JULY 22, 1940 _' Bring On Your first picsitlcnt so nominated in hour of darkest need." I W": Amid tumult which was stupendous, if not quite spontaneous, the ili-moirzts oi tiie United States nominated Franklin I). Roosevelt for u third term in Washington's White House. Roosevelt was tiie Republicans the history of the republic. Delegates miiilc the draft unanimous. Drafting of the man who had publicly renounced his liigh office came as the whirlwind finish oi’ a. five- l-our. three-ring c'rcu:= of old- (‘liii-lgo. It came 24 hours ahead of schedule whrn Sirnator Lester lliii of Aizihotna demanded during a [ire-nominal roll call of the shill-s that "America call on this great patriot to save her in her fashioned political tub-thinnpiiig at Advertising Rates-- Central Guardian locals, 5o per Alli) ‘ nitrification. Mimlmum Charge for Any Advertisements 25 Cent; 2c our word; Announcements and Coming Events 3e Per word: Cllisallit-‘d 3c per word; In Mcmorlam Notices 70a per inch; Lists of l Floral and Spiritual Offerings, Cards. etc.. 5c per name; Letters of (‘ondolciice 70c per inch. Wedding engagement 40 words for $1.00 and it) i-cnts for every additional 3 words. Notices of Thanks and "-1150". 701-‘ Der inch or 4o per word. Lists 0| Subscriptions .-. touts iii-r inch, Address and Presentation $1.00. other rate; an Payable in Advance W011i; Western and Eastern local: biisceiliineous BEAUTY SHOP- ~ in iill our permanent. \\'il'- -. Opt-ii Zfuesdiiy, Thursday and Saiiirtliiy evenings. L-029-7-l9-3i. ETA-AA“ t-osiriolv OPEN i t lllilll about 45 years of .i-'.\' illlt‘ to ti-itusfci- and promo- ti .ii \l our oi‘ our men. Apply’ BAJ" it) A, Al. ‘fucstiriy’, July 23rd .2 . otcl. Ask for L_050-7-'.Z0-2i. Agtiiii; Wanted lN'I‘l-] ESTED IN Profits-of you would iig. profitable work l popular linc of ct ssilics at present on inqulrc Today with- . tlon: Fiiinilex, 570 St. i, Montreal. N-4. . ._-_.____ . _ , nlc Help Wanted nun. \\'.»\.\'TICIIVWFCliwlldIlfiEi Wtllk- Ai>i>ly 3c‘: Elin AVCIHIP. k L-iilltl-7-22-2l. Lost oo tosr-srithyisn FROM home tit Strinhope, Tuesday moi-ulna. medium sized York- shire terrier named Bobs-white sliaiucv cont. brown markings. Itciviird for information leading to recoil-hi’. Notify W. J. Duche- F or Stile FOR SALE -— 30 ACRES STAND- illi.’ ha)‘. Lloyd Moiyiieiiux, Sfluthport. L-tlol-f-Ztl-lii. FOR. sALi-z-wiirznrésdiso cwr. oats $1.35 cwt. Delivered in 100 bus. lots. Ed. MucFiidyen, our- leton. L~672-7-20-4i. For Rent FOR. IIENT-SIWIMIIR COTTAGE North River ROllCl—: hore privilege; reasonable. Phone 8'14 or colt rit 175 Quccn Street. J. P. Crockett. L-ti64-7-20-2l. Are You the Man i? __*__ ' VYATKINS DEALER, (BETIVEILN :25 und 50 years, with car), nccdcd iinmetliiiteli" to hand out. MLEE Soap in nearby rural route and supply established ttciiiand tcr Everyday Necessities including $111605. Extracts. Bibklilg Powder, Toilet Preparations, Cleansers, Medicines. l"ly' Spray", lvllnivralizctl Stock iind Poultry ‘Ionics. 72 year reputation. 10.000 dcrilers. Must be satisfied with $30.00 weekly at start, Selling ex] ‘i109 unneces- sary. Farm crxpt cnve iislplul. Credit furnished right parties. Write immediately, The J. . Watkins Company, Montreal, Que. Dept, Z-C-1A. N-320-7-3-8-l5-22. Keep Minartfs in the home. min, Stnnhope. L- B38-7-l9-3l. , _ i i-ii Hum: Office LU l‘ ‘v _,v Wiliam Middle- i “- ti compost-d the battle song or tiicditltli Army Gil-operation has b_'e:i k'lleti in a fly- il. his family in Owen been informed. APPOINTED TO MD. M"!!! W. K. hlarGregor has been ‘Pliliintcd assistant ndjutant-gen- "RI to miilt1 dixt~l l. N . a. Since [Mil he liyns l);"!vc|v1""':l'"9\ arr North Rt-nfrcw. In the lust fifkhe served with tht- B ei. “ Yh "kimt-nt and was taken {TWIN by tiie Gcnnans. Until his ‘gipointmcnt lic- was a major In l Lanzirk and Rrnfrew regiment. Fearless Villcter Wins $5,000 llillage Farm Stake GOSHEN, Jilly 18-tAP)~li‘cnr- less Pct-er, ounic-ri by Dr. I... M. Guilznger of Aiidcver, Ohio, and t driven by H. M. Pars-hull, today i ' won the $5.000 Village FJHII Stoke for thrtre-year-old paccrs, for his third straight Grand Crcult, vic- tory at the historic track. The favorite. William Cash. was ncscd out in the first heat biit 1:1 the llflfll the pacer from the Par- shall Stable hocl no trouble. The winner paid $7.70 straight in the first, heat and $4.20 in the final. Athlone Flaxcy Guy, owned by Leon McNamara, of Indianapolis and driven by Tom Berry, was a. straight-heat vinucr of t-he Second Division of the Trotting Club Trot. Pioneer Hanover stocd out in the Third Division of the Trotting Club race and won easily for his owner-driver W. E. Miller, of Washington, D. C. In the final heat drivers Parshzill and Will Fleming drew $100 fines for beating the barrier. The Classified Trot wits limited to two heats and at tihe finish More" Expense and Doctor Lee were tl-rd for first. honors, each with a first and second. AWARDED DEGREE PII. D. Robert Glen, Assistant Entomolo- gist, at the Dominion Entomolo- gical Laboratory, Saskatoon, Sash, has recently been granted the de- gree of Doctor of Philosophy by the University _of Minnesota. Dr. Glen was appointed to the staff of tho Saskatoon Laboratory in 192B, l-[e was born in Paisley, Scot- liznd, and came to Canada at an early age. At the University of Saskatchewan he nbtnincd the d»- gree of Bachelor of science with honours in Biology, iii 1929. and Master of Science (Entomology) 1n 193p Further graduate work in entomology was tiikcn at the Unl- verslty of Minnesota tind lit. Wash- ington. D. C. l-ie lins boon cntznucd lirlmllf"? in rt study of flic various nsyiect of tiic wivcworm problem in West- ern Coiuidn, niid in recent: you‘ tins dcvols-d much time t0 slutlvhr. the characters by which the dif- f-mq gtfllplflfi m‘ wlrcivorins con be ,"SH..-...i.-~-.-,q_ In hi“. doctor's ills- s e r t o t l o n. cnllticd "Larval '""' rinencnt ectlwo mllltlg, N. ,Y. Stock Exchange (Canadian Press) Montreal §totrk Exchange (Canadian Preol) _ CHARL()'I"I'E'I‘UWN GUARDIAN STOCK QUOTA UONS I FINANCE n‘, nuiETc-rum NEW YORK, July 3i—(A.l=)- The stock market muddled through smother ltickociaiaicll session Sat- uid nlahed the week with enamel Mrtookcwacofflcftpointqbut ‘on the week showed a net ad- vance of 3. ‘Ii-austere of 111,200, armies consented with 134.030 last Saturday, touching l. low mark for a two-hour wrench limo Jun dc . the week's BRETQCB-te or i.- 63 .72) shares bettcred that of the preceding week bty around 100.000 shares. main under water am the Boincry Ward, United Aircraft. Am- erican Telephone, lsues moved friacttonaliy higher. Canadian Pacific, Walkers, D15. tillers Seagraim uid Lake shore gained lmcilune vvhille Dome lost 1-4. In the bond market Canada 4's were inactive. Produce Prices | Jilly 3I—(OtP)— Produce Market prices here Sat- urday. as reported by the Dominion Department of Agriculture, follow: Butter: first. grade creaimery prints. lflbbing price 24. 1-2; first EH66 solids, Jobbing price, 24; Quebec no 1 paswimzed, current receipt but». 23. Quebec no 2, ; Qllebw I10 1 rifled. Wholesale Jvbblnc brwc. 2t 3-8-1-3, Quebec I10 2. 32 5-8——3-4. Cheese: Western white, current well» 13 11-16-13 -1c; col- ored, 1 15-16-44; whlw and col. cred, wholesale Jobbing price, 14, Quebec white and colored, current receipt 014W. 13 3-4; Jobbing prim‘ . wholesale E8851 eroded i-‘pmeinm in used are. r“:- “ilir P3’:- -; ._m . _ . 19 i-z-oo; c mum a 1 2' B 75's 1.70-1.15; (POBBW Pfices aire wholesale.) Market At A Glance (By The Canadian Press) Toronto-Industrial and base met- gleuaitoclrs higher; other groups Y. . . Montreal-Utilities industrial; and golds lower, New York-Stocks closed slightly lower. Wlnnlnee-wnut closed unchanged at - cred prices. New York-Canadian dollar up l-it to .88 3-4. Coat of Mail Once Called A Chemise The W°Td Che-mile. the French word for shirt, has been used mwvsh the ages to apply m all sorts of garments-moth inner and outer, glllilgefllld short. masculine and fem- 'l‘o lust what artncle of clothing it first referred. is obscure. ltis deriv- 22.1.1.0»; r“';."r:m*o-" t" .meanng .r on ca n 1n addition the idea of a thin Probably the first chemise was an undergarment, usually of linen. worn bv bot-h men and women. This is the modern French meaning. However. we read also of cnusader Ralloping off “We tunic. worn over the coat o mail. called n. chemise. 'I‘iie priest's surpllce and the robes of heralds also once bore this name. Feminine Garment 1n English the word came to be restricted to the feminine undergar- mcnt, from which there arises in etymological discussions a. deal of confusion between smocks, shifts. kitties, shertes. and chemises - all words applied at, various times to the same garment. In the middle of the 19th century came the humorous corruption of the French pronunciation of "Chem- ise" into "shimmy" or “shimmey,” the French word being taken for a. plural form. Hence. t is qui ,quot- ed from a. work of the perl girost. was Aunt Kate's shtmmeys pinned on the line to dry." Todaé the Chemise is the "all-in- one" s p-ln, p. combination pantie and vest with shoulder straps. It is especially prominent in knitted smlis as a staple, also in woven a the in a ion or cottons, attains a certain popularity when sheer shirtwalsts and suit-s are in fashion. It. is gen- erally regarded as a type for iargm sizes, to wear under a corset. GASOLINE Fl-Altl- UP ALTON, Australia —(CP) —Onc thousand three hundred and fifty gallons of gasoline were destroyed fire here when the wagon 00;; rying the gasoline was struck an electrical train. 41359144! fl/IPAG‘ the island of Ouelunt (Ushnnt), off the coast of Brittnifl. fiance, according to I Berlin report, which claims that lo naval hue; have been estab- Ilshed at the channel ports shown. From some it In claimed that thfl hiiVlll nrm of tin invading army could be rent to Britliih shores with- Steckl Olen Stock: m," Am Radiator B 3-4. 3 Am Tel Tel 100 B:;.lZllIl‘::l H: 1.3 Am WM" ' 9 Bldg Prcductl 13 Anaconda 19 Cari Lament 4 Ba“ 01119 3 7-3 Cari Pacific 4 1 4 Baldwin 5°“ 14 l-8 Can Steamship . 3 1:4 Beth Steel 74 1-2 Cons Smelt ‘t9, 9y ch95 °h1° 33 Dom steel B - ’- 1 Chrysler 68 1-4 Gen Steel Wares 4 3.4 Commonwea. So 1 l-4 Int Nickel 3g 1.4 Con Edison 2s Mtl Power m; Col Gas Co 5 3-4 Nat Brew g5 E190 Pl‘ 1M0 5 1-2 Noranda 4g Gen Eleo 31 3.4 power Corp a g€IINMOlDPS 43 1-4 Shawinizan ' 13 Kenna)!‘ Pfd 22 5-8 MONTREAL. July Z1—(OPJ-_ m"? 25 1-4 The stock market felled to rally Mont Wiird ' 39 3-4 after an early wiave of light, selling N Y Central l1 7-8 and leading issues ended on g0? Am C0 19 1-8 downside although a few scatter“; or Pacific 6 l-8 advances. mostly adjustimgnr; dot. Pack Motor a 5-8 ted til-e list 11L the clc-se of éiirur. Penn R R. [9 1-2 day's abbreviated session. gut; Oil Co 7 3-8 fell Telephone declzned, 1 1-5 a o_ Corp 4 7-8 w ile Power Co Lion . ilitoe C0 72 7-8 off 1-4. mom finished O N J 33 7-8 Fractional decline bom- Ftude Corp a 1-2 by CPR. and Dososo Mflgtelfl Texas Corp 3g 1.2 Frontenac advanced a minimum l- United Air 33 mount. Nickel closed unchanged United Gas In“; 1g and Noranda had an upward ad. U s Rubber 1B 7-5 Justment of 4 1-4 points, IT s st Co 5o 1-2 General Steel wares and United Vanadium 29 1-4 Steel dipped lightly whpe other 1b West Elec 93 sues to close eafier included Nu- woolwm-th __ tional Breweries and St, Lam-gnu Flour, Canadian Foundry and In- _ ' dustrial Acceptance had upw-Mu m. h‘ t I C just-merits of 1 1-4 point‘ each 0n _ ‘rgfiag ygéssrMfiivo slliares; Indus. ~ . ; es . ; ssoo. 60° Ema‘ (Canadian Press) M- ei»- Banks Abitibl Com 90 Abitibi Pfd 4 1-8 ———- i B A Oil -' l7 3-8 (Canadian Press) Bcuhnrnols 4 l-B Imp Oil 1o Stotdrs m," (Cjflllildfl. ___ ommerce M l Montreal Royal Bk 150 ‘ Nova Scotia _ (Canadian Press) , “MN” “"1” I GRAIN Stock: Close Anglo Cdn 59 --i- Ashley 3 CHICAGO. July 2l—-(AP)-whe@t Aillllltl‘ Gold 117 105i it wit Mid other srams follow- Biisc Metal 7 1-2 ed Wlbh fractional declines Satur- Bear Expl s 1-2 day. Bldggod 13 Prices finished at or near the Brfllflfllo s20 lows 0t the any. i-e-i 1-8 cents Broulzin 4s Iwvr than Y-ESKEXKTBY, July 73 i-s, Bu“ Auk 3w September 74 1-8-74. The July grit Edm, 130 Price was 1-2 cent above the sea- Ccln Mal as i-2 $0M 10W- lcciit Pat. 162 90m @105“ 1-4-3-4. July 8-4, .Chcster 741-2 Sel-“Emmr 6°—59 7-3; Oats un- Cochenour 48 “hmlged l" 3'4 0Y1; Rye 5-8-3-4 Coniarum 100 dmw and Lard 2-5 10W?!‘- Coiis Smelt 32 i Davies 13 WINNIPEG. July 21-—(CP)—An Dome O11 19 PKWY!’ busmes of 1.000.000 bushels East Mal 25D cf no. 2 northern when/r, to me Falcon 250 United Kingdom failed to arousq Pwancoeur 27 interest in traders during the sum-g Gold Gate 12 S?".‘“‘d‘““' 5855"“ On Wmmm Ham Rock 67 Elam exchange, Hollinger 1o a-a P130“ Yfim-"tln-cd M; their P988ed Home on 155 m.n.miiins of 71 3-8 cents per bush- In, Nickel - 32 P1 101' Jglv wheat. 73 s-s for Octob- Jenlcoe 3 34 er and i4 5-8 for Decrmber, prtces J M Con l b2 closed their fourth week on, the Kerr Add 195 pegs‘ Kirk Lake 87 “m” Ah” 5°59‘! 5'3 15° 1-3 Lam Cad 8.7 cent lower. Lapa Cad 7 Lcitch 50 Mme L L 215 ALL FOR A NICKEL Mucssa . 285 i Muaeod 130 One hundred and forty separ- Mnliirtic 75 ate operations are required to make lucyntym 3g the modern Canadian -made shot McKenzie 9t) shell. according to an article under Mew/Myers 26 the above heading which appears Monet; 4g in the June issue of C-I-L Oval. Murphy 11.4 The shot shell consists of five Nnybob 141-3 major parts: brass head, primer, Nornnda 47 5-8 bfl-ifiivad. paper tube and the load 013.19“ '15 which includes powder. shot and on...“ 15 ivads. The action that takes place Pnmguf 105 when the trigger of the shotgun is Pandora 5 pulled on a, shot shell is simple and pnylnasge; g2 1.2 easily understood. says the writer. ppm-on G014 135 The pull on the trigger releases Pick Crow 245 the firing pin which strikes and Powell 69 indent; the primer. 'l‘hls causes Print-it». Roy 14 the primer mixture to ignite and Preston 167 the resulting flame spurts through Reno Gold 15 the flash-hole igniting the powder 5m», Am 105 charge. The large volume of gas siicrritt 63 created sets up tin extremely high Sigma i525 pressure which causes tho felt Slscoa 88 wad to expand and tightly fit th Sladen 2B gun barrel. thus preventing the slave Lake 6 escape of gas or the loss of pres- Steep Rock 140 sure. The vvzid is then set in rapid striiw Lake 4 motion imd pushes the shot charge Sud Basin 100 ahead of it and out of the barrel sylvrmlte 215 in a scatter effect. It is unbeliev- Toburn 115 able. states the writer, that the Upper can '15 product of so much engineering ventures 215 skill. ballistic knowledge, scientific Vermllata. 12 research and technical precision Wrt Harg 515 ' could be obtained for a mere five- cent piece. It's amazing, but true! UNLISTED - The official British annual cen- Pend On it! sus of horses showed a decrease in numbers from 858.700 in 1038 to ‘IOHONTOH July Ib-(CI-"l-Jm- 844,700 in 1030 in England and dwtrlal slow-ks tiizhtened up $1 111 WfilES, and S decrease in scotiimii the index in Saturday's two-hour from 144,800 in 1038 to 142,300 in session to show the best price 1939. The decrease was largely con- lcvvl 8130c the 111164119 0! Jllnte- fined to horses used for agricultural B886 mehal 5116196 “M104 N 8M1 purposes, including mares for breed- the other index groups were prac- 1m; tlcaily “tidal-Wing?! tzhe duly. Vol- ume was . res. ' ' Scattered, induatrlals pushed for- l ‘l1 F81]. ,0, 8,,“ u, , ,0 , M“ Any German Ons a g Gains in 1M4 cum through for Oanadg merit pflL, M00011 pfd., Page He , S u pfd. and Montreal wer. Slzemble losses were boarded by Bani: of Montreal. Blue Ribbon, Cathode Nllultlrig and Canada Bud Breweries. Not-undo advanced lbmit I point, Ventures added i6 comic, Falconibridgo l0 and Sheri-lot. I, In- temmtiortal Nickel Ind Ootniolldtit- ed Simeitieru weakened minor frac- tions. ,1. 4 Doime weakened l-i and lwweasa E l0 mnts while loses of I to 5 came out for Kerr Addison, MlcKenzte, min Central Patricia. Pickle Crow, "14"" advanced l0 and Preston 2. 9F Anglo-Canadian cold off I cent and Vermilatti advanced B. Davies was down 1-4-cent, Tribe liepturoidlnt with Special , Reference to the Genus Ludiun Gprmnn troops have landed on Esch." Dr, Glen has described and g5 mm, (mm Brut, illustrated, in greet detail, chur- ncteri for the identification of the larvae of eighty-four species. It is already l ‘lied by potent authorities an an outstanding con- tribution to science and to applied Morphology and Taxonomy of the eiitomoioq in particular. in 42 minutes, triiopsliipii trltlrg three time! as lcnir. llut Sr Archi- bald Sinclair declared that though n‘r raids might. become much heavier any German onlllillllt will ll"- Alnoclntcd Pres: Financial. Writer I Q 18, 1958. Owing l0 two fit-fly lively | A-Jaige I ,u'l dinner-time at night, they fol- hllh"? other | . "Th, I 'R.G.A. Technical , Training School 5'1‘. THOMAS, July 19- With clocklike regularity, which has been clicking steadily for weeks now, student airmen under the British Commonwealth Air ‘ffraln- ing Plan are pouring into the huge Technical Training School here. The active population of the local organization now has reach- ed proportions of that of a town. Climaxing months of painstaking worlk, whgch had a: prgvide for equ pmen, ma ria an accom- modation to handle the flow of airmen, the school now is in full swing as l; unit) of the training sc eme un er wiich al units had to function like the meshes of a gear whficl. “llléllltl; 11A few dlltyS now. u y qua i ie ero-Erig ne Mechanics tA.E.M‘s.) and Air Frame Mechanics rA.F.M’s) will be- tgin b0 etrnegge. Aéidd faom that. day on a scay pr uc on of 121 l finished men will issue every week, to make way for the steady arrival of 121 beginners. ltTTS, asd the school is called by zigzag? siérlilgle Ilillllltlsofalthtgl-Iairistracilrl? ‘lug scheme which incorporates 111 formations and units, scattered from coast to coast and includes 7i schools for air crews alone. It is the focal point for young men from every part. of Canada who will become the mechanical forces of theorganigatitivn fwhich {must main a.n iuzi re s o aircra t at the stations ai over the Dominion or the ground crews accompanying itcixililzzgiéicns loversfzrilsé Itdis z_t huge cna oer‘, rawing is pupils frcin everywhere in Canada and distributing them back when they are grnciiiittcd. Not. until a visitor has toured its miles of corridors. and watched its hundreds of instructors at work, is lit possible to realize just why .volumes of men were not. produced lin the first; few months of war. ,But after one visit, it is apparent: it is impossible to turn out fully lqualificci men in any vocation with- cut lLllCnlltTEhSitl‘): I:1(5’.‘fllilIll€i\é€q(Ull)- inen, ie ma cria or s u - e - vines aircraft etc? and thejtraihl- ‘Zn teachers. ' l | Foiilmonths these itnlportent fac- t r . ' be b' i l; i qiiniilléi, .33. “iiim..‘.‘ii~.i“ flit. they have been at fuli strength. As a result, more than two thous- and stiifiients are studying every ay. wi not one open or idle hour. ,From 6 dclock every morning un- low a. routine schedule that doesn't miss a man. In the words of a prominent, motorcar manufacturer who visited the school recently, “This is the nearest, thing to line production of human experts that has ever been conceived." SCHOOL ACTIVITIES To get, an idea of the school's ob- jective, it is necessary briefly to visualize the whole training plan. It is an organization which seeks to take raw material in humans and train them into a fighting aerial force. This includes pilots, observers, gunners, wireless opera- tors, maintenance crews. meteoro- logists. etc. It. also must include accountants, cooks, parts experts, stockroom men, equipment men, etc. Pilots cannot train in air- craft that will not. function, nor can they fight in machines which are not in perfect mechanical con- dition. And in aircraft i-lllS last applies to airframes (airplane skele- tons), fabric, instruments, and so on. Try to visualize, with the meagre background, what is necessary,’ therefore, to turn out. and .ater support, a pilot, Whether he be fighter or tivin-engiiie bomber ex- pert. With this knowledge. Royal Air Force and Royal Canadian Air Force chiefs, with the best civilian brains available, worked out. a. pat- .tcrn: S0 many of each qualifica- tion of men must be available to produce pilots. But they just ivereift existent. Every available man was taken, but their numbers still fcl‘. fiir, very far. short of the needed total. So the available men ibecanie teachers of the new men who had to be created. That describes T.T.S. Add to the above that. pupils had to be itauglit cn real aircraft and aero tengines at a time when aircraft and engines had suddenly acquired a. premium value and rarity sce- 0nd only to the dove of peace. Eh- gines had to be begged and bought. Antiques were no good. Aircraft. had to be scraped together from here and there. Evidence of the perseverance of the high com- Ullflflfi of the scheme is seen in the fact that totiay T.T.S. has more than 50 aicrltft in its equipment, ‘with hundreds of engines. carbure- ,tors, magnetocs and other mat- eria . With this description of the pur- pose of the school, the method of its attainment assumes greater iii- terest. First. the school's size, and ability to be co-ordrnatcd iii one big centre. rests on the provision lof the buildings of the new Ontario Hospital hem, donated by the Gov- Hamment of Ontario. Whereas oth- er divisions of the training plan have been broken up to place iiim- -ilar units (1.0. elementary flying schools) at many points, ihcse buildings made it possible to cen- tre everything at. this plant. LOCATION 0P BUILDINGS The buildings are in two main quarters on one side of the high-. wit-w; Operations and schools on; the other side. The latter is alone important in surveying its func- tions. Thesc buildings ale huge, of the most modern construction. ‘They consist of two long central corridors from which four tremen- dous wings jut out in opposite di- rections. The first pair of Win88 house offices and lecture rooms; the other three wings are living quarters for men. including recrea- tion rooms, libraries, etc. The men are divided into exact- ly the divisions represented by the building's description: Wing No. 1. consisting of Squadrons 1, 2 and 3, occupies the northerly trio of wings; Wing No. 2, wit-h its Squa- . drchs 4, 5 and 6. ts in t-he south- erly wing. Thus, so far as instruc- tors and equipment are concerned (and also culinary provisions), the school ta divided into two sections. This permits dual use of every- thing, which means twice as much time on any sublect or materials. than if the whole body were taught. together. Scattered around these buildings are the new structures erected un- tier the Training Plan, consisting of technical shops. hangars and so on. 'I'hese buildings tire vast, cupnblc of housing hundrcrls of students at one time. For instance. glance at acro-cnglne students at. wvrittien and the-e WILL? / Many a_ Will reposesfriieflglect/érrl and b erhaps , forgotten, ‘ awaiting the sigJ mature necessary to make it fa vital‘ ‘documentfit In these days there is no‘. time for delay. Because of the unknown- future, every man sh at once, and appoin ould make his Willi‘ t an executor who is permanent, reliable and experienced. . - _ v c "*' , , v ' Our experience of over forty-five ‘years may prove valuable to“ you in, preparing your Will, and indispensable‘ =to your dependents in the event of your. (death. Our trust officers would gladly, ‘discuss these matters with youIfc Your’. ‘(branch offices.‘ call will be welcomed at anv of our, study. In a long loly fireproof builoltig are scoics of instructors, cacti with an acre-engine or a block. Around cuc is a little group of a dozen all "attnieii. Thz-ir area is clearly marked, because they mustn't crowd ovcr inio ihc next. instructors place. They lis- teii attentively to what is said, are invited to ask questions, watch him_ ivhile he methodically tears the 91181119 down. L‘.\'i’\.lllllg every" 11cm. As they leave him, in moves the identical group from the other Wing, following one hour behind them. They pass on, imrliups, to Carburetion, where they have been [preceded by units from their own wing and will be followed by units from Wing No. 2. 'I‘iiiis it goes on all day long. Aflcr actual me- chanical study, they return to lec- tures for blackboard studies. Each ,dav they study theory, because to understand enguics they must know metals. file's, oils. clear- ances and a thousand other things. '11 ENGINEERING WORK This last description applies only i to area-engine stildents. In all-l other huge building nearby, exact- -, ly the same processes are beiiuzj followed by airframe men. An ii:- striictci" lends his group over to an honest-to-goodiiess airplane and slashes its fabric with a knife, and his wide-eyed students which as he goes to work at, fixing that slash. They have earlier learned. about fabrics, metal fllld wood ll'.lll\C.». dope, paint. Others sinnd in loin: r..»vvs, as far as the eye can dis- cern their actions. itllCi vied metal tubing together or glue strizxs of wood into sections. These mcn are studying in these proportions: 60 hero-engine iiirn to. every 55 airframe mmz. Experi- ence shows thzii those proportions (counting available li\(‘ll 110W! will be the nerds of the Air Force. Sometimes there inav be fluctua- tions, because the odd man fails to measure up or falls ill. "Tribute to the efficiency oi the fllfldillllzkililOIl behind tire schtsius, liowcici", is seen in thr- inc‘. thiit no man to date has flopped through inef- flciency or lack of application. Examinations are written regu- larly, with finishing or iinzi. exams at the finish. No favoritism can occur bDCfilbL‘ iiuinb: c distri- buted just before . .. n ' numbers arr) not matched to the man until \f- ter tihe results of ilic papers have reached Administration. The men come from the Mari- ning Depots t-hrougzh ivhirh evciy Air Force recruit tiriginaily flows. divisions, Administrations head-,As tltcy enter school. tliry are cl‘ the rank assigned them at the De- pot: Aircraftman. Second-Class. A.‘ they emerge, t-hcy conic out A.E.M'.\ or A.F.M‘s. In aildillon. and not, mentioned above, thcrc are offic- ers. taking the some courses mid studies, who have been carefully chosen for educational, leadership and other qualifications, who will become the administrative heads of the work done by the mechancls after they go out on service. Not mentioned till now are oth- er small divisions of the school, such as accounting instruction. equipment. instruction and so on These are small. its are instru- ment mtikcrs, electrical experts. ‘machine tool operators, turner: and iirmourers. Tncsc also are taught at T.'I‘.S. Their numbers are small in comparison with the bllz "show", yet these uten are ea- aentlal to the operation of thr whole machine when it gets into full swine in sucocediiid weekn- Meybe that is why there iii such a high spirit, of co-operniion in the school. Because you can toil: to any men and he is proud that he la "helplnq to vvin thc war" i CARE oi='..i~£§' Aiptirt frombtiie iivqxiruiuce or‘ Pstoring linen tn n ti y tl-1'_\' "lili- "board and usni! fi‘lii‘lt's tn strict rotation totcqualizc wcrir, careful mending will keep did aheetfi, two- .. _ _ ' .. *‘ els, 006., going quite a time. Thin places should be finely darned be- iore U163‘ so into holes, plloivcascs patched before thty arc icrii, In the kitchen linen gins. iiiiti silirr cloths should never 11c used tax- ually as kitchen cloths but kept SQDBPBAYAZ. , N O TI CE ‘mhfsdhfi ..."i.“l§.ii‘§.';.. f.“ CHAR LOTT E 'l'0Vi'.\' RIFLE RAN G E Between 1st of August. and 1st of September. Etna arein liioiisistsnof all l‘ vc l‘ to 0"‘ boundarics— O L V‘ mg Commencing at the tiring points and extending over the Hillslxxo River to a point 500 yxirds neith- eaatcrly from the Ihlcoiivvood Asylum. thence ' yards in a, northwestcrly d on, tin-rt, a running southivesict. n the three- . , _ _ .\ ttion oi the firing pOllllr, rill land and ivatcr being incluueil in tliisc boundaries lie in the danger arcit. By order 0f ti'i.c MINISTER 0F NATIONAL DEFENCE. PROVINCE OF i PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND In the Probate Cour‘. the 12th day 0f July, A. 1).. liJ-ltl. i In Rc Eszriio (.1 11w, iLean lino of (Jim * lQuccns Coiuiiy ill . nice. Wiclotv, (incensed, icstnic. l To the sheriff of ilie tioiinit- of yQucens County or any Constable ior literate person ivithin said ‘County. i GREETING: Whci .i\ upon rend n: tlir- pctl- ditlll Oil file oi I). l'..i.i |of Soilris in King iProvincc. Farmer, 1A. Mcllonrtlrl aforusziid, ctl . X .5 R lticDiii-izild s Cuiiiily lll said red Masti ‘hereby rcqiiired to ciie all peifionl interested in the said Estate to bu and appear before the Jiitlue pre- sent at a Probate CJilIt, to be held tin the Court House ill Churliywo- town in Queen's Count , m the said Province, on Mon lli‘ iltfzi driv of August next co ting. at the hour of 213C o'clock t» tDtxvllght saving TlillPl of lie some dliv to shew ciiusc if tiny they can why the Accounts of ‘ihc ..iilti Est-ate should not i ithe Estate closed as ayid for iii ‘_<oid pctrion and or. lll’"'il'll of H. F. MzicPhcc, Esq, Prccloi" for said Peiitioncr. And it is hereby ordered. that I true ccpv hereof be. forthwith pub- lishcd in sonic llf‘\\'5‘});‘il*‘1‘ publish- ed in Charlottctoilvii iilortzsunld one! in each wcck for or lPIlSi tour con- secutive weeks from the date hen-- of rind that. a true copy hcreof_bl forihitvitii posted in the following public pips rcs-pcv!.\".‘l,v. uRmHY. . of the Co "z House in at or nml‘ , Conatla ill Charla .. n ufo: aid. and 11f, o! near the Brink of Nova, scout in Charlottetown aforesaid so that all persons interested in the said Estate as aforesaid may have dul notice thereof. witness His Hono I-lnrol Leonard Palmer, Judizc o the sol Prohiiti- Court at Chnrlottcto riforcsntd. the day and yeti-r firs groove arlttcn. Bar Q: 5 s- By the Court. _ tSgd.) MURIEL C. LO\\'TIIEI\ ‘L. B.) '1 Registrar l 14487-1-15-4