/_,-- h , r WESTER.“ AND PRINCE CO J GUARDIAN .TO_DA Y . ‘GINTBS In. John Pond. ll Ohnroh Street-Phone ll IIJMMEBBIDI All PBINII COUNT! l M‘, sumgrlptloul Advertising should ho left with llra. Pond. ' llldlll afl-flmmllhbtllll i , \ W’, Water Biron. liEEPINE tiilillllll" FRANK fiongw . ANN HIIIIEIDIIIDJOIIII stony of the following ates-earn i Drugstore, Water Strut, Also News and shorts “f,” Water Street Math Galdot, or ounvme Street. Gui-dim will be delivered to any home‘ in Summer M u, 2,; per- on or 1w per week. Phone 389 for this service or u m" ,0 w, w, ruponllblo for deliver-reg on your Ion", by Shows at 3.30—7.l5—9.l5 ____?__ gunned lot IOII I! .1'1.'$I.."ii~ mum-w "i - "m" m‘, 9e inserted no‘! ‘ | Iiilll. strict!) PlIYw" 5 ., D Guam 6f ‘E11 kinds l, “ma, L-902-8-l2-2l. W‘? a . SfiiiQB-B-fi-ll. organdy ap- 5-10-1110 Store. L-906-3-l2-2i. 1E5 daint 35¢ gash. R4.‘ f all stomach ISM Rexificfueconomical l6‘ . G0 rllea Rexal f“ 'uI..-904-3-12-2i. SPORTS Kensiiii- fiofiidsy, March 1a at a moles from adjacent school ' " w’ may ruerL-sos-a-ii-ai. DENS pure paint. Klyvgrlnligi. shellac anfil war: ‘ 1 ni supp es a ,_ ‘mm c’ mL-QM-S-lii-Ii. .. g Dish towels and dfilfia each. Rex 5 and 10- 5m, L-906-3-l2-2l. ~ MP1‘ service on your films. .. . itexall Dfli85~ L-Boi-l-lr-zi. m" “.°'.“°.'.= state's; r1 c er . “keeper a ‘ Must have "‘“"““‘"° his "has l. fiwilfif, lililfgize. L-aaa-s-iz-ail 1| gr "vise for Mrs. Major Huestis tield on Tuesday afternoon . m; late residence to ‘trinity church. Rev. Mr. Sullivan ... . the service, assisted by _ Wm. Vex-Wolfe. Many ... ittended (,0 pay a last te to the deceased. The pall- 1. were: Messrs. Abert and 111 lluwtis, Ohestley Robertson mnwy, Emmett Ransghan ., Murphy. Interment in leqiles cemetery. ~8- Personals ~ John Peterson and young of Charlottetown are visiting Peterson’; sister, ltfrs. Roy 1 t, Summerside. —S— Air. Justin Murphy who has spending the past couple of ‘it st 1he hcme of his parents, iiid Mrs. John T. Murphy, ~~- left to resume his 1- st Noranda, P. Q. I~~ SCHOOL CHILDREN AGAIN T0 THE FOB! w- raged by their principal teachers the Borden school n ire again saving their tohelp the needy children flint Britain. t Save the Children Fund" is 11 oi consideration by all it children throughout our in. who wish w supply com- to those in need across the iiler Majesty the Queen is es- '\ llliertstedln this fund as by tlie following extract "The World's Children," the j‘ 0181111 oi the Save the -- hind. iteen Mary takes a deep r- interest in the well-beinc of , children evacuated from their 1 in London and other great Ind is delighted to hear of n. work being done in tlil.s " on by tile residential nurser- ilvldeu by the Save the ChFdO Fund in this country. Her Wishes to pay tribute to iii! liiiid people, who through "lsiinization, are caring for least able to care for them- » the babies and very young ~nll from our heavily-bcmbed i591"! cases among the Bel- 1 "mil"? Population in Corn- l" "Dmitri by Lady Peel who iii‘ hon. administrator for the l.e children 1mm gm- 3,1- Jililellrénch familifi in that oney gran. by e Children mind providu hi. and other necessities not irom any other source. __ 5011001 Children's most “contribution to the fund is m" of $10.09, their savings for 0i February. ‘it ilmrar. prior oooxiss “In iat____ ' c H "l: synnlfir , “as milk Plclliirfilzdingmu sifted lll-Qurvposg ‘x5500?! salt “$190011 cinnamm ,4 "boon cloves “rm nutmeg llitim fat, 23w“??? - mm urn ‘huvuihiy. r i. lganding to- - ..r in milk. ill? m‘ and mist-rs: mix . hinnlmww,,'mef°"gdulttbepiiirees : a ge m llama; h“ lhilfilllshiy. Drop -MENTHOLATED Tar Cough Syrup helps coughs. Taylor Drug 00., Remington. , . -FURNISHED apartments to DRSIDE W113- APPLY Gcurlies Drug Store. , 11-915 ’ S UMM -BOLTS, Nuts, Bolt kids, Barr Iron and all blacksmith supplies obtainable at Bruce's. L-902-3-12-2i. ‘Keeping Company” At Capitol Theatre SERVICE-The fun- sch —FOB RENT! Store building on Central Street. Apply Gcurlias Drug Store. 1,405, —SIIOPPERS! Visit the Rex 5 10 to $1.00 Store and benefit by the many savings. L-908-8-l2-3i. “BEEF, 1101i and Wine! Pro- motes the appetite and enriches the blood. l6 oz $1.00. Gourlles L-904-3-12-2i. Rcxsll Drugs. -—HOCKEVY Bedeque Rink, Bedtlquc South Shore League, “W541i. March 12. second game in finals. Middleton vs. New An- nan. Skate after. Admission 20 i ls- L-sss-s-io-ai. —RECEIVED CABLE - Mr. and M". Jtlhn H. Chiow, Summerside, have received a cable from their two sons, Donald and Marshal of the R..C.A.F. stating that they five arrived safely in Great Bri- n. —F0lt SALE. — Choice 84 acre farm. suitable for potatoes or mixed farming. All fenced. Situated in Lot 11 near St. Bridsers Church and col. dwelling; also out buildings. Terms can be arranged. ADDly to E. Sharbell Portage. L-889-3-12-3i. —-SIGN5 WITH Am FORCE -— It will be pleasing for the friends of Elaine Burns, lately of this town, but now of i-Iahfax to know that he has signed up with the Cans ian Women's Air Force last week and has been accepted and will in the near future leave fcr Ontario to take up her 3 months training. Her friends all wim her Summerside An iclieal “famll ' with side-splitting‘ iglfihjé" 59ers“? by Wilde!‘ 11011111; romance. made its appearance at the Capitol Theatre wit-h the opening g1 "K999- ing Company.’ The romantic comedy presents laugh-provok- Wtstmtffi “i. an n utherford and John Shelton as a pair oi_ young screen lovers comparable with the finest. Playing their most ambitious roles t0 Claw, both M155 Rutherford and Shelton furnish proof 1n “Kgep- ins company" that they are rapidly neariniz the threshold of stardom. The story deals with youniz newly- weds and their trials and tribula- tions. eslletllillly when their first quarrel arrives. That is occasioned by the boys ex-sweetheart and her flirtatious plotting to separate the youngsters, She does. too. but the families of the newlyweds bring them whether attain with some hil- arious scheming on their own part. Morgan and Irene Rich as the girls parents are teamed again. fol- lowinzntheir success in "The Mortal Storm. while little Vlfglflla Weiulcr steals scene after scene as the pesti- ierous but lovable. kid sister. Genie 10011114111. Virginia. Grey, Darr Dail- ey, Jr., and Sara Haden turn ' DPB-l-‘WWPPIIIY performances in the supporting cast. S. Sylvan Simon directed the picture. ST- MARY'S ACADEMY The following i' the stndi i the Diipils oi stsMaryb Acifilzemfy, Sumnierside, for the months of Jan- ueary and February: Grade X: 1. Florence Williams; 2. Ruth Kelly: 3. Lillian Glow. Grade IX: l. Nan Maclnnis: 2. liq/Egg T. Arsenault: 3. Frances Mac- Grade VIII: 1. Irene Gallant; 2. best of luck and will look forward Susie Clow; 3, Eleanor Campbell. to seeing her in uniform. She is the daughter of Mrs. Esther Burns of Simmer-side who also has a son a Sgt. in the U. S. Air CiiflJsm-S. BORDEN Stoker Edward Oatway who has been spending leave with his par- ents at Borden has left on return. Friends here are glad to learn that David constable. four year old cf Gordon and Mrs. Constable of Borden, who has recently under- gone an appendix operation in the Prince County Hospital is makin! l good recovery. Mr. Harold Stewart of Bilideh. who spent the week-end iwitli friends in Charlottetown returned home on Monday. Miss Pauline Mimi-WM 0i Chi-I‘ lottetcwn spent the week-end st her home in Borden. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Currie and three children of Halifax are visit- ing in Borden guests of Mrs. Cur- rie's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Ieard. Miss Olga and Joyce Love of Summerside spent the week-er. with their parents. Mr. and Mr. Colin Love of Borden. Grade VII: 1. Florence Clow; 2. ‘Theresa Prauizht: 3. Anna Gallant. Gr e VI: 1. Dorothy Arsenauit; 2- Muriorie 22ers: :1. Rita Gallant. Grade V: 1. eresa Arsenault and M. Florence Gallant: 2. Frances Pei-Elsi 3. Marie Gallant. Grade IV: 1. Zolnia LeClair: 2. Dorothy Arscnault: 3. Marv Kelly. Grade III: 1. Shirley Nconan: 2. Ethel Arsenault; 3. Marie Arsenault and Ann A’l-learn. Grace II: Isabelle lfCourse; 2. Mildred Cameron; 3, Marie Richard and Una Wedge. MUSIC DEPARTMENT: Senlcr Cl:lss-1.Kuili1een Allen; 2. Anna Hewitt; 3, Jean Nicholson. Junior Class-l. Ellen Moiiison: I. Mary Huestis; 3. Jean Dunn. TOO MANY DONTS IRK YOUNG GIRL A Wise mother lets her daughter look her agc- and nowadays that tends to mean looking every bit as old, rather than as young, as Mary and all he; friends are. Mothers often take too seriously every shred of advice they've heard, especially outdated advice remembered from their own adoles- cence, sibouit the importance of keeping young. Its quite natural to want a daughter to keep her fresh, natural lock as long as pos- sible. But when that leads to pro- hibiting this and that cosmetic, one and another skirt-length, it undercuts poise- wlthcut which M" Wm ma“ o, “finch the complexion of Diana fa useless. River is visitin her daughter Mrs. Gordon Coiista ie oi Borden. chmme l” Duh“ Mrs. Aeneas MacDonald of West If your dilllsliter really is "dif- st. Peters is spending a few days with her husband in Borden. Social Club met at the home of Mrs. Ralph Toombs on March 4th._ A letter of thanlm was read from one sick woman who had received fruit and fruit was ordered sent to three others. Mrs. 'I‘oombs treated the members with candy. Meeting closed with Mlzpah Benediction. The members were invited to the home cl‘ Mrs. Cecil Stewart for next meeting, A- IA JI inspecting -' ' ' _ in C‘ guns, fire control’ instrnmentl. Children pl defe SUMTMTETIYSTTITDQE fiUAR UNTY CHROCLE sy an important part in national by keeping sturdy. One good way to help your youngsters develop strong chest bones, sturdy legs, straight backs, sound teeth-and help them grow into stalwart citizens-is to give them Scott's Emulsion regularly every day. You'll find, too, that this great vitamin-rich tonic will help build resistaric to‘ common colds and certain infections. Give your baby Scott's Emulsion now and watch lilm thrive! By an exclusive method of emulsifying, Scott's Emulsion is 4 times easier to digest than ordinary cod liver oil. l" " ‘ ‘ing, economical, rich in natural Vitamins A and D, Scott's Emulsion is highly recommended as a valuable tonic for all the family. Buy today at your druggist. scans fA Great Year-Rho . I, lit EMULSION und TonjtfFdf vii/Bilge’! “Q UEEIVZS CANADIAN FUND 001m TIONS Repeated bombing raids on Bri- ' tisn port areas and the industrial midlands has attracted fresh at- tention to the frightful suffering ni the manv thousands of civilians in Great Britain who are harried from sitelicr to shelter and finally r iven into the open country by successive raids. Eventually places are found for them all places of relative security. but their belong- ings of all kinds are destroyed The task of emergency feedmg alone is difficult. The task oi setting them up once more with some quantity of clothing and bedding is much more difficult. To deet these enormous ‘needs iunds have been started in various parts oi the world l-l ferent," just let eschew cosmetics on her own, and your lob is to help her maintain balance. But the fact is. most girls want above all not to be different, espe- cially not to lock different. And most young things do use cosme- tics. do come cut in ankle-length party skirts, much earlier now than u-hen you were their age. So if she wants to use lipstick as the other girls do, as well as dunce to the same boogie ivoogie, read the same book; and deck herself in the same little fur aniimais -take it easy, she's only doing as you did. It’; the times that have changed. Restrained Make-up Oi course. her tender lain and delicate natural colouring require restrained make-up with material designed (or her age. Probably she has discovered that the manufac- turers of everything from hats to llpeticks have discovered her, and are odiferirig her-things made forr her ante. Id’ she hasnt, showing them to her will be sudflcient, and it, may be the beginning 01f her self-training in discriminating dress. “on, pm,“ “in; vllll war work such as that performed by the use o1 rier name in ccnneflllilll Wli-h the U-lfllilllbll campaign. which l! off=c1ally known as "The Qllfiell’! Canadian Fund for Air Raid Vic- time." Every dollar contributed to the Queen's Canadian Fund goes With- out deduction to the Lord Mayor of London for distribution to the homeless and needy ' Contributions from this Province should be forwarded to the RAVE] “rust. Company. Charlottetown which repzii-ts the following M- celpts tn date:- Received recently:- Mr. and Mrs, J. ll. Hill. Char- lottetown, $30.00. Total to date, $5,517.95. MEAT PIE 2 pounds round or shoulder steak 2 medium onions 1-2 clip clicpprd celery 4 tablespoons fat 2 1-2 clips 11:1. water 3-4 teaspoon salt Dash ct Primer l tabiespoon Worchestershire sauce . 2 cups sliced raiv csirrots 2 taibl-ewpooiis flcur Method: Melt the fat and Edd-film onions that have been chopped and the chopped celery anzl cook until slightly browned, Add the meat that has been cut into serving size pieces arid brown on all sides, Add the water, salt, pepper, Worcester- shire sauce. and cook for about 1 hour over 10w heat, until the meat is iznclez". Add the slcd carrots. Cock for about l0 minutes longer, and then thicken the gravy with the 2 tablrs-pccns ilzur which have been moistened in a little cold wa- her. Cook until the mixture is thickened and than pour into n greased baking dish. Cover with baking powder bis- cuits arid bake in a moderate oven (375 des- F.) for about 80 min- WOMIIN WANTED A! INSPECTORS IN WAI. PLANTS ngmwmuanlloardelihotllnltel Kinldoninnil Onnadahaslasoodanurgentealforniorethnndfl "mm “w,” m, “s; of 2o and 40 for inspection work In Canadian war plants. Iiespcidble positions explosives and radio parts await applicants who have bod od- or radio. Tliey will icln hundreds of other women m manl- two girls In fllil photograph. TABIGET FIXING BY VOLUNTEERS IONDON. March 10 -(CP) -- Eflwusands of foreign glide-books, mops, technical periodicals, direc- tories and Other reference works mo longer obtainable through usual pie-war channels are pouring into the Ministry of Economic Warfare which uses them to fix potential firs“; 1n Nazi-occupied territory. A ltllnistty official discussing ro- ‘Ilie mother of a dead ROS/Bil All‘ Force ilot sent her son's collection of forefgn maps with an acccmpflkv- ing note which sold that l! they helped to drop bombs on German objemivcs she would feel liar boy's death has been a ie; have sent h books, maps and journals with pio- Sitie: of factories and other h‘! suits of an appeal for the material Nil said that thanks to the donor of one obscure foreign reference book the whereabouts of a certain vit-al f in Nani-occupied Europe have been settled. "The book pro- vided the missing link in s long chain of evidence." he said. "For some time we had been trying to locate the position." AN EVENING AT NO. 1o BY PAUL MANNING NBA Service Staff Correspondent LONDON - ‘Ilia weather had turned from bitter cold to warm. And now rain, beating down on the pavement outside No. 10 Downing, turned into slush the snow which had fallen earlier in the evening. But it was warm inside, and before a ,c0al fire we followed Dunkirk, when a great nation was nearly beat- en to its knees. Mcnihs 0f bombs in- cluding one stretch, during September and October and part 0i Novem- ber, i940, that ran for sixty days and nights, until most people in this capital began getting punch-drunk and resented even UM‘ slamming of a car dccr or the shuffling cf waiters tray. But mostly we talked about the futui-‘e, For It's seificm you look back when y-:11're with the Church- ills. They. l‘k" 111C“. of Eilrlniid, think only of icday and tomorrow, not of yestrrziay and the past. We had met at 6:30 in the Savoy _Lance Corporal Mary Ciiumhlll and Private Sarah Churchill both in Lcriticn on lezve “Sullivan's Travels" at the Plaza is what. they LONDON. March 13—(OP) —LQd! Sinclair, wife of the Air Minister, told a meeting how the wives 01f bomber pilots sit night after night knitting and listening for the sound of returning planes. Wlien the bombers are heard they stop their knitting and count the planes b! DIAN F"—___T_'Q, IHSUHHHE ALL 13155 , RALPH MUTTART Szzmmcrside u» ...‘.. a th i in scveeeh of their? hrglkgs 3 DO VWVING S TREE T First, You Tickle Two Fish for Luck; Then You Sit and Talk Before boil! a 669th and warmth to R all that makes y0u unconsciomiy overlook the actual smallness of her apartment. You think only of the warmth heme and the cold. 11M! ‘ll-Maui. for the contrast I sharp and. vivid. IUOOM SHOW! INTIIII‘! IN AMERICA which is a reason why it is the nerve center oi’ No. l0 For durins the l0ng night. harms when London has shut shop for the day this is where Winston Churchill and a few key men, v/tio form an unofficial inner cabinet, meet to do the actual beating and molding of the FYret I h, however, taro Incl Gilb- porcehin ftidi, upright and at op- posite ends ct the flrepece man- tle, which have the greatest sen- tim tal attraction for the across the small area. between the door and the mantle-piece and tickle the bellies of both fish. The conversation around the dining table this evening was not deg-u , though it wasn't exact- ly sparkling. It lust needed the Prime Minister to needle it along, that's all. He's the conversation- a1 pacemaker cf this household and when absent, as now. tall Britain's empire strategy. when lags New Dealer Ben Cohen arrived in London last spring. for a brief stay, he said it was the men who see Winston Churchill after- nine 1:1 the evening that he was inter- ested in meeting. Tiicres a bright, conl fireplace at one side of the rocm. Two small divans. separated by a low mahogany sherry-laden table, face each other. Four small period chairs and e. flower-decked table ccniplcte l-lie furniture layout of ilic rncni. A dozen infonrial camera stud- ies of the Churchill children arid half a hundred books help to give the room a feeling of being lived in. 'I‘lie1'e are pictures of Mary. at age nine. astride e, horse; of Sarah and Diana at. school age and two philics oi’ Randolph, one at age ten. encased in a suit a sine too small. A recent- addltions is a photo of the now-Major Randolph Churchill, standing upright in the turrent of an American tank in Libya. A picture oi Harry Hop- caviar, brought back from Russia as l. present to the Churchill family, was the star item of the dinner. The menu was caviar, pea soup. chicken croquetic-rnil with mash- ed potatoes arid br-ursel sprouts. DISCUSS STEIYBEFK‘! “GRAPES OF WRATH" Coffee was served as a hi8! in c l1‘ ' ‘im- resurirrtecl John. . - "Grapes of Wrath." 1'11 . . one had rend The.“ lwllld-‘Yfd l1 the mlgfaflbn probltfiln was as st- 1 7 .< “Ema-v...” When yon leave No. l0 Downirili and start the long walk up desert- od Whitehall. you think, “Ewell people e Churr " th hills daughters, Mary, above, and Sarah, right. Mary was recently p- moted to be a lance cufllilrfll l" m‘ ATS, which puts her one up on Sarah, who ls still wanted to m. but ft was too late an hour for that-so the newsreel theatre 11:. the Strand was the comps-cm Later we down the Strand we h-ad gotten soaked by the ritin. But once in- l0 we had again become hallway which leads from the entrance door to the austere. mahogany-paneled cabinet room at the read but down- stairs. where the Giurchiils live, in the' blsckou , side No. warm. Not in the long and entertain when in Inndori It's small, this Downing Street Shall and compact because the already low-cellinged apartment. rooms have been reinforced heavy wood girders boltmd to- gether as a protection blast. Yet Mrs. Churchill, by hav- all the wood-work wliive and placing the furniture informally around the living room, nos given dor John O. ing a private in the i is there too. Carl Sand-burg; collection which scriment of the London Daily Express of Jan of the December World-Telegram British readers headline, “i500 DEAD IN I-IA WAII," letting such a story is handled by a 11.8 newspaper, A mir of 8C) and lCillllllg like ash traps legs, occupy one shelf Minister hv Wizisnt. kins and daughter standing in the iaht of a White House window "Abraham Lin- coln" is part of the Churchill boow fills peveral shelvea..n.icng with a snail as- myslery stories sev- eral wbies of Time magazine, and l3. which printed a large picture 8th New York as to give a glimpse oi the itism know huw pro-Ming dynasty brazlera about three inches high on corner. They were presentrd to the Prime American Ambassa- WAAF. tcda as when the book was vigil/en. y Bu; irlili a war boom- in American iiidu-tiy- 11nd I81‘!- cuTture. I didn't. beiizw s0. There's rivalry between Mary and Sarah. They both started ll privofes-1\i:iry in ilie ATS Mid siiriili izi illi‘ \vA!\F‘S~_n11d MM)?’ wifii licr rrrent. pinmcirn to the . rank cf lance cofllfffll. is 0M “l! on Sarah It ended at 17:00. tiifs London night. at. N4) l0 D1 rim . l sriiti gocdllr,‘ illlfi lhzy swrl Outside tlic rain lircl s‘ e moon mid star.- vnvc a1‘ lntriis-e . quality i0 the bliifllfltlt 'l'li~ C‘n- 011011 you cciuzi “'1 "»" ""Y ill!‘ Ailriilrwliv and War Cffrc. ycii pf\'~'°(‘(l directly by, You could slill rri warmth of 11v" 1'1 r.’ though. and in iii/g lr~11 deserted \V‘lll"l‘fi" v :1 , "Swell people, the Cliiirclillls." until ""11 n.1,. '2 we 1k up '.it,