TI 5, :1."'.".:: inn All cmtutttiquuLv.r.i. Showfnioyed All Sunset Lodge Sumac Lodge was the noun d gisiety and laughter Tut on-hing when the Victoria group of the Baptut church. staged ti professor of magic show. Mrs. Lloyd I-lewkea was the talented professor. Pianist, vocalist. elecutionict, for- tune-teller. choir director and wt- resses appeared on u flourish of her magic wand. All changed in a twinkling and appeared in lovely evening dress. The performers were: Mrs. Vic ituiiiz. Mrs. Garnet God- frey, Mrs. Harold Jenkins. Mrs. Russell Perr Mrs. Spurgoon Jenk- ins, Mrs. A . Bud McMurti1v. Mrs. Horace Willis, Mrs. Lloyd Gll)5(!il uiiil Mrs. Dan Bell. Mrs. J. W. Btiilum was accompanist. The lad:-s 'zllliltlhli(l.x Joined in a sing-son: (ll ol'i II.ll'iirlL?S The group This igiiiil-it-d by Major Stevens or. taint: of the zuests of Sunset Lodge, and Mrs. Godfrey. the DY9Slil”Tll t-)t'p:c"5M1d the pleas- ure Of the group at being preisent. Refrer-,liniiii's ucie served aiidi "SIS:-Pt (iii-.iii.a Z.-mil-.-' brought a! happy ?I'Pll.IlS; to a close E Illness Prevents Address Here . piesideiit oi the ..iite of Canada. .. xiv cit yesterday- and vtiis nL'.' xiulvit to speak at sf meeting of the P. E. Island brantihl of th-- or" 'z;iiiu:t last night, was lll'll(iI”illiliil presented from mak- ing an tippt iitro due to illness. He hopes iiiet-I as many members of the Inst.tiite at the Expert- mental Farm today. as possible. be-1 fore leaving my all for Nova Scotia. At the d nner meeting arranged in honor of pifsidelll Hackney. Don wnrid substituted for the- guest speaker with an illustrated talk on his trip overseas last stim-I51” Helim T-mutt lll'b'lTlP(l- Duh madcl at Q”eb"C C-ll” mer under the Student Foundation EFIRHREXHEHL. Hon. C. C. Baker. M.nister of Agriculture. crave some timely ad- vice to the asseinbly as did also the Deputy M:nistcr, Mr. S. C. Wright. The meeting was presided over by Morris Deacon. president of the P. E. Island branch of the In- stitute. Condemn Aping Yanks At Resorts OTTAWA (CPi -The practice of Canadian l'PN'lI" operators flying the Stars and Stripes and giving their est.iblish.merits American names was condemned Tuesday by Canadian tourist officials. A ft-dcrnl-provincial tourist con- ference endorsed a resolution of the C-ll'l.iEll.iTl Chamber of Commerce urging that the practice of flying- the United States flag be discour-I aged and that resort and restaur- ant operwtors be urged to serve: high quality food CIISCIITCEIVB of. some ziten of (Yitindn 1 Resources M tnister Lcsagel agreed wvh other delegates that, Canada shwid he kept Canadian. He said the federal am-ernment is ready to r.-iiriorse Canadian Tour- ist Week to be held next May 1-7 and that misln hc it good time to impress the "K(i('p Canada Cana- dian" idea on caterers and the public E G Roucbrittom. British Co- Iumbin deputy minister of trade and industry, termed as "stupid" the practice of fl)lniZ the U. 5. flag. Leo Dol-iii. director of the' Canadian travel bureau and it was "ridiculoo " BIRTHS. MARRIAGES. DEATHS 50c Per Insertion IIIIFIHS 0I'I.T().V-.-U lhn City Hospital on Nov. 20. lflfi-l, to Mr. and Mrs. Gr-nrzri (lullrsn. ii son. PHII.l.lPS-.-M the PFIHPP County Hn:tiii1l fin Nov. lflth. I95-I. to Mr. and up: lzrihril Phillips. in Iliixlllflili linllitl, 6 lh-1.4 ozs. N. D. MacLEAN FNIIERTAKEI? PIMBAIJIER Charlottetown and North Wllhhllo DIAL 5549 THE HENNESSEY FUNERAL HOME 91 Kent St. W. J. BROWN Funeral Director Dial 632 I Nil 94 Hour Ambulance serving Dlgllfled. Contest Benton CHARLOTTETOWN FUNERAL HOME 78 Easter: St. but. one complete Flnorll nil Ambulance Service --Dlnetor- BOIIITIIIAMJI , 32.16.500.000. REES. - 3! Z. ooors lot patent plum-as war uuvnpaiipmm at Pun; Dimes All men Modesto i plan. Nanak. Kan. ltnot. T0-DAY Wodnudny. Bub and Tea. st. Peters Cathedral Pariah 1-mi, no p. In. WHAT DO YOU think of the Western paintings? On exhibit afternoon: daily, HITHI Memorial Gallery. DISASTER TEAMS SEE FILMS -The four first aid teams of Red Cross disaster workers viewed -films at Red Cross headquarters on Monday night. Mrs. I-Iarry Cud- more, director of first lid. spoke briefly on some specific phases of first aid procedures. The newly pnpproved method of applying. a ztourniquet provoked much discus- lsion. Mr. J. Gordon MacDonald, -provincial chairman reviewed var- ious aspects of the Red Cross Dis- aster Service ZION I". P. S.-The regular lTl0,9Ill'lg of Zion Y. P. S. was held on Tut-sda) evening in the form of A "Misxinii: Niizht" The mm-1. ing opened with the buSlllt'.s.- per- inri unrlvr the lP&(IPf'ShIp of the PTPSICIPIII, Rodriin Hfcknx. A very intere.-tiiig l'I'IlKKiI')n study an ”1n. riia" via: led 0) l-hhi-l Farquhnr- son and Iluvida MacEat'liern, fol- lowed hy the dmiiiionnl period. A Charle: Latirzhinn rt-rm-d t-;.n,15v. ing of tho -min;-.: of ”Xo;tl1'g Ark" and "DHVITI and Goliath" was planed The yiiiing pP0plP then atljnurnt-il to the lnvier hall TOY KRYYTW. Thr nice-ting closed with '-inrzing ”Blest Be The Tie Thai Binds." L Meeting Held the St. Mary's Anglican Young People's Auocintion was held in the church hall on Monday ovu- ning at 721) pm. with the presi- dent, Peggy Priston in the chair. The meeting openeti with prnyers by the president end a hymn. The business meeting which by the lecretary. Betty Lou Trea- enick, concerned plnrinlng for future meetings and the dressing or the church for the Christmas season. books for the Christmas service. After this work was completed everyone J0lI'lPd in a singsong. Refreshments were served by Sally Wnndside and Ned Hen- thorn assisted by Donald Cotes The meeting closed with hymn and pray:-,rs.-S. Plans--IT-Tldyd Tour of Camps iCPi .The man who cunimanued the first Common- wealth division in Korea during the last 3-eat will make a 12-day tour oi Canadian army installa- tions and CIVIC centres in three pl'0l'IllCt!b. The army aiiiiouiicr.-ti Tuesday that Maj.-Gen. Hoziltlus Murray will a.-rive in Vancouver Dec. ii and will hop through Alberta, On- O'I'TAWA HOLD )IICI'ITIN(i 'l'lic- Nrible Grands Club of the Rehekati I.O(lEP held their .'Vmeni- her TIIPT-'Tlr12 at the home nf Mrs., .lai-k .VlarLcnd. North River ROHCH uith 'l2 meniiwis an-uniting roll call and T5 lhf'I'1ihl'?l'S of the Arnie Past Nohlr Grmiii-' Club. Mou- lalluc as guests. The prtNl(lPnl.1 ing the hliSlflC:S IIIEHIIITLT it was (IPt'ldPl'l that on Thursday, De-I cc-mhor 9 the club would mt-Iii all the IOOF Hall. each n1(tlllL)Pli in hrini H :2.” for ll'-0 1'It:l(IfTl'l in the Inllflllal). rltiiwitaiiiinaiii anti lunch was Jriinlly riinveneil by Miss Hilda ll.ii-pay and M15: Bessie Hnlnian. After an evening of fun and game: t-ante In A cln-P it delicious buffet lunch was scri- ed. FLOWS IN A("I'ION--File siimx plows sent out from the ctiy by the Department of PIJLHIC uoiusl and Hlkhivays ycste.d:ty made- the round trip to souris. Summer- side, Montague, Eldon and Buldciil l'6SD9vIlV9l)'. and levelled oil the high spots fring.ng the ll"dl'8I tracks which had made piisan; difficult, The same plows. aftcri being serviced at the Governmentl garage. are scheduled 10 leave ail daylight today to COllLlIll.l8 the work in untouched an-as. Owing to communication interruptions little specific information as to roacii, conditions was available yesterday except from the travelling public. TRINITY Y.P.l'. -The regular meeting of Trinity YPU. was helii last evening in the social hall. A Lvely recreational period was led by the recreational committee. Rev. Howard Christie led a group study and discussion on the introduction of the life oi Christ. A film "The choice is yours" was shown. A business meeting was conducted by the president. Final plans were made for the candlelight service to be held on Dec. 12. Also plans in go carolling on Dec 22. A devo- tional period led by Bertha Birch and Anna Matheson followed. The guest soloist for the evening was Jean Ellis. accomparued by Nancy Len. who was pianist for the eve- ntng. Meeting closed by repeating the Mizpah Benediction. Personals A The many friends of Mr. J. M. MacF'adyen will regret to learn that he has entered the P. E. I Hospital for treatment. 4 Oc ober Exports O'I'r.iWA. iCPPi-Canada's ex- ports declined by s29.sn0,0o0 in Oc- tober. cutting the total for the first IO months of I954 by s2'I4.000.000. The month's trade produced a def- icit of 514000.000. A preliminary estimate by the bureau of statistic-.: Monday placed October's shipments at 3318 000,000 down from s34'i'.il00.000 last. year The 10-month total was estunnird at 33.182.500.000. down from S3.- 456.500,000 A war Ago, Imports also Cnnfll'lllPd to tip. clme. dropping hr s26,3on.otio In October and by S309.700.000 in the 10-month period. Total imports declined to 3332.- 000000 from 33.58.300.000 in October and to sa,3a.'i.:ioo.ooo from 33.693.- 000.000 In the 10 months. With imports still running high- er than export totals. Canada show- ed ii deficit of sl4.000.000 in Octo- ber's trade. up from the 310500.000 deficit a year Ago. though the T854 i0-month adverse balance at 5200.. 800.000 was still below last year's HIGH SPOT Bogota. capital of Colombia in South America. in built at an al- titude of 8,700 feet above the sen. IN MEMORIAM In fnml -ml lnylng memory of Mn. Hnmmnmt Afllnck who pau- ol uny cm DH-4-mhor Int. 1952. lpiuyci H , Quinn farm and Quebec to visit army amps. confer R ; t h defence of- ficials .n Oitaua. sec big alum- inum procluctioii plants and tour the CHiladall' plzint at Montreal. home oi the F-86 Sabre fighter. He will fly Dev. 16 to Bagotville. Que, and then Arvidn to see the aluminum piiuer plaiiis, spend a dziy at Camp Val.artiei- and the He will tour the Canada-.r plant at Montreal Dec. 20 and leave for Britain by air Dec. 21. Goes On Trial For Husband Poisoning Oltla tAPi Judge McGuiie chic-reti a plea nf not izuilty Tue.-(lay for grand- mother Nannie Doss to a charge she murdered her fifth husband! one nf four ssie has admitted feed-p mg rat piiisuiiing Judge Mt'Guii-c aclttl at the le- quc.-t nf ciiiiniy Eittorncy J. Howard Eclmtindson after Mrs. Dtiss' court- appninied lawyers refused to make a plea for her. They insisted she is mentally incompetent. The plump. 49-year-old widow is at-ciiscd of causing the death Oct 10 of Samuel D055. 58. who died about five months after they werel married. Her lawyers, Gordon Patten and Dickason, for the second time tried unsuccessfully to have tlicir client committed to a mental hospital for observation. Judge Mc- Guire rcfusod. saying he did not. feel he had that Jurisdiction. Continued from page I CEITGIIIII Elves all day and mm the n;ghi. Millions of television viewers on the birthday presentations in ancient Westminster Hall when the prime min.sLei' was g;ven the pur- trait oi himself painted by Graham Sutherland and the autographed book from Parliament Recalling that he and Attlee had been the only two British prime ministers oi the last. 14 years. Churchill and that was something for the world to recognize as "a symbol of the inherent stability of our British way of life." Or hll wartime leadership. he said he was glad when Attlee de- scribed his speeches then as ex- pressing the will not only of Par-I liament but of the whole nation. TULSA. THANKS OVER TV Churchill v i s i t e d Buckingham; Palate Tuesday night where the Queen, at the regular weekly au- dience with the prime minister, w.shcd him "many happy returns." It was ChurChIll.H last official birthday engagement but later in the evening. seated beside his wife. he made R brief television speech oi thanks at the end ” ii pl'0gI'a..l devoted to his career. The prime m.nistei”s personal isiends in all corners of the world, including Prime Minister St. Lau- rent, ma-is brief speeches. many of them filmed in advance. Continued from page 1 -Toloulione company.- the telephone men. were on the job all day yesterday and d 1 In getting power to the Summeraide Airport. On the edge of the city the situation was spotty with many transformers burned out. The same situation obtained on the Sourill and Montague circuits. , The graph circuits to Montreal. and saint John were restored early yesterday afternoon rind Also local- ly in spurts and Borden. West to Summerside and out to George- town nnd Montague. the service wu utill lntcn-upted up to a late hour last night. POPULAR INSTRUMENT The English cnncertim was in- vented by Sir Cherie: Whuutone in 1829. Sweet In me -1" Nut nevnr fulc- Ol one we loved. but could not nave. ' Alvin no rue. unnalfinh and kind Pownlll the world her equal you'll nd. Hint cum to I! ha akin to dis lived, not-ynne'I frland .abmdtiv huh!!! but 111. KINII IIIIIE TEA Sttmul-rifinq tind rl0liiWH.' The regular weekly meeting 4. followed the minutes and roll call -X Following the business meeting all members Joined in the work -. of repairing the church hymn i Canadian Nntiorinl TelI-- 1-Inlifnx l New Maritime E1 The structural steel outline of the new fireproof building for the Maritime Electric Co., indicates the progress being made on The structure by M. F. Schurman Co. Ltd, since excavation was completed late in October. The build- ing is to serve as a line materials storeroom and a dispersal centre for linemen. It is sit- uated on the west side of St. Peter's highway in Parkdale with an extension on Gower Street and with an entrance there in addition to one on St. Peter's Highway. Charles Boisner is foreman on construction. Moncton TV Station On Air MONCTON ICP)-The Marliimes' newest television station. CKCW- TV, went on the air Tuesday night with I! test pattern and officials announced the station will start re- gular programming Wednesday. The officiiil opening it schedul- ed for Saturday evening. The television unit is owned and operated by Moncton Broadcasting Ltd., and puts out a signal strength of 5.000 watts. video, and 2.9 kilo- wzttts. audio. The station trans- mitter is located on top of Cale- donia mountain. in Albert county, a peak 1.300 feet above sea level. A 50-foot antenna is located on top of a 300-foot tower. DullesISTresses Peaceful Note In Latest Talli (By Janie-s. Marlow. Associated Press stuff It riter) The Iii.-cnlimver adiiiinistralion has IPplll'fI to those who ivaiit fought-r tactics tmvartl R('(l Chine: Slain So-i-rt-taiv Dullr-.- ii--pruid- ed In a ratliri-television liroadiiii.-1 nn Mondas. night. Tho L'nii-:1 Stale: will tr) use every pear-uiul TTIPHTIS. fariliei-, to get along Communist-'. "Prat":-iul" was the ktyntittv his talk, although he said United States would "rr-iici vigor- ously” to provocation. He did not In with lhv of say what he meant hy reacting "vigorously" I.a:i January Dulles spoke of "massive retaliation" Against an aggressor. Monday night. al- though firm. he was more re- strainr-cl. Hp tmk cracks M the Russians and Red Chins-cc. And. just as in January. he empliasizcrl the power of the 1'. S. and its AIIIFW to meet any attack. But he add- ed "This does not mean that any local war would auiriinaticnlly he turned into A general war with atomic bomb: being dropped all over the map." IIEVEALS THINKING This was A little more detailed insight into his thinking than he provided in January when his fail- ure to explain in some detail what he meant brought him criti- cism here and abroad. Dulli-5' speech Monday night was made at It time when the U. S. is protesting the imprisonment of 13 Americans as spies by the Chinese Communists Without specifying this in his talk. Dulles called the Chinese "provocative". Biil if the Eisen- linwrr iIdI'TIIfIl5lTEll0l1 has any plans for freeing those Anierican: beyond protesting LIIPIF imprison- ment. Dulles did not reveal them. William Knowlund. the Republi- riins' Senate loader and there- for! one of President Eisenhower's chief captains in Congress, has atlompterl tn fell Eisenhower and Dulles, apparently without Mn- suiting either. how in trtint Red Chinese for tailing the ericnns. Am- China coast-an act which might country's United Nittinnx Allin they'd come Alnnz. but without them If necessary. before going am. the! vnsil the, He proposes it hlncltnt-i'r of the- Iend In war-with the help of fhvf l.'l Dull:-in answered Knnwlimd di- German Orchestra Conductor Dies of Pneumonia BADEN BADEN. Germany (AP) -Wilhelm Furtwaengler, 68, noted German orchestra conductor whose independence caused him trouble with both the Nazis and anti-Nazis. died of pneumonia Tuesday night Death came as plans were Dead- ing to send him and his entire 110 - member Berlin Symphony Orchestra next year to the United States. a country where he had not always been welcome because of the honors the Nazis heaped on him. Furtuaengler was stricken Sun- day. He was brought to a private sanalorium here. but his condition steadily detericrated. He was regarded as one of the BV'DI'ld.S greatest interpreters of Beethoven' 5 symphonies. In 1926 and 1927 he shared the direction of the New York Philhartamiic Orchestra with Arturo Toscanini. BORN 1886 Son of a German university pro- fessor and archaeologist, Furt- yvizienglcr was born in Berlin. Jan. .25, 1886. I His political troubles started Iwht-ti the Nazis attained power In G(li'.'lt.'il'iV in 1933. They demanded that he purge his Berlin orchestra -of its Jewish musicians, but he re- fused The Nazis were conscious of his international reputation and made him a state privy councillor and first musical director of the state opera. But he fell under 3 tempor- iary shadow when he defended the Jewish composer Paul Hindemith in a letter in 1934 and resigned all his musical posts. The following musical season in Berlin was so uninspiring that Nazi leaders finally lpersuaded Ftirtwaengler to resume ldireclion of the Berlin orchestra. FL!-JD GERMANY Hitler was reported to have ivarnocl Furtwaenizlcr in 1944 that ,any further championing of people classified by Hitler as non-Aryans would be considered treason. Furt- -waenglcr fled to Switzerland in learly 1945. apparently to escape ar- l ectric Co. Building A (above) under construction Bai'ier”s Film Lab. Funeral of Mr. L J. Larabee The funeral of the late J. J. Larabee was held yesterday after- noon from the Macbenn Funeral Home to the Baptist Church where service was conducted by Rev. Frank Smith and Rev. E. C. Evans. Interment was in Belfast cemetery. Honorary pail bearers were. L. C. Johnston, I-Ion. Dougald MacKin- non, Neil A. Maiheson, M.P., Dr. W. J. P. MacMillan, D. J. Riley, Mar- tin W. MacDonald, Dr. J. P. Lantz. Harper MncNeill, Joseph Griffin. Active pail bearers were: Samuel Buchanan, Angus MacLeod. Stew- art Ross. Clayton Shaw. Leonard Murphy and Peter MacLennan. Members of Mizpah Lodge A. F and A. M.. Eldon. attended the Masonic service at the grave con- ducted by Rev. James E. Heath- wood. .gotten. In retroapoct. there in an ' aura. of excitement about Czechs Propose -Eight Country Military Command By RICHARD KASISCHKE MOSCOW iAPi-Spurred by the Soviet Union. Czechoslovakia on Tuesday proposed a. combined, eikht-country Communist militaryl command and East Germany cal- led for an army of its own as eastern Europe's answer to the prospective rearmmg of the West Germans. I Czech Premier Vilem Siroky and East German Premier Otto Grote- wohl advanced their proposals at the Communist Europi-an security conference organized by the Soviet Union in an effort to prevent or delay ratification of the Paris asreements by the Western powers. Those agreements-scheduled for ratification by March I - would bring R near-sovereign. rearmed West Germany into the North M. lantic Treaty Organization. . lrest by the Gestapo. After the war a four-power de-. nazificaiion commission clearedt him of active collaboration with thei Hitler regime, but his troubles were not OVGT. In 1949 Furiwaengler had a con- tract to conduct the Chicago Sym- phony Orchestra but cancelled it after protests from many musicians in the United State: became of his honors from the Nazis. As time passed, criticism of Furt- waengler in North America aub- sided. Little or no objections x ere heard to the U.S. and Canadian concerts which had been planned for his orchestra next February. -m. really, without naming him, by! repudialing his two proposals of; hlncknde and go-it-alone. at least! lfnr the, present. l HP SAUCE "Improve; all meals!" USED CAR winter 8!. Potion": loud I Llut Prlco Sale Price 1947 Studebaker sedan. winterized. good tires, ti bargain . . . ... 845 47! 1947 Studebaker Coupe. good mechanical condition 47! E1 1946 Ford Sedan Dollvery. Jifst the thing for taking the hockey team to rink 55 3 I937 Studebaker Sudan. This car has A beautiful built-in radio. Good ' tires. overdrive. hlllhoider. Upholstery, body and motor good . .-. .. 350 18'! 1941 Ford Couch. motor, tire: and chant: good. body fair .. 200 9'! I946 Chev. half-ton pickup in in z 50 79 1936 Plymouth. Why not btflld I good truck wagon In your spare time this hacflfn Phone Gus CLEARANCE CANTWELL'S PHARMACY .175 Grafton Streel Phone 5132 ' l I OPEN ALL DAY TODAY WEDNESDAY Britain Itettves Finest Hour Vlltti 80th Birthday of Prime Minister By Ann Harvey Cundian Prul Staff Writer LONDON. (CP)-.Bi-it.Lln reuvod in finest. hour with the 80th birth- day of Prime Minister Churchill. The umlverury or the ”Voico of Old Britnfn It BSY"-Cl POCTPPIJF wright Sir Alan Herbert once called him-evoked n. noltslgic flashback to I moment ofbida drum. Throughout the lane Tuesday. minds turned to the terrible time it you: go when Churchill's ring- ing words rsllied the people to I cause that seemed lost-victory over Gemiany in the Second World War. Those were grim day: but they hid n quality few Briton have for- them. Somehow there now seems in then islands almost ii hankering to ro- capture the spirit of wartime, to regain the shared feeling of com- nrnderie and shared odventure. of living on the nerve-ands, beside which peacetime exlltgnce seems drab and tame. VAGUE NOSTALGIA There is nothing bloodthirsty in this odd yearning. Movie-maker Sir Michael Baloon describes it as is "vague, unwitting nostalgia." Sir Michael, head of milling Studios. agu with the same lmaklnntio . stirring sound as thou of Napoiegri, Ind Alexunder the Great. Churchill, by no means diffident shout hi: own Abilities, might ml. clniin such praise. He has mu thnt all his rpecchu did was focus the courage of the British pegple In his speech Tuesday at wt-5.; minster Hill, referring to Wgrtimc days, he said: "It was the natlon...tiiai had the lion's hurt. I had the luck to be called upon to give the roar." Hillsboro Man Heads MHlt Producers. Vendors Mr. Robert Drlamll. I-Illlsborn, was elected president of the Milk Producer: and Vendors A&50ClELlon It their uiual meeting held last night at the library of the Experi. mental Faun. Other officers elected were: vice-president, I-Ion. Eugene Cullen: secretary treasurer, Percy 0. Gay. Mr. Major Macllae presided at the well attended meeting which says in a contribution to the week- ly British magazine. Truth, that this nostalgia is caused not by wanting the ”horror" of those days back again but by an awareness of their general atmosphere. Something of the same feeling Ls expressed by the Dowager Muc- hioness of Reading. chairman and founder of the women's voluntary services. who writes that she can- not read Churchillla wartime speeches "without a pricklirig eye and a tingling memory." The examples could be multip- lied. They may help explain why Churchill has earned a special gratitude which cuts across party lines; why the man who once seemed doomed to be forever a brilliant failure how is widely ac- aaw some lively discussion carried on by the mid: producers concern. mg the fluid milk industry and fa.rm.ing practises. Turkeys We are taking orders for Christmas Turkeys, choice Purina feed birds, well known for their excellent flavour: also delicious home canned cepted as one of the great figures of the 20th century. POLITICAL RARITY As the years roll by, it becom plain that Churchill is a polttir rarity-a figure who has reach; hi.-itoric stature in his own lifetime. one whose name may ring in futurel EXAMPLES OF LOANS 8YC::h IIIO. HMO. ll M0. on ism 529.9 156.56 .2.'.?.t.l', st: sac 90 m N Phone nun pay:-tum an hu 3 Iayunn I anluuflll In III puperi P IN! ........g 151 GREAT I GEORGE STR mail 0 ham S50 M SI200 TNAT unity to SAY vii FINANCE CO. turkey. GREGOR'S TURKEY FARM. Cornwall Dial 7666 OANS PIIOI!-.667 (01!!! on FlR.f'7' VIJV 5 Give I low quick fun about youn- ulf on phone. Upon npprovll. some in cuh . . . your wly and Inn! for I-visit loan. write for loan by r com: in lod y. Ta IVIVI M EET. CHARLOTTET OWN Second Floor. Plckard Bulldlng Phone: 6513 0 Ask for the YES MANnger OPEN EVENINGS IV APPOINTMENT -PHONE FOR EVENING HOURS loan: made Ia IIIIIIOMI at all surrounding towns " 0 Pmonul Flnuniu Company of (outfit ASSOGI P.E.l. HEREFORD BREEDERS ANNUAL MEETING FRIDAY. DEC. 3-2:30 P. M. Farmers Hull --On- Richmond Si-rut Full attendance required ATIOH AH throughout I955. Contractors. 1 MOT 25 Chnlmtrtm-H rush is upon us. tractor. elated. in decorative street lighting being 1855 GHARLOTTETOWII CENTENNIAL 1955 INVITATION TO OIIR CITIZENS T0 LIGHT UP FOR CENTENNIAL YEAR With January lat set for the Official Opening of Charlotte- town's Centennial Celebration all merchants and citizens are urged to co-operate in the lighting up of our City through special plan- ned street lighting in the business area and by extra special Christ- mas lighting of their homes. all of which we urge you to leave up Up-town merchants will be contacted regarding participation planned by our local Electrical It is I-i.oped.tI1at many of our privatecitizons will make an ex- tra effort to light up their homes for the Holiday Season and the ensuing Centennial Year. Arrangements have b o e it made for special lighting of City Hall and many of "our Churches and other Public Buildings. A: Christmas is only about three weeks away it is respectful ly suggested that the time to light up is now bgfofg 111. Christmas For suggestions. costs. otc.. contact your local Electrical Con- Your support and co-operation in providing for the Festive lighting of our City for its l00th Anniversary will be greatly app?!- I Ch: rlottetown Centennial Committee. .4