11.11911“ I!’ 194?, The Coal A Question ‘during the cold winter weather. 'May we suggest that you pt". chase your supply now, wlliio coal is available and carelai delivery con be made. ‘_ We are prepared to deliver; American Hard Cool Old Sydney Screened Albion Lump and Nat iiiv-crness Screened Bras J’Or Screened and Stoker lntcrcoionial Screened Boy View Screened. A. Piekarii 8i Co PHONE 240 a+ --_--_____ ‘ MONCTON, N. 8.. Aug. B-(cp) -Edivard Gaudet, as. of Monctun tied tonight from injuries receiv. id when he was struck by a tr <ck ihile walking on the main iiigli- "N111 nearby st. Anselmo a. c. ti. P. announced they would aunch an investigation. Gnudet is survived by his mo. lher‘ living in Hartford. Conn BIRTH-la. MAIIITIAGES. IIEATIIS 50c Per Insertion BIRTHS GLOW-At the Prince county H05. ii-ifl1 5011111103‘. August 9th, to Mr and Mrs. George Claw, a 50d e Coun- ty iiiispitiil August 10th, Atwood Bliiizeiiiiy. Sen View, aged 63 years. l-uiirral notice later. JHRDFN -- Suddenly st his s". ‘News. Mt. Edward Raac on Sat. iirii-ii‘. Aug. ‘i0. witiam Pcarden. ""1 130 Ywirs. Funeral fr-xri Trin- 11.i' Uulii-(l Church nzmozron (Tues- riflii. sci-vice starting at 2 o'clock. infer-men'- Pcoplezs Cemetery. 111511 — In the Ciirlottcto-wn lie-i" :1. on Saturday, August 9. lilsi. .\:.i.n J. Lund of Tracade in 111i 56-h year Hi» remains ivcrb lrrimii-xled Saturiiay afternoon from m» A.A. Henness-y mineral HOT-i‘ lo his late reililcrce frcm Whrrr the funeral will take place on rllPnlfly morning at o A_M. m '51~ Mimi/Phillis’! Churali Traca- liie Chis. Interment in the Church CQIIWIPU/ ‘In Memos-lam --_ In loving memory of dcur hus- Ilauii and iiaddy, Gnr. Geo. M. DICilAI-lllllll, drowned in Holland. iiiisusi 11th, 1945. Within n foreign field you lie, Bent-nth a pure white cross, 111111 "W! day we think of you, §And of our mighty loss, g5"! whdtr we think of you, dear i; ‘ George, "~\t‘e don't break down and cry. fits smile anri know you wanted .7" 11°01! our spirit! high. Idiiiiialy remembered Ind little children, t v f by Wife 11h Memorials: “McZtLUION-ln fond and/loving “E1111”! ol’ our dear son, George hriln McMahon. Gunner. killed I‘. Holland oll All‘. 11th, 1M5. “u: is laid to teat In a foreign land. ll grave we may never see. iit maybe some kind hand in that ‘ far-off land “111 Place a flower for Inc. A token of love and aQIIGmhr-lavv one we ahall never forget. a memory to us is a. treasure. . I loss-a life time regret. -. Remembered by Mom, Dad. ‘I'm! and Pope. .11! Memoriaasa in r ‘ i i Iiivilil memory of my dear ‘Ygilior. Malcolm MaoNelll. st. t- ltherines, who departod this life . 1w. iotli. ietz. i :° Iiliie no one a last farewell _.' ' "111 Infill-bf! to none, y,‘ heavenly sates were opened "'1"! voice said come. i Ftiiiv missed by daughter "olatlya. i r I I CENTRAL GUARDIAN Recommend Changes i hone of the most important fiyau have to solve every year. On it depends your comfort I Till William la reserved for nIIaI I ' ,, ,,_, “m”, m mum‘ _‘ ‘ For Ontario Forests a‘ "n9"! "a?!" "l! be Lnaenod I vs oen a I trio - “'- lhlp l3 ‘denying, o" ' u, p” (B! Th0 Clllldill PIGI) —-———-—--_____.____ TORONTO. Alli. 11—(Monday)‘ DIES AFTER. ACCIDENT-Allan —Mter a year-long study the On- J- Limd. M. of ‘Iraciidie, died in “P10 Royal Commission on For-i the Charlottetown Hospltgl sflyur. estry today recommended radical day, as the result of an accident 1111511895 111. i110 D8815 01 Thursday morning. when he fell cutting in Ontario forests. 0f! a liasins on the ‘Pracadle! School, where he was engaged l“ ; Howard Kennedy repairing the roof, He l; Burvlvud i that the Province establish l2 for- by his widow and ‘at least two *5" °P°"11111¥ “P11911111?! brothers and four sisters. the sole right to out FUNERAL AT autcu alum-- °“1"1°- ql-le gum“; o; m, yaw westawayl Shares in such companies would Chandler was held Saturday aft-- P“ b“ 11°14 P? "it" companies ernoon from the BirchHtll church. 1 Much n” 9”" hi" been c0111- Services were conducted by new 11°11“! 7°!‘ Wit-ii’- Pifliii-Pflliel‘ J‘ H‘ Bishop and _M,.‘ zitzmann‘; manufacturers. sawmill operators Interment was in Birch l-Illl Cem- and “he” 111mb" 11"“- The 1'01’- iii-Iil‘. The riailbearers were: J. W. m’ maerafl“? °°mp°111°° W°111d 11° 33mm‘ M_w_ wood‘ James wood‘ all the eutbng, supplying gimbal- John Rankin Lea. Ferguson, lived 1° the sh“°'°w“1n3 1111979515- II- lzobertmn‘ “'11! Suggested the Government ap- ___ l.-oint one director to the board of FUNERAL AT awareness-J “am °P""11"¥ "miiiiiiv- The funeral of the late Mrsi 'w“"11“¢ 11"" 11 1111111111! is done Charles MacFadyen was held from 51°” presem" "P5191111 i!" 01 he, resldenm M‘ Rivera,“ on sap forest resources the lumber trade urday afternoon. Services- at the ' “Amid be " mm“ ‘1111111511’? 1n l home and grave were conducted g°“e'“1°“- 111° “ 1111551” 815° by Rev‘ T‘ w_ Goodwin‘ mm“ recommended wide changes in the ment was in St. Catherine's Cem- ‘ “!5an1z'111°na‘ 591411’) °1 111! 0D- eterv, The pallbearers were: Fred fir“) D°17‘"""‘e“1 °1 1151155 and Buchanan, Guy MacLeod. James rmwstst and 5' 111°1'°11B'1'i FBVWOD Matheson. John McQuald, James "f the “B1115- McQuaid. James MacPhaii. I _ LANDLDRD sin (Continued from Page l) ~___________._ or's body was found ln a lumber‘ yard in the sort Rouge dsitrlct the Prroe Eflward Island,’ ‘Jan._4, 194s. with three huuer He ii-vn Droceeicd to transfer ,wounds in his body, had warned tiis-Abigwoit to the Canadian Na- Itheir children to hurry home from iiionsl Railways. represented ia¢llgol_ iMr. Johnson. l | Their alarm was heightened "11 il 11111695 l Flat pleasure -when Smith's body, also bearing and Iimor to 8069;»? this ship for three bullet wounds, was found in “Defflli-i- the Canadian Na- September in a West-Central Win- P0001 Railways." M1‘. Johnson de- ‘nipeg lane. flared. "and 1 Speak for the pres- timber in lwas dli-trlbuL-d to the propeller-a, Vesclo appeared only briefly in 1l1°ii1- ‘III- R-C- Viliiifhil. C.M 6.. .Police Court Saturday and was 1319 BIY-rd of Directors and the [remanded by Magistrate a. B. mo" 'i"-'-ii 100-000 vi ooileasues Graham to Aug‘ 1.; ‘apd ctr-workers on the eyrgemp. I He was brought here from MY- '3~T- Yiiviiifliiifleiy. supe:in- i Stoney Mountain Penitentiary ten-ion: of the P.s.1. division, lwhere he had begun serving a C-Nflu FY9591“ ""111 1111B 911i? ‘three-year sentence for armed W“ 1111911 if"? '0 I116 Railway. ‘i robbm-y o; the palm Dairies M, m, then Mi‘. Johnson coniurted the imkehmd‘ remainder of the brief ceremony. Chief Maciver said his officers who borrowed a mine detector, from military authorities in tliei isearch for the bullets which kitted I Message From Minister Durlrig the ceremony Cmdr. Ed- 1SmItI1 and McGregor, trained their wards delivered the ioiiowiris ' own squad in its use. YHBSEBSC on ‘what! of the Minister For three days‘ police pairistak- 0f TTKY-SPOW “Please convey to the people of Prince Edward Island the assur- iince ma: 1 thoroughly appreciate the necessity and desirability for a rapid and efficient service to, and from the mainlanr’ an that my Depclrtntent urill riot ceiri; in its efforts to see that such a service is hereafter provided. "lt has fallen on me during my ingly covered the ground about the scene at which young McGrego"'s ,body was found. Eventually they located a bullet. embedded under snow and ice. R.C.M.P. ballistics experts examniecl it, determined ‘ that it came from a nine-millimetre Browning, which finally was tree-W ed to Vescio. | term of office to look after the l P.E.I. lorry service. and our first i It i ti: l i i» "ilcemTarshal wjfé§pijnzjf are now aboard. W: rlso nave 11n- ‘der W3) repairs an; improvements t iii be ointed Chief _ Z°'XR°SQIV,C,S_ T1239 w“ no m. at both terminals which, when clicatloh who would fill the pos‘s Iywmlflw-Pd- l" exl-‘wud 1° "111 they now hold-Chief of NavaiI8fPi11-1Y to the semieii rnd wi- Administrtltlon and Supplies an! ,:l’°ii15'11¢'~' °i 111°“ ‘"118 111° iFcrry. I‘i'e ccst of these improve- ‘ments is estimator. at 55364900. 'We are 50l‘l‘y this work is not fur- ,ther advanced, but when I advise iyou thai some eighteen months ago iwe calhd for tenders and we did irnt rece.ve even a single bid for ‘the Borden projcci you will DP‘ prociate some cf ollr aifficulfes. This situation has rlleviabd itself, rind we now have t-wo first-close contractors on the war: which is proceeds-g space. _ "As 1hr the ship herself, you viill find she ls modern 1n every respect. The designers and build- iers hafu succeeded in streamlin- 11115 her to a remarkable degree ("raving regard to the fact that l car ferry has to have mi-rv 0r i"! straight lines. Yc-u cannot bend a ‘box oar around l will" Bill-I l5 liir as 1 know we have .".ited her member of Air Council for Plans. respectively. Rear Admiral Grant has been a navy man nearly all his life, grad- uating from the Royal Miiitai! College of Canada and fighting ti‘. sea during the last two years of the First World War. During the visit of the King and Queen I18 commanded H.M.C.S. Skeem, em- barking the Royal Party for 111l- snge to and from Prince Edward Island. During the Second World War he was Chief of Naval Per- - sonnel and held an appointment in , Newfoundland. I Vice Admiral Reid, a man with ‘the rolling gait of the seas. also is a two-war man. During the first wai- he was aboard various ships of the Canadian Navy. inciudinil ithe warship Attack. mined and {sunk in i911. He assisted in the C f "rm: CI-IARLUFPETOWN GUARDIAN OWING TO THE DEATH OP THE LATE WILLIAM PEARDEN LT- PLAN TO BUILD YOUR HOME Under The ' NATIONAL HOUSING ACT,‘ Food Required i To F iii Contracts I -. ..._.». r orig.» , _ PAGE. I'll! OUR STORE WILL IE CLOSED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE. With The ii. K. Wjth LONG TERM PAYMENTS Mortgage Loans arranged for Private Residences, Multiple Family Homes, and Commercial Buildings. i timber- R-Oval Commissioner Mat-Gen. recommended ‘ iii 1a different regions, and give them l Commander Edwards, in accept. 1118 the vesse. for the Department l0! TIM-Sport. said "we accept the Abegweri with every new m” Sh, will prove as faithful a yrvant a; DY i ‘Stanley. ‘Show k Pearden (By Tho Canadian Preu) I OTTAWA. AHE- 10-Flgures rs- leased by the Foreign Service of' Rain improves ‘N. S. Forest Fire Situation i i (By The Canadian Press) Alerts Trim Tigers 28-2 T1" Merl-S. taking advantage of i ———— every opportunity, took a corivhnc- 1118 verdict frcm the Dodgers in a the Trade Department indicated today that Canada will have to- make heavy shipments of bacon, beef, other meat, cheese, milk, eggs and fruit pulp to the United Kingdom if existing long-term Local CHARLOTTETO MORTON ‘EASTERN TRUST BUILDING DEW Agent WN-TEL. I7 II food contracts are left untouched by Britain's plans to meet her economic crisis. The wheat and flour contracts for the crop year ended July 31 have been fiiied, but a recent sur. PASSING IS SNDCN ___,._ (Continued from Page 1) ‘the end of s long session. I All forest fires in Cape Breton regular scheduled game 1n tlh ‘Icy mdicatw ma‘ “us? quanm‘ Island, on the Nova Scotia main- Knights of Columbus Softball Sfipgfedozrl]? (‘gmxggicxéenlatlzigeéflniie Death Came Svrlftly land and in New Brunswick were League. ' 5 i vnder control tonight after a The line ups: 1W9" 1° be fined‘ La t '1'. cl , h t lr t -' heavy rain spilled on parched Alerts: S. McLure, K. Tulle, D.’ so n" the Government has r5 Ithe 80101114? By e 0o I um ‘or woodlands Saturday to bring elev- enth-hour aid to tired firefight- ‘ ere. DQ118811. a. Kelly. "Pertinent save iovglf1ulfi‘s“fr5nea1'1'agfig ;‘1‘11:y‘w‘:'; n02???zcgfiurifnfl¥llfxgukgj‘ Co‘; of food contracted for this year 5610mm“ l Pleasant Bay on the western coast P151195- R. Crabbe. L. Taylor, L. and ‘he “mwm 51119119111 ' of Cape Breton and Big ‘Bras D'- Gii11i1ii1- J- Gallant. Or. about 2.3 miles from Sydney. A fire racing down the slopes of -MacKenz1e Mountain had for a time threatened the tiny village of Pleasant Bay. Volunteers kept a watchful eye on the s ouraerlng embers of a fire at Mi a Gut on the east. coast of Cape Breton which Friday de- strayed four buildings, damaged others and galloped through 1,000 acres of woodland in less than four hour's. More than 200 vacat- ionists had to be evacuated by special train Some fighters battling a. six- day-ald lire on Cheticamp Island were transferred to the Macken- rie Mountain outbreak. 20 miles to TORONTO, Aug, during the week-end unsuarded following guards Saturday. the Clark. D. MacDonald, M. MacDon. aid, B. Clark, D. McNally, C. Mac. Neat game .his morning M1010 is between Alerts and Lions. Walk Dut Dn Strike. 10 —-(CP) — Bathers were warned to “beware",‘ lng March 3i. 1048; ‘ as Toronto baihina beaches were left virtually ‘imua resignation" of 46 temporary life- ceived no indication that the con- tracts are to be disturbed. The wade morning he sllppn i t u r1 thl b=kd f ' " "U 11"‘ s rta cull o some quantities and dun‘ “me so ‘quickly that a brother who l-md ‘ Bflcmhflsetween 265300900 and come here from Morictcri, NB, did 350,000,000 pounds during calendar ""1 ha“ mm m reach his bed"- year; 108,322,035 hi d b .1 1 1‘ 1 _ . 15‘ s ppe y uy_ His death in its stunniig sw1ft-‘ Beef- 120.i:00.000 pounds dilrlng “P55 ""19 as a major shock to o.’- ‘Llost nigirt, it became critical. Th3 . calendar year; 1065543 pounds ficial Oitawa man iii Striking h; d b l ‘ .ph;.'siq'.1*>, standing inches over six Toronto Lifeguards s Lggg, l,,g1rm1;,,,,_,,‘,,,,,,,‘i... ... -........ a. ........... .. t. pounds durlrg calendar year; l7,-l°"1y "1 11"’ 1m°51'°1° ~7 a 1°'1¥i 539 all d5 y 1 d 25306 political career. p n o amb an 1 Assocu-rtes and underimgs liked unds cf mu ton sh r l]? I ‘ppm by Julyihlm for his hlunor lug ability all Cheese-A minimum iz5.oo0,oooi"P"1°@ "id 111$ iefii-"i 1° 181W] pounds during the l2 monthsend- 111m$°11 '~°° "Twusly- 1'11’ “'55 9253350 called "frank" universally. and he pounds shipped by July 31, carried lightly the heavy designa- Evaporated milk-A minimum of 11°" °1 3°“ H9111"! film" 9"“ 600.0% cams c! t! td-oz. tins dur- 80W EH18“- K-C- ‘ing the l2 months ending March 1"" Ji-i-iil’ miliiiiie. he fiihd been '31, 1948; 280.500 cases shipped by ‘M37135? (in B "1510! 19975331311191’! . Piiiiee and emergency crews of July 15, and expansion o-f liis oeniironrni‘ It)“: 3‘°e'1151‘ieepr1‘s°‘3ée1m$1ghg1r1égflgz ‘faull-timegiéeguardts patrolled the‘ Dressed poultl-y_ganada Con. to meet peacetime neerl. and as- - a a- ' ' f“ Lretm‘ hmmmd range ‘hmugh sac cs o av bu officials em gragted lo;- a-id supplled 12500900 ‘sonates cad that undoubtedly ....is‘ dense forest before they could get to the fighting line. The flre on the Island was reported under (ontrol-after help from Saturday's rain, first in parched cape Breton in three weeks At Big Bras D‘Or. some 25 miles from Sydney. Daniel Campbell's home burned down before farm- ers, who organized themselves in- to firefighting crews, brought a flesh blaze under control. I Fighters stayed on even terms with. a. fire near Port Hood. 35 miles south of Cheticamp. which has burned over 10 square miles of forest and scrub since it broke cut July 2B. Four conIl-igrations between Syd- riey and New Waterford died down during the week-end after a sporting arm of one of them swal- lowed two houses and other bulld- iiigs Friday night and sent an e‘derly man to hospital suficring from shock. On the Nova Scotia mainland near Antigonish a shift in wind sent a week-old fire away from a monastery it had threatened and rate tonight forest rangers said they had ‘cornered it." It already has cut a four-mile swath through valuable spruce. Rain did not fall there durinr; the week-end and fighters had to truck water over long distances. In Now Brunswick. rain conq- iiered three serious fires'neiir the railroad centre of Moncton and Protection" for tihe seeking relief from heat. The police would The lifeguards Toronto Harbor in civic pair-ks. ‘ines. ..__.._.. OTTAWA. Aug. 10 -- Crbwn efforts to obtain a convic- lion o.f Mrs. Evelyn Dick iri the ""50 513W!!! of her husband 1n Hamilton in March, 1946. phaslzed they could not “guarantee thousands the ‘ sticky not take Evelyn Dick Case Ends With New Touch Df Drama over the duties of life guards but wereordcred to do all they can to. “help protect the public accidents on the beaches." "resigned" when Commbsion ficials refused to meet tihe guards’ demand for a 20-per cent wage in- crease. At present their pay rangesi from $105 to $135 a month for 55-hour week. They want equal pay with the supervisors of playgrounds against of- After the resignation, the Com- mission's permanent staff of 1D- _engmeors and patrol omcerk ‘was arrested on Bridge street last and 12 patrol boa; crew members ‘Wednesday hy chief of police Bowes were put on duty to man "all the beaches" and to patrol the shore- (CP) — ended pounds during the 12 monthsend- till! hit-d Weakeiifid hi! eirsnzth. | ed March Si. 1947. The "outside services" of his‘ l Eggg-Lvmyooo c3595‘ of shell Departiic-nt on both coasts had! ‘eggs during the 12 months ending ‘been bolstered heavily under his, Jan. a1. 1946, of which 469.592.6ii’€¢1-1°il in Merit moms-s. and up‘ plan; for a ire-alignment at head- ‘ i quarters P,E,|, ticns at first hand, he had plan-l l neda '..‘"p to the Pacific toast for Multiples next mouth. Until the selection of a succes- ister Ian MacKenzte is handling the fisheries portfolio. cases were shipped by June 30. ‘until he died he was working on‘ To observe the outside opera», this month and another- to the aor to the Minister, Veterans Min- SACKVILLE. N. B., Aug. 10 — H id ll f B . .. no Ho and o edeque’ PEI Few Outside Interests ‘Apart from his Jobs, the law and politics-and teaching in his younger days-Mr. Bridges had few outside interests. Though he had the bulid of an athlete, he iivas only mildly interested in isports, and curling was his most strenuous activity. ‘ l-le had an authentic background for scholarship and the law. l-Ils father, the late Dr. l-fedley v, 3, Biidsei. was principal of the New Brunswick provincial normal school from i906 until his death in 1938. l-Iis mother was the iiiiiilhter of a New Brunswick Siilireme court justice. Born at Fredericton, Mr. Bridg. es was educated there, graduating in arts from the University of New Brunswick in 1922. From and R.C.M.P. Corporal H. C. Wil- son. He was lodged in the local gaol and appeared Thursday morn- ing before Magistrate W. A. Gass on a charge of reckless driving and having liquor in an unauthor- ired place. He was fined $10 and casts for reckless driving and $100 and costs for having liquor in an unauthor- ized plsce.-—Sackville Tribune. Plan To Build Dii Refinery and trio hospital r}e-‘ scribed his condition as "serious", Support Board. After much dill.- culty in obtaining personnel. the membership of the Board was an- ‘ just a few weeks ago. Only two immediate relatives survive. They are his mother, Mrs. H. V. B. Bridges of Fredericton. and his brother Gregory, lawyer of Moncton, and a. former mayor of that town. who came to Ottawa on Thursday. TWO first 001151111 here are 1-1. A. Bridses. member o! the Canadian Pensions Commis- sion, an: Dr: E. S. Bridges, med- ical adviser'to the Commission. To BO Buried In N. B. The Minister will be buried In his native New Brunswick. where his Massachusetts great, great grandfather first settled in 1164, years before the exodus of United Empire Loyaiists from the rebel- ling British Colonies. There will be a funeral service here at 2 pm. tomorrow, and the L-ody will be taken to Fredericton- Burial will bc in that city's Forest Hill Cemetery after a service at Christ Church Cathedral. While the time of the funeral had not been fixed tonight, it was expected to be Wednesday after- f 0011. LARGE NIIMDERS (Czntlnueo from Page 1) the City, probably the most logical are. first. that the employment fig- ures for the United States are to- day the highest in that country's history and that thousands o! Americans are now having the privilege of enjoying their first holiday since the United Stafca entered the inst war; second, that while this time l st year. the Pro- vince was suffer ng from a polio epidemic, it ls the only Province in Canada which has not been attacked by the scourge this year. In the meantime, the restaurant proprietors, realizing that they would be called upon to extend themselves ever. more than last year, have been preparing. and one of the bigger caterers inform- ed. the Guardian last night that he felt sure the restaurants would be able to furnish all the meals desired. While all the larger hotels la the Oity are filled to capacity, the number of over-night cabins have been greatly Increased and it fl believed that there will be euflio- ient accommodation for every via- .tor especially when it is realized that scores of private homes ars helping out by taking one, two. or more visitors for the present week. At. the Exhibition grounds ev- erything is in readiness for the opening of the horse racing to- morrow afternoon and by this evening between 100 and 170 race Montague Man ‘Masonic Meeting Ont» was elected Grand Sovereign 0f the Grand Imperial Conclave of Canada, Red Cross of Constantine, when the Masonic Order held its 12th annual meeting only two small blazes, both under nntroi, were rcported tonight. s Elected At SAINT JOHN. N.B.. Aug. 10- ClD-Edward Tregenca, Windsor,- here Satur- Saturday with a touch of some of the drama which marked various phases of tho ceinbfah-d ‘murder C889. ‘ chamber o; the new supmne new Leduc oll fields an outlet, it Court .1 Canada hulldirlg where W" 1'°V°°1°d sfliiffifly 1X1 Bli- Mr. Justice J.W. Estey was hear- 11°1l11°°m°1115 111 wlihmBi-"l 511° ing a Crown application for lezive T‘°1’°111'°- to sppesl- to the against the acquittal of Mrs. Dick 111° Y°I111¢YY "V1119" at her uecond trial. Martin. K C , prepared to amia- iact and will move it to the A1- the appncsticm for the Ontario At- be"! “P1981- torney-Generais Department. Dick's lawyer m. Eobihotte. mo. Imperial will spend {6-000000 w of ‘Toronto. qtliefiy oroceedmgs with a statement that liii-lbiifili 1t. and t0 bring in fur- hc did not believe At Edmonton ‘ Tonoivm. Aug. io-(ori-rod- Th, and came mddeng, l“ g monton will get a refinery and the Imperial Oil, Ltd., has purchased the United States built at Whitehorse, YT., A, wg common K11, and WM, as part of its wartime Canol pro- Suprrme Court l-a, Purchase price is £000,000. but Jlfllfrupfgd dismantle the plant. move and re- the supreme ther material from sarnia. 0nt., then until N127 he taught school rnd studied Law on the side. i-ie held school principalshipa in Hills. b0"). N.‘B., and Campbellton, N. B- and in 1926 was president of tlie New Brunswick Teachers’ Ar. sociatlon. Admitted to the bar in 1927, he hung out his shingle in Camp. beilton. andihree years later ran for the New Brunswick Leglslai. ilre in Restigouche, losing to the late Hon. DA. Stewart, then Pub. ilo Works Minister. fie came back in i935 to defeat Mr. Stewart and ‘ take over a riding that had been Conservative for many years. Though only 34. Mr. Bridges was elected Speaker" at the next Legislature session, and he served for three sessions. Then he are“ with his Party leadership on an issue concerned with the New , r fsdiCti t r. the and other pointi- captui-e of two prize vessels. ‘with evijry Iii-gm" ""11; f? “fr, day night. 23:2; m "I"! on u "I I Th! tlmedwlng gum,- led 1m- One of his most difficult tasks iaatianni d9‘ <19 -- BY v‘ mPi-‘n- Other officers include grand Mr Roblneue‘ who won Mrs‘ perm m make me purchase‘ a during the secoritLwar was ex- zecho so mdfr. fildafykuiiibfl fines-Ca viceroy. V011 Archdeacon ‘SH. Mid- mck a ‘ew ma‘ md mo“ m .‘__ company statement 55¢ The m“, ipmdlng manum” p?“ m dispatch ylfiroirfc-lnn‘ mater‘ ‘I. u I $151113: éanlfrsglonAn érlgziflrdci-ilzipnd ilulttal after her Ci-HVACIIIDTI at a C1751? 15 5110111 111° “P9 115 1'11" ‘a?’ | .so1dier5, airmen an nurses ifvm- 5 _ ' - ' i ' .- _‘ s y; ~ l_ erectln a new- pant‘ but e ‘plate with equipment forpvcisefls Then Cmdr. Edwards rohlingild- nlpeg; Grand Junior General, grisgugrgf &e;: oixnaqngmzfhefllgf whlteygjrse refinery can be putl service. Later he commanded Nzw- "when His Honor Lieut-Gov. “H- Lauchlin M. McKi-nnori, Montague. ‘sd‘c“o“ o‘ ‘he courts‘ mm production by the end o, next‘ foundland forces and was ap- hard saw her 001111118 Iii i119 1"‘ P.E.I.; Grand Treasurer. Fred J. yen.‘ when“ H‘ would take at bour. he commentid that the looked to him like .1 yollna "Qliffli Mary." i can only say to l-lis Ex- cellency that, while she at- 1101 6X- Bctly the "Queen Mary‘ neverthe- ‘less ihuis is not ii sin!" 31d 1° Inavlgatiun or safet, device on the "imam Mary" the: is not aboard . pointed deputy chief oi naval swii and Canadian naval member 0i the joint Canada-United States defence board. | i TNDIISANIIS VIEW (Continued from Page l) n,“ m“ o; bu“? “ t u P ~ _ t.\s ype munch‘ yoswrday when m, amp _A special s p of d ‘was iIlPlEd UVGIaDy the builders "i" 11°=411°° °1' m“ °r “new” . l; ne man. and. wrvle those ‘asserts. :1: t. o... r- The Lieutenant Governor in re- ferring to the new vessel said. "I congratulate the Canadian build- 222‘. i§1i"‘.°ii'".n‘.‘fi“‘.i§'2' $153‘; no -- imi=~=i-"i..""' ' ""8. "'3 in the production of such a grand iii“11il ‘lfiaiwfifirh °°3“";r‘§.° an‘ ship as we are looking over today. Mi" “1 P "iw" swim‘ m. Our thaiilo to officials of the renteiivs- lady.‘ "ohms" Canadian National Railways who ‘dssiggniigudyahurd I h“; h" gaentoyer zealous for our better- fir. “O66” w was“ m. “map ' h '1 : ' s ' AINNENTAIEEJFIINNIII tmlcaoblibsbiitin: 1 “EL-sells Bole. Shipyard Manner. Portanoe would be realized when John lllcGrelor. $331 it was remembered that today ‘tandem: And" ‘ 'n‘d‘m“,“‘l ninety par oent of the Provinces milifitiir- I11 °1 “"5” H“! i” trafiio went across the Strait in B. l-lairaino. Chief has.“ t “I railway cars. "The Canadian Na- sinear. Olfllii- 3"“ i 1' ' l 'il.D.MaeLoan i UNDERTAKER EMIALMER VlI-arlottetowo- and North Wtlsenlrs Iaooe l0 ' . a ‘ tional Railways," he continued ‘Pranliifli’ °-°~ M°°"“7' mm" "have been mighty co-operstive iri lllnsinear ‘Petrrborii: W- wnhziz-l this hllllill| of trams." lCODKTICI- Insinmiiis Bsvtiém‘; _, ‘Mr. slmani when turning over tlisjmionto; o. nasal-tr. lifig s“; oar ferry on oehali of tn.- btilldemear, Montreal. Ii‘. b O x to the Depai-tmen‘ of ‘Transport sntee Engineer. Monti-es. ‘ ° I‘ referred to the not iiuii she ivi-lnreotiori lizismser. Montreal. Oilfi- eorponied many unique features Richott; John MacDonald.‘ gs!" in her dellln which made her an iah Cotfnrltiiiii- W81"?! ° P" ouf-rtanding vi-ssel of tier typo. Re ping: J00 Tl-ii- 711°’ m'"""| said I11lp operators all over the Dept. oi Trsnslflfi» A-K- VMDPM‘ world were i-iierestcii Ill il.e seq- Principal Inspector. Bteamahl? IB- walt bsoauas of the irray this lfovraiqsptailvii. Ottawa.‘ . l. I Johnson. Toronto. and Grand Re- i-ordor and Registrar General. WJ. Brackner, Toronto. Guests included Edward Bullick. Grand Sovereign Council of the tii-iitcd States. Mex- ico and the Philiiplnes. accompan- ied by Edward Grand Recorder: Philadelphia, Grand t-hn Grand Council of the States, empire of the east: vers Leach, Grand Sovereign of the of the Grand Glad. Chicago. Arthur Wind. Recorder of United Con- i is . R‘ d Cross of Constantine, State of md “mum by "m. "d Erwin’ at covylfilsrldifkletdnsrlarigriggipdolrfir Meaine, and Samuel Harris. High tey's time. m. n“ o’ cum“ memhmt onset to be overlooked. I em Prairie, Alia., immediate past .__.____._.._ msriiie- l‘l::xae!~°‘Ie Wm, your paflnfgslon, grand sovereign of the order and OPTIMISTIC sour. _ e of present Grand Master of the Roy- Elgm: figipprlzbiitllterd“ Efiofxflx? and ll liid 591C" teolurlclrna who have played not Jurisdiction of Canada. Masters, western FAMILY SECRET Early secrets you were closely sanded and a from generation to generation with- in families. of watchmalcina handed He said the section clvi-riy stated the supreme Cour: did not have jurisdiction to hear appeals in cases confirming or setting aside ah acquittal. . Mr. Justice Estey said it appear- ed clear that he iiad no jurisdic- tion to hesi- the application. The Crown mwyers agreed amt Mr. Common, who soent yesterday reading background of the case which has had four court hear- T119 911M115" 315° 15 151W“ P51“ lugs‘ awloglzad y“ having "mag- line with recent statements by fin- iessly" taken up Mr. Justice 3|.- perial officials that the company iwlli spend up to ssooooooo on it! exploration and development pro- gram in Western Canada. The-Whitehorse refinery is part WINNlPEQ (gp) pin-in; of the colorful Canal project ,, rgggylf h“; w"; l“ wngch ill; undertaken by the United States manna-y navel-ad around the go in i042 as part of its Alaska and m"; 5gp," “mp-ll . Ignoml hm, west coast defence against Japan. ‘ o; g5, n m", wen-p,‘ a ha”, win- ft Included a 597-mile bineiiiie ier parka with the hood pulled 11'1"" P7111111!“ w°11s~ N~wrTv u’ up. was .een peddling home on his Wiiii-Bimfst- W111i "111" 1111" P": bicycle with. a cake of ice in ell; vided to take the refined pmduc. “ll-flay, to Alaskan points. least another 18 months to build a new plant under present supp!’ conditions. The purchase is taken as con-i‘ firmation of Imperinrs belief my the Leduc field. some l6 miles‘ south of Edmonton. regarded sat the most important oil develop- ment in Canada since the Turner Valley came in. RECORD PENALTY PRINCE RUPERT n. c. - torn‘ —l-Iesvlest lsenalw ever levied Brunswick Government's attitude toward confederation. spun out the rest of his term as an inde- 1 pendent member and retired from ' politics in I039. Enlisted In 1912 He enlisted in the Army in 1942 and served overseas with the 2nd Canadian Corps, assisting in the administration of Justice in north- west Europe. I-fe was a maior in i045 when he was invited to coma home and contest York-Sunbury in the general election. Flying back from Europe, he ar- rived in Fredericton on nominat- ion day, obtained the nomination, rnd went on to defeat Lt-Gen. Ii. W. Sansom, the Progressive Con- scrvative candidate, in what had been regarded as a traditionally Conservative constituency. New Brunswick was left without a Cabinet member through the defeat in St John-Albert of Rev- enue Minister MacLaren. and Mr. Bridges was chosen for the port- folio. l-ie took over Fisheries from Hon. Ernest Bertrand, who be- came Postmaster-General. 0n Aug. 2D, i945, less than three months after he first became a lnember of Parliament. he was sworn into the Government. About his last major act as The Quality Tea a . . oniinos PBKDE against a halibut fisherman for iri- Minister was his completion of fraction of the Tiiiiimflilolifli Fiih- the setup for the Fisheries Prices ery Regulations — s fine w? $800 and confiscation of 12,000 wands of halibut - was imposed o-i Olaf An-i derson. Anderson pIPadel culltv to retaining tlnlibu-t caught under a i‘ black eoo license. i “Lon. o‘ N‘ KINKOEA “Us TUES_ merit of Agriculture building. Dr. day, bllifolrl containing sum of money and bank book. Finder please writs "M. C.“ c/o Guar- dfas ._.._-..a.a.___..a_.., Canadian Guernsey Breeders Association will address tile meeting." All interested are invited to attend. . l. R. CARR, Secretory. horses. the pick of the Maritimes, will be munching their hay and oats in their stalls. -_-_-___._. ATTENDS GENEVA MEET.‘ EDMONTON — (CP) - The do put/y minister of health for Alberta. Dr. R. M. Bow, will be one 0f the three Canadians attending the World illeslth Organization meeting in Geneva in September. He will re- present the Dominion Council ol health. LONDON -(CP) —- War Office is considering incorporating mar- riage preparation classes into ltl army education scheme. Judging Program For Cattle and Horses At the Provincial Exhibition Tuesday. 9 a-nm: Jerseys, llol- stelna and Shorthorns; also Tue‘. day at D a.m., Standard-bred horses and rnadsters. ' Wednesday at 9 a.m., Guernsey; Ayrshires, llrreforda, and Angus: also Ciydesdoies, Pereherons, purl smaller horses. Dissolution Df Partnership I hereby wish to make known that the partnership heretofore existing between E. Paul Sharpe and Wendell A. MaoNutt operat- ing under the name of Paul's Fly. trig School has been dissolved. My share has been pnrahaaad by l‘. Paul Sharpe. I have no Illllla cisl interest or other oonneotlal with Paul's Flying Service afloat- lvn July 1S, tilfl. WENDILL MMNUT‘! swarms‘ ————-———————-—-;——l A melting of the I-ince Edward Island Guernsey Breeders‘ T00 Late T0 Ciaslfy I Association will be held at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. i2, in the De ort- A. R. Campbell, secretary o thl \