28 and said 1-lei-mann Field had been or- rested and held in s prison out- side Warsaw. BELIEVES TVVO DEAD Swiatlo, who said ho had been Field's jailer surmised that Noel Field and his wife. lost reported held in Hungary. probably were dead. The Fields' adopted daugh- ter is believed a prisoner in s is- bor camp in Russia's for north. Diplomats in Vienna said Her- mann Field may still be in confine- ment outside Warsaw to permit him to get treatment necessary to make him appear rehpbjutated when he is seen by tho ouuiag world. In London Hermsmfs wife sp- Deared overjoyed. She told report. ers that when she heard the ngwg "I went down on my knees and thanked God-and then I wept." since her husband dlsssppeared. Mrs. Field and hsr two sons. have been Hvins in London with her parents. Continued from page I Racket-Busting detectives on call throughout the day. At one time. it was estimated that police rsdlo calls to patrol cars to investigate reports of "W519 W”! loin! out at the rate of one a minute. Police said in many cases they answered calls that were unwarranted. At the polls. police srreoisd sp- Droximlfoli 75 persons for st- tempted impersonation and dc- toined ll of them for further quea- Uoninl. They did not know how many would be charged. The vote was limited to Ippro - "Mel! 300.000 property owners on tenants at polls that won open from O o.m. to 7 p.rn. NINE CANDIDATE! Nina i-nan soured the msyonity rsce. thrown wide open when popu- lpr Csmllllen Bonds. mayor for is years. decided to ruin boesuss of ill health. - The candidates were Chsrlss O. Bouoqust. i-sand businessman: Camille Dionne csndidsts of uni Labor - Progressive party; Jssn D. .. . ilos-busting lswysr snd former mambo of the Nationalist Bloc Pcpuisirs norm Hector Du- polo. Liberal number of Partis- Inaat for Sex Terrorist Continues Fight In Death House WASHINGTON. (AP)- The Bu- preme Court has aksin denied I hearing to Caryl Chesaman, Loo Angela; sex terrorist who was sen- tenced six years ago to dis in Gli- lfornisls gas chamber. During his long wait in the San Quentin prison's death house Chess- man stalled off his execution by a series of legal moves snd wrote a widely-read book. "Call 2455. Death Row". He won his fourth reprieve from death last July 29. less than 24 hours before he was scheduled to enter the gas chamber. This lat- est reprieve was to give the su- preme Court time to consider a new appeal on which it acted Mon- day. Six times before the Supreme Court has rejected Chessman's ap- penis. The tribunal said its latest denial was without prejudice to. Chess- ma.n's filing an application for a writ of habeas corpus in a U. 5. district court in California. Chessman. 32, contended in his latest appeal that the trial trans- cript was in error. The transcript was made from the notes of a court reporter who died before he could finish the 1,200 pages. Justice Jesse Carter of the Cali- fornia supreme Court granted the fourth reprieve on the basis of this contention. Carter acted after Gov- ernor Goodwin Knight rejected a plea. for clemency. The governor said Chessman's crimes - kidnapping. attempted rape. sex perversion and robbery- were ”horrible and there were 17 of them." Polio Foundation Chapter Meeting ”This year's epidemic has been the worst since 1946'. said Dr. T. Genchefl at the annual meeting of the Prince Edward island Polio Chapter held at the Charlotte- town Hotel last night. Dr. Genchefi pointed out. that seventy six casts nave been reported to date with four fatalities and of the remain- ing seventy-two cases. about twenty -five percent may be regard- ed as having severe muscle involve- ment. fifty percent mild muscle in- volvement. The remaining twenty- five percent may be regarded as absortive cases with no residual weakness. The speaker said that there has been a high degree of co-operation oetween the Department of Health and the Polio Centre on one side and the nnedicnl practitioner on the other. He mentioned that the Iron Lung has been used on six patients. and resulted in the saving of two of them. Dr. Gencheff stated that in the past year forty three Cp.”I'a4;.Oili were performed. which he said was nearly three t.m'..s us many as ... ;lie proceeding year. He summed by saying that un- i:ss urgent measures are under- taken for the admission of both this years cases and cases of other years. the work toward the re- habilitation of such patients will be made that much more difficult. The meeting was presided over by Mr. Lincoln Dewar. president of the P.E.I. Polio Chapter, and in- cluded speeches by Major v. N. Hodscn. Mr. W. M. Mciiiah. Miss Heather MacLean. and Mrs. Fred Gates. Last year's complete slate of of- ficers werc re-elected st the meet- ing. They are Mr. Lincoln Dewar, president; Judge C. St. Claw Trainer. vice president: Mr. W. M. Melilsn. treasurer. and Major V. N. I-lodson. secretary. DITTEN BY SPIDER NEW YORK (CP)-Five-year-old Deborah Dell-lsois was recovering in hospital Friday from the bite of a poisonous black widow spider. at first diagnosed as not serious but later. recognized by her family physician for what it was. The girl was bitten while playing in a lot near her home. a former city council member; Senator Sarto Fournier, runner-up in the last mayoralty election; Charles Lafontaine. disqualified as mayor of suburban Ville Si. Michel; Adhemar Raynault, mayor of Montreal from 1936 to 1988 and again from 1940 to 1944; Dave Rochon. leader of the present council and Liberal member of the Quebec legislature: and Jacques Sauriol. a Montreal uuwspspe man. A total of 180 candidates sought election to tho 06 council seats. SHOTS l'Il.ED The revolver shots were .fired near the committee rooms of Mr. Rsynault at east-end St. Denis snd Duluth streets. ' Constable Dares Flibotis said he ran into the street and fired re- volver shots into the air to summon help when he spotted approxi- mately 50 men approaching the committee rooms. . Ho sold the man fgncr him and rushed into the com ittss rooms. smashing tables and files and pulling telephones from their connections. Fllbotie said he rs' turned to the rooms with his rs- volver drawn and said: "The first man to try to get out this door will be shot." HIT BY 'l?lIalPIOKI But a telephone. he said. was hurled at him from bshind. striking him on the head and stunning him. Ths men one pod. -Also rspci-ting Ii-cubic was Mr. D. . suocisic counsel on s vice inquiry which land to the con- victim of so mambsro and former members of the police department for toisrsthg vice in the cib bo- twsen 1041 and iii). Mr. Drsposu said his committee rooms on ssst-and Lsarist avenue were dsfnsgod by nine anon wield- bsts. lsntrssllslsrysndhgbsssbsli .v Boost Entertainer At Rotary Yesterday Mir. Hairy Mscussi. s loo-mar resident. of Onu-nit-tctow; an it: many yeuu pmev ous ' cent iatioamcnt. has been no busi- neu in Vancouver. was guest on- tertainar at the weakly luncheon of 't.bs Rotary Club at tbs Char- lottetown hotel Y- Mr. Mscloao. who developed the Maczieu: method of pemisnnhi-D wibicb has been followed with success by many institutions of . is a "recognized authority on handwriting. Ind 1' 550 N" gsrdcd as s leading authority on autheritioatlng signatures to im- portant dooiimen-ts. Mr. variety of clever megs, verging on the magic. While rabbi-t from the hat-. and trans- fenced articles from one location to another far removed. he did reveal how a couple of card tricks were performed. On conicludins the performance. I10 NI-Ufmd 3 watch or two and ii pocket-book to c UDIAPG. The assistance given by WVGYEI members produced situations which were laugih-provoking. and tended to give the entertainment local color. G-eorgc Walters. chairman of the meetinz. intmduced-Mn MW" lean who was thankeiifor his entertainment by the co-chairman. Reuei LePage. waltar I-lyndman conducted the sing-song with Al. Blanchard M. the piano. Russell Seller, chair- man of the Rotary Auction Com- mittee made a PYOKTO-5 report- Guests of Rotary were C. R. Allen. Virginia. Dir. R. F. GOWC. Ottawa. arid Jim Ibbott. City. Vis- iting Rotarians were J. E. Mac- Intyre, Moncton. Thomas Mibton. Truro and Mayor W. Macxenzie. Ti-u.ro. Meeting Of Royal Edward Chapter IDDE The Royal Edward Chapter of the I.O.D.E. met at the Clover Club for their monthly meeting yester- day with a good attendance of members. Mrs J. T. Davies Regent presided. Mrs. J. S. Walker treasur- er read a letter from the National treasurer thanking the Chapter for contribution to the Korean X-rail Fund. The members were very privilc3- ed to hear Miss Lena McLure talk on her experience at the Nuffield Centre. London. England. WM" vvliere she had been for the last two and a half years. She was in- troduced by the Regent who re- marked that Miss Lena needed no inti-oduciion as she and her mother were very well known to the mem- bers as the latter had been a mem- ber of the Chapter for many years. The interest of everyone was firm- ly held as Miss McLure spoke and there was occasional spontaneous laughter as humorous snoodot.-.s were recalled. Miss McLure referred to the I-0- D.E. as having a broad humanat.ar- in outlook and the continual emphasis of the work "Empire" in all it's programmes and publicat- ions. It was noted in England that "the Empire" was also widely used by such people as Sir Winston Churchill and others in public life. The speaker met many notable peo- ple during her work; she was pre- sented tc Princess Alice. Honorary President of the !.O.D.E., which was on that all important day "Dominion Day." Many visiioi: from P.E.l. called at. the Centrc notably Lieutenant Governor am: Mrs. T. W. L. Prowsc whom sh was delighted to see and proudl. introduced to her colleagues. Direct contact with" the service men was described with delicious humour and there is no doubt that her friendly snd charming manner of approach was spprecsted. Lars and Lady Nuffield wars descrlberl as sterling citizens with the wel- fare of their country at heart. Lord Nuffleld. at one time a proprietor of a. very small cycle store. now ,. cases a ”ei-able fortune although much of it is turned back into various projects for the benefitlof the country. Miss McLure said that it. was worth crossing the ocean just to meet such people of character. "Young Canada as represented by our Arm- ed Forces in England are a clcsn. straight-shooting type of youth and as such we should be proud of them." said Miss McLurs. Prime Minister St. Laurent was sn hon- oured vlsitor who was accompanied by the the then. Minister of De- fence the Hon. Bruce Cloxton who personally thanked her for net work at the Contra. Miss McLura closed her thor- oughly lnierestlngt talk with an appeal to all members to wield every influsnco toward a world peace. she was liosnilythanksd by Mrs. Putnam who rcferrsd to Miss McLuro as an Ambssssdress of Canada and we could not have a more able u-pi-sssntstivs. a senti- ment. that was echoed by all. Many business matters were dis- cussed. including scholarship for a Prince of Wales student. Ontario Hurricane mud. and the provision of books for Appin Rd. School lib- rsry. Mrs. W. 0. MscMulsn. con- vener for scrvica st I-toms and Abroad, remarked in her report how gratifying it was to know that the Chapter was Ibis to sand hslss of articles when naodsd. one such bslsbsdboenunttocirascoin the swing. she requested that all members continue to givs their so- opoi-aiion in sowing and knitting so that this will all ways bs pouibls. The meeting closed with the sing- ing of God Says the Quun. Ouitinusd f'l& Dill I Dlsrclill calls this total was largely bslsnecd by lhs Manchester walkout. wR&. of vessel: agitate: to ton on s the peak figure of 811. , up in 1 parts how affected. and of lrltalrro ocsboms trsdo Is st I IIIIIIIIIIIL; In addition. moo dock worksn on sttmng in rspsir London h The entertainment provided by Mscbeaii. centered round s . slight-of-hand -,' keeping to himself the way and-, manner in which he Pfodlwed "W l Receive" Nursing Certificates” 4? it Mines Charlotte Ann Quigloy. Mount 'ni-yon (left) and Doris Margaret Steele. Wellington (right) received their certificates and pins at the graduating exercises for nuraec assistants held yesterday afternoon at the Provincial Sanct- orium. Colonel G. E. Full, chair- man of the Suiatowlum Commis- slon. presided. v The presentation of pins certificates was made by Miss Muriel Archibald. of the Prince Edward Island Nurses Associa- tion. The addixus to the graduates was given by Dr. A. A. Macvicox. psychiatrist. Provincial Department and a separate dispute. tying up an- other 100 ships. VOTE TO CONTINUE Leaders of the main dock strike. that of cargo-handling workers. mode plain Monday that they had no intention of responding to back- to-work appeals from the govern- ment and union leaders. -They or- ganized meetings in Liverpool and at Tilbury. east pf London. at which the strikers voted to con- tinue thc stoppage. The three-man government court of inquiry into the strike continued its deliberations in private Mon- day. It may issue its findings, or an interim report. this week. of I-leaitli and Welfare. speaking on behalf of the Government was Dr. own Curtis. Deputy Mk-ilster of Health snd Welfare and on be. hiaif of the Sanstorium. Dr. P.A. Creeliman. superintendent. Music for the occasion was provided by Mrs. G. A. 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