JANUARY -27. 1954 THE GUARDIAN. WN mos ELEVEN ' IN I-MEMORIAM 1n loving memory of Illehan! pope Newman. who passed away January 21th, 1944. Tiny any time heals all sorrow And helps us to forget. nut time has only meant to us How much we miss him yet. Always Remembered by wife and Family. IN MEMORIAM In lovint memory of Harry E. Roberts. who departed this life Janllafy 27th, 1938. .l precious one from us Is gone. I voice we loved la still. And in our sad and aching hearts we love you Father still. Lovlngly Remembered by Wife and Daughter Ruth. IN MEMORIAM In loving memory of Mother J snmry 2'lth. Just a year ago you parted ind made us very sad at heart. But all your loving InCI!IOI'Ica Hill linger in our hearts. Daughter Christine I). Msriell and Family. INVEMO RIAM IN MENLORIAM JOHN STANLEY LOOLAXIR There passed peacefully away at the home of his son. Francis. in Charlottetown on Nvemher 26. John Stanley Leclair in his list Year. The deceased had been in failing health for some time and had suffered a fatal heart attack Among his friends in the city. the deceased will be recalled as he went about plying his trade, that of a painter. Many will re- call that he was a maintenance man at the "Vic" I-lotel before the fire. In his youth the deceased was an employee of the old P.E.I. Railway. In the last few years it was his-great delight to sit and talk of his experiences while on the job. There was a bit of the artist in him and one of his treas- lured possessions was a collection of 'pen-and-ink sketches of the personnel and trains of the old railway in thevdays of the narrow gauge. His wife predeceased him some years ago. Left to mourn are four sons and two daughters: Ralph in Halifax; Wilfred and Francis. Charlotte- town: and Plus in Summerside; tsteilal Mrs. Albert Smlthers. Halifax; and (Dorothy) Mrs. 'I'.C. Brown, Summersicie: also four brothers and two sisters: Andrew in Ottawa; Amos. Sydney, N. 8.; Joseph. Idaho, U. S. A.; Peter, Charlottetown; (Carrie) Mrs. Ar- chibald Watson, and Mac, in Lynn. Mass. The funeral was held November 28, from the Charlottetown Funer- In loving memory of our dear filnlher, Mrs. I). W. )IacI'herson who passed away January 21th, 1953. Rest dear mother, your worlr all done llesuilful life with its crown now won. Icntered the glory now your own. In your God given rest. Rest in peace by the beautiful shore, l-'rr.-ed from all watching and sorrow and tears: llest through etemity's unbounded years In the land of the bieat. o'er your slumbers, peace from all stain. To us the heartache. Nine sorrow and pain. Secure in your glory and innnlte P8300 gs Dear Mother rest. l.m'ingIy Remembered by Willard. Anne and Bill. IN MEMORIAM In loving memory of our dear Mother. Mrs. Daniel W. MacPher- son, Orwtiil Cove, P. E. Island. who passed away January 21th, 1953. A year ago this morning. A voice we loved was gone, Our Mother so endearing. was called by Him beyond. We loved her very fondly, - Our loss was hard to bear, But God. who falieth never. Will solace all thru prayer. Remembered by Lenore. Eddie and Children. IN M-EMORIAM In loving memory of a dear Sister and Aunt. Mn. Amelia llscI'heI-sou. who passed away January 27th, 1953. There is no death the stars go down To rise upon some other shore. Always And bright in heavens ,Iewelled' crown, They shine for ever more. Inserted by sister Sadie. Billie and Family. IN MEMORIAM In loving memory of Mrs, D. W. llacrherson. orwoll Cove. who Imsscd away January 27th, 1953. "Weeping may endure for a i"IK')I- but Ioy cometh In the mom- ng. ' Sister Mae and I-hmily. IN MEMORIAM In loving memo y of my dear i':'r':nndmolhe':'. lllrse.d I). W. Mac- . arson. w o pass away Januar 17th. 1953. y A cheery smile and a heart of gold, one or-the dcamst grandmother's the world could hold, ',"m0l'ie8 loving. fond and true. 1' mm a little girl who thought the world of you. lily Missed by Little Lessors. ----...M3, BUCKLEY'S CINNAMATID CAPSULES ' C010 CNFSIIIIO al Home to Holy Redeemer Church. 'where Requiem I-Iigh Mass was icclebrsted by Rev. Father Doyle. lC.Ss.R.. who also officiated at the interment in the church cemetery. Pall bearers were Messrs. Char- la; Gallant, Joseph Madorc, Mel- lvin Duffy, John Wcatherblc, Lou Howatt and Austin Bradley. Pillow The Family Wreaths . Sisters Mae and Carrie , Thelma. and Byron Burns -' Mass Cards Mr. Mrs. Ralph Leclsir Mr. Mrs. Wilfred Leclair Mr. Mrs. Francis Leciair : Mr. and Mrs. Pius Leclair Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Brown I Leclair Grandchildren Mae Leclair .Mr. and Mrs. Peter Lecialr, Sr Peter. Jean and Mike Loclair Sisters of St. Martha, Charlotte- . town Hospital a ' Pauline Leclair I Charlottetown Funeral Home : Mrs. Genevieve MacDonald Beverley Fitzgerald Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gallant 3 Noreen and Florence Baglole Patrick D. MacDonald ; Ads and Melvin Duffy. Cards of Sympathy Miss Dawn smithers Mr. and Mrs. Hillard Marks Mr. and Mrs. William D. Gal- lant Mr. Douglas Mitohell Mr. and Mrs. Robert I-Icndry Mrs. Helen Miliigan and family Miss Laura DoulL and and and so-yea":-ind-sniffo" Signal llooLAl Halifax HALIFAX. (GP) - Hsligonlsns will be hearing their noon time signals from a 50-year-old sun. Army engineers began restoring a 50-year-old 12-pound flcldpiece to be used as the time gun at the top of Citadel Hill. UP to now a 25-pounder-of Second World War vintage has been used for the daily signal. Odicials said that black powder for the older aeldploce cm be mum; "at a greatly reduced price" compared with the blanks used in the present gun. liars Birth lly Jersey cow Makes Voter nary History SYDNEY, Australia, (0?) -A Jersey cow named Nancy has made veterinary history in Aus- tralia by producing twin calves six weeks apart at Munrumbsteman. The first was a blank and white heifer. the second a bull, born on a farm near Canberra. Veterinary scientists who de- scribed the event as "a near mir- rwle" said six weeks between cattle twins was rare. It was pos- sibly the flrst case of its kind in Australia. Tllentleighbors L Strange But True I! l'. H. MacArthur j.. A tornsde struck I-Iehron, Ne- brash. May 11. 1953. It wrecked two-thirds of the town's buildings, lniured 69 persons. .'rwo miracles came out of the storm: not one or the injured died, and although the Sacred ,1-leart Church was com. vletely destroyed. the altar and image of (mrist stood unscathed amid the wreckage. On May 6. 1953 at 1.30 Lin. a strange event took place in Ed- monton, Alberta, Mrs. Don Walm- sley awakened her husband, a well- known Edmonton musican, when she saw flames pouring from their parked automobile at the rear oi their home. Mr. walmsley got up, turned in a fire alarm. While they were watching the flames the horn began to blow noisily. Then lo und behold the car began to move. It slowly moved backward up a slight incline and into the roadway. the horn still blowing. By the time the firemen arrived it had stopped by itself and they put out Ilhc flames strange but true. Last summer a man crossing the ferry enroute to Georgetown to visit his brother after a separation of twenty-four years stood on the ship's deck and asked the man standing beside him for a match. The stronger was his brother who was taking a round way trip on the ferry just to say that he had been aboard her. 0 English kings used to go to war wearing their crowns. Remember after Bosworth Field how they picked up the crownfrom a thorn- bush, where it had fallen after Richard III had been killed, and set it on Henry Tudor's head? In the early days in England wo- men were charm for luck before babies were born. so superstitious were they that the midwife had to swear not to use sorcery or change the new-born child, If a. baby had to be fed from a container 9. cow's horn was used. There were no fending bottles in those days. During the reign of Henry VIII an Ad.miral's badge of command was a gold whistle, Navel pay for mariners and gunners was 5s a month. plus an extra .'is for food. A master gunner got 205 a month, a captain ls 6d a day, and a vice- Admral los a day. Sailors got 3 gallon of ale 9. day. Those were hard days for tho poor. Any ableboded man or wo- man caugiht begging were stripped of all their clothing and flogged within an inch of their lives. Children were often put to work at the age of five. If these infants. ran away they were whipped and I sent back to work. on the second conviction of a begger. not licenced. he had his ears chopped off. and a third offence called for the death penalty. 0 C it would not be right to call it pygmy a. dwarf, Pygmies are naturally tiny people whereas a dwarf is a human much below thr- avcrage size. . Believe it or not. but playing cards used to have songs, music and love mottoes on them. Before newspapers came into gcneral use in America little news- books with little news in them. circulated freely. During the civil war each side published news- booirs filled mostly with war pro- paganda. There were no flying saucers gaddlng about the heavens. but according to contemporary writers a real honest to goodness mermaid came ashore at Greer.- wich with 1 comb in one hand and in mirror in the otlher. one "That medical men advanced strange cures in bye-gone days may be seen from the following: a live sheep laid on a patient's head was stated to be a sure cure formeasles. In cases of smallpox, rod was be- lieved to be a helpful aid to the sufferers health, so the bed would be hung with red curtains and the patient clothed in a red gown. In cases of the Black Death, earne- times nude pullets would be laid on the pstlent's chest. When the bird was supposed to have caught the plague another one was brought and when at length a bird failed to become a victim of the disease, the patient. it still alive, was de- clared on the road to recovery, Parish clergy were once so bad- ly paid in England that some help- ed aupport themselves and melr fnmilles by selling beer and ale from their homes. This who for- bidden. but it was a fairly common - "Ltom,'l can remember back when this was only . , eighteen cents." .- .-..--- .--m-.--u-1-r practice. according to professor A. ly George Clark cause of death was written into the Charged With Murder of Husband Mrs. Mary Bell, ta-year-old widow of Percy Bell, who died at Belle- vflle, 0nt., on Jan. 2, has been arrested , IP37 huebond of 30 years. Police interest in Bell's death resulted just, one day after he had been buried in Belleville, when his brother-in-law, Penrose Caird of Seelcys Bay, 1'2 miles north of Kingston told them al story of how Bell's death had been forecast by a pslmist. Caird said .l'e had no faith in such predictions, but was shocked to learn of his brother-in-law's sudden death because he had always been so healthy. Bell became suddenly 211 and a doctor was called. I-lis violent death a few minutes later was attributed to a cerebral hemorrhage and this and charged with the murder of . death certificate. with no evidence . to prove death was not natural, but faced with the story told by Calrd, a E garage operator, police considered it necessary to have Bell's body ex- 2 at their hm” in N”, . , A , , . Y . . port, as the numed. Pisces of snychmne were found in the body. Three monthsla guests of their puma Mr. and prior to her husbands death, Mrs. Bell, seen above, had purchased some Mrs Leo Fay of same poison from a. druggist to ”mske rat poison." ' t ' Parkdale First Aid Course Twenty-five residents of Parkdale received standard first aid cer- tificates and pins at a. recent meeting in Parkdale Hall. Dr. A. J. Murchison, chairman of the Red Cross First Aid Com- mittee presented the awards and commended the candidates for their efforts, Lt. Col. Mscdonald, president of the Prince Edward Island Divi- sion of the Canadian Red Cross Society, spoke to the group on the various aspects of Red Cross work. Three films portrayed artificial respiration and methods of too rescue. Miss I. Arsenault spoke briefly and congratulated the mem- bcrs of the First Aid Class which was sponsored by the Women's Institute and instructed by Mrs. Henry Peters. The following rare the list oi members who received standard First Aid Certificates": Mrs. James Burke, John Burke, Mrs, J. L. Chcverie, Miss Doreen Cusaclr. Mrs, Edgar Dennis. Mrs. Henry Douglas, Mrs. Aubrey Found. Mrs. Hilbert Frlzzeil. Mrs. Victor Livingstone” Mrs. Horace Mae- lllwen, Mrs. Harold Maclnnis, Mrs. Leo Mclsssc, Mrs, Elmore Mac- Kay. Mrs. Leslie MscKay. Mrs Sterling Maolcay. Mrs. Fcrnc Math- son. Mrs. Douglas Moore, Mrs. Al- bert Muiphy. Mrs. George New- man, Miss Olive Newman. Mrs. Glen Ramsay, Mrs. Pearl Rice, Mrs, Frank Ross, Mrs. Arthur Seaman, Mrs. Arthur Trewln. .......?.:.....?M. M. Low. in his book, "The Post Presented." 0 O O Clouds sre good conductors of electricity,'l1ut air is not. Thus two clouds. drawn to he another they are electrified, seek to discharge their fire in order that it may be balanced, The current released has to overcome the resistance of the sir and that's when we see a flash or lightning. Most persons will tell you that thunder Always comes after the flash of lightning. True or false, Thunder and lightning actually come at the same time. not light travels faster than sound, and so we see the lightning before we hes: the thunder. If We multiply volts and amperas we get watts, and it is upon the basis of wants that we are charged for our home supply of electricity. Envelopes have only been in common use since IMO-s. little over I10 years. -... Work that sore shoulder! We instinctively tend to rest I more shoulder, whereas we should keep it moving to cure it. In February Reader's Digest. Paul de Kruif. noted science re- porter, tells you about newly de- veloped techniques that ease psin enough to start core shoulder joints moving -- wipe out acute pain - speed recovny of disabled Read .how science is beginning to find the remedy for bursitis, an ailment that brings misery to millions of people. ' Get February Reader's Digest today: 37 articles of I -” in- terest, condensed from loading magazines and current books. PAINT A I-'()(7M & RESCUES WIFE. CHILD EEPANOLA. Ont. (OP) - Len McDonald suffered second-degree bums early Thursday in rescuing his wife and year-old son froml their flaming home here. The fire. which nearly trapped them in, their beds, destroyed the three-; room house. It is believed to have started by the coal stove in the kitchen exploding. St. George: And Vicinity JA successful "sewing Olrcle" was held at the home of Miss Lu- cina Campbell on January 14. A successful card party was held at the home of Mrs. Aeneu Mac- Donald on January 10. There were 'llv& tables in play. The gentiemexfs prize was won by Mr. Alfred Mac- Phee and the ladies' prize wsswqn by Mrs. George MacPherson, The many friends of Mr, Jack E. MacDonald are sorry to hear of his illness and will hi.m a speedy return to good health. A successful Junior Fanners' Meeting was held at the home of the Walker sisters. There were in members present. Mr. Paul MacPhce recently took a position in Nova scotia, "Log- gring for Logan." Mr, F. A. MscPhee of DeGros Marsh, is teaching school in Baltic. - Mr. Albert MsadPheo was a busi- ness visitor to Montague on Jan- uary l5. A successful card party was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles MacDonald of Poplar Point on January 1'1. Mrs Clement MacDonald, ae- companled by Mrs. Paul MacDon- ald. were recent visitors to char- lottetown. - Miss Bernice MacDonald. return- ed to her home in "Green I-fill". after being employed in Vernon River. The Misses Mary Annette and Lorraine Foy spent the week-and The Misses Foy's attend Georgetown High school. Mr. Jack Chrlstisnson is em- ployed at. cutting pulp with Mic- hael Slgswortm, at Newport. Mam Eileen Fitzpatrick of Wood- ville Mills, spent the week-end at her home, Mrs. Peter Walker spent a few days at Little Pond. where she was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. R. S. MacDonald. Due to the conditions of the roads the card parties in Newport and st. (home's were postponed imtll the following wet, Mrs. Joseph alaevu-in of El- liolwale, is spending I few days at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alex Morrison. Miss Gail Macoormack spent the week-end with her grandmother, Mrs. Lucy Morrison ed launching. Friends of Mr. Jim Campbell are sorry to hear of his illness, liis many friends wish him a speedy recovery. Friends of Mn. Prank Mac- Pherson are sorry to hear of her illness. Mr. Reggie Morrison, accom- panied by Lea and Allen Morrison motored to Georgetown on Jan- uary 14 Min Edna M.acMaster has ac- cepted a. position In Sydney, NS. Mr. Albert MaaPhee was .. bust. visltor to Montague on January 15. aw ! W. M. I. The members of Bummerflshj woman's M' I' .1 Society met January 7 at. the home of Mn, Sutherland MacKay. M31. Elmer Stewart presided, worship theme wnl "Tho Chumh an image of the Kingdom." Mira, Harland Day with her outlined an interesting program from the study book "wherein The Sun.” . Roll call was answered by members. Offering amounted 54.50, 12 members paying fees. Mrs. Elmer tewart Lindsay Sharpe were delegates to Prcsbyterial, Next meeting is to be held .1 the home of Mrs, Elmer stownm with Mrs. Clark Harding in oharge' of program. Roll call will be any swered by a verse containing the Word "Prince." I l I I l I I i I e needs You'll love New Sunlight for cleaning almost everything around the home. Yourhands will love it. too. Got Sunlight today. It's all pure. extra soapy. No mailer what type of truck you require... Iierek wziy Murray SEE. 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