JULY 31', 1953. . THE EASTERN GUARDIAN AGENT! I-MONTAGUEI EIPOIII I. B1-nca Maurine. Min 1 AGENT 61:03 The Guardian may no, bought at Blue Dome Restaurant. rod Oliiu; In Sonrls: .-.-rrncs VULCANIZED. Alex MscDougsll, Montague. ..,'Mr. and Mrs. Leo Got-man. U. 5.. are spending two weeks visiting Mrs. Maurica Daley, St. Mary's Road. r ..'Mr. Duncan Mat-Donald, Gen- eral Theatres Supplies. Saint John, N. B.. was a visitor to Montague yesterday. ...'Dr. A. R. Mcftse, Mrs. Mac- Ron and Mrs. A. E. Sullivan have returned to Montague following a short. vacation spcnt visiting re- latives and friends in Toronto, Ont. ..'GEORGE'l'0WN PASTORAL CHARGE.-United Church of Can- ada. Services for August 2nd. 11.00 A. M. sturgeon: 2.30 P. M. Milltown Cross; 7 P. M. Georgetown. Rev, E. Melville Altken. D. 1)., will be the Guest Preacher in Georgetown. Theme: "The Greatest Danger we F309-" BY00k1.lIn Trio will render special mums. Rev. W. A Paterson, Minister. ..'T0 PREACIL AT VALLEY. FIELD - It is expected that large congregations will be in attend- ance at the anniversary services in the Valleyfield Church on sun- day. August 2, to hear the distin. sulshed guest preacher, Very Rev. rrend C. M. Nicholson, D. D., LL. D., ex moderator oi the United Church and Principal of Pine Hall DIVIHIIY Hall, Halifax. Dr. Nichol- mn is one (R tl1e outstandin preachers and cducationists of Sanada. Mrs. Nicholson, who will accompany her husband, is the laughter of the Rev. J. A. MacLei- R - 3- Du 01 Btiddcck. Cape Breton mt. during her girlhood spent -nzht years in the valleyfield nanse while her father was pag- tor of the congregation. - MOIIIIMEIITS and IIISGBIPTIOIIS LEVI V. POWER, Montague, P. E. i. Representative I .. Louis MacDonald woo ETOWN: laundry. Mrs. B I Wlssiataa. Pins"II:KIxI:::.n. In Waldoss lavon. "'9 I""9"I"l places us Montana: and Guardian Offi gtnueo sown ThaSnseiBosasI;Il.nioisa':1IslOa:... .--'SAI.I5--Us OFF all summer dresses, suits and shortles. Belle's Shop, Montague. ...'SUMMEB SKIRTS, shorts and 'biouses greatly reduced, at Belles Shop, Montague. ..tMiss Elsie Jardine is spending a holiday at her home in Kings- boro. having spent the past win- ter in Miami, Florida. ...'MONTAGUE United Church. Rev. J. M. Fraser, minister. Sun- day, August 2. Montague: 11 am. morning service and Sunday school; 7:30 p.m. evening service. .-FUPTON Gospel Chapel, Dun- das. Sunday School, 10:30 am. Lord's Supper 11:30 am. Evening gospel service 7:30 pm. Special singing. All welcome. -JDUNDAS-Annandale Baptist Church services. Sunday, August 2. Service at Dundaa 11:00 a.m. Service at Annandale 7:30 p.m. Preacher Rev. E. J. .-Barrass. All welcome. ..tTllE ANNUAL MONTAGUE Church of Christ picnic will be held on Saturday afternoon, Aug- ust 1st. at Panmure Island. All interested gather at the church at 1:30 p.m. Truck leaving at 2 o'- clock. ..tMr. and Mrs. James Jsrdine, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Morrow, Mrs. Harvey Poole and Miss Elsie Jar- dine spent July 28 at the home of Mrs. George Docheriy, Pinette, where a birthday party was held for Mr. James Jardine. WSMURRAY HARBOR and Vic- inity: Evangelistic services in the Gospel tent. Murray Harbor. com- mcncing with after church ser- lvice, Sunday. August 2nd at 8:45 p.m. Weck nights, Monday through Friday at 8:00. Special singing. Also daily vacation Bible School commencing Monday, Aug- ust 3rd-14th. 9-12 am. All school age children invited. ...'CITUR.Cl! OF CHRIST. Sun- day. August 2, 1958. Montague: 10:00 am. Bible School for all ages from beginners through Idults: 11:00 am. Lord's Supper and preaching. Murray River: 11:00 a.m. Bible School and Lord's Supper. Murray Harbour: 6:00 p.m. Bible School and Lord's 85 Mccin Avenue Supper. Combined evangelistic service at Murray Harbour DTAL 8109 Church of Christ at 7:30 p.m. All welcome. Kenneth '1'. Norris, mgymkm evangelist. MEET US AT THE PRINCE EDWARD THE WHOLE FAMILY WILL ENJOY THE FUN THEY HAD-.. and THE LOVIN' THEY GOT! . . . in those wonderful, lighthearted days wheen Ro- mance rode 111 a horse-and-buggy and Adventure wait- ed around every curve! A HAPPY LOVIN'! l Starring DAN with IIUGII 0'iiiiIIlI ' CAROLE ” HAPPY mv1N'1..1f I DAILEY' LYNN "SCIT IIAN" CROTIIIIS andintroducino DIANA IITIIRS EXTRA -:- NEWS-:-SCENIC -:- CARTOON SHOWING AT 2.30--7-9 TO-DAY and SAT. CAPITOL - 1o-nu - sir. n-STEPHEN DLINNE. . sov meson-sue: Joanie-IYW CARTOON --:- SERIAL ..;- shows at 2.30 -7 -3 "- '-m- -..---..a......,..-....... A..-.--...... Lnmsr sssarvnn at the Jo- Anna Dresa Shop, wool bolero: in assorted shades. -JGOSPEL Tabernacle. Mon- tague, Sunday, August 2nd. 3:00 p.m. ' i program of the daily vacation Bible school. Hear these young -people sing, play and re- cite. 7:30 p.m. evening service. Everyone welcome. .-.tSUMMEll. CLEARANCE sale at Jo-Anna Dress shop. Dresses, suits, blouses, and s 1ew coats. churcitill liopss Continued from page I ably take place some time in the autumn, it will not be before For-, Eiln Secretary Anthony Eden re- turns to work. Eden, now making a. satisfactory recovery after three operations for gall-bladder trouble.will go abroad in August to complete his conval- CSCEHCE. and his own gucu is that he will be back ”on the Job" in September. From Chequers, the prime min- ister's official country residence. Churchill is keeping in close touch with stiairs now handled by the chancellor oi the exchcquer, R. A. Butler. I-iis ouice there has direct telephone lines to 10 Downing Street. and officials can reach Ilium by car in less than no min- es Parliament adjourns today for a summer recess of nearly three months. In the comparative quiet of this recess, with no day-to-day responsibility to the House of Commons. the prime minister will be able to turn over the question of overcoming the recent weak- nesses which illness caused in his admlrustrstion. Casualties this summer have included. in addition to Churchill and Eden, Housing Minister )1”- old Macmillan, now back at work after a bladder complaint similar to Eden's, and Supply Nfinister Duncan Sandyls, who was out of action for a short while because of an infected hand. ' Hungry Soviet Continued from page 1 rising. He was accused of showing "a cspitulatory attitude" toward strikers when the Communist cen- txal committee sent him to the Baltic port of Rostock to quell rioting. . Max Fritsch, state secretary for coal and power. was thrown out of the government entirely. A tough Communist party worker, Rolf Ja- schonka, takes over the secretary- ship. East Germans called the food rush "our second uprising". No East German seemed too old or too young, too weak or .too tearful, to join in the trek. Com- munist police seizures merely fired the anger of the people. IN MEMPRIAM Mas. LEONARD csmrasu. Clarena, beloved wife of Leunnfd Campbell of Montague, was called to enter into the Joy 01 the MN on May 6. She was born February 8. 1911- at Sturgeon, and was the eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Llewellyn of Georgetown. She was united in marriage to Leonard Campbell in 1937, and tor the put nine years had resided in Mont- ague. Mrs. Campbell was a faithful member of the Montague Church of Christ. To those who knew her best she was in every respect a Christian, a loving and helpful companion, a devoted mother, and a kind and generous neighbour and friend. All who knew her will remember her sunny 5111”! Ind genial, disposition. Left to mourn her passing are her husband Leonard. and two children, Chester and Janet. Also there are her parents who reside in Georgetown, four brothers, Em- es-son, I-Iowsrd. Chester and James. and two sisters, Janie at home, and Rosaline, R..N., Hamilton, who tenderly nursed her until the end. Funeral services were conducted in the Montague Church of Christ by Mr. Kenneth T. Norris. mini!- ter of the church. speaking on the subject, "The Preciousness Of Death" he read the comforting words of scripture. The hymns sung during the service were "Legning 011 The Everlasting Arms", "Beyond The Sunset" and "Haven or Rest". The pallbear- ers were R. W. Beck. D. Macbaren. John Bears. Clifford Lilly, John Shaw. and Ralph Bock. Interment was in the Montague Park Cam- e-tery. , , Cord Of Thanks The family of the late Mrs. Leonard Campbell wish to express their sincere thanks to the doctors and nurses and am! of the P. E. I. and Montague I-iospitala for their care during her illness. They also express their thanks to her many kind friends and neighbours who visited and sent flowers and cards. and to the ministers who visited and spoke words oi comfort to her. They also wish to extend their sincere thanks for the many flor- al tributes, letters and cards ex- pressing sympathy in their be- reavement. and to the members of the Church of Christ and the choir and the Brooklyn trio. rm: GUARDIAN. Preparations Continued from page 1 all horses. fast or slow. new or old, trottcr or pacer. The racing will go on day and night and so will the excitement as favorites are beaten and longshots get a nose under the wire first. All put together it forms the warp and the woof of Old Home Week and the Provincial Exhibit- ion. And it brings to the Islander and his guestsx the everlasting craving for something different. It is what he waits all year to see. Farmyard Classes The lateness oi the hsyinl 89!: son this year is having a tendency to cut down the number of entries in the various farmyard classes for the Exhibition. This is par- ticularly true of tho catttle classes where the number of entries is lower than it. was last year. Only in sheep and chicken and fowl are there more entries this you than there were for the 1052 show. The classes with the number of entries, 1952 totals in brackets, are as follows: horses 106 (118); cat- tle 658 (854. of which 209 were beef and 645 dairy); sheep 125 (100); swine 150 (155); chicken and fowl 215 (132)-. In the cattle classes there will be severaf new breeders among the exhibitors. but at the same time many who have frequently shown their stock in past years will bo absent due to prevailing farming conditions and the lack 1)! sufficient help in the fields. Armistice Continued from page 1 southward from Manchurla 1712171: day after the 10,1). m. truce dead- line for such military movement into Korea. The planes presum- ably were MiG iets, the report said. Under the truce terms,-the move- ment of all arms and war equip- ment should have stopped at the Monday night: deadline except for replacement purposes. Even re- placement operations must pro- ceed under supervision. An air force officer said "we had suspected the Reds might do something like this" and so the Allies had plastered North Korea airflelds with bombs in the last hours of the fighting. "We did a lot of bombing." the officer said. "but apparently we didn't leave the field non-opera- tlonal." In the first meeting oi the Red Cross representatives Thursday. the Allied spokesman urged that the mercy teams start moving to- ward prisoner stockades on both sides by Sunday. The Communists did not reply then to this proposal. More than 86,000 men will be moved in the prisoner operation. The Reds will return 12,500 Al- lied men, including 3,313 Ameri- cans and 14 Canadians. and the Allies will send to Red territory about 74,000 captives. The Allies moved up 2,400 North Korea. and Chinese Red prisoners Thursday from camps at Koje and Cheju, islands off south Korea. The captives landed at Inchon. port city of Seoul, then 600 Chin- ese. were put aboard trains bound for a stockade north of Munsau. on the road to Panmunjom. The North Koreans were lodged in de- tentlon camps at Yongdonpo, Just outside Seoul. The Reds have said the move-.' ment of Allied prisoners south! from stockades near the Manchur- ian border will begin soon. Petition iie Potato Continued from page 1 is supported by 175 growers repre- senting about 1800 acres in the OtLea.ry, Alberton radius and some 205 growers representing about 2259 acres in the Carleton. Albany shipping area which we believe lo be the two largest consolidated pro- ducing areas of the Province and should be convincing proof of the general feeling. "It is not the desire or intention of the supporters of this resolution to make reference to the petty criticism of those who continually express their ideas through the press and otherwise and have done a great deal to create dis- u nity. "We feel that all present are capable of measuring intelligence and can easily distinguish the chaff from the grain and likewise con- structive assistance from petty bickering which is of no value to the farmers or to the industry. "We do feel, however, that we should take this opportunity of ex- preesins our disapproval of the continous effort on the part of the chairman of the Potato Marketing Board and officials oi other or- ganisations purporting to represent the farmers made through the prm and from the platform which have been detrimental to the better relationship of the dealer-grower cooperation. "We all appreciate the value of the potato industry to this Prov- inco and to the farmers in par- ticular ancl realize that in the most part all those connected with the industry have and will work in the best interests of all, and we would rather see every effort made to solicit the closest cooperation rather than-the continued effort to encourage animosity and dis- unity. "we. would. therefore, that in order to depart fro such a condition this Govemmen take immediate steps for the removal of the present chairman of the Potato TCQUGEI. ATTENTION August 11. ' EASTERN KING'S Until further notice our representatives Mr. C. C. Pratt and Sons and,Mr. Gordon Robertson will be loading hogs every second Tuesday beginning FARMERS ,Board chairman the petition has CHARLO1'l'ETOWN Marketing Board from the E;os.rd. "We further advise that a. com- mittee has been selected from the group here today of which I am the chairman and we remectfully re- quest your consideration of this petition. "While it has been stated by the now become an illegal abortion. the connected details." Rupectfully submitted The aches-so. been 'conceived in iniquity: a phrase very foreign in a free country. we are hopeful it will not Beethoven and Schubert. "ran committee will be very pleased to auist the Government and others in the setting up of the proposed advisory committee and "NEIL BRADSHAW a musical move- ment ot light or humorous charac- ter, was established mainly by SALAD WEEK SPECIAL JULY 31 TO AUG. 3rd. INCLUSIVE Broken PokooToo.Ib'. 59: Matches. Eddy's. 3 pkgs. . . . . . . . . . . . 29: White Swan and Purox Toilet Tissue. 2 for 25: Super Suds. 2 pkgs. .. . . . . . 69: Carnation Milk. 6 Pins . . . . . . . . .. 87: Kraft Cheese. pkg. . . . . . . . . . . . . -32: Sodas. any brand. lb. pkg. plain . . . . . 31: Peanut Butter. any brand. 16 oz. . . . . . 43: Peanut Butter. 4 lb. pails . . . . . . . . . . SL39 Domestic Shortening. 2 lbs. . . . . . . . . .. 53: Fry's Cocoa. Ib.I'ins................ 67:. Peaches. Raggedy Ann or Peter Pan. 4 for 69: Tomato Ketchup. Campbell's. bofrlo . . 25: Five String Brooms. rag. 51.49 for . . 31.25 FRUIT & VEG. DEPT. Lettuce. large Island. 2 for . . . . . . . . ., 29: Cukes. large Island. 2 for . . . . . . . . . . 25: Tomatoes. Ontario. 2 lbs. . . . . . . . . 39: Wax Beans. 2lbs. 49: Oranges. 4 doz. 89: Cherries. 6 qt. basket . . . . . . . . . . . . SL98 MEAT & FISH DEPT. Boneless Chuck Roast Beef. lb. .I. . . . . 59: Hams. Pi:ni: Shoulders. lb. . . . . . . . 59: Bacon. sliced. lb. 69: Corned Beef. boneless. lb. . . . . . . . . . 49: Roasting Pork. lb. 63: Beef Liver.Ib. 45: Wieners. lb. 39: We have Fresh Salmon. Halibut. Haddock. Haddock Fillets. Mackerel on hand. SHAMA'S GROCETERIA 211 Euston St. Dial 8224 We Deliver Liberal Radio Speeches on GFCY S . All Times Standard FRIDAY. JULY 31--12 NOON CECIL A. MILLER. Liberal Political Meetings , FRIDAY, JULY 31-STELLA MARIS BALI) NORTH RUSTICO. Meetings will begin at 8:30. They will be attended by the candidates, Cecil A. Miller and Neil A. Math- eson and by other prominent Liberals. LIBERAL POLITICAL MEETINGS FRIDAY. July 31- North Rustlco (Stella Msrisvllail) MONDAY, AUGUST 3- Mount Stewart (Legion Hall) TUESDAY, AUGUST 4- Parkdale (Community Hall) THURSDAY, AUGUST 6- Eldon (Eldon Hall at 9 p.m.) FRIDAY. AUGUST 7- Sprlng, Park (Spring Park - Hall) Meetings will begin at 8:30. They will be attended by the Candidates, Cecil A. Miller and Neil A. Mathe- son and by other prominent Liberals. Mormon Group To a Arrive In Canada ...... OREBTON, 3.0. (GP) -?Rem- mants of the polygamous Mormon colony at short Creek, Ariz., are expected to arrive hero shortly. Claude Evans, presiding elder of the Church of Latter Day saints, said Thursday, Mr. Evans said the group, part of the Short Creek colony recently broken up by Arizona state police, should reach Creston "in a day or two.” The Arlaons colony was raided by police tut Monday in an effort to stamp out the practice of poly- gamy. Police said they found 33 men with so wives and 263 chil- dren in the colony. The 83 men and a. number of their wives were arrested. A record o.oos.ooo new out-pm tients during the year was re- corded by Britain's national health service in 1952. rouscnr MELVIN McQUAID Important broadcast of interest to all residents of Prince Edward Island c F c Y 630 ON YOUR DIAL 9.30 to 9.45 p.m. (A. S: T.) TONIGHT! A P.C. TEAMWORK BROADCAST GEORGE DREWP GORDON GRAYDON 0 GEORGE HEES 0 DAVIE FULTON 0 T , GEORGE NOWLAN I fur 16 point PLEDGE on 1070 on Your .1... 11.15 mm. Alli Petal-Ad 1- n. Prvgnuhv Coaoarwhv rm -4C--Ik 1 .....Z............... - .. . FRIDAY, JULY 31st- CONSERVATIVE 1211110 srrrcurs is OVER": "C F C Y All Times Standard 7:15 to 7:20 P.M.-Frank Myers, M.L.A. SATURDAY, AUGUST 1st- 8:25 to 6:30 P.M. Mr. Walter G. Mackenzie Cut out this ad for reference. JULY 31st--9:80 P.M. AUGUST lst-7:00 P.M. Vice President Young ENSURE THE TERESTS. KINGS COUNTY CONSERVATIVE BROAOCASTS Melvin Mcqnaidg Souris, Chairman King's County P. C. Association. Kenneth Anderson. Sf. ELECTORS of KING'S COIINTY On August: 10th you can get rid of a Government that rides roughshod over the wishes of the people and carries on the greatest spending spree of all time. HOW TO VOTE 2 JOHN A. MacIi0IiALO X A VOTE FOR MacI)0NAI.D IN KING'S WILIJ SAFEGUARDING OF YOUR IN- Inserted by the .Ix'i11g's (”m111iy Progressive Conservative Association Peters. Progressive (lonservat-Ives.