._wg galvanised fllilil I MAY 14,1945 THE WEST LRN (‘is l. lbw Ilrply, I ‘ ........p ’ Wmnz. tor-s..." NOVI- lliloliploll, (“i-corn Io . he roar bol-ghtllllvltllslyollofol Imam-aural oottff-JM onr-oluwlloooollvuooooauaouulas "Ilolwoohlhoao liiillollolVikolyoun-u 4000a aouoa oanvrcf“. w-rrirr-ars- "d: W1C a WM or i" 0d Hflflfl. ‘. giro at , -- book" and "twin 4flwhhigh enamel sinks o/t glam ' 51-12-21. g1) lnmediatol . faul- "LINTi-"nme Count-y homo-l. idl have mac-lodge steam 1411f“, Good wases, mom and gm,‘ provided. APPIY w- E- mmi" flmmerside’ r-ra-n. ' BEEN LIIIilI-ATED — flflfisir... Charles MacLennan "vtcioria West have received a V. n, from their son. PW- Q1195- W ulllord MacLerrnan statinK I m. has been liberated as a “Itner of war and has been re- ward to England. He w“ With "muons Nova Scotia Highland- fg and was taken prisoner -on Juno ‘l. "Wt-s y m 1e; ingredients of "Irgblkllnd use used in 811K181 among] No. l Fox Ration: m. ma rate ingredients have n p e h, "use rations. That 1s the rea- son Sunglo IFeeds may b‘: arlxlait uglier in price than 0 Bf X M5 Remember a good suit of never sells at‘ _ 2325-0141391?‘ [SE PRESENTATION QSIIIIPE/rrs. William McLellan Id IamilV were taken Y WWI!" ' o... mung or Apr: m wh-n ll: members of the staff of the gflmmerside Post Office building. rihered o. bid them soodbirlfih Mr- Igmllnn was presented w a pndsome chair and Mrs. McLellan pith a lovely set of dishes. An redress was read by Mr. Ar ur Allen, Mr, W. A. Gaudet pres- md the choir and Mr. P. C. “mm presented the dishes. Thc ' ~ spent inhglnsllpk anlrtl en oyed 8 - fi..‘...“§.“.» singling God Save the pm,- and wishing Mr. and Mrs. llcllellan and family all hap iness hlheir new home in Brada bane. -S 8011 eral -rron ‘aura-o ma: t ‘data no boar an rr. r. n: - sort ssus can. u as, Iouls rm. \ -FOI. and lot in om conveniences. axes. _t.ion, grounds. Morley M. Be side. —WAS 1N HALIFAX-Bk. Clove tltiilhaelgnh urn orne from Nova Bcotla. He happened to be Tuesday of last V-E riots were in had a front seat u. the whole per- formance. It. was will not soon fo that one can't possibly the destruction but would ly have to see magnitude-S. —WOMEN'B LIBERAL ORGAN- IZATION FORMED - M1’. J. Wat- the Oddfellows’ Hail night. set up with Mrs. Enman chairman and Mrs, Harold Schur- man, secretary's-S. -Mrs. Jack Oliver Texas, USA. chard) and Mary Frances arrived in Sum- merside recently on an extended visit to her parents, Mr. and Mrs.‘ Felix Blanchard, Sumrnerside-S. i _Cpl. John T. Murphy. RCAF,‘ son of Mr. and Mrs. Murphy. Emerald, returned week from India. listed shortly after the out- reak of war and has been overseas for several years-S. ' GUARDIAN IIIOIII‘ ILunj vetting Ilrrnorlldo. llllortlrhoorvroo 6-14-11. newly-fraficn. ._.___ “Harmon r mom two-m abode-til; se. e w 5-14-17-21 UQII desirable All centrally located 5-14-16-21 of Surnrnersido has re- in Halifax on week when the progress and he an experience he rget and he says imagine actual- to realize its Maclzairtiuht,“ K.C., tI-ibera} ross a rneo ng o n of Summerside in on Friday Following his talk a Lib- Women's Organization was . S. as Personals of South (nee Albina Blan- yrrxwru- auorrsom-s {by plane from Sumrnerslde. started TH l. STMARK. ANNE BAXTER - WllllAMEYTHE MICHAE! osnss . \.;\ _ “ A 201i CINIUlY-IOI IICIUII ALSO SHORT; SUBIIIICT Shows 7:30 - 9:15 Matinee Tuesday-3,3() ..._-i_—o~ sUMMEIRsIDI-z c and two children, Jackie James A. last" Cpl. Murph en- .____..__..-_._____ utch iloctor Studios“ Typhus In Nazi Prison ~ .4 Bracken Party Loaves Prov. By Air Sat. Hon. John Bracken, Progressive Conservative party leader. Mrs, Bracken and other members of the Bracken party left Prince Edward Island Sotuiggy e p train but when hey reached rden they learn- ed that the ferry S. S. Scotia, replacing the Prince Edward ls- land. was not crossing until we'r- thor conditions moderated. While Mr. Bracken was making for a plans at Bum- Lqolfla, MM. Bracken national orrabdod touroltheTown byl lit-Col. I. H. Strong, K.C., Pro-j gressive Conservative candidate for Prince County. She was shown the Summers‘ mores and the fur buying establlshmento. At the lattorr die evidenced particular interest. When, arrangements were com-. plated for a plane the party was‘ driven to the airport by Mayor J.. . Arnott ' M’. Bracken had a speaking en-i gagemont at Amherst on Satur- day and it was for that reosm that he could not wait for the ferry crossing. Ferry service between the Pro-- vinoe and the mainland was back to normal yesterday as the wea- ther turned fine after high winds on Friday and Saturday. C. N. ll. Figures llovcal Tremendous Wartime Activity MONTREAL. May l0 - When Hitler's forces collapsed and the war in Europe came to an cnd. statisticians of the Canadian Nat-_ ional Railways began bringing up to date their figures on the corr- tribution made by Canada's largest single industry to the cause of the United Nations. They found that between September, 1039, and V-lEl Day. the Canadian National had transported more than 463,000,000 tons of freight and 144,676,000 passengers. Train miles aggregated more than 353000.000. CNR. din- ing cars served approximately 22,- 730,000 meals. C_.N.R. hotels housed nearly four million guests and ser- ved more than 15 and half million is {Ports and airfieldo could so CHURCHILL (Continuedjgn rm wield." Mr. Churchill made no ddrect reference to an election to end Britain's wartime coalition Gov- ernment but indebted he felt his work had not boon cornplstod. Bo soldhowov Juwouldstmbwn “with the best of grace" if the People thflvglht they had had hor- enough of m He said "we have received rible iniurios" from the Japanese and "we are bound by the ties of I honor and fraternal loyolt to the iUnlted States to fl0ht great .war at the other end of the world " muitheir side without flagging or a n83. I loviowo Ilvo Iohlo Roviowing his five youo u Prime Minister and head of the War Cabinet, Mr. Churchill said that during the ihrk days of l0- 41 the German blockade was so ef- fective that the only route into FBI!!- l Z Wlnddglu Scotland. “mm "Owing to the action of llr. De Valera. so much at vorionco with the temper arrdrinstinot of thou- sands of southern Irishman who hastened to the bottldnmt .to prove their ancient valor, tho ap- proaches which the southern Irhh may e have guarded wore closed by hostile aircradt and U-boats. “This was lmeod a deadly mo- ment in our and if it had not been for the loyalty and Mul- ship of Northern Ireland, we should have been forced. to conic to close quarters with Mr. De Vgera or perish forever from the . "However, with a rmtraint and poise to which, I say. history will find few porwlklo. 111s Mlkdly-‘s Government never laid a violent hand upon thorn. tho h at times it would have been e easy and quite natural, but left the De Valera Government to frolic with German and later with the Jop- anose representatives to their hearts‘ content." He added. though, that ‘bitin- ness by Britain for the Irish race dies in my heart" when he thought of the valor of many Irish soldiers i?‘ fighting for the Empire during t c war. Mr. Churchill said “Australia. New Zealand and Canada were and are all directly monaced" by Jap- an. ‘They came to our aid in our dark times,” he concluded. "and we must not leave unfinished any task which concerned their safety. "I told you hard things at the beginning of these last five yours. You did not shrink. and I should be unworthy of your confidence and generosity if I ddd not still cry: CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN [First Annual Meeting ‘S’side Youth Centre Tho first annual meeting of the Summer-side Youth Centre was held Frlda evening at the office of the P .I. Fur Pool. Members from the three service clubs. the Y's Mon, the Rotary Club an'd Council 2010 of the Knights of Columbus were in elected each year. Eighteen men constitutes the membership of the S.Y.C.I. SIX 110m the eighteen are elected to the board of directors for one your. The directors elected for tho coming year were: P. 0. Cllri. T. hDarle Hickey. W. E. I -arn PalmnFred M - PM. L. Ilancooke. ur “she newly eledted officers for ° Year were appointed at a meetégf held la the P.E.I, Fur Pool ice on Thursday, May 10th. and are as follows: pPreolden . W. Hancock; vice- gili-fmed Murphy; Sec'y.—-Elmer neau, Treasn-W. R. Mellish-S -—-i-——-___ NORWAY FREE AFTER 5 YEARS l7 ‘Ila Canadian he“ p»??? .‘§.-.°‘}‘Z“.¥ F3. ‘m " Eon iilvaslon s ' n we Ger- e vrt l l continue? s” emmc the fall of which had 0n The continent since n Poland. Several "mciq- en“ W! 93min ‘bhlel attack. ° Qrwedian waters i: evade iihe ‘British blockade TOWN; on the ‘Altmnrk" affair. me Brltl-‘h dE-Slwyfll‘ Cossack Smrfiigd in, boarded the German a "Y and freed some hundred fish prisoners-seamen off seven British vessels sunk by the pgqket battleship Graf Spee, T° B Nvrwesian Protest Britain ed She was Justified in intcr. wilting the "Altrnlark" because she w“ 11°11 01188896 in “innocent pas- 8586" allowed by international law. "he mvmhw or April a. the ROYBI Nov!’ mined Norwegian waters to stop German ships carrying war “Forward unflinching, unswer- ving. indomitable till the whore tsak cinrtraband, mainly ore from Nay. v of Avril 9. 1940, ended " arranged as Iotorl bolow, when the public mum r- i»; in meetings common-so at 0:00 pan. . OILIIX MOI-ll. -- W DIITDGETOWN — Friday, May GIOUGITOWN — Wednesday, MURRAY HARBOR. - HEATHERDALE - STUBGEON - Saturday, Juno North Ill]. MURRAY RIVER — Thursday, MURRAY HARBOR. NORTH -- Monday, BAGE NINE ',. . PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE ‘ MEETINGS l CCUITY -. Tho Progressive - Conservative Candidate and othor sooner-o to moot all of the Electors of King's at Public Meethga which hlvl Party's policy and prognl, and ilropreoentloctionwlllbodloowsood. AI IT. MAI-CADET‘! — Wednesday, May 10011, It. Margoodfl Ill. ST. COLUMBA-Thursday, May 17th, St. Columbia Ill-IL. KINGSBORO-Irlday, May 18th, Kinglboro H111. OHM!’ $14!. — Saturday, May 18th, Cherry I111 School. IT. I'll-Ill -- Idlllly, 1y Illt, It. TIIII Iall. l1‘ —'!uday,IoylhIl,lt.ClrorloslIll. chip, In; SM, Karol] Hull. ANNANDALI - Thlrorhy, May M011, Annandalo llalL 26th, Bridgetown Hall. ST. GEORGE! - Saturday, May 00th, St, Georges IhlL QT JETERB -— Monday, May filth, Holy Name Hall. IOUEIS — ‘fiddly,- May 590b, . You’: Ball May 30th, Georgetown Hall. Thursday, May 31st, Murray Harbor Hall. Friday. June 1st, l-leatherdale Hall. ' 2nd, Sturgeon Hall. June 4th, Murray Harbor GLIDIGAN — Tuuday, Juno lt-h, Cardigan Hal MONTAGUE, Wodnoolay, June 0th, 1.0.0.1’. Hall. June 7th, Public Hall. LORNE VALLEY -- Friday, June 8th, Lorrie Valley "all. II. I‘. MnoPHEE, PBOGIIRBIVE CONSERVATIVE CANDIDATE, FOR. KINGS. 1g iberar RALLY MEETINGS TIGNISII . . . . . . Monday, May 14th PALMER ROAD. . . Tuesday, May 15th ALBERTCN . . . Wednesday, May 16th 0’LEABY . . . . . Thursday, May 17th Mr. J. Watson MacNaught, K.C., Liberal “e GeTmWI-f. using the excuse safe and clean" M Plgtefmllg Norway against British flswsslon." B-HIlQunced m. 3"“; “my”, _ invasion on April B. However, the invasion fleet had left Germany m. Churchill disclosed that by “We de-Y-s before the British mines ~ | - . . . dime and the Wh°1° “"11 l‘ candidate and other prominent Liberals wrll address these meetings. Other Prince County meetings will be an. nounced later. ' 9- meals. (AP)-—Within ridden Furthermore it was pointed out. t hus the war is not yet over for the Wldflni" L! b91118 9019119 1001121 National System. Troops must be studied by I Dumb unlvefllf-y DTO- brought home from Europe. Sup- “ 9 by lplies must go over for the millions -Mrs. Frank Ogden of a. r. SEIGBURG- Gfflany- MW 1 Holman, Ltd, Summerside, is s patient in the Prince County Hos- pital where she recently under- went an operation for appen- dicitis-S. ,r ‘ V WgRD H: thfirs. ~ W t , Trave er's s as gulggl oaolrfi of the death on nl 30 in Chelsea, Mass. 01' h" runt, Mrs. Sara E. Pettrnan, sis- were sown’ n: of the late Mr. Ephram Urch rf 'l‘rnl'f‘llr‘r’s Rest. Mrs. PB"- mill was wrll known in Summer- ude and vicinity where she spent , summers with her family. l5 sitrived by her daughter, - Theron Groove (Marjorie). lal icok place at. the family p.01 in New Hampshire-S. Han Community ioncert Ass'n A lrcilng was held In the .n Summerside, on l-‘rr- ' vcnmg to discuss the ldeaI nuns: a urrlt of the Com- . ' Concert Association 1:1 ‘ LL-Col. and Mrs. . . Rogers, lvlrs. Arthur Roper ‘l- Percy Williams of Char- .Ct0\\'il were present. Mr. L. n. HBITCOCII acted as chairman. It's. Rogers explained the set-up rnd the purpose of the o aniza- ilcrxqthoyheadquarters of w ich is 3W ork. Summerside world frmoui singers, rrl dancers would Alter " able n: decided noses: of organization and tele-I Trams we here. . m of the association who . urns-ant in Antlgonish, N.S., sung that she proceed to .. ide as soon as possible. Th? unswerving ‘ -, purpose that has characterised General of tho ‘ Dwight D. Eisenhower's direction of the bottle for German)‘ ll latest portrait d tho owremo Allied commander. no 1.. ti... ~HT BLIND N . -Mrs. Isabelle Monkley, South- west. Lot 16, returned home last week after spending a oyable two months visit in the nited States. Mrs. in Moncton, N.B.--S. Norway’: Crown Prince Returns By OSLO. May Olav of Norway returned to his nation's capital today while in a ‘dingy cell in Gale's largest prison Vldkuu Quisling was reported ‘flu- lng mad." The err-president of the weglan Puppet Government was complaining about his food and nobody seems to care. firm Prlnllce Olav landed from cane . ' t - If a unit were or-j ghemimck‘ fiuaxsggopelnpfir Bn%w¢s -. ,1 t aace. ea - '“§"“,“,“Q§“"““*“I Ihgvetlllre obattle GECBSS of a general die»- “52i..i“§.i'.t&'°‘.i.2“‘ii$§§§‘ to proceed with the. Thousands or Norwegians “fled re sent at once to anl the streets although the news this Crown Rrince was to ref-um 0t ,m. was kept on an "unofficial" sis for security reasons. estimated that 250.000 persons We?! in the streets. very en- On the way home Monkley spent the weekend . average CHARLES P. ARNOT 13 - Crown Prince Nor- l-le perched on t 4 It was Bold only b: Your N»! lirum l‘ but prefers to finish his chosen task. “I am just an average victim of Nazi persecution and I served half of an average term of two years hard labor in an average Germani penitentiary," said the professorn Pr. Lourens G. M. Bans-Backing. But perhaps my detailed report on the ravages of typhus upon an group of malnourished persons will prove of value when I submit it to the Intematlonal Red Cross." Accused of espionage. communi- cation with the enemy and at- f-émlltiul; to escape from Holland, the little middle-aged scientist was sent to a foul cell in the Seig- burg "Zuchthaus" (house of cor. reotion). Dr. Bans-Backing smiled rue- fully at the memory of how the Germans tried to ignore the pres- ence ot typhus in the prison only to have 30 of their own guards die of it. “We had been virtuall starving for months, living in tlr. when first case or ed us Jan. 0. d fool t e chief doctor flu. saw symptoms appeanon one of my cell mates on Feb. 24. "I convinced the Germans fin- ally. but the epidemic was well under way by then. There were 300 deaths among 2,000 prisoners. The typhus cases numbered more than 1,100." MAJ. BRIDGES NOMINATED FREDERICTON. May l3 - (OP) --8tlll in battle dress after flying the Atlantic and reaching Frederic- ton Saturday, Mai. 1-l. F. C. Bridges, former Speaker of the New Bruns- wick Legislature, was chosen Lib- eral candidate for York-Sunbury in the Federal election June ll. Ho was in Germany with Cana- dian troops 10 days ago, in London in time to see the British celebrate V-E day and watch Big Berl light up for the first time in six years, rand breakfasted in Scotland yester- BIIIe arrived in Fredricton from et, Mo, where bad weather forced his piano down; IIUNSTIP ATIUN Co! quick ro- llofwlthllgsoa —-tho pleasant tootlnl laxa- tive you chow like candy. In motol box 25c NYAL FIGSEN J. Ernest ll. Worth Nral Drrrsllot’ ll Prince Street. Phone I ‘Io Illoponoo Au Prescription‘ ll. L. WCNTIIY Nm Dlllllil I'll Qloerr Street _ Phone I'll sumed: strgar added up to 1.229,750| r of people now emerging out of chaos. Japan has still to face the L“ day of reckoning. _ Freight car miles. the SIMISUCIBHS‘ estimated, amounted to nco-rly nine and a half billion: net ton; miles more than 185 bllllflll. The, principal commodities carried were‘ manufactured goods, than iron and sleel-lldtlidtfiu tonszl iron and steel—-l3,l89,000 ions; cool‘ and coke-78.111,250 tons; other mine Droducts—28.122.500 ~21 wheat-NBCBZSO tons; other i graln.s—l5,835,500 tons. A Billion Miles I Passenger train car miles ag-l gregated more than a billion. More! than four million troops were,‘ transported. requiring 6,540 spec-1 lal trains. ' More than 40 million war indus-I try workers were carried in special» trains. ,1 Serving nearly 23 million meals» Canadian National dining cars_ onsum -' gigantic quantities of, supplies, more than eight million, pounds of meat: more than two‘ million pounds of poultry and ni- most as much fish. Two and a quarter million loaves of bread were eaten, 785.000 pounds of butter, 1'10,- 7ii0 pounds of cheese. Eggs a- mounted to 1.1243350 dozen, tea drinkers used 69.250 pounds and 425.500 pounds of coffee were con- I a pounds and milk and crxam to< 673.51!) gallons. More than 39 million tons cool were used by the C.N.R. dur- ing the five years and eight months of war, and more than 309 million gallons of oil. Lumber ran to 741i.- 750,000 feet. New rails grossed 420.625 tons and relay rail 59,875] tons“ More than 715,000 wheels were used. ‘Pies numbered 34.272,- 000. Millions By Express The Canadian National Express. handled more than '17 million‘ shipments. More than 17 million‘ C.O.D. and money orders ls-l sued had a value of upwards of} $272 million. M handled by the Can- sdian National Telegraphs totalled approximately 56.550900 and nearly. three million cables were sent and received. ' Notional Railways Munitions Limited. at Montreal. and the company's shops in eastern and western Caanda. turned out nav-, ai guns. hospitals cars and other munitions and equipment; the rail- way’; dry dock and shipyard at Prince Rupert, BC. built mine- sweopers and frelghters in the service of the United Nations. The Indy Nelson. formerly in the west, Indies service. became Cnmrdhh, senior hospital ship. The Lady, Rodney. the Prlncr- Henry. the, Prince David and thc Prince Rob-g ert, all formerly Canadian Nab; ional ships, went into war service as units of the Canadian navy and plowed important parts. I even ships operated by C.N.S.l 8. war transport service, were lost. Trans Canada Air Lines. in addition to transporting millions or , ‘ of mail and exprem and carrying considerably more than half a million nonsense a. operat- ed s ‘Imam-Atlantic service to oi up mails for the troops N. D. MacLean IINBERTAK II IMIALMII Krloototown Ill North Wiltolrio Plots II ‘posed to be for touring and bus- iFOR SALE reeling the German grmy back on its heels the Allied armies saved ndon from perhaps its worst hliltlz by a new Nazi weapon lost He said that in addition i0 flying bombs and rockets. the Germans were preparing to launch big gt- tacks on the Capital from multiple lone-range artillery on the coasts of Franco and Holland. “Only Just in time did the Al~ lied armies blast the viper in his nest." the Prime Minister said. “Otherwise. the autumn of 1944 well might have seen London as shuttered as Berlin." Mr. Churchill said in the same period the Germans had prepared a new submarine fleet and "nov- cl tactics" which might well "have carried the anti-U-boat warfare back to the high peak days of l9- l . Now Nazi Prisoners Took Surrender News LETHBRIDGE, Alta, May 1L. (CPh-The Lei. bridge Herald said in a newspage story Saturday 00,000 German prisoners of war in Al- berto. camps were "bewildered" and "stunned" by news that Germany had surrendered unconditionally to the Allies. . Official surrender announcement was made to the captives Tuesday but most of them ew Monday, theApapler said. m‘ h d " goomy a osp ere gri e the thousands of men lnsldepghe compound and. dazed about the news, they became melancholy." 'I‘ha paper said one informed source said they wandered about, “seemingly in a fog," Some prisoners working in lumb- ering cam s and on farms actual- ly cheere louder than Canadian employees at tho news, the paper sa . LONDON - (C?) —- Designers in a factory in the Home Counties have almost completed plans for a standard motorcycle which will travel 120 mil an hour. Despite its high weed o machine is sup- ineos use. not for racing. 'm.:ny O O l ' On the night of April 8 the Ger- mans attacked Oslo Fjord tortures. tions. At 4 AM. the next. morn. m8. Dr. Kurt Brauer, Germna min- ister, demanded Norwayis surrender. Norway chose to fight, . K1118 li/aakon and his governmen I left Oslo at 7:30 A.M. for Humor, A new government. representing all! Dimes. Was formed and the Stort-l ing ‘gave it full power to act, even‘ if king and government took ref- uge abroad. Dr. Brauer made efforts to con- vert the government but failed. In the meantime, Mia-jot Vidkun Quis-| lug-whose name now is synony- mous with "traitor"— proclaimed; himself Prime Minister. This frus-< trated army officer had stepped in’ without the knowledge of Brauerl lxlut with moral support from Ber- n Not until April 26 did Germany formally declare war. '.T‘ho king and government re- treated to north Norway, pursued by the Germans and harrassed by bombers. After a last cabinet meet- ing on Norwegian soil, the king issued a proclamation explaining hi5 decision to leave the country and! carry on the fight for freedom from Iondon. Organised resistance ended June 10. The war had lasted two months.‘ Norway's meagre military; forces; were pitifully inadequate to cope, with German might. Small Brit-l kh and French forces were sent inf an abortive effort to aid. O O O Norwegian losses were 8,000 killedg including civilians in air raids, ac-i cording to their own figures Thei Germans set their losses at less than 5,000 but Norwegian figures! put them at 60,000 to 70,000 l The campaign gained (or Ger- a strong flank position against Britain. ports and airflelds‘ for'access to the Atlantic and im- portant supplies of food and war, materials. During occupation "spiritual re- sistance" begran against the Nazis. No armistice or peace treaty was signed. Norwegians became welded; their political party never numbered more than one per cent of the pop- uiaiiou. ‘he Germans tried to win over the NorWQians but met only stif- fening resistance wshlch led in turn h . . of air- verseaa. and did a overhaul work on craft. Canadian National employees a- veraged 171.066 during the war per- lod. The system's honor roll show- ed the names of 20.165 enlisted for active service: 582 killed. and more than 100 decorated for gal- lantry. Before the eighth victory loan campaign began. the system and its employees had suMcrlbed $148,940,922 in Victory bonds and war saving certificates. Too Late To Classify FOR SALE — PIIAM IN 000D Condition. Phone i000. 5-17-11 ‘QQQQOFC-OO-O-O-GO-FQ" great deal military 2 newly fresherred cows. Guernsey grade, and 6 feed- er cattle, also 1 general pur- Ipooe more, 3 yro. old. ARNOLD WEEKS, Fredericton, P.E.l. 1*..l.:' cf a ‘.1211: :1 iii l. (I . . and Hero of the Soviet Union. Cup‘. of the Guard-ii ll!!- FOR two geldjngs at North -=_-_~ .—_————-—~__.:> ‘T2 1 L- ‘T1115 --2 SALE I At bargain prices 17 choice working mares and I American Hotel stables. ROLAND WOOD. refuge from the Allied bombing of their homeland increased Norways population of less than 3,000,000. by l2 per cent, in the face of food} shortages and other occupation: hardships. Occupation cost; took nearly half of Norway's income Norwegians were executed not only for "attempting to help the enemy" but for attempting to es- cape to Britain or repeating British broadcast reports The press and church ‘were suppressed, as were teaching nad other professions But Norwegians, uncooperative and defiant. waited for liberation. while ose who could flee joined the All 0d fight. B. C. City Rocked ~ By 3 Tiuakcs PRINCE GEORGE. B.C., May 13 —1CP)—TIi1‘e6 earthquakes rocked this northeastern British Colum- bia City in the last 2-4 hours. No serious damage has been caused. The first tremor rocked the dis- trict at 7:36 pm. CD.T. for 30 sec- onds Saturday causing merchan- dise to topple from shelves in sev- eral clty stores. Houses and bus- iness premises swayed. Plaster cracked in several buildings. Two tremors felt today were less intense. HAMSTBRI-Y, Durham. 51113101141 - (c?) -_ Col. ‘Thomas Dowllag, prominent figure in football circles. has died here, aged B0. He was the oldest practising solicitor 1n Bishop Auckland. ._r IZIIEJEIIEIIEJIEIIEIIEJIEIIEIE Farm For Sale Consisting o! 100 acres. 96 cleao, balance uuder wood and orchard. Situated on the main highway leading to Kenslrrgton. There are 17 acres of land ready for glop. ping. This property has a good set of buildings also well fenced and watered and is handy to stores, It is also near one of the bel- marketirrg centres on the Island. Owner can vacate to suit pur- chaser. EVERETT L. DONALD Baltic, Lot 1s EEIILEEIEJJIIQEJIEIIQJEIIEJIE —14- 1'. IF YOU NEED HEALTH ' Learn about the splendid re- sults obtaincrl from use of tho Faraclor. Endorsed by hundreds of trustworthy people who have been relieved of serious ailments such as rheumatism. bronchitis, asthma, eczema, ulcers.. Acts like magic in influenza. pneumonia and all sorts of fevers. Ask for literature with long list of reliev- ed and satisfied users. Mr. W. E. Enman, Farador Re- presentative, who now resides in Halifax (31 Poplar Si.) arrived in Charlottetown Friday evening and will be here for about three weeks. He. will he delighted tn meet with his old friends and ail who are interested in the Farador. llc will be found at the Russ Hotel. ‘:£'ir.':t-4.':1‘.1OIJ£P ‘HM-ll ' <5 1".»- Red Armyflialcony of a house in a captured section of Ber- Lipatklnb tank unit woo Hmong first ltusolan maq-g-ggpg-g POGO! Lipatkin 110180 thO Russian 118.1 011 $110 1010B Ill $130 QGIIKI Ni- , _,