0 . THE GUARDIAN. cirsnndrrarowiv PAGE FIVE AUGUST 11.__19_4§__' ‘;“._;=-_;_—.-_____-_; one umirrs iiazvis \ saour f JOHNS-MANVILLE _..___---_____ iio iisso FCIi iiiiaic "um: member u» story of Mums and his lam? - h," n, gave him everything h, wished for? Well the same holds true with Johns- Manville Dunbeatos Beef shinny. It's everything ya“ could ever wish for ia a roofing ahinsle- n.‘ the finest roof protea- tion money can bily- M!“ of asbestos and cement - 1. i. fireproof, rot-proof. wgthflpflwf — and m1 a "houaetlme." 1n over 35 years not one J-M As- bestos Shingle has ever burned — not one has ever worn out. And Dursbestos Shingles are beautiful. too! ‘their harmingiy _ ‘ned texture and staggered butts give chm all the beauty of fine weathered wood. Ask your nearest J-M deal- er for free folder showing style and four blended coi- ours. ' Phone him today, or write can. Johns - Manviile Co. Ltd, 1062 Sun Life Bldg, Montreal. Que. ' GGVERIIHENERAL Continued from page 1 them. The acrobatic shunts arid feais of balancing were warmly applauded, as was the music fur- nished by Don Messer and his Islanders. The midway was thronged all afternoon and evening by hund- reds of persons young arid old. Bill Lyrnchs live ponies with their miniature saddles were kept busy carrying about potential young cowboys end cowgirls. Other feat- urea of the show. including the Iron Lung and ‘rangoola. the 175- pound gorilla, came in for a lot of attention. The booths where soft drinks and lunches: were sold did- a rushing business throughout the day and evening and the large crowds and the ideal temperature seemed to make for less fret and hurry than was evidenced a year s.go when the heat was more up- pres-rive. The livestock exhibits were seen by hundreds of persons through- out the day. Many people spent considerable time strolling from shed to shed and from barn to barn where the show stock was hot The traffic cops good naturedly kept all traffic moving and no accidents of any kind occurred despite the steady stream of cars that were moving to and from the Exhibition grounds. Today's half-holiday is expected to bring record-breaking crowds to the grounds, where a particularly infers-slink program for racing fans ls being provided. iiiiiiiis. iisiiiiiiass. IEATIIS ' 50c Par Insertion ‘ amrus l CORNEY-At Clyde River on July 29th. 194B. t0 Mi‘. and Mrs. Si Cornell (nee Helen Derrech) of Avlrin Road. a eon. Hartley Dale. DOHERTY-At the Prince Ed- ward Island Hospital. Aug. 10, to Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Doherty.Cher- lotieiown. a eon. Robert Barry. LE BLANC-At the Prince County H°$l1ital on July 2cm. 194a. to Mi‘. end Mrs. John P. Le Blame. Kinkora a daughter. Weight 7 lbs. 11 ors. GAMBLE-At the Prince Edward Island Hospital on July 30th. 1948. l0 ‘Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Gamble oi Hesiown. a daughter, Judith Dianne. HUGHES-At the Prince Edward Bland Hospital. Aug. l0. 194d. to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hughes, Brack- l" Belch. a. daughter. DEATHS smllilNhN-At u» Charlotte- lwn Hoqaital on Al‘. 10th, the ‘mom-as Shreenan of Kinkora. Funeral notice later. WHITE - at the ‘P. r2. Island "Moll-a! Aug. 1i. 194a. Mrs. John Whiio of Murray River in her 53th year. Remains will be forwarded this afternoon frcm the Cutcliffe Funeral Home to her residence. Funeral notice later. REEVES-At the PEI. Hospital Tuesday. August 10th. ma. r. a. Reeves in his 06th year Funeral from Trinity United Church t0- "WTW. Thursday morning. ser- vice starting at 10:30. interment Pwblebi Cemetery. Resting at the MacLcan Funeral Home. BARNIIUM-Suddeniy at St. Beorse. N.B.. on sue. aiii. with Elizabeth Garnhum in her 10th year. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rflymond Garnhum, 01 Elm Ave. Remains arrived at the Cuteliffe Funeral Home last night. where the funeral service will be held rhulidfll’ ai 1:30. Interment Peo- ple's Cemetery. ' UNDERTAKER EMIALMIR Charlottetown and North Wiiteblre Phone 1C This column IIQIQQIVN for new» of local interest, but advertising of a newsy nature may ba inserted at five cents a word strictly psy- able tn advanta- ' CBASWILL for Photographs. CONFEDERATION LIFE IN- SUBANCB. HOWARD summa- Fitted Footwear at 11s Queen Street. AT YOUR. SERVE! - Arnhat Coal Co.\Phone M00. JOHNSON G JOHNSON Drug Store will be the only one open this afternoon and evening. RETURN HOME — Dr. John Fuddick and his daughter. Miss Marlon Ruddick, have returned from Brackley Beach. P. m. 1. where they spent several weeks.- Ottawa Journal. GUESTS A‘! BXBIBITION Several of the patients at Fal- conwood Hospital and the Pro. vincial Infirmary were the guests of the Exhibition Association at yesterday's opening of the Ex. hibitlon. GUESTS A1‘ GOVERNMENT HOUSE-Dr. P. l’... Farrell. Bos- ton. Mass. and Dr. Roy Johnson oi Greenfield. Mass. are guesi... oi latent-Governor J. A. Bernard and Mrs. Bernard at Government House. Also guests of Governor and Mrs. Bernard are Dr. Ma;- haw and Mrs. Mayhew of (la:- dlner, Maine. FUNERAL AT GLEN VALLEY —'1‘he funeral of the late Cpl. Lawrence Muizay of the R.C.A.F.. killed in an automobile accident at Whitehorse. Yukon Territory recently, was held yesterday after- noon from the residence of Norr men MacDonald, Glen Valley. Ser- vices were conducted by Padre W. F. MscLean. assisted by Rev. Don- ald Nicholson. The pallbearers, ail membe s of the R.C.A.F. stationed at Summerside, were Corpocals Aucoin, Kent, stone. Gaudet. O‘. Neill, McIntyre. lntery-nent/was in Hartsville Cemetery. SOUTH SIDE SEASON-Pros- pects look good for South Side lobster fishermen whose season opened yesterday and will coi- iinue to Oct. 5. reports Mr. J. J. Larebee, supervisor of flshcrict. A large number of fishermen were preparing to put out traps, wit!) continuing high prices and a strong market as an inceiimc. Limited to areas between Nmfh Point and Victoria. the catch is not usually as prolific as the ear- lier North Side season. which this year netted a big increase ovcr last year's operations. Personals Miss Ruby Delaney of‘ Toronto. Ont... is spending her vacation at the home oi her parents Mr. and Mrs. Precy Delaney. North Tryon. Marv friends of Miss Joyfl Coedy will regret to learn that yesterday morning she underwent. an operation at the City Hospital. The many friends of Mrs. Ern- est Stead of Hunter River will '..e pleased to learn that she is 9Y0‘ gzessing favourably after her ic- cent operation in the P. E. 1.. Hospital. Rev. A. Lorne MscKay. B. D.- Montreal W e s t Presbyttflilll Church, who is spending his va- cation with his mother at the oiu romestead at Stanley Bridse. ‘WM- in the city yesterday. The many friend-s of Mr. W. R. Dennis. Central Royalty. will be glad to learn his condition is im- proving in the Prince Edward Island Hospital. Mrs. John Angivin. Barre. Ver- mont, Mr. Iawrence Angivm. Woodstock. Vermont. Miss Winnie Angivin. Schenectady. New York and Mr. and Mrs. James Mac- Manus. Malone. New York. nave been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. James E. Andrews Hunter Ricsr and Miss Nettie Andrews, New Glasgow. Mr. R. Bruce MacDonald and Mr. Paul Burnhasn. both oi Mor- risvilie, Vermont. are spending a pleasant holiday It l» cottsse in Msrgate. They were visitors to ffirarlotietown yesterday. MnMac- Donald is formerly from Brook- field, P.E.1.. but this is Mr. Burnhams nrst visit to this Pro- vlnce. fiiiioiiio lllCll (Continued from Pei! l) s in time for dinner. Mr. L. W. Show, Provincial Director of Edu- cation is iri charge of tour ar- rangements fpr the party during their stay on the Island. Toniiiht the group will pay a visit to thf Provincial mhibiiion. One of the boys. Paul Gronfors has been mos impressed so fer ori the trip by he ReverslbleFalls at Saint John. N. B. Hugh Alex- ander thought that the Provincial Bulldin in Fredericton was an unusually fine structure. The friendly attitude of people in each of the Provinces thus far visited is the fact foremost in the mind of waiter Peiryksn. All three students recalled with great amusement their reaction on see- ing’ the famous Magnetic Bill in New Brunswick. Each of the boys is carrying a notebook and a camera on the trip and an official photographic record in the form oi a coloured movie is being made by photo- grapher Phil Aggua. when each boy goes back to his school he albfliatemsidssrunairia CENTRAL ouiiiiiiiiiii f5?" “m”? °' i-“m” f... AL The name ' ames Jamieson." notorious narcotics runner from Hamilton. Ont, also known as La- barcl. still strikes fear into the m"? and eyes oi an attractive. 18-year-old Canadian girl held in Detroit. Mich" in protective C113- tody. She is Elaine Poitier, above, brown-haired. brown-eyed. wing. 80!‘. Ont. girl who met Jamieson four months before police bullets riddled him to‘ death in a Cin- cinnatl apartment house over s "mm! 88o. Elaine will be escort- ed to Canada. She is expected to m‘ Camdlflll Police protection. imiibffiii-TTER Continued fsom page 1 try does not want the price cell. lng removed during the present shortage. It should be remuvgd will’ when the supply was suflic- ient to meet demand. "We know what would happen if it were taken off at present." they told reporters. “The pm; would zoom. "The members have no interest 1H hrice as such. Their interest is in supply because oi the very serious criticism which was level- led against the industry during last winter's shortage." They said the cabinet pygm- ised to consider their recccnmend- aiions and that Government spokesmen indicated the administ- ration ls exploring the possibility oi importing butter to meet a threatening shortage. Imports might come from New Zealand. The Cabinet committee which met the delegation was headed by External Affairs Minister St. Leu- renf. the new Liberal leader. and included Agriculture Minister Gar- diner, Finance Minister Abbott. Labor Minister Mitchell and Health Minister Martin. In a brief presented to the Cab- inet. the Council offered its “com- plete" co-operatlon to the Gov- ernment and urged an early an- nouncement oi a. long-term dairy policy as the "only effective means" of meeting the situation. It said the reasons for the ex- pected butter shortage are a. re- ducticn in milk production. in- creases in population. higher prices for milk going into other dairy products, and continued high purchasing power throughout the country. It added: "It is our considered opinion “ that unless the butter supply is augmented by imports in suffic- ient quantity to meet minimum needs. it will continue to be im- possible to maintain orderly or equitable distribution oi available supply through to April 30. 1949." The brief noted that. at Aug. 1. sioclos were almost 13.000000 pounds below those of the same date in 1947 and that the over- all 1048 shortage -wes 10,000,000 pounds. . 40 Cents Pound? KITCI-IENER, Ont.. Aug. l0 — (CF) — Senator W.D. Euler said today that oieomargarlne could be made from ingredients grown on Canadian farms and that the nc-iv-bsnntd butter substitute could be sold at a retail price of 40 cents a pound or less. The senator, long a fighter for lifting cf the margarine ban, said in an interview that margarine could be made from the oils of soy bean, sunflower seed, rape seed and perhaps mustard seed. Those plants are all easily grcwn in Canada. iisiififvssiiziiiiiii Continued f.om page 1 where he met and married his wile. the former Alene Pinlaysor. daughter oi Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Flniayson. He moved to South- port in 1938 and immediately ne- gan the setting out of an orcnaid which today consists of approxl niately 3.000 trees roughly divided into apple. cherry. and. plum trees. In the meantime. while his o:- chard was developing. Mr. Reeves concentrated on the growing of strawberries. raspberries, black- berries. currents. and other small fruits. A member oi the Agricultural Institute of Canada. the late M." Reeves was intensely interested in the promotion oi agricultural es.‘ ucatlon for the young. Because he believed they would advance such education, he was an outspoken advocate oi regional high schools and used all his influence in pel- suading the public of their nt- cessity. ' Besides his widow, he is lilfvTv- ad by two children. Malcolm. ‘ii Southport. and Mary Frances (Mrs. Dennis Neal). Winsloe. Aso surviving him are two brotheza in England, William and George. and three sisters, Mabel and Mil.- nie in England. ahd Mrs. John Webb in Toronto. commentary while the film is be- ing shown to his fellow-students. ‘This experiment in "education by travel" has prover» very successful to date and it also gives promise of greet value in the future. Premier Pleased With Results 0f Party Convention“ Premier J. Walter Jones. tiicd but happy upon his return slung v-ltli other Liberal delegates from the party's national convention at Ottawa, told ‘The Guardian last night that everything had gone "satisfactorily". Considerable tin-o and effort. the Premier said, had bten used by the Maritime dele- gation in formulating their reso- lution. He and others who lie-F framed it had worked all Thuls- day night and well inw the early hours of Friday morning. Commenting on yesterday's opening of the Provincial Ex- hibition. the Premier said he took much pleasure at seeing the man- ner in which His Excellency the Governor General ‘had enjoyed himself. Only once beiore, some years ago in Vienna. Austria, had His Excellency vva ssed a ner- ness race. An interesting sidelight of the Governor Generals visit to the Fxhibltion was when the Premier introduced His Excellency to Mr Andrew MacRae of Royalty. who is in his 94th year. The Governor General and Mr. Maoltae ha“ their photographs taken together. The Premier ebcorted His Ex- cellency through the various shcilr and barns where all the live stock were quartered. His Excellency showed keen and expert inteics‘ in the various breeds of cattle which were on display. iivizsiocii wiiiiii-ziis Continued fmm page 1 1. Fulton Willis, North River, with Abbie Dale. Section 6: Female born in 1047 -1.' AB. Cutcllffo, Charlottetown. with You'll See; 2. George C Kit- son. Hampshire. with Barbara Ann Queen; 3. Harry W. Crozlet. Darnlcy. with The Squire's Prin- ce . gectlon 9: Female born before 1945-1. George H. flimtairhChar- lottewwn, with Miss Knox; 2. George Thompson, Summerside. with Babe Britten; 3. 0.1-1. Chand- iey, Clftown. with Lustlcia; 4. Fulton Willis. North River. With Hazel Set; 5 w. H. Home. Mil- 'ton Station. with Daisy Set. Section 12: Champion female and reserve-Champion, G. H. Buntaln, Charlottetown; reserve, George Thomipson. Section 13: Get of sire-l. Ful- ton Willis. North River. with Lin- dy Budlong. ‘ section i4: Progeny of dam-1- W. H. Horne, Milton Station, with Daisy Set-Hazel Set. ‘ CLASS L-ROADSTERS Section 1: Filly or gelding born in 1947-1. John B. Gillespie. Mil- ton. Section 2: Filly or gelding born ‘in 1946-1. Fulton Willis, North River; 2. W. H. Horne. Milton Station, with Patsy; 3. Frank Hemline, Chtown, with Nelsdiale. Section 3: Filly or gelding. in harness. born in 1945-1. Earl Secniple, Kensington. Section 4: Mare or gelding. in harness. born before 1945-1. Roy Younker, Kingston and ClydeRiv- er. with Derky; 3. Wilibur Younk- er. Kingston and Clyde River. with Teddy‘; 3. Harrison Green. Clyde River. CATTLE Clsaa 7A—Herefords Section i: Junior calf. male. born after Dec. 3i, 1M7 and be- fore May 10, 1948-1. Fulton San- derson. North River. with Duo Heir; 2. Miller Sanderson. North River, with Highland Bray. Duo Tone Lad; 3. Hayden Bros... Cher- ry Valley, with Mixer Gay led. 69C; 4. Hayden Bros. Cherry Vel- ley. with Monte's Pride. Section 3: Senior calf. male. born July 1. 1947 to Dec. 31, 1947 -l. Lawson and Raymond Tre- mere. New Wlltshire, with High- land Brae Duo Tone Lad 9th. Section 3: Junior yearling. male bom Jan. 1. 1M7 to June 30, 1047 -1. Hayden Bros. Cherry Valley. with Monte Gay Lad. Section 0: Male born before July 1. 1946-1. Miller Sanderson, North River. with Monte Vista DuoTone Jr.; 2. Hayden Bros. Cherry Val- ley. with Monte vista Duo Tone 39th. Section 7: Junior champio , beef. male and reserve-Cha - pion. Fulton Sanderson; reserve. Hayden Bros. Section 9: senior champion. male, beef. born before July 1. INS-Champion. Miller Sander- son; reserve. Hayden Bros. ' Section 11: Grand champion. beef. mele and reserve-Grand champion. Miller Sanderson; re- serve. Pillton Sanderson. Section 13: Junior calf, female. born after Dec. 3i. 1947. and be- fore May 10. 1948-1. Miller San- derson. North River, with High- (Continued on Page ‘,7 173 Candidates In Alberta Contact EDMONTON, Aug. s -(C1>)- A total of 173 candidates will be in the running for the 157 seats at stake in the Aug. 17 Aibertagen- eral electicn. ' There were only two surprises as deadline for nominations passed Saturday-the late entries of an independent social credifer in Cal. gery and a Liberal in Ponoisa. Three parties-Social Credit. C. C.l=‘.. and Liberal-entered enough candid ‘ ‘to form s goverrznent. The Independent party which had 36 candidates in the i944 provinc- ial general eleetions has only nine in the field this time. Toteiailllrtiaawithialttetels I‘ tinned from page 1. Union Nationals "Party." said Mn Bell. However. Mr. Duplessis has not been invited and is not ex- pected to attend the LCILVCDMIJYI. There will be 1,313 official del- egates and 766 alternates; The exact r .. sentation by Provinces has not yet been worked out. But their selection will be on the basis of the_ new redistribution apt which increases membership in the Commons frornl24t to 255 seats. . When union with Newfoundland is consummated the membership will Jump to 2Q. No one from Newfoundland has yet been in- vited to the convention, Mr. Bell said, but invitations may go out later if it is seen that such action will not interfere with the work- ins out of union arrangements. He said that 237 of the delegaies will come under the heading of privy councillors, senators. meni- bers of Provincial Legislatures, members of the Commons and executive officers of the Progres- sive Conservative Association, There will be 311 delegates-at- large. representing labor. business. press. education. agriculture and professions. Riding delegates will number 765. Sept. 4 has been sci. as the deadline for naming .ie'e- gates and Sept. l5 for the filing of resolutions. P. E. I. on Resolutions Group A 193-man resolutions ,comm.t- tee will meet here two days oe- fore the convention opens. "i710 committee will be made up of f..~e representatives from Prince L-si- ward Island. nine from Nova Scotia. eight from New Brunswick, 50 from Quebec, 62 from Ontario, 14 from Manitoba 16 from sash- atchewan. 14 from Alberta, '4 from British Columbia and one from the Yukon. Mr. Bell said the first day villi be taken up with the ironing out of convention procedure and wlch a farewell address by Mr. Brace- en. The morning and afternoon sea- slons of the second day will UC taken up with discussion oi re.o- lutions. In the evening. the noni- inations for leadership will be ac- cepted. The nomlnator will be a:- lowed to speak for l0 minutes. the seconder five minutes and the nominee 20 minutes. On the final day. the morning sitting will be devoted to contin- ued study of the resolutions. In the afternoon the new leader will be elected. Critical o: Liberals Mr. Bell, who sat in on the iii- tlonal liberal convention last week as an observer. had some blunt criticism of the way in which the Government party car- ried out th_e drafting of a new platform and the election of a new leader. “We thought the convention was gagged and that the ordinary delegate was just an automaton." said Mr. Bell. From start to ii.- ish. he added. the convention was "incredibly autocratic and arini- rary." T0 RECEIVE Continued 1mm page 1 Province before his appointment as inspector of schools in i920. Five years later he was appolln- ed supervisor of schools in Char- lottetown. a position which he held until 1929. During this penal he was also part time teacher at Prince of Wales College. From i029 to 1932 he was at Mt. AI- lison University. both studying and teaching, receiving his Ii. A. degree there in the latter year. For the next two years \1r. Shaw was in charge of teacher tvalning in Prince of Wales Coi- lege. He then went to Newfound- land to organize teacher training iii the Memorial College. A year later he was appointed head ..l the Department of Education ii: Newfoundland. a post which he occupied for nine years. in 1942 he received his M. A degree from Mt. Allison and in 1943 went to Ottawa to assist D1. Tory in organizing Carleton Col- lege. He returned to Prince EJ- ward Island in 1944 as Deputy Minister and Director of Educa- tion a position which he has filled very successfully since trio‘. time. LIVLSTGGK JUDGES Continued fzoin page 1 4 shire and Guernsey classes ro- pectiveiy, said the exhibits were of an exceptionally high quality and that many of the cattle shown would do well in any show ring in the country. Mr. Frederick Driscoil, one of the Judges of the poultry exhibit at the Provincial Ebfhibltlon, said it was not so large as it has been in some previous years but hari made up in quality what it had lacked in numbers. The trend for hatching early chicks now produced a bird. Mr. Driscell said, as well developed as thcee formerly shown in fall sign/s so that the present birds are s credit to the poultry indus- try of tlie Province. White Leghorn and New Hamp- shlrea entries were more numer- ous then at former exhibitions in brackets: Social Credit s1 (57); COT. 51 (57); Liberal 49 (-): Independeit 9 (36); independent Social Credit 3 (-); Labor-Pro. griesalve 2 (30); others 2 (4); totei 173 (184). Premier Manning and all mem- bers of his Social Credit cabinet, are seeking re-election. All four party, leaders are can. didates in the multiple riding of Edmonton where five will be elect- ed. The leeders are Premier Man- “Y" Conference iiero Next Month A three-day conference of dele- gates from all of the Y.M.C..\. centres in the Maritime Provinces will be held here on September l1. 1B. 1D. R. S. Hosking, General Secretary of the Y.M.C.A. National Council will attend as a speaker and as a discussion leader Other Y.M.C.¢l. National Council secretaries at- tending will be Les Vlpond. Na- tzorial Boys’ Work Secretary, La- vern Herbert, National Exterslan Work Secretary. and C. A. Scheli, National Administration Secretary Delegations are expected from Yarmouth. Sydney. Halifax. Saint John, Fredericton. Moncton, Wood- stock, Glace Bay and Summerslde. Members of the local host coir.- niittee are James Cudznore. "dal- icr Cox, B. Frank Tinney and J. M. MacFadyen. - Admits Burning Bodies 0f Infants BfiON. ATgfulb-fAPi-Wll- liam E. Bell. 53-year-old morgue attendant, admitted in court ne burned the bodies of 19 dead 2r.- fznts in an incinerator at the Boston City Hospital. He pleaded innocent to a chaige of "wilfully and unlawfully co..- teying away a certain body wits- out authorization." Bell was found guilty and via: szntcnced to 2 1-2 years in one house of correction. He appealed and was held in $5,000 ball. The destruction of the infants who were stillborn or who dlfld soon after premature birth. was disclosed Sunday when an 111111.1- taker went to the hospital to claim one of the bodies. Bell told the courthe had nev- er received any orders to bum any bodies at the hospital mor- gue. "I didn't meant no harm,’ he said. "1 thought I was doing right." Earlier Bell had told police he hadn't been feeling or sleeplii; well for the last few weeks but that when he came to work Sun- day morning he "felt good." "So I thought. why not clean up the place? And so I took them u; to the fourth floor and did it." police quoted him as saying. Under Massachusetts law bod- ies are keptat the morgue for C0 days unless they are claimed by relatives. At the end of that per- iod they ere turned over to the City Welfare Department for bur ial. ‘ Fabulous Campaign 0f Jimmie Gardiner‘ oirraws. Aug. o-(cri-rrney were cleaning up the fabulous rooms of the Rt. Hon. Jimmy va- day. The doors were closed. The hotel corridors were hushed and empty. The Liberal conventlpd was over. The boom for Agriculture Min- ister Gardiner didn't click. but 1t was terrific while it lasted. And these rooms, three of them on the first floor of the Chateau Ieurler were its pivot. the site of a ma:- athon party that raged for days from morning until night and back again into morning. It was something that only politics could father and the lure of leadership sustain. Everybody came there at one time or another. Anybody who was thirsty or awed or lonely o: bored or legitimately zealous could come to pay homage. There were no formalities to admission. So- they came in their hun- dreds. jammed together. shoulder to shoulder. face to face. glass to glass. in the rooms and the cor-- riders. There was the Rt. Hon. Jimmy. ruugh-heivn. chunky. a little gamecock of a man, a teetotallc: “yading through the festival. ‘n.s hand out. his shoulders cocky‘. And big. booming Colin Complies o.‘ Ontario, his anchor in the east. By yesterday. all was retrospcl‘ Even some of Jimmy's enemlcs were saying his campaign maze the convention. They chuckled about his last defiant words: "lim StlH willing to sparkplug the L.o-_ oral party." Someone figured 1.. was the first political fight he €\O1' lost and someone else-some- one from Saskatchewan-cones.- ed: "Let's say the first one in uhich he wasn't ultimately 611i;- cessiul." They checked out finally S0111!- vme late Sunday. and there was a fair showing of Barred Rocks and Wyandcties. The Record oi Performance flocks were well represented and the stock from those flocks show what careful breeding can do. The display of ducks and geese added interest to the exhibit, Mr. Driscoll said. and bronze. while, and buff turkeys were of high quality and rlrcw much attention. The egg display was small but the eggs were of good quality. Visitors had the opportunity of seeing what really high quality graded eggs should look like. Members of the local staff of the Dominion Department of Ag- riculture's marketing end pro- duction poultry services and one member of the staff of the Es- perimentel Penn placed the poultry and eggs. PM. Nash. senior poultry products inspector here. CS. Scranton. Poultry Field- man and Fred Driscoil of the Farm staff placed the poultry. nlng; Elmer E. Roper. C.C.F.: Harper Prdwse. Liberal. and J. Percy Pele, independent. EA. Holland Judged the eggs. . D. L. and W. "BLUE COAL" WE ARE UNLOADING 300 TONS~ HIGH GRADE AMERICAN ANTHRACITE COAL ii. PICKARD s. co. ~ ‘ It has been decided that all RCAF aircrew are to wear double wings 1n the future. The new wings will be similar to the familiar Air Force pilots’ wings. ECAF Headquarters, Ottawa. announced today that". radio- oflcers and radio-navigators. who together with pilots. make up the present peacetime aircrew list. arc to wear double wings. resembling those worn by pilots. but with distinctive ccnires indicating the air- crew branch. _ First of the new radio-officers’ wings have been awarded to classes which graduated from the EtCAFs radio school at Clinton. Ontario. In place of the letters "RiCAF" the centre oif the pilots’ wings. the radio- offlcers brevet has three red flashes upon a black background. A has liar wing. with a blue globe in the centre and one red flash, has been de- slgnii for ragxlo-navigators. ‘ rcrew the peacetime RCA!‘ who have preiviousl earned 1 X11185 will stain them until they have been trained as ayoilots. religion-xi: cers or r o-navigators. In ths wa th obsolets sing“ yin‘ will disaippear gradually from use lin thfl Better Food n7; Latin Americbi f l a ‘w. a » . Nutrition experts are devising ways of improving the diets oil of Latin Americans under the auspices of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Abovc a ivoi-izcr brings in peanuts harvested on an agricultural experiment station which is exploring the possibilities of growing different foods for Latin America.) ATTENTION EGG STATIONS EGG GlllPPERS Effective today, August llili, we ore paying for eggs ‘basis F.O.B. shipping point, the following prices: ” ' Graded Ungraded GrcdeALurge . . . . . 6O 55 GrddeAMedium 58 53 Grode B . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 37 Grade C 27 23 licrurk. ...... . . . . . . . 2s zi CMIAM PACKERS. LTil. CHARLOTTETOWN P. E. l. i Competent lnsiikrance Service HAVE A TALK WITH raonrou new Eastern Tum Bldg. Charlottetown m». mi