,1 ruse,- v$ggmfdqlki> _ blazes to liFo on the screen! ‘race six i. I'D-DAY Only ‘slsi'll'n‘s'sf"ffu‘d¥'s'a"sfb?d i =n'sr".>'u'r.‘h"a'r-"n'rFu"rHs' efififefllfflf-WJHLHMHH‘ 451245 “Nelcisliie "" on the decimal _ . .0’. g corpse, oniiie i __ ihresholdl > Home w i I-Ii-‘WJ-l-I-Iffa-ffi’! ‘o’..- s HQHAHIVI-“ufifi 'ls'a'ls"s'a BPONSOI-ID BY ‘I'll “AIMY” CADETS “S UNDA Y DINNER FOR ~A SOLDIER ” Shllwlflg At 3:15 - 7 and 9 --'PRINCE EDWARD .- AYS THUR.—-FRI. 4-sA r EXTRA! l News 0r THE nay HY EHSNNHE V EMPIRE -:- TIIIIIL-FRL-SAT. Shows At 7 - 8:46 - Matinee Saturday Only m: screen's MERRIEST MUSICAL MASQUERADEI Plus “MASKED MARVEL" Serial - Comedy mesa-m‘ firs‘s'o's'.'e'slsnsnv.anvwes'shvhv \ @- F-ns-v-n". \ i‘u'w-n"d"u'is'n- 47:"; Thrills Galore TODAY ONLY “ EliTER ARSENE LlirPlll ” fr?‘ CAPITOL W Tl-lilll.—Flil.—SAT. ‘The Robin Hood of Comic Strips Q f I I ALSO COMEDY Chapi. l0 “Desert Hawk” “Sadie Hawkins Day" IZ-LETTER. ALPHABET The Hawaiian language con- ns fewer letters in its ul habet ban any other language-d let- . PI. arr-van- n: JENKINS’ ruinuicv Will be the only Drug Store Open all day Today Wednesday, Feh- 7 ‘ BA IO.3O P. M. | “mm” ‘° F q plmmnflpmmnnHnninfivq‘ H," H ‘ P—_'_- time and Vicinity [flan World MraTiliie of M002! lbmi tobblfdl W¥i 01:21:: ir. sh oh - r plans agdelgit For utlge d III t"l‘.°l."".l‘.s“tf. 0d he Mrs. William rrcarsui, who m a ed been for several weeks and a t feelers on times reported on the danger list has been removed to town Hospital for treatment. -——— , does Mr. P. R. Slnnott. mail driver on general representation the longest and hardest route here, Del t“ has purchased a new drlvlngshorse tries have gathered here in the . Ed Rossiter. Th DEW ds improve. Speaking of mall routes the rural drivers report the to the continued drifting On the crou roads where gpowhismmoreh than“; harass oug roug . rou a; take about three h whole day with man and horse. Mr. J. chant has not been enjoying usual ‘flood health this winter but is at- store daily and a countrv store to ihe public. erative management will} store and main warehouse in th early spring. The new buildin will b; eighty by forty feet. two. storey and have a cellar under the' whole building for storing large qualtities of spuds. The building now used will be turned and taken into the new structure. ‘Ihis speaks well for this new business started only a few ears o owned and e erated by t e peop e for the peo- ge along with other branohes oi zisiness. Mr. James F. MacDonald was in the city lest week having a check up by city doctors. Mr. Prank MacDonald who mov- ed here from Halifax, N.S., last fall after the sud’ assing his wife has returned to Scotia capital to make his home. His sister Margaret has no with him to manage his house. r. Mac- ald is a son of m. and Mrs. James l". MacDonald of Bristol, but has resided in Halifax for many years. Despite the mountains of snow this winter the Bristol boys are keep the open air rink running st top speed. Mrs. Russell Hawbolt was s week end visitor to the city where he; o‘ husband Cpl. Russell Hewbolg stationed with the RCAJ". Welcome visitors here last week ' were Petty Officer John J. O'Hara- the Charlotte- ii mail route organise r ds in the only one labor organization from worst state in their memory owing each country can be admitted. . Organizati W. MsdBwen. local ma‘; llaussisn ugrlifns The Morell Consumers Co-Op- L bor Congress . H. Mlliar ii-lgrsbaw returned ‘ of home from Halifax last week ow- e r: labor llniens A Iy JOHN DAUPIIINBI IDNDON. Ihb. l-(OP Gable)- Rspnseutstives of labor 1mm many parts _ tomorrow a conference nere t drlftllll plans for a world 1 b” replresentatge “of ll: rganisa o . s en fi-‘om othe ex Mg Inaierxaiilignal Federation of Trade Unions which not fully meet demands for from st 1.6.» 4o coun- last two weeks but their exact as not been announced. membership of the union tions they re resent is est- imated at more an 50.000000 wor ers. i Under the I.!'.'l‘. U. constitution F02‘. weather. instance, the Trades and Labor the Con ress of Canada is a member can so t should is ours require a American Federation of Labor is Canadian Congress of Labor barred. In the same way, the, and the Congress of Industrial is not a member nference opening tomor- - as he is alone row under the auspices of the is so necessary ‘British Trades Union Congress will! be attended by both Canadian Congress of Labor and Trades and; so ddelegates. erect a new building to be used a! Pat Conroy of L. . One of the reasons for AFL. absence is its intense rivalry with the C.I.O.. another is its re- fusal to recognize Soviet unions as free and independent. . And at this meeting a Russlan delegation of 35 members will be the largest individual national group. The union membership they| are said to represent is 27.000.000- The twolmain jecis of the con- ference are to e amine the 1H0!!- lerns of the war and the coming eace and to exchange views of reds union policy and 018891103" ion for the post-war years. l 0* c. c. F. To HE; 22s Candidates In Election (By The Canadian Press) WASHINGGDN. Feb. 5 — Pr0f. Frank R. Scott, national chairman of the Co-operativc Commonwealth Federation, told reporters here to- day that his party would have s minimum of 325 candida‘ for the 245 House of Commons seats in the forthcoming Canadian general el- ection. He said the party's chances forming the next Canadian Government were "very good." ‘ children" even more than in most other f‘ man-occupied countries. The case of Panayotis Monos, ley and Mrs. 0'l-lanley, who ar- rived from Newfoundland where Mr. Ul-lanley is stationed wlbh the Royal Canadian Navy. They als St. Bani home in Oileary. PEI. Pett ficer 0'Hanley left on Satur ay to rejoin his ship while his young wife and baby will remain on the Island Several card Parties have been held in the vicinity as a entertainment this winter and good sum of different causes. Mrs. William MacDonald has re- celved word from her son Pte. Joseph MacDonald stating he has again returned to the Hospital in England. He was wounded some- time ago but has" recovered an ll . his Several young men from here who‘ hit out for the New Brune- wick lumber woods have returned. snow it was impossible to do any- thing in the woods. It is understood that to e abandoned for the present. ' Mr. Harry city on Saturday on business-B. Two Big Problems Are Facing Greece terrorists, now Tl order of Ge subgend-edpfnum‘ “s government and E. A. M. , Peace terms. turn the spotlight on glgéiayllll Drvblehis facing Greece l. Th bl i' “lost" yguiili? em o m. comm’. discuss II Biickinlqham This War—Four Years Ago by against the f rces nes an . BENEVOLEIT I 2. The violence and bitter-neg dividing the people. The courts-martial are really the trial of youths who belong to time apneny of problem children of mur- o . Th?! are "Dead End Kids," th boys who have been brought up i; a wartims school teaching physi- cai violence and political extrem. ‘Ihs borderline dividing patriot- ism from terrorism must often‘ have been ‘ligwcrcetptlble for their,’ Gil . 9d gm The brea down of normal life in’ Greece dur the i040 campaign] tallans and during, three years of German occupation combined with the seeds o! inter- nal political hatred sown during the Metaxas dictatorship of 1036-41 swell the ranks of tbs "probl ___________________ lllSll SOCIETY REGULAR MONTHLY MEETING WEDNESDAY, m. m. a r. u. Initiation New Members Reports on Preparations for St. Patrick's Play All Members Are Requested To Attend P. A. LAFFERTY, Secretary plans w remove the Morell packing plant iih Red Head shore have been MacEwen was in the U visited Mr. Oflésnlefik old home st| m“ m" u“ 1'8. 11's im chi fievgt: all Wh weekly g d fered by his funily Owing to the terrible amount of h, condemned to death for the mur- it er of three policemen, is typical. Monos’ age is gi He was 14 at ning of the Metaxas re- age at which most boys their spare time tosport. en the Germans entered Greece he was 20. Counsel defending him at the fiOIéIt-lrllttléfll Monos’ father a been opo to Germany as laborer. his brother was tortured and then executed by the Germans reece. money gathered up for 1n c, 5o Monos joined E. L. A.S.. the armed militia of the E.A.M. (Nat- ional Liberation Front). feeling that since no l al Greek power was capable of dc ending his rights he would avenge the wrongs suf- The prosecution claimed he was a brutal assassin. pearance certainly did not belie he charges, but he had an almost childlike simplicity and when asked by the residing judge what he d in say before the verdict was passed, he was "incapable of mak- ing any coherent statement." onversation of the crowd in the court centred around the point made by counsel defending Monos who asked the Judges why these youths l nsible leaders were still un- touched. Assuming that a general amnesty is granted. the traffic problem _of the country's youth cast a shadow on the future, young men just stood trial can succeed only under enlightened conditions. How is Greece. in the midst of (Reutem-Ths al of voung E.L.A.H. aflgble. [Greek Prime Minister, while mil material and political chaos. to tackle this problem? All one can say ls that she will desperately need all the help av- This is not charity. but sound international investment. agrarian needless sir-uses miserieaglhgxzlrome- Q ' to are not represent-Alma includes Canberra; aid o lty ‘ est lit His brutish np- is were being tried when their‘ Rehabilitation of like those who have res (SYDNEY. A (OP Gable) ens half bracing South A New .. . r a anus . n "Pr" “ha”. . re ev r ove a, of thixswhuge area, with‘? of several inches inceestal ions, relid mini-lore and ended during the dry spell. , However, in the far interior of sitar“: "cent"... s... an no w e have fallen at all. In those mas, temperatures have m" 100 in nun there have been hot off valuable top soil. Best sellers: One unusual eh. fect of this worst drought of the resent century in the affect it las had on belated realize and Australia's existence, public is beai It Ill-l’ QT,’ A . Burgunann, Bish- docese which Prof. MacDon- Holmes’ "Geographical Bases od Government," and "Iva: Dem-i ocracv on the March.” the story, i’ the Tennessee valley author- wit-h lwsons for Australia. _ _____..__. Whiskey Shortage Continues In britain B! JAMES l‘. KING LONDON, Feb. 5—(AP)—-A mod- tle item of 50 to 100 words in the British press a few weeks ago said some distillerles in Boot- land were resuming operations af- ter being closed four years. | Since then one of the best known bartenders on Fleet Street estim- ates he’s uttered at least a half million words and spent s third of his time explaining that. even with. distilleries working again, there isn't going to be much whisky a- round before INS-either at home‘ or for export. Britain has many bars bug in this fifth year of wsr it's almost as hard for an ordinary person to get a drink of whisk; as it was in the United States uring prohib- on And when the bartender occas- ionaliy brings out a bottle from under the bar it's like a bargain basement rush on Main Street back home. Of course you can always get a drink at one of Iondont swank hotels for a price-VS cents a “nip" which is less than an ounce. But ordinary pubs have whisky infrequently. The vernmen has allocated eno arley and other grains to dist cries for them to manufact- ure this year about one-third their normal pre-war production of 30.- 000,000 gallons. The plants are operating on a oo-operatlve lan. Some of them are lemainn closed on the ground. it wouldn't pay for all to reopen at once in view of the shlgrtlde of manpower and mater- A spokesman for the Distillers Association said that under the law whisky must be held in bond for ‘at least threc years. He e cted .no appreciable increase in t e s- lmtgint of whisky available for ex- po . i LONG nrvnn woman's l msrrrurs The meeting of !..o River W1. was held Bela. 2 at t e home of Mrs. Murdock MscLeod. with an attendance of 13 members present. The President, Mrs. Heath Oomp- boll presided and themeeting open- ed by singing Institute Carol and nded to by an exchange o! Va etines. Minutes of previous [meeting were read, approved and lslgned. Reports of committees were given and new committee; RD- ; pointed as follows: School, Mrs. Oliver Paynter and Mrs. Heath Campbell. Sick, Mrs. Murdock MacLeod. Mrs. Joseph Dunninl and Mrs. Hedley Paynter. Program. Mrs. Murdock MscLeod. Mra- Allah Campbell, Mrs. Andrew C. John- stone, Miss Mae Found, Mrs. -Arifnur Johnatone and Mrs. Heath Campbell. It was decided that all members bring lunch for next mes . It was planned to have an auction .-~‘~ ~‘ "w "r-"h meeting. and each rnern :: to bring a friend. in- J Navy League. Correspondence was read by secre- tary and letters from severalo! the . l‘ w b ll th b ht ‘ ‘ t: t 9V N?“ Vllllfil thinnest . bush fires which more ,. arsed-l his of inrisgcrw; c. Hogg. the Pritwé Edward- Island on... under ma“ retool Confcderatiml Life, \. q; joygd unotliltl‘ successful year in 1944* Si“ mFmh" tics qualified for the» senior production club \ of their company- w. c.‘ HOGG, C.L.U., ' Manager R. j. RUPERT, C.L.U. " w. c. CROSSMAN H. W. IVES. C.L.U. » in; of the urging‘; .. D. H. GALLANT, lliaeouche M. BELL De Sable Con; federation Li e Branch QffiCC ssociation Charlottetown VIII-i, Bertha. Mes:- Lean, 2, John’ Hayier. Grade VII-l, Catherine Man- Kay; I, Earle Bruce: 3. Belay Stewart. Grade V-l. Bett MacDonald; .1. Harry Hayter; 3, ola M .‘ Grade IV-l, Billy Hayter; Norman Stewart; 3, Annabellls Bruce. Donalda MacKayil Grade III-l, I. Ruth Moo . Grade I (a)—l, Harold Moore.- Grade I (b)—1, Velma Stewart. Perfect attendance for month:-- Bertha MacLesn. Catherine Mac- Kay. Evola Moore, Donalda Mac- Kay and Ruth Moore. . Perfect attendance for half- ear -.Bertha MaeLean. Evola ooro and Donalda MacKsy. Highest average in senior grades -Bertha MacLean, 95% Highest average in junior graded --Donalda MacKay, 96%. , Percentage of attendance 17.6%. Mhry Maclnan Walton. teacher. _._.____.+_. NORTH WILTSHIRI W-N-B. The February meeting of the North Wiltshire Women's Mission- ary Society wss held at the home of Mrs. Walton Toomba on the of» temoon of the 1st. Theme: This Kingdom of God-In our Natlor . The worship period was led b ' Mrs. Toomibs and opened with to worship, followed by hymn "0 Gad‘ of Bctilieli" Psalm ‘Kwanzaa: r res nsvey. Hymn " g! Eternal ned in splendourfl. was followed by prayer and tnih period closed with the leader read- ng verse 4 of hymn 51o. The business period followed. fir» spite the unfavourable wesiher seven gem-hers and one associates _____i___________—————————-———-—_. v AH! HOME-COOKQG! MAGGIE '6 MAKN’ A WONDER SOUFflJM-Mfifl" Commissioner of ramparts are requested for the Public Land? purchase of s has of ninety-six acres. situate at East Baltic, Lot 46, in King's County formerly occupied by the late Peter McIntyre and afterwards by the late Matthew Samuel Rose. The prop- erty is described as follows: Commencing on the rear line of 280 acres of land new or formerly in possession of‘ Benjamin MeEacllern. and in the northwest angle of 30 acres of land sold to llugli McEachern, thence running south sixty chains, thence west sixteen chains, and twenty-two links. thence norii fifty-eight chains and seventy-two links, thence east to tho place of commencement, containing ninety-six acres of land a little more or less. Tenders must be made to the undersigned within thirty days and must be accompanied by a deposit 1i twenty per centum of the price offered. Dated this 30th day of January, 1945. W. H. KIGGINS, Commissioner of Public Lands. members were present. A copy of “Guard Your Grey Cells" is to sent to the Hunter River Library and to the school. Mrs. Godfrey read receipt from the Presbytcrial treasurer for $43 making a total for all societies of use. In the ab- sence of the Community Friend- ship secretary the account of visits made was taken by Mrs. Mitchell. Attor expressing her appreciation for the opportunity of attendin in 1118 Mrs.’ Maicnae fie f; v be ing report of the meeting the"- T" study period of th lugs of interest bu ldi __.-= intereile was on "The Church the Philippines" from" WM e Date Line." Members atl- as news reporters. s!" M’ ooncernills l" ngnup of the Church in it! es. closed with the h!" ng Shall Reign W‘ g. mrious," and the beneflctivh b! u“ L____________i_ themfiresbytsirial min ,__Summerside. president. THAT Fllll. Fl-AVUR IS BRINGING A DOMINION- WIDE SWING TD OM55 8- SAN BORN cao- go McMu '1'“