i ii PAGE EIGHT . N , ITHE EASTERN GUARDIAN ash: A... .-.-. ,.::..:'.;..;i.u . ...'CLARl('S : I'flnIlI'ILll'S ill .. . ' tague, Chicken i Club Hall, Wetlncsday, iv 12th. 9 ' , -nr:si'Mr.s l)l'TlES ? Russell MacDonald, Montague, re-I .. turned to her (ilillPS as matron of i the Knis.'a County linspit.-ii, Mon- l llll('l' spending lagvle, on llimi(i:iv Anniversary Montague all week, ends Nnvcmlicr 8th. ..'C0-OP Insurance, Life, Fire.l Auto. Above Co-op Super Markat.lBulova or Lorie wan-ii, Sale V this i Beaver November, Mrsl AGENTS:-MONTAGUB: Harold I. Landry. Mrs. Byron Stewart, Mn - Brno: Mai-.PIieo. Min Joyof Wlgglnton. Pins Mcmnnon. - AGENT GEORGETOWN; ,Tbe Guardian may be bought at the following places In itlonucgu-. iv Blue Donia Restaurant, and Guardian Office; In Georgetown: Tu Post Office; in South: The Snack Bar and 8. Il.iehu-do A SOL Walden Lavera. that Ronson, dresser sel, etc. 31.00 holds till Christ- mas, V. R. Peplcr, The Jeweller, Montague. ...FLAY AVVAY Miss Janie Llewellyn. George- . HST. MART"S PARISH, Mon- town, was a Vi5il0l' to Montague Slipper. yesterday, guest of her brother-in- law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Leon- ard Campbell. She was accompan- ied by Mrs. Harriet Birlcketi. . . 'GEORGE'l'0WN CHARGE.-United Church of Can- ada. Services for November 9th. 11 A. M. Mllitoivn Cross. 2.30 P. M. a very ciiiuyniiiw v.irn.'.:nii ViSlLlllSjStIll'l1EOll, '1 P. M. Georgetown. Rev. Cnirlr. John E-i'W. A. Paterson. Minister. licr bl'(li.llFf. Andrew, llllfi Patton. in T0ll(Wll'(l. l.lmli SLSHT Mrs. John R.i Ontario. She; . . 'REYIVAL MEETINGS with 71150 visited ll"Kil lirr brother and Evangelist Jack Sands. Portsmouth, s szer-in . xir ni:(i Mrs. Han-l England, at Eiiurray River Pentecos- I0l'(i W11: , 1:; (ii risiniw, liichi- . ini Church. Sunday at 11 A. M. and pan, and rr!.v:ws in Nlillllftaflfliisw 7.30 P. M. Monday through Friday Minncsnl :1. .nt. 8 P. Eli. WE REGRET TO ANNOUNCE. THAT I)I'E TO CIR- CIXVIST.-l.V(i'ES BEYOND OUR C0N'17ROl'i, THE STAGE PIIODYCTION OF "CARMEN" AS PREV- O 1 I , mn.i.r;ii. IOl'SI.Y ADVERTISED, HAS NOW BEEN It . . THE MANAGEMENT, PRINCE ED- " WARD THI'IATRE. CAN- WE'RE TOGETHER FOR. TWO MORE LOVE iN' ACTION Fll.I.EI) DAYS - . . CALL IN AND SEE US AT THE PRINCE EDWARD: to-DAV - sir- : I S ,iiiiiiiii iEXTRA!l NEWS - CARTOON - COMEDY BRODERICK RAWFORD ii. The battle of Texas . . . and thr '1 - battle of the sexesi t X IN M-6-M'S ME STA! Shows 3:30, 7-9 ADLT” , FIANKENSTEIN ' TO HIS MAKE! A lynflleflc Woman Inn" it uh! A New 1:: Duirueflen Loo no You SGARE EASlLY?,, THEN DON'T SEE THIS: CHILLER - - - THRILLER MIDNIGHT SHOW - - - "S CHALLINII . Fun mxmo I-ovuwuuo . 4, rmncb sown I nuns? 11.30 p.m. . an or an ugly . ANYTHING can HAPPEN AT we value: EDWARDOTHEATRE can TWO n4A7si-.- luonuv and wrsosv 0 er. ref 1:. amino - - manmmn. PASTO RAL Mr. Walter White. Charlottetown, was a tnisineas visitor to Montague yesterday. Mr. Alvin Mocswain, Charlotte- town, was a business visitor to Montague yesterday. - Mr. Arthur MacNeill. Montague. was a visitor to Charlottetown yea- terday. ( Sgt. Douglas Preece, who recent- ly returned home from Korea, has gone over to Halifax, N. S. to visit his brother. Chief Petty Officer Cyril Preecc and Mrs. Preece. .., . Miss Shirley Godfrey, Moncton, N. B., was 3. recent visitor to Brudenell, calling on Min Phillis MacLaren, who is a patient in the King's County Hospital. Mr. -and Mrs. E. E. Parkman. Miss Clara Gordon and Mrs. George Clark and family, Sumniersidc, were recent guests of Mrs. C. B. Green, Montague. ..'MONTAGUE UNITED PAS- TORATE.-Rev. J. M. Fraser, Min- ister. Sunday, November 9th. Mon- tague 11 A. M. Service of Remem- brance. '7.30 P. M. Evening Service, series of the Lord's Supper. Lower Montague 3 P. M. Service of Re- membrance. ..'H0l-Y TRINITY (Anglican). Georg,etovi'n. Sunday. November 9th. Twenty-second Sunday after Trinity. ii A. M. Morning Prayer and Sermon by Re-v'd. W. Aidan Cotton, C. R., former Rector of Holy Trinity. Rev. W. G. I-logg, Priest in charge. WPLOADING I'R()l)l'(il'i The motor vessel. Bessie Marin, from Twilllngate. Nfid., undvr tho com- mand of Capt. Cr-rii Slot-kicy, ar- rived in the nor: n.' T” '- yesterday to lake on a load of produce for Si. .-iii...o..g, .-.'DON'T WASTE money on a fancy dress watch. "Spud Island- ers" need a waterproof, dust- proof, wrist watch. See our stock from 529.75 up. Loy one away for Christmas. V. R. Pcplcr, The Jeweller, Montague. .'VALLEYFlELD - ORWELL HEAD CONGREGATION. - Ser- vices Sunday. November 9th. val- leyfleld ii A. M. The Sacrament of the Lord's Supper will be dispensed. Orwell Head 730 P. M. The W. M. S. Thank offering. Singers from other churches will assist the local choir. Rev. A. C. Fraser, Min- istcr. ..f'lNVESTl.'RE ON SUNDAY - The investilure of Dr. R. J. Mac- Donald of St. Peter's as a Knight of St. Gregory the Great will take place on Sunday. November 9th, at 3 p.m. in the parish church at St. Peter's. Most Reverend James Boyle, Bishop of Charlottetown, will officiate at the ceremony. .-!(7. G. I. T. MEETING-The Aketa C.G.l.'l'. nf Trinity United Church, Mnniague. met in the church hall yesterday nfiernoon. The meeting opened by rcpeaiing the C.G.l.T. purpose and prayer. The devotional period followed with the call to worship by the leader. The Scripture was read by Miss Eileen Annear. A story, "God's Merciful Goodness" was read by Kay MacKenzie. The wor- ship closed by prayer. Roll call was answered by naming a book of the Old Testament. A chapter from the story book was read by the leader. After II half-hour of games, the meeting closed by singing Taps. 'MILITARl' FUNERAI. - 'A military funeral for the late Joaeph MacLelisn. who passed away at his home in Cardigan November 4th, was held yesterday ,morning from his late residence to All Saints Church. Cardigan where Requiem High Mass was celebrated by his pastor, Rev. H. J. Croken. Present in the sanctuary were Rev, Urban Gillis and Rev: J. W. Mccardle. Rev. 8. Gallant, assisted the choir. Pall bearers were Messrs. William Brothers, Andrew Mac- Donald. Francis shepherd, Lea Al- lan. Herman Smith. and Dan C. McAulay. Interment took place in the church cemetery. Military rites were pronounced by Comrade Alvin Brothers. SETTLE!) BY GERANS Lunenberg in Nova Bcotia was settled in 1751-53 by German im- migrants from I-lannover. CAPITO T0-DAY and SAT. of 9 . isririev CIEMENTS don vumio-Mn uni Serial - Comedy - Cartoon Shows 3:30-7-9 mm -GUARDIAN. cnARLo'rTs':"ow'nT:...-...,-...-.;...... i A Island Odds And Ends .....m ' 100:: good to see so many po- tato-loaded trucks moving through Charlottetown en rouie to cargo ships on the water front. Every such truck means dollars to our farmers, our merchants,. our wage earners. since farm prices for many other Island products have dopped-sharply in some cases- the potato crop will come to the rescue of those farmers who have some to market. Plenty of our farmers have lost many on them in low-price years but it must be admitted that two good years in a row can wipe the slate clean of a lot of debts. AM. The seasonal wind-up of street repairs in Charlottetown meant loss of employment for 9. consider- able number of men. Fortunately a good proportion of these are find- ing other work even at this tag end of the year. Those who cannot be given work have filed claims for Unemployment Insurance Ben- efita. This has been a busy week for the,Cityls longshoremen. so many men were needed to load cargo on two ships at the Railroad wharf. that the Laborers Union was able to employ all its own members and to provide workifor many non- union men. The Union ,however, does not have it so good all the time. There are long intervals dur- ing the year when water-from activity ,1; spotty. The men are hopeful that the movement of po- Latoes by water will provide them with sufficient work to make a cheerful Christmas. Eisenhower's conquest of the traditionally Democratic "solid South" could only be paralleled in Canada if Mr. Drew were to win more than three-quarters of the Quebec ridlngs in the Dominion House. . .1 since the days of Lincoln, being a Democrat in the South has been almost a religious rather than a political faith. What Canadians have to worry about is whether Old Guard Republicanism and its belief in high tariffs, isolationism and other re-actionary will re-open. or whether "Ike" and the new guard will shape new aims for the G. O. P. Its beginning to dawn on Island fans that ”Murph" Chamberlain is slowly molding a hustling hockey club. patiently but steadily he is filling the gaps left by the death of Johnny Duichak. the departure for other towns of Willie Marshall. Red Fever. "Bucko" Trainor, Phil Vitaie. Walter Pawlyahin and Ray Predericks. Chamberlain knows- at least as well as the fans do- ihat there are still holes to plug and he is working on the problem all the time. with ,3 defence man expected from the Pacific Coast, and the ex-st. John Beaver. Ron Hurst due in town soon, the Is- landers will gain strength and there are other deals in the mak- ITIK. A little stiffening in the defence and a bit more polish in their at- tacking lines. and the Islanders should have the punch to carry them along near the top of the Big Four. It seems the Island is headed for a new and unwanted record-a new high in deaths by car acci- dents for the year. it would also be interesting to know how man.V ”near misses" occurcd during the year due to careless driving. Not all accidents, of course. are attributable to fast or wild driv- ing-they happen quite often under blameless conditions, be- cause this is an age of increased road'trsffic and a stepped up tempo of life in general. But a curb on recklessness, would elim- inate some of the unnecessary fatatitiea which have occurred, and folks all over the Province are looking for action from some quarter. Despite the recognized need for greater national production, the shorter working week idea seems to be gaining ground in Canada. Figures recently released by the Economics and Research branch of the Federal Department of La- bor reveal the trend clearly. The figures offer I compar- ison between 1960 and 1961. In 1960 06 per cent of Canadian workers in manufacturing plants were on the five day week: in 1961 this had increased to '70 per cent. No statistics are yet available for 1952. The survey showed that the percentage of workers on the five day week varied from 61.4 in On- tario and 76.8 in British Columbia to as in New Brunswick and 2.1 in Prince Edward Island. More than 60 per cent worked a five day week in Manitoba. and Quebec. more than 42 per cent in Alberta. about as per cent in Saskatchewan cent in Newfoundland. Office workers in manufacturini! also shared in the reduction of working hours. The over-age work- ing hourr in 1061 was found to be ' an hours, a decrease. of twelve minutes from 1060. Office worker.-1' on n atraiilht in 1061 comprised '16 PU 0”" "I the national total, as compared to 0 per cent in 1960. NEW DELHI, Nov. 22 - (AP) - Prima Minister Nehru and Ilnlted Btatu Ambassador Chester Bdwlu will sign an agreement tomorrow for the second instalment of the I1oo,ooo.oo0 American aid vmrrun. the 11.6. lntbluy announced an- urday. The poet, backing Indira five-year plan for ooonomio,dovol- content; will add 038,350,000 to 050.- 500,000 already granted policies . and Nova Bcotia, and about is per five-day week-in manufacturing ” White Sands Mr. Austin Bell of Whiu sands was elected president of the Pro- gressive Conservative Alsoclltlon for 4th Kings at the nnuuol meet- ing held at Murray River Wednes- day night. Mr. Eman Btcwart.'Mon- tague. was appointed eocrotsry. The meeting was well attended by 9. large number of ladies And gentlemen. and was presided over by the chairman, Mr. Charles Rich- ards. Mr. Charles Mscquaid. secretary of the Provincial Conservative Par- ty, outlined. the purposes of the meeting. He also explained that the ten poll chairmen of the district would make up the executive for the district. After business, the meeting was uddrossod by Mr. R.R. Beu, provin- ciai leader. He was followed by Major John A. MacDonald of Card- igan. ' Murray Harbour North and Vicinity hear Mrs. John Condon is 0. pa- tient in the King's County Hoa- pltal, and all join 1n wishing her a speedy recovery. Mr. and Mrs. Cheater McLure and Mrs. Annie Kennedy were visitors to Charlottetown on But- urday, November lat. Mr, and Mrs. Lowell Johnston and daughter Paulette were week- end visitora to Carleton Siding where they were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Craawell. Mra. Lloyd Reid, R.N., who has been on the stat! of the King's County Hospital for some time, has returned to her home at Murray Harbour North. Mr. and Mrs. Albert McLeod and family left on Monday, No- Conservatives In 4th ..'I-ler many friends are sorry to M Man Head and,Mr. and Mn. I-fury Reid nave returned home after spend- ing a. few days in Trenton, N. 5.. wnere they were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Irving. Mr. and Mrs. William Dunn, Murray Harbour, were recent vis- itors to Etellarton. N. 3.. guests of Mrs. Dunn's brother, Mr. James Macxannie. -A.0. EGLINGTON.-JIOWE BAY W. I. ..'The October meeting of Eg- lington and Howe Bay Institute was held at the home of Mrs. Lorne Dingwell. The meeting was opened by repeating the Creed in unison. Ten members answered roll call and collection amounted to 80 cents. A motion was made that a bill for Egllngton school he paid. and a sale of articles increased the funds 38.00. Mrs. Ernest Underhay invited the members for the November meeting, when roll call is to be answered by paying dues. The lunch committee will be Mrs. Chester Burke and Mrs. Russell ills: The meeting closed by singing "God Save the Queen", and lunch was served by the hostess, assisted by Miss Irene Ma.cKenzie, and a pleasant evening enjoyed. SUCCESS AT LAST ST. JOHN'S, Nfid.-(CP)-N. S. 1- March spent two years and dug eight wells in his search for a good wuter supply. The eighth well has just turned out success- fully for the 78-year-old digger. --:----2--gs--2 -Preston ll. Maclure Electrical Contractor Montague hanslalluliler Case Adlourned . . The preliminary hearingofifohn K. MacDonald, Kllmuir. charged with manslaughter in the death of Basil Booted. was postponed to November 13th yesterday. The hearing was at Georgetown be- fore Stlpehdlnry Magistrate Jor- eph W. MacDonald. The inquest is scheduled to be held on Mon- -day night at the Legion Hall at Montague. The case of William MacPher- son. charged with intoxication in a public place, at the same time and place as the accident, in- volving the death of Basil Bea- ton, was also adjourned till next week. Two other cases were also heard at Georgetown yesterday. A resident of Roseneath charged with operating a motor vehicle while his ability was impaired with alcohol was fined 350.00 and coats. and the loss of his license for three months. A resident of Montague, on a charge of hlt-and- run, was fined 525.00 and costs on each of two similar charges. Court was resumed at Mon- tague later in the afternoon. where the case of a resident of Roseneath charged with imper- sonating an officer was postponed until November 14th. ' III vember am for Montague, where they have taken up residence. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Condon had as their weekend guesta re- cently, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cam- eron of Stellarton, N. 5. Wiring oflall kinds P. O. Box 362 Phone 22-2 Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Llewellyn The HI-Spud Colrod .u...;;... iiiuars rm III! or llET'I'lE I: so rm the kottio-right In the water. No narrow! is wasted Imoino all the but , out into tho water. It mm nloooy '- become lm electricity in mod. lolnnldo wv CANAD IAN olnrna CFCY 10:00 - il. . .. proves its worth many. times. a day 1 Your G-Eiltlectrlc Kettle will get you out of household indie isms a dozenftlmes I day. When the stove is crowded at meal time it's just like having an extra element . .3 when bsby"iumps”hia feeding schedule or friends drop in you can boil water in no time at all. Boil: enough water for four cups of tea in less than three minutes . .: shuts itself off should it boil dry. See your dealer today-let him show you the fastest way of hectibg water in the home. ' I. I..c'nic comuuv LIMITID Hood OMeO'- Toronto --YET? 'NOVEMBER 7, 1952 - msronro err: 111- um pu-mmene or up. per Canada met at Niagara.-on-chg. Lake, Ont., in September. 1792. TIIE HAVEN '5 RESTAURANT Montague By Special Request TURKEY DINNER Sunday Evening At 5 P. M. H. J. Mabon ll. 0. optometrist. Eye! lliamlned Fitting and supplying Glnlea. etc. Office Hours: 10 to 12 A.M. I 2 00 5 EM. and by appointment. Office Connected with Mabon Drug Co. Manta nu. P. E. I. "THE CORN IS GREEN" By Emlyn Williams Fe Mn A.s-To " Litton If :5: Canadian Gaunt! Biuwie Radio Ptpgumu, CBC Dominion Nmurl Evnylsundaj Evening 8:30 E.S.Tl?