ii - F. ..._ .. s. fr“. miflgrgrr, s...“ w»- i’ April, A1). i‘ . timer.‘ mom‘ idea of the magnitude oi this huge mental urea in Great Britain. Th cations in Germany. Mortgage Sale There will be sold by Public Auction in front of the Court House in Souris in King's County in Print-c ii: word island. on Sat- urday the Tyvcxiify-eighth day of 15145 at the hour of twelve o'clock norm. ALL THAT _ TRACT piece or parcel of land sit- , uate lying and being on Lot or ‘. Township Number Fifty-five in King's County in Prince Edward Island bounded and lies- cribed as follows thut is to say:- - COMMENCING at an angle on the east side of the West settlement road thereon running North and - South and on the South side of a Cross Road running East and West. thence extending East along said ~ Cross lfoafl for the distance of fli- ty-tuo chains and sixty-four links 1 to a centre settlement road; thence along said Centre Settlement road ' for the distnnce of nineteen chains. ' to the northeast angle of plot num- ' her eighty-four thence west fifty- two chains and ezixiy-iuiu" links to‘ the said West Settlement Rozul thence North nineteen chains to the , ace of commencement . ‘ ' ‘ g ONE HUNDRED ACRES of lundi ~ a little more or less, and being Plotl . Number 87 on the plan of said‘ ALL THAI‘ TRACT piece or par-l cel of‘ land situate lying and beingl on Lot or Township Number Fif- ty-iivc in King's County aforesaid. bounded and described as follows, that is to sayz-On the East by land in the possession of Abner Gay; on the South by land in possession ofl Donald Beaten; on the west by‘ the road leading from Enman’s Corner to Grand River and on the North by land lately in possession of John Bcaton but now of Rode- rick S. McKay and containing - FIFTY ACRES of land n little more or less. The above sale is made under “ and by virtue of and pursuant to a power of sale (vontained in an In- denture of Mortgage bearing date the Seventeenth day of March A. D. 928 and made between Rode- rick S. McKay of Dundas in King's County in Prince Edward Island, Farmer, of the one part und Wil- liam H. Jenkins of Annandale in King's County in Prince Edward Island, Farmer, oi the other part which said lllortgnge has sinoe been assigned by the said William II. Jenkins and is now vested in the undersigned; and hcenusc of de- fault having been mode in thc pay- ment oi the principal and inter- ’ est secured thereby. For further particulars appl to Arthur F. Mcquairl, Solicitor, gou- rls, Prince Edward Island. ' Dated this Twenty-fourth day of March, A.D. 1945. AMANDA DINGWELL Somewhue in England-Tiny figure of a man (arrow. topl gives an RAFZs new ll-lon bomb at the Ministry of Aircraft Production experi- with what is described as devastating effect on rail and other communi- v l crater. caused by explosion of the ese bombs already have been used In Memoriam MRS. ROBERT TODD ,more panic in Germany l Revolution ’ Improbable y In Germany But Serious Food Short- age Would Bring Up- rising Quickly. Swedish Newsman Thinks. oonsdgftd’ t f libel OI! , 0 , n helm’! Tldningen, who bu rut ’ to Stockholm) Copyrleht i945 by The Associated res: srocxuonu, March as - (u) - Revolution frmn below m1] 10°36 11181115‘ improbable in Ger- mfln . unless starvation drives the peope into the streets or a beaten army floods back in a state of dis- .. e rs ns of a real colln of the Nani fgod system will cell’: worst mill the defeat. 8o far the Gennan f0 rationing end sup. ply systems have functioned ex- tremeiy well although rations have been short. particularly fats. But Allied bombing of food foc- tories and storehouses and the crippling of the transport system plus the loss oi Germimys rich- est agricultural lands in the east have changed the situation. The Germans now associate the dura- tion of the war with the food sup. PY- slgThgwhgrgr Gwgli and." Berliner: . o an Goebbels’ trousers?‘ p“ on No Flowers In Germany (A new German order forbids the planting of flowers oven for use in cemeteries. The Berlin cor- respondent oi the Stockholm news- paper Dogens Nyheter reported Sunday that parks and warts fields were being plowed under throughout the country for the planting oi otatoes and vege- tables. The lspatch said official: estimated that each uore kilo- metre of land in the lch now must support 30f persons instead There passed away at her home in Ruse Vrlllcy on Feb. 23rd, 1945.. Mrs Robert ‘Todd. The late Mrs.‘ Todd was born at Springton 89! years ego and was the former Ann Macintosh. Up until vwo months previous to her death, she had been up and about her tasks. She was a consistent christlamand a constant church attendant, and will be greatly missed in the’ church as well as in her home. , 'I'h0se left to mourn her passing, ore the following sons and dough-i teis. James, Daniel, Mrs. W. B.| Cousins. Mrs Neil MacCallum, Mrs. . O. Anderson, Mrs George Barclay, Mrs. Alex Aiken, and Mrs. Harold lbefurge thirty grand children and six greet grandchildren. Her funeral which was largely l’ i B150 twenty- lattgndcd was held from her Late m“ residence, on February 26th, and was conducted by her pastor. REV. ' ishop. The text was the 130th Pslam and the lst verse. The 23rd Pslam a favorite of the de- ceased, was sung. The pail bearers were five grand‘ Township Number Fifty-five ALSO sons and one nephew. EWQn T0dd,'secretly of extra. sales several days John McCallum. Dan Aiken, Ben Cousins, James Cousins and John‘ Mbclntosh. Interment was in Springlon Oemetrey. ISLAND TIIBERS- Reference was also made to plowing matches and the exhibition at Egmont Bay. i Short courses in handlcraItsI were progressing favorably. Mr. Stewart reported. There is always a waiting list attend these courses with one unfortunate ex- ception. Thnt is the course in general agriculture. This does not seem to be popular and the de- parhnent has not been able to get classes in this course for some! years. The blucksmlthing course was well attended. and was one’ of the most valuable on the list. l "A tunnel across Northumber» land Strait moy come in course of~ time, but it will be a very expen- sive project," Mr. Stewart said. “With the devclo ment oi greatr transport genes a ter the war, we] may see x cars transported lw air, and neither tunnel nor cause- way will enter into the picture." He commended Island farmers for working so hard under war- time difficulties, and said they Assigns-c oi Mortgagee. 3-27-4-3-10-17 4i . .werc the only workers among whom ‘one would not find strikers. "it guys would pay more attention to signs we'd have Us: work t’dol “This. A. I well-informed party . rnfin no longer ha _._. appeared. This was the most seri- (Continued from Page a) ous sign of disintegration on the ~€————-i———~— —" rationing front. When everything . ment had sought to avoid a p of 147.1 Although foreign agents have attempted to form so-coiled trolcas after the Baltic pattern-groups of three men each as a basic cell for g wider resistance movement -lt was not until the Army invaded Germany that Berliners begun inquiring of one another about thci chances of joining an on]. “organizut Ever since Hitler came into power the German people have been used to the organized ration- ing of food. I-Ieretofore food has| been adequate while strictly con- trolled, but now supplies aredeter- within-Germany roper. After the Vistula. retreat the first thing done in Berlin was to stretch eight weeks rations , to e. Rationing Breaks Down The first serious breach of the rationing discipline occurred with men and wholesalers informing one snothrr before the public was notified. As a result when the public lined up all the best things were gone. When the ‘ l ‘r -‘ the Oder and Berliners thourrht tho capital might be b ‘ within hours they suddenl found trades- anytning to On the followingday goods re- beglns to collapse and the people oi Berlin see nothing ahead but siege or flight, then not even the strictest measures by authorities will prevent the remaining stocks from vanishing among relatives, friends and favorite customers. The lea: fortunate faced wltn starvation will take to the streets ln search of food. Ontario Election in May, June Probable TORONTO, March 25 - (GP) - A second wartime election for Ontario, probably in Ma or J nc. was assured Saturday y sud en dissolution of the Legislature fol- lowing by two days the defeat of the Progressive Conservative Gov- crnment. Announcing the dissolution, Pre- mier Drew sald the election willvbe held as soon as arrangements can be made for taking the vote oi’ ov- erseas servicemen. Premier Drew said his unveil’;- election “while our lads at .9“- vincial the front are locked in mortal bot with e deepcrate e It would. howeve , be ntrlry to constitutional practice” for the government to seek further sup- port from n le islature which he voted non-con ldence. The Pre- mier charged that "by every poss- ible devlce, each of the op oel- tion groups impeded the bus ness of the legislature and made it im- possible to proceed with important government business. leaders immediately dissolution move. passed unanimously, House adjourn until Tuesday for further business. C.C.F‘. leader E. B. Jolliiie, op- position leader, charged the Pre- mier had “delibera cly lunged Ontario into o general elecion by asking end obtaining dissolution vavhein "is neither necesse; nor es rn e. A. A. MacLeod. chief of the wo- man Lenny-Progressive group, call- ed the Premier's decls on o dir- solve the House "on act of olitical cowardice" and “u. usurPBi- 0n 05 the supremacy oi Plflllmenb" PHILIPPINE ISLAND The Philippine Island of Min- dang“ i5 35,003 miles square and has 2,000,000 inhabitnnls. l Simpson, lead- lug drum Iro- cory, hardware I t o r e s, or write beg: Products, ronto f. l-‘i-TMLFKS H» ‘ Ii. I i ., l. Mrs. Thursday, with the president, Orr, in the chair. Mrs. George Smith led the de- votional period opvning with the hymn no 400. St. John, l4, Go bird 5 , Mn. and Mrs. W. J DISH!“ of rip the theme ‘The in th; gvorld" Scmp ymn 4T4. Hover Mrs. George Smith. by Lord's Bayer in Miss Ella Sump reading Father?" Mrs‘. 811W n temperance r cchol the Thief," and a Nrrs. Boston wu r J. McLeod memb we viii i»: boxes to paid. Severa graph were passed in charge. The school committee NIW GI-AEGQW W. I. I. The W.M.S. of the United. Church, New GIBACOW held their monthly meeting at the (Rev. N. San. The meeti and the Natl nel Anthem. SUCCESS W. I. The regular meeting of Success Women's Institute. Grahams Road {TBS helclldcafg Tu sd uyme 8V OII E BY CVEIk ing. March‘ 20th. presided and meeting opened by repeating Creed. Roll call fourteen members, resent. The minutes of lost meet- re read and approved. $12.41 b0 quilt . Chalmers Laird as Miss a missionary rum-trialled’ from ‘Iiuallofld. 4.755 home of l W.J. on evenim M . Much 8th Mrs. Warficld. Birlpture. reading Prayer by Mrs. . m R. W rwi Prayer by Hymn aw and The W. H. Stevenson final “AL letter from by Mrs. W. Bwwanish and roll thirteen Ind d Bulrnsn was read M: l-fowett. imper- knith. as mission- lnupereonatlns. M!‘ - n. Thai cthrlstian and closed with a hymn the home of Miss The president was res onded to by o one visitor A for postage on eleven OVETSGRB WES moved squares for the auto- are completed and in to the commit n. ll: Diekluon“ Hldfitld ip_ Easier Taylor. and Mrsnllay Mec- Body. The minutes of the last meeting were read and approved call was answered by A ‘on: efiur visitors. very n r ng programme on ‘Ihoilond and o-Chino ‘by M by Mrs C. sonating Mrs. ary in Indo- Chine. by Miss Anna Stevenson Seng gcnnnsmgirquw 595521.61“. Newsman Describes Greet’ Fury Of Rhine Attack B! ROSS MUNIIO WITH THE Juno like the British Rhine crossing. For the concentrated fury o! nttaek, the operation eclipses the Nor- mandy landings. British troops gained the first ‘foothhold and thg first Comedian regiment across was hlon Light Infantry of Ocnoda. Gait. Ont.,With them in the bri ehead now are tho Stormont. undas Glengarry Highlanders, Cornwall. On . and the North Nova. Booth blunders. Amherst and Truro, NB. From on observation point west oi the river I watched the cross- ing through the hue. smoke and dull: curtaining the river. There their pomroeslnit i Fri day H1811 red and white tracer bullets and shells lettlced Rhine for miles. British officers called it their “pepper pot." At 9 p.m. under a three-quarters moon the 51st Division shoved off in Buofolos—snipblblous armored vehicles. "I sow the Black Watch slog O- down the flat rad to a dike where they got into the Buffllol. In the beckgro somewhere tho inevit- able skirl of pipers wu heard amid maanglmhlghl u inf t dug ‘ n an on lnry in elong the hedges r ug the gun lines and later they made their crooslnl. t 8:06 p.m. the Black Watch bottle .Meanwbflo n the durations lumen ashore shortly after down on the flat, marshy dlkellnd. Bri- tish and Canadian artillery pound- ed the Gordian-held areas on the bank end around the bridge- porlmeter in e terrific ber- "8 . Mli- Maurice Olennett. Halifax. reported having visited the school fir: had the classroom floor scrub- lt was decided to invite the Cov- perfonners to repeat their in hams Road Hall. A very interesting discussion on Hospitalization, in the form of guestlons and answers. was con- ucted by Mrs. Hugh Campbell and Mrs. George Macbeod. A lei:- ter was read from H. W. Fletch. iron comes mainly in darker col- oured foods like yolks, red menus and especially ver, and sl- laresident T. B. League, regarding he mass chest X-rey survey wor the League is about to carry out in eve community on REL, and the fo lowing standing committee were a pointed to co-operate with the mo le unit: Mrs. Hugh Camp- bell Mrs. Fred Campbell. Mrs. Several members r pprted having "listened-in" to Mr. onald Gor- don's talk on March 6th as chair- man of the W.P.T.B. The Red Cross convenor report- ed having received the following work: two A Force sweaters, (long sleeves), three khaki long- sleeved sweaters. three pairs socks. seven pairs gloves, six pairs ladies‘ knickers, one pair men's pyjamas and three quilts. $10.00 was voted as the monthly contribution to risoner of war boxes fund. An ntcreetin contest was enjoyed. IRoll cal for next meeting to be answered with donations for an auction sale at the April meeting, Mrs. John MacLeod to be the auc- tloneer. Collection taken amount- ed to $6.90. Meeting closed with The King. A delicious lunch was served by the committee in charge. TIMELY TIPS A dose oi’ sulphur and molasses used to be a remedy for one loggy tired, end-ai-Wlntey feeling that lhits moot of us those days. and from u nutritional point of view, says. Ann Burns, assistant to Chief Nutritionist Grace Dug-gun of the Health Departments nutrition division. ' "To increase onc's pop (he main Here's a straight, forthright statement from Nashl Nash is preparing to meet the postwar demand for thing is to increase OIlB'5 intake of dried fruit (prunes or figs). cfiutmeal cookies, milk, bee, or cof- EQ. ' ‘The and Research Foun‘ t-lon announ- c-sd appointment Richards. diractor of the Institute of Radiotherapy at Toronto Gen- eral Hospital, snaging dir actor of the foundation l; studying the posnib~ nostlc and prevention clinics Ontario. so in whole grain cereals. | Molasses tops the sugar food; in nutritive value, omitrlbuting cal- ories to the diet. plus worth-while a-mounts of calcium, iron and IB- complex vitamlnefl. but, says Dr.- LB. Pei-t. director of nutrition, present-day molcnes b neither no us no old- dark nor so nutritio time black-strap. - A day's menu containing plenty of vigour-giving iron and might include these foods; At breakfast s. glass of oranze Juice, u bowl of whole-groin cereal like rolled oats. possibly with wheat- germ ’ ‘ on . s ,_ “ ‘ eggnn toast made from Canada approved bread and coffee for the adult members, milk for e children. Lunch or supper: Groom of to- mato soup. fresh fruit mild, Oun- odo approved breed and butter, gingerbread for dessert and mil. Dinner; Pork chops, baked po- tatoes, buttered greens. stewed fo and I to < TORONTO. March I — (OP) — Ontario Cancer Treatment oi Dr. Th; ility of establishing cancer dim‘:- n the province and the first of these will likely be set up in Northern lead the a new kind‘ of car that will measure up to what you have a right to expect of a new world . . .- The new discoveries, the new materials, the new techniques that have grown out of a world at. war. . .and thatNashhas become familiar within its all-out job of war production . . . will be utilized. ...Butuntil Nash will utilize all these things in the same way that: it utilised in the past all those advanced developments which astonished you ‘Noshcsre... Nash will meet them with two cars that, each in its field, are designed to give the best that the new world can produce . . . in the pro-war ' < 11/115)!‘ Muir. . It'll/l) flashed m: u» m .' 1:155:10“ ashomout much tug-Q A iii-lion general directing the , is second in common of h Nova Booties and Ncgll- '°°- Ifyw bike bread at home-don't risk mlmdors are: Majors Don Lea failures. Use Pleilchmann’: jrerb Your. 1 flfni- Lloyd Wlnlwld- Tlv- been Canada's favorite for over 70 a been‘ h" s 0c ., ave Dichso . e- dericton. on. Captains Jrlik Fslr- i‘ w‘ "d! {Md bread ev e. All: it: geatheiyumlsly. ma. ma 1w. P]; wit? frah Yo“; all, w, 5mm" raves. n. Ont. ye ow Ag ymn grocer-s I I ‘iron and vitamins Ill-both found "s." .,",,,",‘,.',l,“:,7,l.,",','j,',, Q,'_':""{V:"'QI 1 "in ol n m0lassu-—but liver is nutri Youth '7 x-‘Thll Inch “only he“, been“ it w,“ gnu,‘ lh-‘kon euollontnoeuvuluuuoof an"... mine bo in larger quantities." ‘w-i" ' she fold the Can ion Prose. ___._ . _ , Important vitnmlne n1 u gqunq ~ --~---~-—---’—-—"'—=-=-==_ in meats. milk, i vegetables ' , , and whole-grain cereals, while s C o . Bomb Victims Aided Through Bl National federation oi Women's Institutes. the Holn. Francis Far- rer. was“ gratitude to the Queen's Canadian Fund; for a gift of one tlaundred l made to men's Institutes War Distress direct r enemy attack in south Burr writes- Mise er "It ll with write to ecknow come donation of Queen's Canadian Fund. I shall at the earliest opportunity re kind their "m; w mtunely u our War Distress Fund been H n» e l. , , re- cently on account of the V-1 and V-fl ettoc am while there will oori nun calla hind Fun have been made families in the counties of Suffolk, Essex. Hertiordsliire,.i(ent, Surrey. Sussex the grants have been given out‘ Ceylon" is now more than ma: R o o A new Nash 9600” in the low-priced field that will convenience and in economy . . . A new Nash Ambassador in the medium-priced field that will be the finest, most luxurious and, in its class, the most economical car ever built . . . tinue our 100% production for War. rIUIflR/O —lo bike brood Ion right. on; l Floisehmonn’: FRESH YQqgf You'll turn to b d mo. M...::..r:::.=.'.-.:'.z es .11; -,,- vlllmill 3. led it's e fine dntcbnfor lube; _ Fund News Women’s Institutes 'in small amounts to enable men- bers to buy necessities when net up their new homes liter ha: dwiiree’ n 4 n1 been ‘ ey eve one an touched o; u» thought u- th received The General Secretary. of the" hes e he warmest greatly hind e ifts we have from Con: a." » Through Canada. the women of the country-side surfort the Queen's Canadian Fun through the Women's Institutes. Many In- stitutes have adopted the Queen’: Canadian nd as a spacial oblon- tlve in their war effort end largo numbers of donations have been made. Wo- Fund purpose of immediate and clef to civilian victims of England. deep gi- tude um r ledge e most wel- 2100 from the r the rt this gift to my Commi tee know that they would wish me ""~....::r:::::...c¥ =~ m donation came most Sud Contributions u u; loyal ‘hut company, on". lottetown. its we have bed many cases in count districts, and I id that or uite o little to be CINGALESE wen Enos n the “pig: dete, nts 0! i0 m “Send-u-Plane" Fimd. mg the fund up m a total of 000 The grand (bi-bl o! the Wu by “The w! from the to blltzed Iild Devonshlre. Mostly Funds sponsored way in operating improvements, in final Victory, we at Nash will con; MID/l 1155,43 ,-