AUGUST 30, 1949 ‘THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN‘ ' PAGE THIRTEEN iii-Ts wssrsnu GUARDIAN ' ransom COUNTY owners 8 Summer Street, Summerlilie, Phone 2B0 News. Subscriptions, Advertieing Beprelentntiveu ,,,__ J, ELMEB MURPHY lnil GEORGE GLOW The Guardian may be bought at any of the following ltoree in Summerlide ii ll ' ‘ ‘ e m “$11,; Newsstiinil. WM" 5'5""; ‘; Gourliee it. ,, , ii Central Street; hurls Gludet, 67 Grenville Street; Myra Doucetfnfs Grocery, Second Street; blend Motor ’.i‘ Import, Water Street The Guardian wil‘ be delivered to any home in Summerlitle ivy Carrier B,” n; 3c per tiny or 18c per week. Phone 289 for thin lervice or give ,0... order to the boy relponllbie for delivery on your route. Gl-‘N-SRAL INSURANCE Rllph f‘. iiuttzirt. Sumzncrside. _(,'OME to the Chicken Supper n, Klllktrl ilall. Wednesday. Sept. l-iili. _ AFTERMATH 0F DISTUR- ‘ ' ‘ — As the result of a dis- ;- on Spring Street eurly morning a man was fin- lllld costs for creating a JJHCL‘, in the Summcrside Court yesterday morning. A \\liS fined $3.00 and costs c352 against a man charg- i speeding was dismissed. fFELL- HOWARD WEDD- -- .\ quiet wedding was solem- _ bv Rcv. G. N. Semen at his c iii Siirnmcrslde on Wtdills- 10th aLBJiO p.m. when s ‘glitc: of Mr. and Mrs. ~" Travellers the bride of Freder- . scii of Mr. and Mrs . Mitigate. The brid: r wcdcLng a suit of ice idiiie with iuvy accessor- ng the ccrmcm Mr. and rd left on a honeymoon ierciit pomts of the prov- will rcsfdc in Margiitc the groom is o. successful ,. lhc bride has betri cri inc ‘iii of Sznriilmiins Ltd. Slimmer- tn: -—S. _ scimricsmn POLICE infill‘ -— Sevci-ai cases were yesterday - iwi in Siimznursidc - 3- .. ll. S. Hinton, KC. i. '. of an incident that rd at Rand's Corner early ndayr morning four charges laid. One party was fined s... mid costs for assault, another ~ nod $i0 and costs for dis- - 1 the peace, one \vas fined s; and costs for being drunk and f iil".il was fined $25 and costs pu55c5Si0rl. A Summerside nriio was fincd $200 and costs iircc months under the Tem- izce Act for keeping for sale 1i man from Baltic ivas given days in jail for drunken :ig.—S. Personals - 111s; Mary Moore who has been ig hcr vacation with her >- Colonsl iind Mrs. 1.. A. Summerslde, left on Sunday in iciurn to Montreal-S. .\li- and Mrs. Jerry Doucette. niLilVll Street, Summerslde, have o: their welcome guests Mr. Dou- N-iii-‘s brother. Moxie Doucctte wiil lirs. Doucette of Westbrookc. Alamo, also his broihcr Peter Dou- wii.» nnd Mrs. Doucettc of Lynn. lines-S. liealh leads To Murder Charge il-XMZILTON. Aug. 23 —(OP) - mvid tlrish Davey) Ambersley, 63. i-iiici Edward (Dempsey) Richards ivday were committed for trial on a joint charlie of murder arising imin the "blind pig" death of Richard Sllfka. 23. Police said Slifka was shot to death in a drunken brawl Aug. 6 at Ambersley‘! farm hams in nee:- iiy Saitfleet township. They des- cribed it as a baotlsgglng cstabilsh- ltlElll where Rchards worked as bmlsndcr. SIX msn. ranging in age from ‘£0 in 27, testified at the preliminary liciirlizyz that thsy acccmpanicd Siitka to Ambersley’: for "a few late drinks." The)’ sa'd o fight started aftrr Itcliards refllsfd ih Ill any more drinks aftcr one round. LONDON - (GP) -—Work is to slirt soon on rebuilding St. Cath- erine ilatchrrn Church in New southeast London. {The h \\'."is bombed during the Blitz iii September. 1940. i? ofcssioiraillarils t ll. E. ELLIS’ Fire - Autu — Calualti ARC! 5 Slimmer Si. Snrnruertldt Phone I29 T. Earle Hickey Chartered Accountant Office ul ill Granville street Phone S78 I f SUM.“ liltbillil! . l I B. F. Hunter, ll.O. OPTOMETIIIBQ ‘omplete visual-Amines Glennie Fitted , PHONE 100 SMALLMAPPS BUILNNG Summerelde. 9.5.1. “~—_i__ E. E. Parkman, Opt.D.. R.O. OPTUMI’. ‘IIII.’ ' l": Examine Gluten Pitta‘ —iiEAil. Ray Little's Musicale at Kensington Thursday. Sept. 1. 8.30 p.m. Sponsored by C. W.L. —LADY REQUIRES PASSAGE by car to Boston or New York, ref- erences, Phone Guardian, Summer- e. -—RETURNS HOME - Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Amirault, Yar- mouth. N.S., left Saturday for home. Mrs. Amirault has been spending the past three weeks with her mother, Mrs. Wilfred Gallant. East StreetmSummersido. Mr. Amirault was attendlngstim- mer camp with Yarmouth Squad- ron. Air Cadets-S. Howion Miss Jean Livingstone of N. B., ls spending sometime in Wood- stock. Mrs. George SlN-ETQI of Wood- stock was in Howlan on ll/cdnes- day. Mrs. Pearle Duncan is the effici- ent school teacher at Woodstock far the coming year. Miss Bernice Gallant of Wood- stock has now bcgun teaching in West Devon School. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Arsenault were among those who attended the lobster supper at St. Mark's on Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Gussie Martin and little son are now visiting in Howlan. Mr. and IMrs. Alban Arsenault‘ have as guests, Mr. and Mrs. Al- ban \Vhite and sons Gene. Merrill and Teddie. Mrs. Ben Gallant, who spent the past few days with relatives and friends in Summerside, returned home on Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Harold White and sons Gene, Merrill and Teddie-of U. S. A., are now visiting‘ in l-low- ian. Mr. Frank J. Arsenault and fam- ily of “feedstock, have as guests Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Arscnault of Rumford, Me., USA. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Arsenault and their youngest son of Skow- hegon. Me, rire now visiting with Mr. Arsenaulfs brother. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Arsenoult. Mr. Elmer Knollln and son Gor- don of Woodstock had as their reccnt guests Mr. and Mrs, Wil- mot Kiiollln find children of Belle Isle Creek, N. B. Mrs. John Cahlll and daughter Miss Florence of Summerside, and Mrs. John Flnnan of Woodstock. also Raymond Casey of Rumford were in l-lovvlan on Tuesday after- noon. Miss Mary Gagan and Allie Nel- son of U. S. A., who s99"! tw° weeks’ vacation around l-iowlhn and Woodstock, left on Wednes- dlly morning on return to their homes after a very P1955311! Wm‘ tlon. Harvesting l: now in full swing and with the present izwd weather lasting for another week most formers will be PM!!!’ We" all done with spud disclnz "ext in line. Seems Fall ls not too f8!‘ away. Misses Florence and Laurette and brother Erskine Cahili 0f Summerslde; also Rllymmld can)’ of Rumford. Me.. were in HOW!!!" on Thursday evening» Pr!" l° their leaving for Rumford. Mo» H11 but Erskine, who remains in Sum- merslde. The funeral of the late Mrs. Ben L. Arsenriult of l-lowliin was held on Friday mornlns l" S“ Anthony's R. C. church. 3111mm‘ field, and was loft-Zeb’ flllcmkd» her family being all present. M!‘ gqn Joseph and her sister, Mrs. John J. Arseriault of Prnvlden“. R.1., having arrived the previous evening. The funeral mas: and service at the 8PM’? W"! °°"' ducted by her beloved pastor. Rel/- M. J, Rooney. Floral tributes and Mas; Cardr were a silent remind- er of the esteem in which the lute Mrs. Arsenoult was held by h" family, relatives, rind many friends. i-ler pail-bearers were Robert Gul- lant, William Shield, Bert and L00 Peters, Lawrence Peters Ind P01" Gallant. LETISTON. Suffolk. England ~- fCPi-qinakea olive. An angler fishing in an Oulton Broad com- petition caught e three-foot sunk-- in hi3 landing net. _A_._________. Wanted ~ RELIABLE MAN With good experience in Electric and Acety- lene Welding TIIIQ IS A PEIMANENT JOB WITH G000 WORKING CONDITIONS Apply in person to:- HALL MFG. AND COLD STORAGE CO. LTD. Visual Training Giv REGENT" ‘IIIIATII- 8:510. Innings». Sllrnrnerlide =s~ _ .____~_—_ Summorsldc Economic Plan ls Approv_ed By FRASER. WIGBTON .. LONDON, Aug. 29 — (Reuters) -—The British case for the Wash- ington doliar-sterling crisis talks was completQd today with the cabinet‘s unanimous endorsement of Sir Stafford Cripps' proposals for the solution. The lceue now shifts to Wuh- ington, where preliminary d11- cussions are already in progress between British. United States and Canadian officials. Sir Stafford and Foreign Secre- tary_ Bevin leave Wednesday for Washington, where the talk: will begin Sept. 7. There will be a gap of only five days between the meeting of the economic “big three"-—Sir Stafford, Treasury Secretary John W. Snyder of the United States; and Finance Minister Abbott of Canada-and the meeting ofvthe international Monetary Fund. VJhlCh Sir Stafford and Snyder will attend as national directors. Crux of the crisis to be exam- ined in Washington is the rapid run-down of the gold and dollar reserves of the sterling lrel. A main cause is the recent drop in the area's exports to the dol- lar countries. Britain, banker of the whole sterling-area, is chiefly affected. but the crisis affects also every commonwealth country in vary- ing dcgrce, and its repercussions arc felt not only in European and other countries, but in the dollar area as well. Recalls Early (Continued from Page 5) rains and the stream becoming a turbulent river, the French spent the night in an orgy of wine. wom- en and song. Clive ordered the ad- vance at midnight, and his 1500 soldiers crossed the river by a human bridge of men clinging hand to hand. Thcy fell upon the stupcfied French routing them completely. The British continued their conquest of India, compleb- ing their work in 1051. Indian Mutiny The Indian Mutiny started in i857 when a British garrison was attacked While attending church service. Their rifles stacked out- side, the defenseless soldiers were massacred to the- last mini. Brig- adier General John Nicholson, hearing of the disaster appealed to his Punjab troops to march with him to “save my people". Queen Victoria had granted pension-s to all aged soldiers even though six years before they had fought the British. One such pensioner hear- ing that Nicholson was marching against the mutinecrs, asked that he be allowed to march by Nich- olson’s side. Nicholson pointed out that. the old man had already fought his battles. and now should remain in retirement. The old man braiidished his two swords iind in- sisted on fighting for his Queen. The Indian rebels had 75.000 British trained troops in the city of Delhi when Nicholson came up to attack the Kashmir gate. Using hLs elephants to break down the gats-s, Nicholson found that the mutineers had profited well from their British training and had set up l. secondary barricade the ap- proaches to which were covered by snipers. In leading his Punjab troops through the gates to the barricades Nicholson was shot. Seeing their leader fall the Pun- jab soldiers raised their fearful bottle cry and rushed the barri- cades driving their bayonet: to form e ladder. The first one to scale the wall by this ladder was the old pensioner. When the city was taken he was found at the bottom of the wall, both his swords were broken. Campbell’: Addrele Later at Lucknow, Colin Camp- bell. a Scotsman, who had been sent by Queen Victoria, drew up his troops in bottle formation. He had insisted that his old regiment the 01st foot consisting of the fa- mous Argyle and Sutherland High- landers, be returned to hh com- mand. He spoke to these men, said Mr. Ashford, something like this.- “Yonder is the city we must re- lieve. British men, women, child- rcn. and soldiers are there. The soldiers can die, for it is a. soldiers job iutdle, but the women and children must be saved. Our bat- tles in the Crimea are childs play compared to what I am going to coll upon you to do. Who will fol- low me into Lucknow?" A drum- mer boy spoke up "Aye. aye. Sir Colin, we kcn ye and we will fol- low ye". Lucknow was saved by this small force of British regulars and their Punjab supporters. ‘During the lost war the 5th Iri- dian Army fought by the side of the British from i939 until 1945. taking 100,000 prisoners, suffering 23,033 casualties, capturing the German commander in chief, and winning 3i Victoria Crosses. 5d George Crosses. and innumerable decorations and distinctions. The important thing for all to realize is that it ls the Indians themselves who have established British rule there. They have fought many times by Britain's side. and are proud of their place in the Empire. The recent tragic split is dangerous in that it may be made use of by Russia. With three million of the best trained troops of the world in Pakistan it may be o crucial miiticr which side she takes. Guests yesterday included Ro- tlrians William F. Harper. Selma. Alabama. l-l-oi-wood Dickinson, Baltimore, Maryland. md Arthur G. Stearns. Medford, Mus. Among other; present were Dr. JKJ... Ir- win, Charlottetown. TE. Turner, Toronto. Dr. .7. Ralph Colder, Montreal, Dr. Clark Fraser, Mon- treat. Chairmen-were ilotarlena Der- rei McGuire and George Tweedy. rvorem AMERKAN LIFE L. S. STEVENSON HRANLH MANAGER 14o mctlniouo s1. AMUTUAL COMPANY , n. c. A. r. Ptftlllllllll Assist Blood Clinics The twelve young ladle: who make up the mobile team from the Maritime Depot of the Candic- Red Cross Blood Transfusion Ber- vicc ct Halifax. ind lome very much appreciated mole assistants when they held the iii-st of the week's clinics in this province a; the R..C.A.F. Station at Summer. side yesterday morning. ‘l0 mcm. hero of the REAP. personnel contributed their blood, 1nd thl; number. together with the donors Who rfillflrted at the evening clinic brought the Summersidc total to over 130 donors. Mr. W.A. Currie, chug-mm o; the Surrimerside Red Crop Blood Donor Committee made the or. rangemenu in Connection with these successful clinics and was ably assisted by members of the Summerside Red Cross ‘branch, the "Abegweit" Chapter o; the I.O.DE. and the Summerside Sub- division of the League. Today. the Mobile team will hold clinics at the School in O'Lcary in the afternoon between 3 and 4, and 1n the Women's Institute Hall in Albertoin this evening between 7 and 8 WhBn ll’. is hoped to have ‘good turn out of donors from these centres and the surrounding dist- ricts. Arrangements for these clin- ics are belngmade by the wom. en's Institutes under the chair- manship of Mrs. J.S. Macwilliams at 0'l..eary and Mrs. E.C, weeks at Alberton. On Wednesday morning the team will move on to Kenstngton where a clinic will be held in the Masonic l-lall between l0 and ll arranged by Mrs. Wilfred Taylor and Mrs. James Pendcrgast. The final clin- ics will be held at the 03.13.11,... Legion in Charlottetown on Thurs- day afternoon and evening, Sept- ember 1st. Co-operalives Now Blgiiisiness (Canadian Press) The co-opcrative movement, started on a mlniscule scale in the lllaritimcs 20 years ago, now is bit; business. A co-operative pro- gram. as well, is being suggested as a basis for development of the world's backward areas. Although the movement, as it is now known, began in the Mari- tlmes only two decades ago, there were co-ops of a kind in Quebec and Ontario as long ago as 1789. At Stellarton and Sydney Mines. N. S., English emigrants started a business in the mid-19th cen- tury along the lines of the Roch- dole principles, which form the bible of present-day co-opcrators. The main Rochdale principles of “one member-one vote, open membership and limited interest on capitol” were enunciated by a group of English weavers in 1844. They form the base on which 2,- 249 co-ops in Canada operate with a membership of more than 1,- 000,000. In the world. there are more than 120,000,000 co-operafors. In 1937, Canada's co-opa did $137,000,000 business. Now their annual turnover '15 $775,000,000. Membership and business are both increasing steadily. A band of zealots who started the movement today can point. to co-op endeavour in fishing, agri- culture, merchandizlng, marketing, credit, housing, lumbering, wheat pools, factories, coal, oil, trans- portation, farm machinery, rural electrification and insurance. Perhaps the cornerstone of the system is the credit unions- caisses populalres as they are known in French Canada-by which the people run their own honking service and become elig- ible for nn international, free in- surance plan. Quebec, with more than 600 or- ganizations. is the greatest co- operating province, and Sask- atchewan is second with about 550. Altogether. Canadian co-ops handle about 33 1-3 per cent of the main form products entering commer- cial channels of trade. The thesis of co-operotlon ls "business at cost." In makeup, the system is simple and in most dis- trlcts has for its hose o co-op store handling a rnnge of mer- chandise from suit cod to fountain pens. Each member owns at least one share in the store. entitling him to one vole in its affairs hrid n fixed interest on his cnpltnl. A number of stores then hand lo- rzether to orilunize a ivholesrilo. The lililmnfe object is for the wholesale to rcacn back into the manufacturing field and this has been accomplished in some coun- tries. Co-operatlvo Services Limited, a sort ‘of parent co-op in the seaside provinces. showed e grou volume of $8,000,000 last year. It has 210 rnemberr. includ- ing one co-op at Doy-les, Nfld, It is, by and large, a farmers‘ co- 0P. Roughly. lirro ‘s the breakdown for the Livestock. $3,- 600000. feed. 52.300000, fertilizers and lnscctides, 5700.000. seeds. $2@.®°, '"'-'\rnrl9s, $278,000, ma- chinery. $250,000. RBPUTATION MEANS LITTLE BAERIE. 011%.. - (C?) - To Tlnltcd Sits: "virists. Cicada i-rizy be the land of ice and snow. Rut last. winter was m mild that the reputation is suffering. Ice sup- plies of ‘rummer resorts have run out and U. S. tourists are supplied which was held in St. Mary's Hall, i‘ Catholic Women's i Pink feathers sweeping from a velvet half shell. $6.95. 1r Cavendish Enjoys Musical interlude By Gifted Visitors Cavendish and environs has been hearing some pretty high- class music during the last (out days, when an “international trio of promising young musicians from the Juilliard School of Music, New York. gave out with their interpretations of the classics- They played at the Baptist ChurCh and a number of homes in the vicinity. _ All scholarship winners at Juil- liard, they are Francis Chaplin. 2i, Saint John. New Brunswwk- violinist. who is booked for a tour of Western Canada in Octo- ber and one in the Maritlmes in February. Richard Adams. ‘20. Minneapolis. violinst, will be giv- ing concerts in Boston and Min- neapolis this winter. Channinl Robbins, 22, Los Angeles. is first ‘cellist with the Juilllard orchestra. He played two years with the Cleveland Symphony Qflfhcslra and toured South America with the All-American Youth Orches- tra under Leopold Stokowski. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Matthews. Brighton Beach. the group, with Allison Patterson. on staff of Mount Allison Conserva- tory of Music, is delighted with its reception on the Island and remark on the "warm hospital- ity and friendliness of the people here in comparison to New York- ers." Not actually a "trio, they "just play together while on holiday." It fakes the tediousness oi.it of practicing, perhaps. The boys plan to remain ari- nther wcck on the Island. when they will return to New York. Apple Deal ' ls Approved KENTVILLE, N.S., Aug. 29 - (C?) —Dircctors of the Nova Sco- tlo Apple Marl-retina Board and Nova Scoilri Fruit Growers Assoc- iation today approved ii deal to market. 463.030 barrels rif Aliflflp-i nlis Valley npplrs in the United Kingdom this sea-Son. b Action was deferred on the op- tion to export another 1251000 bor- relii. also to the United Kingdom. The deal would involve nn estim- ated $2,000.0D0 if the total ship- ment is made. Although it is the first large shipment to the United Kingdom in years, apple growers were not Jubilant. Most said the price would not be sufficient i0 meet Drodiicilon. and packaging costs. "It looks as‘ if we are stuck again. but it cert-l olnly is better than dumping our apples." said one grower. ; The Annapolis Valley crop this‘ year is expected to total about l.- 200000 barrels. No market has yet been found for the remainder of, the crop. WALFKJLE ST. PETER. Nerf: England —iCP> —Fcr the first; time in many year". a month i passed without a sifili? bu)‘: with ice frcm their own country - brought. from Buffalo, N. Y. wedding nr burial bcinz rrpoiicd here. Wool felt rolled brim cloche, feather trim. veiled or other- Q wise. $3.95 to 27.95. i River district ivlicn the new bfiill! over the Emcky River was oilfimd August 17 A monster parade, his- Winnipeg's city hall should b m-d h pagoda." ‘ . ‘iii feathers. 3.95 to 11.95 A DAY FOR CELEBRATION was a bis My fr" ‘he Pa?“ om BOARDING HOUSE ' AM I DECODING ‘li-ie SMOKE , v sienAte-aict-i-nci-iice? l5 -’ teem. r lT "mus some EAets- is TRYING To 5u4i< ‘ii-is FANGS Meme ohi TRAT STEAM SHOVEL ,2 8-11 V uszv, EDUCNUON, HAPPNSS 2 “'7 remembered. Black v el v o f lnieanit. with imaginative weather trim of vchrt. $4.90. Upper Floor -- Main Store SMALIM 'll‘S lN you FOR PAY— " EGAD, e6 8am‘! LlsTsrt To QEASON! A GOAT THAT TALKS iS BlGGER THAN BOTi-i OF 0S -- PLATO BELONGE To THE woizto! -- wouw You BAR i-tis PATi-i TO A LlFE OF i_u><— I show — imaginatively trimmed In toric pageant. ball game and pic ___ nics wcre held. And beached on i‘, GRANDE PRAIRIE. Alia. - iCPl slim-c below the bridge was thr- c wOCdPn ferry which for many yr: faithfully plied across the Smck; WINNlP-EIG —- (OP) Pcrhap . éfl~'l?l-lEEA‘§ "m; M éic a ..... .... .. ... .. 51/7 . V_ , Frankly Intended To Flattar- - - They Suooociil. - "A Collection of Full Huts mo, makes any, Tiny heed - hugging ‘ shells — lirlms that dip or Barely brown, _ . \\ .- \w.\“\““~ \ \ ;\ STOP sstzvisie THE PUDDiNG, MAJOR! tT'S A DEAL»- THE- GOAT FotzTi-ie ZlTHER/wv ‘l’. l<hiov~i You-ti. ‘TREAT PLATO A/ RIGl-Firw- HE EATS vase - TABLES, BARK AND LEPNES -AND He srsiSos/s A PAGE OlZTWO FROM A MAlL i ORDER CATALO6 ohice A Wl-ULE! Side‘ swipe’ ha felt, feather trim. $11.95. I Teen - Agers email brim rol- lers in green, wine, grey, and black. l i . .. <1 “ navy shamed the city ii/losquoda. Alder- lfll". D. L. Mulligan tcid his public works crinrmitiee colleagues he con- lilers the city hall "nothing but a i-css betwcen a Moorish mosque M AJOR HOOPLE “"471 A DAsi-t rr ALL,\!E5/ lT <32‘ " MlGl-lT BE Wis:- TO coT SHORT ouR SO$OL$RN HERE-wINE A HOFZEOQ OF srusvv couizrieooms! , , “Bur 1 MUST Maize a one LAST DESPERATE 12v i=oi2 THAT TALK-/ N6‘ GOAT ,1 iron-" L“ ' i G855 (fill-ER: _ i