_BOTARY MEETING-Ml‘. L. of the Board of In W! dration w “by of dehydra . “ndmteii-i mthro, ugh on sled“ jmmagilllfi’ D - mmblng the part played by each machine in the p . Guests we Rotalian Austin A. es and w, Douglas Bell, Carleton. The mueth anniversary of Rota In- mntional is on Feb. 28 an the flgmlflefsldti Club will celebrate the on at their next ann “Mung when they will hold their annual Ladies‘ Night-S.» ALBERTOII isr. Alfred Gordon, Slunmsldde, k enjoying a short visit here. ills; Maxwell, Gypsulnvilie, 14 enjoying a visit with her Miss Alice Gordon. Pilot Oiflccr Willard Oulton, Bllnllnerside, spent the week-end with his wife and family. "Miss Greta Rogers, Coleman, spent s few days last week with lier friend Mrs. Willard Oulton Mr. and Mrs. Pike and family, Salisbury, N. 8.. will arrive in the near future. Pike will take over from Mr. Victor Currie, man- iger Canadian Bank of Commerce. iIr. victor Currie, manager oftbs cinadlan Bankof Comm 1% ben transferred to Sourls. Mr. and mm m“ lire. Currie will be greatly missed fiotlally by their many friends fit. l - The hockey match between the Greenmount R.C.A.F. team Alberton First Team, resulted in a score of 7-5 in favour of Alberion. It will be remembered the first tame was s tie, 9-0. The Dock Community Club served lunch in lid of the Red Cross realizing twelve dollars. Ffidly afternoon the World m % wrote oi Prayer was observed lllllted Church and was reasonably ml attended. Leaders were: Mrs. J. F. Fraser. Mrs. H. Clark, Mrs. W. Hardy. Mrs. W. Matthews. Brief ual deushtcr. Hrs. Clifford Rodd. ‘lflfld m4 suede him that his'duty as a —Mrs. III] K .. ton. 1m weiinfinm’ x°“"'" Halifax where nlnywlii°w§1i§§ “Wed. Jennie. Blanch Dawson of Slmenaide. t m: week-end at the home o: +591,‘ u“- ems Mr. and Mrs. Murdock Daw- lflll. Albany. P. E. I. FORMER ITALIAN- (Contlmssd hogijggomi) -__-____..________———-—————-_—_-. double-crossed Mussolini b d dine nillllnry "Pllllesyfro; which Ge Iini dually iiecl wnon Grand! Joined his old reg- ere was "un- csllcdforthere- tend tiative of the state." The resolution lay dormant. apparently until July . 104d, when Gran talked to Mussolini ' to per;- pa riot was to uit. to give up the mo. nséicrl- express its will." ' barrier fine-iii forced $ NICIIEILIOI: a vlcte. A s am, e res : onaNingieeé-l-forkudseven - against. ". . . rl ce pflggd on ctatorsfiip." Miss Phyllis Whi of U. 0. C. lnri Mr. Gordon M cKonsie of P. W 0-. harlottetown, spent the sgk-end at their homes in Bor- Mrs. William Walsh \of lotte Borden, was a visitor to r"- wwn on Friday. Mr. James Andrews of the Vet erans Guard of Canada visited in Borden recenfi when mlimills from leave at home Hunter River. Mr. and Mrs. John Maclieuaie, mfivyere visitors to Slmmerside an Mr. Albert Jay. Jr., who Plolment at Royalty m. Week ° nt -erld at his home in rden. Inn. Rel h Dmsey 30x1], 1| grudge! Iggy: witnéais parent's,‘ Bowen ' ‘m’ M” Macfnnig “V1118 for Sydney, 0,5, "r- and like. James v. $2315‘ 01 Borden spent Friday in M __. 9m b]; ‘l-nlgyd Isnnan Gordon Borden are essrs ta GHT BINDINM hum whi th LAID ’l‘0 DIST WITH MILITARY IONOBS The runains f Percy Centweil who diet? stnhdiswhome in ysnu is "Vluhsirigton Dd 3“ wlieroullewu laid to seer/in 'si-l-' lllilton Cemetery. the grave being i“ ‘..’i°.».‘.‘.“.-"."'° and"? iii: smo on eh Oa itol d Potom V .::.. ....." ‘" "" e can Iuard of honor with the sbtthuInf fantry Band, s party, eo- men detail, two buglers, and a dilhlain n the army. The gun carriage, on which the casket rested, was drawn by six te horses. Colonel Edwards. a member of Major Cantwelib Post received the flag and Private Nugent, the Maj- or's ole. .~l ‘n the last pressn . lrsve was being conducted three volleys hrcd over the grave, of planes drosied over» OPIOIITIIT IIQHIIII GBIII lesions.)- s.i. Olee lease ' - 810a‘; ‘in L n. essence-m tatorship voluntarily and u. let the W WW0 “in which had been adopted was Mine thepseelfxahxkaslgnqinradiosignalsctsnewsessiorl ‘ accepted fllrlicrvpgre» Robert Lowery Joan Parker lill Henry Roscoe Kora: Also Short Subjects . Shows 1:30-9:15 SUMMERSIDE DENNIS MORGAN ._[n-. “ The Desert Song" MONDAY I TUESDAY Monthly Meeting Canadian Legion th pwgglyd the toltlhefi" of n. .... use. firs. .11" 6 d be carried out. D w It was decided that members of ' would v morn ing next to commemorate Paarde- hay Ia has been the cilstom for many years liiiaior Alan Nicholson gave t inbermting and ie ' of Army tmi a standlnk vote of National Arsthem the meeting to a close ta were served. GEN. MCI_\I_1_\_UGT ON __.__ic°u_umm___lm_lufl_ll_= were various ranging devices Armor-piercing sheila were made and navg given Britidi anti-tank guns “the contra marflin of per- formnnoe tn penetrate the new heavily armored German ta 1y this lnoinl had only been ii; quantities in China and "Our mines in-anch was seksd tungsten in Canada," he to find said. "In the summer of 1942 they covered the country with prospec-I tors. They quickly found and re- ported deposits running in onel case alone into several hundred thousamgantons which could y _.. Air-Field Constitution Gen. McNaughton credited Con- ldisn engineers for evolving methods for the rapid construc- il“ .:.'..'.'.".'.‘.‘°i.'.'3..'"'i‘% ‘s?’ if." eve en na n emineers —- members of this in- stftute - in association with tech- nical eXPtrtg from the Canadian oil industry." he said. clearing . were in Canada in referen In limo been _ Britain and Runia. He made only a brief . reinforcement situation. fuliz inteirled til uh ma, un victory I Beds Put Gillian "Ileiler Siege fflpeeialists h the" ting‘ CIIIIII-fbi’ the. ‘correction cf ocular lee; feels.‘ xii/Jilly»: m _,___________ Eng: missionaries." ' itimu during January fell nkscrcsseof youth in comnmnd: it is under A Wile, detennined leaders: it will be 11m Cf-lAllhfiTTiiTOwftféglléilbliN _, i-illlll Whit" Filtllcr Arctic Job Of The Midnight’ Sun. GITAWA. Ihb. I - (C?) - ‘rlle ltisios, andlnis- simastesinilis Am“ Circle have seen the lest of willie- Li e Mo ill . veiled IIMO of the midnight sun during voyages as chef of the Govern- ments lantern Arctic petrol on the Hudson's Bay ship sscopi No more the Nasco e on ago. creep into inlets. bays and to civilisation and supplies to lonely outposts. Ietiriaglnlane He is retlringfn June as super- htensient of e Eastern Arctic and secretary of the Northwest Territories Council for the Mines and Resources Department and plans to settle in Victoria to pur- sus his hobby of gardening. No successor has been named yet. . McKeand, still v and chunky. confessed in an inter- view that he was going to miss the close associations he formed a- mong the people of the northland. And he chuckled reminiscently es he recalled the misgivings with which he took 810.000 worth of first Victor the Nsscop e. ‘I thought I'd be luoklk to sell 3N0 worth." he said. B he re- t/umed with 111.500 in cash. oon- tributed by trappers, hunters. fur traders. Royal Canadian Mounted Police and others met during the p. When the King and Queen vis- ited Canada in 1999. Mai. McKeand made a request through official clannels for’ élwo autographed p togmipluo em one or Pond Inlet, on Baffin Island of the Northwest Territories-most north- eii-ly post office in the British Em- p re. Hearing nothing further. he left (or the annual patrol aboard Nas- cople. When he reached Church- ill, Man. the photographs sent from Buckingham Palace. were ' handed to him. One is kept aboard _ the Nasccpie, Wise Administration Highlight of his northern career has been the ‘wise administration" 0d’ its sprawling charge by the Northwest Territories Council, which has promoted scientific investigations into life in the country and its potentialities. ‘Now the administration itself has details on its own files, and lately much of this information has been circulated to the pu -’s doing a mighty fine lob with the advice and assistance of the R.C.M.P.. the fur traders and um dopeiopment of the in the Eastern Are- tic is assured. ' Fish Landings Show Decrease HALIFAX. Feb. 23 ‘mo weight and value of com- mercial fish landings in the M81; o fronl the ulna month last year, Eastern on of the de- gidrtmerlt o1’ Fisheries announced “Y. The vawh dropped by 3.412.000 pounds to 12.311000. while the ended value of $088,000 was a de- t70.000 from the same month 194A. Many storms was through the month hindered fish- ing operations, the report noted. In Nova Scotia the January catch of vsseooo pounds $111165 ward Island's month- were 353,000 and against 561.000 and $40,000 _____.____ 0nt. house Debates Family Allowances Plan last 094.000. cell-ll ’s lengthy .siatemen in whichhe also d. “m, ivlgxuglcodtthe use of the womenqs t‘ question those _ ances. a cross-fire developed 1- w tary services to and who get the allow- l-dbe ral Hen ' m w. l. lczllgr Mitchell it. W” us. madsitcicesths y "a, broad mien. of so? ' c so. pnlw. "it is constitutional As s ‘sei thin the enolusivg Made 14 Trips To Land w?“ '“' "'* haired vid vinsaton - n” glieanilt-ihe ‘littlo ‘lite father" “m, d m, I he her annual voy- “menu igorous C Loan Bonds aboard gi -<o1=>-‘ ., Lauson would have had an intense- o . are,“ taine Allied cilia. ‘Plans , Interesting Meeting lion suilisy i I C1161‘- llll dhlil~| . hll. h"! response ian and Air Force circles. The honors president,‘ P/I... ll. F. Cameron, ef Ground Instruc- tor, w p e at meeting in the Y.M.C.A. next Sun- day st 4 p.m. The guests will in- clude: I-Iislixcellency Bishop Boyle, the Hon. 33W. IePage, Lieutenantq Governor. the Rev. Canon E. M.“ Malone, and thirty others selected‘ from the leading citizens of Prince Edward Island and No. 2 A.N.S. Unfortunately Group Captain Price “ng Officer of No. 2 A.N. 8.. being called away by his duties, ‘will be unable to attend the meet- Ii g. The meeting will be opened by tne president, Cpl. D. L. Ganshof van der Meersch who will devote a few words to his fetherland, Bel- um. The firs main talk, to be given by LAC. Ogden, promises to be highly interesting. LAC. 0g has travelled widely in South and North America, and has a thor- ough knowledge of the South Am- erican co . Ho expects to leave the Air Force shortly to work for UN.R.R.A., for which he will undoubtedly prove highly valuable. since besides“ being a certified ac- . {criminal orenewirsstea at five ‘f. “beenreoeivsd Services. m ' lnogifam. Rose Vsm clllifllil. ilAii0lAlil Ilirvedfcrnows . fafllfiuvu Dorothy Dix Says- hvcrtising bli- ad m . eeass a werdfyltrlctlr vu- sbis advance. _.._._.._.-_----—-- IIONTIL! IIIITING of the Legion Indies’ Aslxilisry will be| held tollilht at the Legion Home, n _ ' z-zs-il, sssmx lIltEAVlli-W a n ' GI 0 rlcotchfost Y2K; a die?! i: h m. .1. oi Fisher, of .R.oxbury,, P 8o leaves a wife and Y. h ‘l? XADALIANI! United Ohilmlhl Ilb. Nth: Pleasant Vain I pen. D. . 2-28-11 i I e ‘i Biro. . Morrison. llin . T0 WID AT MONTIIAL-Dr. I. Rachmel left yesterday by plane for Montreal where his marriage to Miss Dorothy'Davy of this City is to take piece. POITPONID — The . Snclgrove. ho at gstcul. has been postponed rom to- until tomorrow afternoon . hour of on kbilrddy will be latu’ ' i FIRE ALARM-The firemen were the funeral i announrad ', called o“; about 1H5 yesierday- {or who cannot get along together to try to live together. | happier and so will your mother lf you part. Put a thousand miles be I tween you and you willbe able to appreciate each other’: virtues. a slight blaze on the second floor of Miller Bros. store. Great George Street. The blaze was extingulshedl before any damage was done. Fire-i men responded to an alarm froml the dental offices of Drs. Beer and’ Dougan about 6.30 Wednesday eve-, ning. An oil stove was the cause. of the trouble. There was no; damage. I WOMAN'S, ASSN. MEETINC—‘ The Woman's Association of Trin- it United Church met for the reg- ulya: monthly meeting on Thursday afternoon in the Social Hall. The president, Mrs. Will Teed presided. The devotional period was b Mrs. McPherson and Mrs. Arthur Coffin, with Mrs. Craswell at the piano. The report of visiting com- mittee was received and the fur- ‘ “ committee's report was giv- countant he speaks Spanish, Ital- ian, Portuguese, English and French with equal fluency. It,is ex ected that the second speaker wil be from Poland. The last main speaker, LAC. Skrede of Norway. has also had varied and interesting experiences. His esca e from Norway brought him via ussia to Singapore where he witnessed the first bombing that city by the Japanese, from there -via Trinidad and New lYork he reached the Norwegian training center in Canada. The chairman, LAC. Jan. W. Leemhorst, will devote a few words to the Netherlands before introduc- the documentary films which Iwill conclude the rrograsn. 2,000 Men liolllc From Battlefront: AN ATLANTIC PORT, Feb. 32- (AW-Wiltlh tha pmwapt. a sis a rea- Y . soldiers arrived here recently fromtheba - tlefronits of the‘ Mediterranean IIC ll 6 Y EH5 a? d1 ded in th etc wene about 1,500 ‘medical walk- now were on the road to allows neor their hAboard the big no tmo . BT00“? D- ship were members of the mlvy and air some retirning firemen. the first five Canadian wrens to return from o- verseas service. ss well as CW. A.C. and R..C A.F. Woman's Div- ision personnel. For manv of them the war was over, but for others this was Just a prelude! tomnewer, and pghaps grlmmer, ngmcccrding one of the of cers aboard. Capt. G. N. Magny of Montreal. at t0 per cent of troops he had during his duties as army examin- er in France, Holland and Belgium wanted to ltigad to; the Pacific sf- ter fur ome. ‘eyfeelthatassoonssthe Nazis are beaten, the Japs will be a cinch," he said. Three brigadiers were Paclfi Vancouver. Brigadier; and London had been in Bnglan on tours of duty. Montreal Murder Trial Continues (By The Canadian Press) MONTREAL. Feb. 22 - Gerard l high fever four hours before his esth in Montreal jail, if he was J in a. strait-jacket with 14 "‘ ured ribs and two fractures of he brass-bone, medico-legal ex- mt Dr. Rosario Fontaine testified ay in the murder trials of Rene Laboie and Marcel Bonneau. The two lnell are charged with being implicated lrl the beating of Lauson in the jail last Ma af- ter he had refused to strip or, a " wer The testimony of . bro ht the comment- . Just ce Wilfrid Insure e‘ that the pris- und lauson "ap- in good health" ‘four hours death. ti {can Lauso by n. and d he thought it likely that all the fractures suffered by the man resulted from one blow or kick. He said it was improbable that Lauson was lyin on the bed at the time e e was on ‘a ess lfk luwthatlohv lying ' I reels t surface." Mr. Justice Insure asked how the prison doctor could have re- rtedhausonin paren good after he ha? suffered such ' ' thsdoctor didnot flsaleitnarontaisie ‘nsver QXIIIIIIIO of“! c8866. men who had been wounded in the bitter fighting but industrial 5 ' toward providing or kick. and more Tuaddv en by lllfrs. Pickard. Reports of different groups were received, and other groups planned for the work of the Association. The meeting closed with prayer. Cpl. Marjorie E. Blakeney An- drews of the R.C.A.F. (WDJ, spent a few days with her parents Petitcodlac and has since re- turned to her post in Charlotte- town. - Saint John Telegraph- Journal. Fuii Employment Measure Introduced In British House BY JOHN DAUPHINEE IONDON. Feb. 2Q — (GP Cable) - The Government introduced in Parliament today one cf the major measures in its “full ployment" Drwmm for after the war - the "distribution of industry biil." un-, der which expenditures up to £7- (XILOO) (about $31,150,000) would he authorised to give a balanced l development to the who country. Closely following proposals ad- vanced in a white palper issued in} 10M, the bill not only envisages, financial assistance to stimulate industrial and social developmental in retarded areas but also Gov- ernment control of any further development in highly industrial- ised areas like London, Binning- ham and Manchester. While the bill merely seeks to set up machine y for handling the program the white paper made it plain that the Government will give ority for building of new factor es and extension of old ones to areas which in the pest have‘ been unduly dependent on indus- tries especially vulnerable to un- employment. Points of ulo bill: | 1. ‘Ric Board oil Trade is em-I powered to , ire land 1n re tarded or "development" areas so premises for industrial under-I takings can be provided and it! ma erect factories Uilizilflfl! if necessary. I 2.1mm may be made to trading or industrial estate nies factories and basic services and there may be annual grants and loans to indus-i i I trial undertakings for capital re-fllullclrcd more Canadians were wel- comed recently when a group quirunernts. 3. The board must be notified of all pmposals to erect indust- rial buildings of more than 3.000. square feet floor space. thus incl-l ing new construction a subject of! Government permit ‘ Tihc bill sets up four "develop- ment sreas." the eastern includ- . West Cumber- - South Wales and. Mon- mmlthshlre; and Scotland. These ere areas the Government has been trying to build up for they. were centres of principal unem- plrlvment before the war bill does Northern Ireland 0c-0ps liearillg At Montreal iicncludes Moumnsnni-‘leb 22 -- tCPi~ y vice only helped escort a convoy safely (Continued from page l) 8111s earlier, is more We blow that in tll to be to bed and left alone We know children who never whimpgr, llbken to. because it mek d impi- of a child's life this: igpstlliool 1:.“ 800d habits or_bad habits ‘.3353 .122?‘ "i? " " ".22. ‘”° '“ . or ve so i them to bed. andwe know otheifnchildzeiipeogdtirllgtfslnecvm mam “flat!” W hww fsm-. and other children who. are flex“ L? nniibeoeusethehesns are formed in a child know children who have are disobedient and saucy mind when they are 1° i! I wmvn thins for mothers and fathers to pass the buck to the schools and they have failed to give, and lums into ladies and gentlemen. have done the teseher cannot home has put upon the children. give the children the discipline that toeapecttbeteecherstotlu-nlittiehoed- butitcantbedone. Whstfliepsrqts undo. Choeannotruboutthestasapthe Thetaiissnimpoaeibleonoinany case and it is made the more inlpossible. 1f such s thing could be. by the number of children with whom the teacher has to deal daily. - Of course. the school does exercise a V“ children. but it lm't to be of the home. DEARJEIE DIX: mother and I cannot in chm-lo “gown 1mm. my mail is opened and my friends insulted. home and be mlsersbl peace? great influence on many for a with the ‘ " Ismsgtrlofmearnirlgmyownlivisig. My get along together because she is the world's y| Woéit naghgegialld fiyrlsglt. I am not free to do anything without. s fight _ -n=an muc er ee g on both sides. m, club,‘ ‘meme. expected l i. night wl , I s-m spied upon coritinuslly.' Is l‘. my duty to stay-at e. or to accept s job in a distant city and be at IDITIIYn- ANSWER: The most. foolish thing in the world is for two peoplo Shortage 0f Nurses OTTAWA. Feb. l2 -- (GDP -— Members of the Canadian Nurses‘ Association liaison committee to- day conferred with Selective Ser- officials here on means of off- setting an expected shortage of trained nurses for hospital staffs during the coming summer. the Labor Department announced to- ay. Mrs. Rex Eaton. associate dir- ector cf Selective Service who re- presented thc Labor Department. said that despite the shortage. Canada has through the winter fairly ‘ However. it was expected mer vacations would cause critical shortages in many areas. lint’ liir Force May Bc -Pari. 0f Peace Guarantee B! JAMES F. KING LONDON, Feb. W — (AP) —A hint. that powerful air forces would play a mayor role in a broad Allied plan w keep the from Prime pence came today 2 p Minister Churchill, along with as- surance; than. V-bombs would be borne in mind when armistice terms are laid down for Gesmfl-"Y- Brushing aside a suggestion the House 0d Commons that "the whole question of the limitation of aerial warfare” be taken up after the defeat of German . the Prime Minister bluntl repled: "I cer- thinly do not ink tihat the vic- torious Allies should delprive them- selves of defences which are pos- sible through the air." Without elaboralting, lids. Churchill implied that any sweep- ing world-wide disarmament such as that alter the last war certainly was riot included in the “Biz Tihree" peace plan And with g. sharp "Vol. sir” the Prime Minister assured the House that he would "bear in mind" vlhen imposing peace terms the Germans’ V-bomb attacks on elv- ilians and that he would sec to it that Germany was never B81110 in the position to manufacture such weapons‘ Canadians Welcomed Into Bluenose Giuh iiy he Canadian Press) A BRI SH PORT. Feb. 22—All sailors whose ships cal-r, them in- to the Arctic Circle in line of duty are eligible for membership in the Blucnose Club, into which several Royal Canadian Navy frigates riot to Murmansk and back again, but also accounted for one of three enemy aircraft shot down during A the ti" ' 1i)» . All certified members of the club --borll in the fertile minds of a. Royal Navy chaplain and leading stoker-receive an inscribed procla- mation, signed by "Neptune Rex. ruler of the raging main." The destroyers Iroquois and Huron were the first Canadian L warships qualify for membership. Latest additions arc the Mon- nuw, Port Colborne. Saint John. None and Stormont. Membe .l.ip the Bluenose Club-including Royal Navy, R.C. N. and United States personnel-is approximately 20,000. only a small portion oi‘ which is Canadian. _ Lieut. James Bradley of Perl. Credit, Ont, in H.M.C.S. Saint John. was one of the first t.o obtain his membership pl ‘ atlomwhich declares him a "loyal and trusty Bluellosc" and calls upon "all ice- The Royal Cqnmlissioll on cO-op“ erotives concluded today its Mou-. trail-sitting; by Hatching lo brleis_ by the Montreal district Chambre do Commerce and the Insurance‘ Brokers’ Association iobhd b m‘ Li Pb e y co-opera ves. ' c com-- nmsiosi. headed by Mr. Justice Ill-rel MW. Mcbougall of Montreal. moves now to Quebec whi-re it will sit next Monday and probably e l The Montreal Chanlbre do Conl- . which has 3,425 mclnbcrs! representing more than 300 ill-o, fusicnel occupation: acknow- BUM in ii.s brief that the co- Ve Witch Wes a "sane dot‘- e." but added "it must be nel- mlfloddntlisgdit fllls a Cflfilllllltélillgl I es s'.'c'l s on r lbiected to tho same taxes im- lvld Doe enterprise." IDUFPOSC-CC make chilly beds com- oorgs, polar bears. whales, llnr- whnls. sea lions and other creat- ures of the frigid north to show him due deference and respect." new bays, our ways LONDON -- Long-handled copper u-zlrnlillg pans which have hullg as ornaments ill many Britisll homes. are being taken down again this ivlniel" and used for their rightful ioriablc. EARLIER JAI’ DEI-‘IIATS Jausli suffered is worst de- ieals prior to the Second Great War at the hands of Admiral Yi Sun sill of Koren. who sank over a thousand Japanese war v and drowned more than 260.000 soldiers. George Taylor of the S. S. Phili Doddridge, Marine Transport. New York, and Joseph Taylor of city. One sister. Miss Gladys Tay- lor of the teaching staff at West M slilhlrllssr '-‘ Al ‘O fa You will be lil0iif0l’ 0n Preventing]: In Memoriam‘ MR. HARRY TAYLOI. The death occurred at the Roch- ford Apartments Wednesday even- ing of Harry Taylor. 65. after s short illness. A native of New foundland, lle was the second son of the late Willis Taylor and Hel- ena Harwood and came to Char- lottetown with his parents at the ago of two. After spending his early life here lie enlisted with the 5th Siege Battery in 1916--later known iri France as the 8th Siege Bty. C G. A.—and served in France and Belgium until severel gassed in June. i918. He was nvalided home the following spring. In 1922 he joined the Canadian Merchant hfzlrine and remained with them until 1941 after sailing to all the principal ports of the world. For the past four years he has been employed as a rigger w“-lij the Norduuyn Aviation Limited oi. Montreal until a few weeks ago~ when a heart condition compelled llliim to give up his work and return ome. - or a bright and cheerful oisposlf tion he made many friends both ashore and afloat who will regret to hear of his untimely death. Surviving are two brothers, I! Kent School, also survives. . ' The funeral will be held frm-I tne MacLeall Funeral Home today, Friday, with the service starting at .m. Interment will be in the People's Cemetery. First To Reach Objective In Stamp Drive TORONTO. Feb. N — (W) - The 1M5 food and allied indust- ries War Savings St sales gaynpaiign has reached 2.4 pel of its objective, it. was re- vealed today in General Chair- man J.J‘. Wiley’; tiiurd report. Prince Edward Island, with total sales amounting to 104.6 per cent of its quota, was the first province of the Dominion to reach its 0b- iectiive. Prince Edward Island keeps a sharp edge over Ontario which is second with 98.7 per cent of its objective. On the basis of one War Savings Stamp per caolt-e the official min imum quota was fixed to 11.205281 stamps. Reports from other provinces are: British Columbia 84.1 Der cent: Nova Scntia 82.1 per amt: No.‘ Brunswick .. per cent; Alberta 65.6 nor r i: Nlaniioba 82.5 per cent: Gr...‘ r 56s p?!‘ cent The 0111113212“ llnlricherl Jan 15th will ("mr to on owl tVlwrrh iii/ll. l Bllcrllsw’ W illE Prince Hospital. Sllmmerslde. . ‘v Limit and Nils. l .~"l‘. Charles VDLATIiS-w MscDONALD-At. the RE. I. Hos- pital Thursclay, Fell, 22. i945. Miss Alberta Jane l\'iar'Dollald, aged 68. 'lllc renlnlns will be forwarded from the lvineLcnn 1711RPM“ Home to- Millvlew inclny. Funeral at Bol- st. Notivo later. JAY-At Fnlllliilghrnilk February 22, 1945, Mrs. George E. Jny. aged 81 years. Funeral from her late resldcllcc Saturday aiiel-noon, ser- vice stnriilli: at 2 pm. Interment in Mt. Stewart. rrlneiely In Memoriam In loving memory of T. A. Mc- Iver, who died February 23rd. 1M4. Friends may ihillk he is forgotten. Thai. the wound is surely healed. But they lltile know the sorrow. Lies within our heal-ta concealed. Inserted by Bernetia and Tens. 2-23-li 1V. D. MacLean IJNDERTAKEI EMIALMEI we and Ilersb Wiiielhe Ilene II