FEBRUARY 9. 1954 Edit Burning" controversy In A British Columbia U51-oR.I.A (CP) --The explosive ,.Do,,k burning" controversy ra- .n.. m the British Columbia capi- ”'i”wii1 be taken to the floor of Legislature when it opens here nag, month. - J, Alan Reid. Social Credit mem- be. mm salmon Arm, 13.c.. and N; would bplng up the lane when .-,,i- Legislature convenes. '-ti,-, Reid was the member who agkm the Legislature at the last ' 1-Ln: session with charges of sex ffx,,,;,,,k,, being used in British (.,,;,,mbla schools. He said the controversy. revolv- -und the reported "book- W 3' remarks of VlCl0I'll'I mm Harrison claiming he was my-epi-esentsd when he was quoted Tuesday as saylnl he VI-3" ,..i all subversive books on the ,5. 0,3; public library shelves ed. ii,-5. Doria Lougheed. library mm member. said the press had . ”Cl)l'lITIIllI'Ll5LlC attitude." 1,, i-xplainim; his stand on the Mayor Harrison said a re- called him to ask "my I about reports of subver- aoks on library shelves." Attacks "censorahlh" of mid him I would not be a- .. :9 to taxpayers moncy be- g amt on subversive bcoks,' i... mid city council "When asked . -, 1 would personally do with books, -I said I would burn That's what all :5 )3 JP in commission. which 0 libraries ppcd into the affray with ntirtck on "cerisonshlll" commission statement said: ”l' 2s a fundamental principle in - -iilcsophy of public libraries .10 Arglo-Saxon world that - shall be freedom to read." ”.'Il'lWl'll.l8, II. meeting of the pnx lzbrary board Thursday pass- ed ml to the incoming board '::x- appeal of John Marshal. dis- ll .-xvi for reported past associa- with leftist organizations Marshal. fired from his ii- ;.- post and given no reason, asked the board for a hearing. '.)!i VALENTINE FORMAL PHALANX OLUR Y. M. C. A. Wednesday, Feb. 17th llusic by the Downtowners Tickets available at- Ihc Y.M.C.A. & Rendezvous Dancing 9:30 to 12:30 Admission 02.00 per couple ll ifo and Family to If:-cvibc At Least 320,000 int winter. a young father told a Lniifcrlr-.ration Man: "Fred. you twn-' liowmuch is left of my 33,000 ,.... i v--um alter payments on my house - . food and clothing bills . . . and all law other expenses. How much pro- ! our-n can I afford for my family?" "A lot more than you think. replied the Confederation llin. "We have a plan that, on your -II-in-, will provide for your family :'i”l'l'l0 in cash at rlcath . . . A '”'l every month until your a rnclifer is 21. Then, they'll receive -'ll4llllf'I' 810,000. In the event of -1 oath after your daughter is 21 this plan provides 520,000 in cash. l i:u': vnough to provide a brighter 1-iuirr-I" That's how I Confedera- lu-n l.llG Man helped one father pro- !-wi hi: family. He can help you too! on ederation Llf ASSOCIATION "N mliumvifiorl about a similar plan Wiflllll vnur bmlpf. call-' .. 5. W. Wllllb Divisional Manager 3'"llt of Nova Sestlc Iulldlng l in." and 'lavo Your Clothes TRY CLEANED BESSED ONLY at lure . war CLEANERS Dial 7387 Strange "But True By F. H. MacArthur Once each spring I used to ac- company granddad on what he. chose to call "A little outing." The little outing meant a journey of perhaps fifteen or twenty miles in in truck wagon to get our seed oats. Granddad never did tell me why he went so far afield to get his seed. especially when our nefghbou had plenty of the same variety and quality. But if the old man chose to keep his motive a secret far belt from me to pry into the matter. Besides, if he bought the grain from one at our neigh- bors both of us would have been out our little adventure.-I use the word adventure here because it was always lust that. every spring granddad and I set out to get our seed oats. It seemed to me then that granddad always took the longest was to get to any given point. Per- haps the little outings were plan- ned that way. I wouldn't know. Anyway, we took a long time getting somewhere. quite a long lme making our purchase. and a long time getting back home again. All in all. the trip took up every- one of the daylight hours. And what with the shaking of the truck wagon over thr- rough stony roads, we were both tired out and happy to know that it was all over till another spring. . Tho last "little outing" that iyranddad and I had together took us to a home where three bachelor brothers hung up their hats. It was the norm hour: and the thre- lnvlted us to dim-Ir and we stayed l)PCallSF' they told its they had bl-ick Norway oats for sale. Boy-llkc. I made It quick survey of the kit- CTIPII taking in with a single glance every bit of furniture it containe-'l. The slave had A dizzy lean to- wards the door and I wonclercd how the brothers managed to kc-op the coals and ashcs from flying a- bout the room. Anothcr thing that drew my nt- tenticn --yea and fascinated me. was a pair of fame pigeons porch- ed on the bowl of ivmshr-d souls and holping themselves. 'I'h.1t.'s when I -zlancnd at granddad. only to see that ho was vmlflng the bachelor's cooklnr as though it was out up by a French ch:-f.Aflcr looking some more I decided that my mvn arrmetitn was not up to nar. but I did manage in force down snmn cnoklell and put the .-nur bread on my plate into my coat pocket. At home. I was al- ways taught. to be polite evcn though it had to be fnrcerl-rinrl hore everything had to be forced -down. 0 I ”How'd you likn the dinner?" I flunk at granddad when we were on our way home. "Fust rate." he lied. "But dnn'f' let tho women hear a word about what you saw back there or it will ho your Inst trio with me. I promised I'd kc-rvp miun. but the moment I got mothnr and -zrandmn behind the iron curtain I unfold- ed the whole story to them on condition that they keep U10 l”0C' ord out of grandd.-id's hearing. And they must have kept their promis- es for never again did I hear any- thing about the bacholor bro- there. sometimes I wr-nl with Hand- dnd to get our flour ground into wheat. When I got tired of looking at all the pulleys and belts and wheels that drove the machinery that ground the golden train. I would go outside tho mill and watch the turning of the old watcr whr-cl in its cncasemr-nt at the far cnd of the flumc; . - 0 Above the din of the moving ms- chlm-ry one could hour the shores nf the mm who slept soundly whilc wuitlm: their turn. Many of them had come long distances over bad roads and among such it was the custom to stay in the mill un- til they could leave with -their grlsts. others sot about the box stove and talked about the west- ther or spun yarns of other days. when I was a bov the -rrist mill and the forge were very important links in every community. Indeed they were favorite meeting nltcrs for the farmers to air their petty gripes against the governments. and what have you. I can recall granddad's freouent visits to those niaces though I am quite sure the horn: didn't. always need to be shod or the wheat to be ground inf.) flnur. I think grandma would bout me out in this statement if she were llvinll now. (To Be Cantlnued) in r.Fia'Moau,AM In loving memory of CARTNEY J, MIOLURE who passed awn! Febrrnry uh, Ever Remembered and sadly Missed by Wife Horenoe LARGEST PROVINCE Area of Quebec province is 2,000 square miles smaller than France. Germany and Spain combined. OENTRAL GUARDIAN HOCKEY EQUIPMENT reduced 2595 to 509!-. The Bike Shop. VISIT H!-STYLE MILLINEBY with Great George street. Every style I-Ii-style. ALL TOYS reduced 33 ll3':5. The lake Shop. "Goons reduced The Bike Shop. SPORTING 3592 to 5095. FOR PROGRESS with Economy Vote Stewart for Mayor. REGULATION hockey sticks to clear 59c. The Bike Shop. FOR THE BEST IN VALEN- TINES see the Rust Craft selection at Rcddln Bros. FOB PROGRESS with Economy Vote Stewart for Mayor. "WE TREAT THE SICK WELL Glggey's Pharmacy, next Stewart: Bakery. KEROSI-ENE. Electric and Pm- pane Gas.-Refrigerators. Bryernton and Mackay. FOR PROGRESS With Economy Vote Stewart for Mayor. I LOVE U-Say it with a Rust Craft Valentine. The Island Book Room. n INTERCOLLEGIATE DEBATE: St. Thomas collage and St. Dun- atamls at S. D. U. Auditorium to- night at 8:30. CAR. FERRY DELAYED-Tlic boat train from Borden arrived Ill the city at 8.05 last night, approx- imately one hour and 50 minutes late. It has been consistently late for several days and the frequent delays have been attributed to ice condit-iors in the Strait by Mr. C. T. Montgomery. Superintendent of the Canadian National Railway here, in explaining the late arriv- als from Cape Tormcntine of thc M.V. Abegweit. ON VISIT IIEIII-2-Commander Kenneth F. Adams, C.D., R.C.N., commanding officer Naval Divis- ion, Hamilton, 0nt., arrived in the city yesterday on a routine visit as part of a familiarization tour of the various divisions. He is the senior officer in charge of naval divisions across Canada and is ac- , companiod on his tour by his Flag Lieutenant, Lieut. C. M. Combs, R.C.N. The officers will pay an ofIicial visit to H. M. C. 5. Queen Charlotte, which 15 under com- mand of Lieut. Cmdr. this evening. J. Kenny, l FUNERAL AT COVEIIEAD - The funeral of the late Ambrose Doyle, formerly of Pleasant Grove. took place yesterday morning from The I-Iennesscy Funeral Home to Saint Eugenc's Oh-urch, Cove-head, where Requiem High Mas was celebrated by the pastor. Rev. Par- nell Wood, who also officiated at, the grave. The pail-bearers wcrc: Terrence Lamphier, Alexander Kelly, Leo Morrison, Raymoudi Arblng, William MacDonald, and Joseph Ready. lnterrnent took place in the family plot in the Church Cemetery. FUN!-IRAI. AT TRACADIF. -- The funeral of Joseph A.-1'Il1I!lIl"5i Mas held yesterday morning froml The Charlottetown Funeral Home to St. Bonaventure: Church. Tra- cadle, where Requiem High Mass was celebrated by Rev. Walter Mc- Gulgan, nephew of the deceased. Present in the sanctuary were Rev. Keneth MacPher-son dnd Roy. Kenneth MacMilian. Pall bearers were I-Ierreil Arblng. Joseph Mc- Quald. John Trainer. I-iimcr Mc- Quald. Daniel Bradley and Robert: Gallant. Intcrmcni. was in iii:-l Church Cemetery where services were conducted by Rev. Kenneth MacMllle.n. POLICE COURT-A city wom- an. resident of Richmond Street, was sentenced to pay a woo fine or three months in Jail when she appeared before Magistrate Mar- tin yesterday morning. charged with selling intoxfcatmg bever- ages, she had previously been charged with contributing to juvenile delinquency but upon agreunent of the Crown counsel the latter charge was dropped. Counsel representing the accused immediately appealed the case and she was released on 5300 ball. A case of common assault was dis- posed of with 3. fine of :20 or 20 days: a drunk and disorderly was fined 520 or 10 days: R drunk and incapable was remanded until the Isth and a vagrant was sent to Jail for 40 days. FUNERAL YESTERDAY - The funeral of the late Mrs. Phoebe Pound was held yesterday after- noon from her late residence, 4'! Orlebar Street, to the Baptist Church where service was con- ducted by Rev. J. D. Davi-son. who also officiated at the grave. Interment was in the People's Cemetery. Following the church service the Rdxakah funeral ser- vice was conducted by Mrs. Kami- leen Cauty, Noble Grand. Miss Jeanette Wilson, Chaplrain. Mrs. en route to Los Noble Cass, Vice Grand. The THE GUARDIAN. To Speak At lied Cross Meeting Mr. Stefan A. Bjarnuon Assistant National Oorrumfasioner, Canadian Red Cross Society who will speak at the atfmnoon session of the annual meeting, P.E.I. Div- ision. Canadian Red Crou soci- ety, to be held at Red Cross Head- quarters in Charlottetown on Fri- day, February 12th. Mr. Biarnason was born in Man- itobs. of Icelandic stock. In his second year at the University of Manitoba in 1942 be interrupted his education to Join the R..CA.F., where he served three years. He was nearly two years overseas as an air crew officer working on operations. He attained the rank of Flying 0iIicer. On his return to Canada Mr. Bjarnason com- plated his Bachelor of Arts course at the University of Manlmba and transferred to Toronto to study law at Osgoode Hall. He gradu- ated l.n 1949. Until March, I951, he practised law in Toronto. A: that time he was appointed exec- utive assistant to the National Commissioner. Mr. Bjarnason was -named assistant national commis- sioner in 1952. In April and May of 1953 Mr. Bjarnason travelled to the Far East to inspect Canadian Red Cross units serving with the Corn- monvvealth armed forces. He also represented the Canadian Red Cross on the cxchagnge of sick and wounded -prisoners of war". In Aug- ust. 1953, Mr. Bjarnason accom- panied the plane load of emergen- cy supplies sent to the earthquake victims in Greece. members of Alpha Rebekah Lodge I.0.0.F. and the Daughters of England attended the funeral in a body. Pall bearers were I-Ion. B. MacDonald, A. V. Tredenlck, Morley Smith, Lloyd Hawkes, Ar- thur MaoLean, Bruce Macbaren. The funeral was largely attended. FIVE ACCIDENTS - Five auto- mobile accidents occurred within the City yesterday. The first was in the morning when two cars col- lided head on, on Belmont Street. There was little damage to either vehicle. A car croulng Fitzroy street at the railway crossing was in collision with snotlier travell- ing east on Fitzroy. The first car received a damaged left front fen- der while the second had a dam- aged right front headlight and engine bonnet. A car travelling east on Kent street was in col- lision with a car backing out from the south side of the street. The first received a damaged right rear fender. At 1.45 p.m. two cars col- lided at the intersection of Graf- ton andmdwardstreets. Oneof the cars received damage to the left front door, A collision of slight consequence occurred at 5.10 pm. when two cars met head on, or North River Road. Pursuit-al-3” Mr. Arthur and Ivan Rolllngs, have returned from Saskatchewan. to spend the winter months at home in North Rustloo. Miss Marie Hughes. of the staff of the Mayfair, is presently con- fined to her residence by it heavy cold. I-fer many friends are hoping to see her around again soon. The many frlenrh of Mrs. Keith Boswell, Victoria. will regret to loam of her sudden and very ser- ioua illness in the P. E.I. Hospital, Charlottetown. Mr. and Mrs. William E. Mac- Lure and daughter. Deborah Ann who motored from Ins Angeles, Onlif., have returned home afipr spending the past month at the home of the formers parents. Mr. and Mrs N. S, Macbure. North Ruatlco, P. E. Island. Mir. Mal.-Luro has been in the American Army for the past six years, in months of which were spent in Alaska. He was promnfcd to the rank of ser- geant ln 1050, and was honorably discliarged in November 1931. Their plans are to call on relatives in Boston. Cleveland, Kansas City. and at the home of Mrs. MoLurc's parents in White Lake. Wisconsin, Angi-lea, where they will reside. Refrigeration SALES & SERVICE Repairs To All Makes MOTORS Rewinding and Repairs ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES Repairs Palmer Electric Phones sun-am ANNUAL PRINCE EDWARD CANADIAN RED at "The Clover Club", FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12th AFTERNOON SESSION-3:30 at Red Cross Headquarters, Charlottetown. Speaker--Mr. S. A. Bjarnason. Toronto, Ass't. National Commissioner. DINNER MEETING AT 6: Speaker-Mr. H. H. Leather. Hamilton, Chair- man, Central Council Canadian Red Cross Society. Dinner Tickets -- 81.00 Please phone 8551 for reservations by Feb. 11th. MEETING ISLAND DIVISION CROSS SOCIETY p.m. 15 PM. Charlottetown. Cl-IARLOTTETOWN The automotive industry today ranks as Canada's second largest manufacturing industry, being sec- ond only to the pulp and paper industry. Mayor .1. D. Stewart stat- ed in an address before the Char- lottetown Rotary Club yesterday. "centuries ago." the speaker said. " man began an increasing struggle into space and time, in a battle to burst through the bar- riers of distance. The first great victory in this struggle came when man invented the wheel. This de- vice gave man mobility on lind. It seems rather odd that the North American Indian never discovered the wheel. for this is the continent where wheels have come to sym- bolize a way of life. Wherever men gather together today. you will find an automobile of some dea- criptlon it may he a faithful model '1' still giving reliable service, or it may be one of those new stream- lined models. but wherever roads may wind, and indeed in many areas where the road disappears in jungle grass or in mountain rock. cars and trucks doggedly deliver their owners to their destination. First Factory "The first -factory to build cars in Canada was set up in an old wagon factory in Windsor. Ontario. facing Detroit, the automotive cap- ital of the world. The year was 1904, and the venture then be- ginning was the Ford Motor Com- pany of Canada Limited. "Building cars was then a slaw and tedious process. A stall ill seventeen put them tol.'9m"- DNA by part, using only one bench tool. it drill press. Sometimes a precision nut or bolt slipped down between the floor boards, and production stopped while someone went over tr: Detroit for a replacement item. The supply of money often ebbed as low as the stock supply. On one occasion the general manna" 01 the Company had to hit the road in sell one car before he could bill! material to build another." "Total salaries that first year. for all the staff including tht general manager, amounted to 312.- 000. This seems pretty small whcri compared with the comfmllyi V,-we but last your inf more than e52.000.00(l. but despite the hard: shlps of that first year. the HI cars turned out were destined for hiatorlc significance. "They were the forerunner: pf more than 3,000,000 cars to 06 turned out by the same company over the next half centul'Y- 1'” of us realize that in those same fifty years. some 2,500 makes of automobiles have passed throllilh the blueprint stage- Marltlme Indus!!! "There was the McKay at Am- herest, Nova Scotia, the Maritime Six at Saint John, and the Par- ker Motor Company of Montreal. the Graham Friction Drive bu.lt in Ottawa: and there was the Grail Dort at Ohatham. the Durant at Iieaslde, the Rec at st. Catherine's. the Brook Steam Motor at Strat- fnrd. and the National Car in I-Iairnllton; the London Six. the Winnipeg six. the Brockville At- las, and the Gait - whose namr-5 revealed their orlizin. "Several companies still pro- ducing vehicles had their birth in the first decade of the twentieth century under another name. Gen- eral Motors in Oshawa grew out of tho McLaughlin factory started in 1008. Chalmers in Windsor he- ccme the Chrtlmcrs-lMaxzwell. and in 1923 the Chrysler Corporation: and another Windsor firm. t- Iilverett-Metzgcr-Flandera, popular- called "E.M.F." became in I011 Studebake? of Canada. "Moat o the cars in that caval- cgde, though, had but a short his- tory. Yet many of them added some lmrprovsrnent in engineering efficiency or in riding comfort to the cars that were to Come. "The Model T. of course. eoflltd for itself A special spot In the Automobile Hall of Fame. some owners claimed it was so slmPl.V constructed they could repair it with a toothpick, some chewlntt gum and a strand of balllltl W”? But it was also so sturdy and de- pendable no mudhole nor mrlm! river could deter it, and It ran up mountains in reverse even bet- ter than when in forward gear. 'Nn other machine ever became M, mpldb. or so deeply entrenched in American folklore, A whole generation of vaudeville comedians shouted Ford jokes acro.-rs tlv: footllghta. Tin Pan Alley WW9 the Ford name into mnn.V I "Nils ody. Indeed. song writers even wrote tuneful obituaries in the- Model T in 192?! when the Model A came out. Far Reaching Changes "Nowadaya we take the car so much for granted that we forget tihe ridicule and warnings tltjt greeted the first horscleas carri- agcs. Alnrmisls decried the car as a menace. and even the newspap- ers regarded it as best as a pass- ing fad. The Model T, priced within the roach of everyone. con- tributed more than my othpr one r.-.cmi- to making the car an accept- rd part. of everyday living. But. mass niohllity for Canadians could not have been achieved without far- reachlng social and economic c h nnges. too. . "At the turn of the cen'.ur,V csnsdrs total population was five and a half million people. 'I1iey were mread across a land greater in area than the United Stats nnd Alaska combined, Agriculture was the leading industry, and only in a few eastern cities could be 1-"rd up hinn of small rnsnufvic.- turlng plants. "arch in nation could not supply the thousand: of technicians upor whom the automotive industry (tape 4. A countless host trained men and women must con- tribute their skill and Immrledce in .1. uclng palnf. enamel. bat- teries. tires. unholatery, insulat- ing and packing materials and hundreds of other items. Foundry- -rectly employed by .. vehicle producing firms alone was Reviews Development Of Canadals Motor Industry men, pattemmaksra. chemists, electricians, men to produce raw materials, men to produce power, the thousands of specialists who work in the service industries - thia essential work force emerged slowly, year by year, as Oansdian industry began to diversify and grow. "Today, across the streets and highways of the Dominion flows a stream of more than 3,000,000 cars and comerclal vehicles, rep- resenting a Canadian investment of more than four and a half bil- lion dollars. In a land where great distances seemed an obstacle to national advancement the motor vehicle has supplemented the rail- way and the waterways in opening up new territories for development. in speeding the nation's commerce and the movement of people, and in forming transportation links which could not have been forged by any other means. "The automotive is in itself a vital economic factor. It creates employment, and employ in e nt creates wealth. In 1952 the averago number of men and women di- izhe motor 35,000, their wages and salaries amounting to a staggering 313.1.- 000,000. The motor car manufac- turers of Canada bought several hundred millions of dollars' worth of supplies from Canadian firms last ycnr." . . an . I Mayor Stewart went on to say that in 1952 Ford of Canada. pur- chased materials in Chatham, On- tarlo to the extent of four and a half million: In London, Onta1':o 34,290,000: in Gananoque 9399000; in Gait, Hespeler and Guelph Si.- 4.'a-5,000l in Hamilton 81-1,715,000: in Montreal 34,455,000: in Prince Gr-owe, ac, so4,oo0. "These, he said, are the purchases of just one manufacturer, not the whole industry, and the cities named are hut random samples of a, list of 350 or 401) Canadian communities which share to some degree in the bu-iineu. tha Jobs and the my cheeks made possible by the auto- motive industry. "One does not realize, perhaps. that automobile dealers are im- portant employers. There are. some 5,500 dealerships across Oanads which sell and service cars and trucks under franchises from On- nadlan Mortor Manufacturers. These do not include, of course. the dealers in imported makes of cars or trucks, nor the many thousands of independent garnze men. Yet these 5.500 dealers have some 55,000 people on their pay- rolls. and their wage and salary bills exceed si32,ooo,ooo ,. ,.e,.,., Put the three groups together - the manufacturers, the suppliers and the dealers, and one finds they employ a total of 398,000 Ca- nadians. and have a combined pay- roll of better than S376,0l)0,000, equal to more than a million dol- lars for every dav in the year. The average Canadian is often unanvare of the extent to which taxation. in one form or another. contributes to the price he must DEV for his pasenzer automobile. "Fhe sales and excise taxes Slnml out-. of course and most new car buyers know that they pay in l595 excise tax and n 107,- rules tax. but he dries not realize that. hidden away in the price of the car, there are it number of other taxes. such as: "ill The customs duties that have been paid on materials and tomrmn its imported by the auto- mobile manufacturer. and similar duties paid on materials. parts and supplies imported by feeder fr.- dustries. "rzi No matter how you fitrurc it. the consumer pay: in thn final analysis the 4-Oiper cent tax,ln1Ipcs- ed upon the profits of the corpor- ations which make the cars. or the materials and parts which go into them. "(.11 The consumer. foo, pays a goodly share of the taxes levied upon the incomes of all the peo- ple who derlve their llvehood di- rectly or indirectly from the pro- duction. distribution and sales of the motor car. because the wmzcs and salaries paid have to take in- to account the tax ell-mi-nt. i A Big am. "It would he cxtremely dif- ficult. to trace all the fax cffccls in the final retail price of tho motor car, but one estimate is that thr-y account for at least -10 per cent. "An I have already said. the mo- tor csr has now become an lntcrz- ral part of our Canadian Way of life. The passenger alll0nIP.'.)llf' carries more people to and from their daily work than all ntfnnr means of transportation combin- ed. Better than 4 out of In go by automobile, 33'). no bv street car. bus. train. fwxi, bicycle or horse. while the bnlancc f'Yl'H walk. "There are 1.900.000 privately owned passenger cars in Canada. and about 310.000 othcra owned by business firms. taxi fleets and so on. The Canadian mnlorisfx drive more than twelve billion mil-s :1 year. or In avrrasfe of 11.300 miles per our. "Of all this l.rr-mcudnua mile- age. only A miles in every 100 arr driven for what mlehf. be con- alrlered nleneurn drix-inn. M of every 100 miles of driving is for some purpose hsvina to do vs-i'h making it llvlnl. such all going to and from wrwk. business call-. or for farm work. "In this bv'lr' barkrward nlancr river the past fifty vcara. I harr- atfemntcd in show you hmv the automotive industry in contribut- Inc in and sharing in C-nadniw n.rmr.lng development. What flf next half r--nturv will bring. I do not know. Economists orcdict t'w-if the nation's wreafest nrtwr:-ts Ila: lug? mud, vm. may be sure that in these years the 2-utnmniivn ic- durlrv of Canada will be rledicat-id. -t it but lo the past. to sharing in Canada's future by providing de- pendable, economical tlon for the millions." Mr. Gerry I-Iavrtlen. chairman of the luncheon meeting introduced the speaker who operates his own company in Charlottetown and is also the Island representative of the Ford Company of Canada. On concluding his address, May- or Stewart waa than-ked on behalf of the club by co-chairman Eldon Campbell. Guests present were W.A. Gand- et and A. J. Hulam, city, and Robert T. Mothcrwell, Abernithy, Sask. Baptist Church Men's Ass'n transporta- Baptlst Church enjoyed an inter- eating and educational address by Dr. George Fisher, when they met for their monthly supper meeting last evening. The president, Mr. W. Bruce Lewis, was chairman. The talk, entitled "United Na- tions", briefly traced the history of the organization and described its composition under the follow- ing headings: General Assembly. Security Council, Economic and Social Council, Trusteeship Coun- Cll, International Court of Justice, and Secretariat. Dr. Fisher cap- ably developed his talk to point up the personal world body. The speaker relationsliu) oij each of his listeners to this great,Ivan waslflriendship Group of the thanked by the president. I ! i OATALOGUE l l Monihlyyfjeeling i 'I'he'Men'a Association of thei PAGE THREE I Send for FREE Today NEW VEGETABLES Do not often appear but EARLIER SUPERIOR Strains of existing varieties are being developed every year. ARE YOU GROW- ING THE BEST? We specialize in supplying homo and market gnrdenern with the NEWEST and CHOICEST l n vogehuhle yet our PRICES York. Prince Edward Island - Mr. Lewis proposed a conccn- ti-ated drive for a larger member- lhlp nhich met with enthusiasm from those present. Col D. N. Bell was delegated to remember the sick of the membership with cards. The president also expressed the thanks of the Association to Mrs. Harper, representing the Ladies Auxiliary for the tasty suprpcr. function. DOLCIN. 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