All l A visitor at last night's hoc- hey game bet/ween Juvenile Can- adlens and Saint John was Ken McLean. manager of the Ken ' slrgton Brook-Macs who lost out the Bradley-coached team in the Island plsydoz/ns‘. Ken. still pulling strongly for Canad- lens and his presence in the press . box lest night was a. most wel- °°"" °"'. . . Interested greatly for the ggveral years in the development o5 the youngsters, Ken has spent unlimited time in teaching them the rudiments‘ ofithe game. Notinthobcstofhcalih due occurrence Great in theFiI-lt nevertheless de- scrvesloam of credit for the showing that his Kensington Brook-Macs made against the Can- sC‘ ‘ iBeat New Brunswick Q Champions By 4-2 Count In Sudden Death Game Carrying the play to their opponents through most “of my, ".10 "If" Periods, Juvenile Canadians last night captured the New Brunswick-Prince Edward Island ‘title when they defeated the Saint John team 4-2 in a wide-open, thrill- "ulfilll Elmo played at the Forum. ‘ The visitors, dangerous at all times, held the local de- fending champions to a scoreless draw in the first period and _ then in a blazing second session were outscored 3-2 m after Canadians had had a goal called: back dn them by the y referees who were handling the game. In the third and final lsession tho defending Maritime champions shot the. only ; Over 600 fans saw the young- lsters stage a great bat/tic all the -.way. There was little to choose between them but Freddy Brad- lcys fast-skating squad finally broke through for the counters that meant their advance into the Maritime finals for the second successive year. meet the winners of the Nova rltletitle atatimeyottobe Pby Opens Past Play opened feet, with the local adiens in thejslsnd title series. gum “my” m, p1" u, the , VIIILOII With MINI, iihd MINI-bl - ' 9‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ kept. very busy ll¢¢m9wl>°inmfnm°ibetweonthapipcnlatbelines NW Y Saint John wm within h‘ 18'1"‘ i3" 1°"! 347*! inchcsof opening the scoring but team gives hockey fans their first chance of the season in viewing an cubicle teem inaction. Butte. led Ilcstar Dickson. marinate time acts! Ml hochey ails and the t. of the game here Wednesday should give local hockey fans a fine idea of the brand of hockey being played h the Oityh Hockey Lclfle. fourth pane of e finals which is scheduled. for ‘rhursday night neat. '. . _ n: Al! of which lends to the fact that. local hockey fans will wl hockey games this week. a honey: Wed- npday’ shoiid be ust ea good mo. 151mm» m; a clash be: tween the Collegians and Sum- merside Flyers providing the cli- max. O O O na by many counted out of the nmnim before the play- o-ilfs sot underway. are still defin- itely in the running for the City Hockey League title. They trail by ;_two games to one at present, but if they give the same fighting dis- qiplsy as they did on flmrsdn nigh-t last, next Thursday's game is swine to Bigger and stronger the tun- merside team oftimes throughout the season have drawn down ill- dcserved comments of the fans as they used their bodies regard- msoftltaettackerwbcwucom- provc_tc.be an epic. Don't be surprised I my day u read in the newspapers urleigh Arland Grimes has as Iscme major league. club. » Wartime conditions have brought the veteran Guy Bush. who is 4i, back to the Nation number of the staff of clnnati Bede. and the return Grimes - or ntsybe even old Grov- aer Cleveland Alexander — would be ht keeping with ‘the times. Bill McKcchnie. manager of the Bork. actually must be harder pressed for mound talent than is morally ted. y if Cincin i pitching ‘ ation MicK ighthander may be able to render some valuable existence to his. new team. In his prime. Bush was one of the topnotchers in fast com- Dbny. He was fast. had a sharp curve and didn't require a three or four-day period of recuperation between his , ccs on the mound. eee o’ ldilll wcrer edb somegret tops b Str in the Oenadiasgs gage. first of to heights on attacks by Robertson and Carver Carver drew a soc- in Gil. gang feiledtcdmtthctwinesu visitors kept w the latter part of the sea- 1n' the um few seconds of the sandwich seaion l H mm 1:17 to ha th ove vs e Oha-lr-{ctzizwn youngster min the open corner of the net. Robertson snared a loose puck a minute lat- cr and this time sent Blanchard the I pcrlod had elapsed. er again in seconds late only to have Alla-n pull off another sensational save. but rtson put Canadians two goals up-whcn. after snoring a loose inside the Saint John bluelinc. ho went in to defeat with s. backhand drive from ten feet out. Visitors Threaten Still very much in the running and after Canadians had had [what loobed 1m a perfect goal called back on them, the visitors shot their first goal of the game 15 seconds after the ll minute Downing aftcbemarryir tifdlerjgitth . r c ng e cf the ice. passing to Th n who scored from lb feet mm than two minutes later the visit- ors were back for the tying goal. with Downing dcnting the twlnes behind Strain on‘ a shot from Just . inside the Canadians’ bluelinc. Wallis Shepherd put the Cen- into the lead with what proved to be the winning goal less than a mlnut lster when, ac- cepting a pass from centre ice Kennedy's goal was a glorious gift from th ods so far as Leafs were concerned. It was luck smeared as Davidson bounced a shot off a 01115111911 108 Ind while the puck was in the air K ‘ slashed at it. Shots like that connect about one time in h. hundred. It. was the luck of the Irish that Ken- nedy connsctcd. Durban had a he didn't Know t. puck hit glean: ‘h. laimhthan in; l k, . c ar an a h d both hit posts a few minutes isefoge. They didnt have any‘ luck on real- ly well directed s‘ho . a It could argued th t - n‘ ‘haulgehuv a Cans Back in tfhe days when Joe Mc- Carthy was gaining early promin- ence as manager of the Cubs. Bush was one of his host. pitchers. Char- les Root, now mnn-suzcr of the Columbus team of the American‘ Association was another one ofl McCarthy's mound aces at that 3" time. --"~‘.t!'.l Pat Malone. another was the late - t Bush. Root c121 Malone formed ihe pita-tun’! trio who did much tu help McCarthy win his first mill“ lccvun pennant. That was !_ .'~' hark in l'\’.‘9 when the Cubs lhumjlheci in the National Leugile. Plush won l8 games that £81” and took part ill no less than v.1": e - e sneaking of the first Canadians- Leafs tussle in Montreal which as‘ ‘everybody knows the Leafs won (I; the last few seconds of play Baz t Meara of the Montreal Star has he fcllgwlng to ‘any: O Both Dick Irvin and Jack Adams " lfe head hanging today though ill the case of Irvin there is no reason whyahc should feel too de- cased. the old Senator coach used to say "Tomorrow is the down of sn- other day." i 1 I You could o on second uess- h for along me about last es- 8 glare defeat but you couldn't con- thncs manly th Leafs had any- lns but uck to help them home. Th!‘ played the game of the kind man ‘gr §.n'“°l'?;¢|<§§“°'n"'l§'ir "Bed back to a defensive‘ riers at tunes. The pla ed for So did Cans lens or that BINDIN“ die g quickly in that last half minute of lay. Lamourenn was jammed HEB nit ‘the rail. says the puck had skidded clear when Chadwick blew his whistle for a faceoff. In any event trouble started from the faceoff but even in making a state- menti like that you are mega css ng, auxin. B-l-N-G-O At The SPfORTING ~ CLUB TONIGHT Time: 8:45 - Adm. 25c In aid of the L.P.U. EASTER the play all B iece of it though ‘ cleared more h; despite nu team's loss. was goal of the period to put the game on ice. from Dowling. he went in to back- hand a shot from the right boards into the t/wines to end the scoring for the period. Hines and MoGregor again serv- ed penalties through the period but. neither squad could take ad- vantage of the manpower absence although the fans in attendance saw man close calls on the part of both . Saint John Royals. as they are called. opened out wide all tbrous the third and final session in an attempt to get the equalizer that would tic up the game but their efforts proved fruitless. Just after the six minute mark had been reached. Bowling ac- cent-ins centre pass after a fsceoff at Maritime champions two B‘ a ice. put the dcfendin! up as he went in to beat the defence clean- ly and beat the great little goalie odthe torsons.‘ tifulwing shot from ten feet out. With Wilson a penalty‘. Saint John, put. on fve forws to try and tie upthe game but their efforts proved fruitless and they were still hammering away wittlotlt. success as the game end- Gosl. Strain: de- forwards. , Carver. Molyncaarx. Shepherd. mwliflfl. Blake. McGregor. Irvine. Saint John: Goal, Allen; de- fame. Hines, £35138; ‘forward: Dunham: Price, Kerincdy. Smith.’ Renshaw. Officials: Cameron. Pete Kelly. SUMMARY First Period Scoring: None. Penalties: Hines. McGrcBQY- Carver. Second Period 1—Canadians, Blanchard (Rob- ertson) 2:06 ' ll-Canadians. Robertson. 7:29. 3-8aint John. Thompson (DOW!!- ing) 11:15. s-saint John. Downi-ns. 181M- gPCsrmdia-ns. Shepherd (Dowl- ing) umo. Penalties: Hines. McGregor. Third Period 6—Canadians. Dowlins. 6:12- Pensltics: Downing. Wilson. Montreal Royals Win Opening Game MONTREAL. March 3 -— (OP) — Montreal Junior Royals rode to an easy 8-2 victory tonight over Ottawa St. Pats in the opening round of their but-ol-three elm- instion series for the Memori Trophy. emblematic of the Canad- ian junior hockey L blonship. Baseball Veteran t Sea: Little iiope For Former Players WABHINGIION. March 26 -—- (Ar) _ Bob Quinn. Boston's base- ball patriarch who is embarking on a new career as farm system supervisor for the Boston Braves A; the age of '15, sees little hope for big league players now in serv- ice ever regaining their pro-war rm. "I hope every one of them can do it." said Quinn at the dahy press conference a-t the club's Georgetown University training base. “but I don't think they can. and evcn five years will have de- veloped a new set of muscles ihbt are ry for war but lack the skillful co-ordlnation so vital for a big leagucr." The case of pitcher Tom Barley. honorably discharged from th Navy and now back with the Braves. came up for discussion- Barley had been taking his first lnrd workout and it was obvious his shoulder and back muscles had tightened up so much he was forc- ed to "shot put. the ball. “Tom is only 2'! and he ousht to be able to come around." the executive observed. “But he's a good example. l-lc hasn't thrown a ball for over a year and You can see what haPPeYIl" Manager Bob Colman of the By ROY SILLIPHANT, Surnsnerside H. C." ATKINSON, Charlottetown CIIARLOTTETOWN HOTEL, Charlottetown a-n, _ MARITIME. EASTER BEEF’ From The FAT STOGK SlliWl Alill SALE win n. Sold WEEK One year, maybe. but three, fourysteel. princi Lil. ma cnaaaorrarowu {GUARDIAN i» Byron ‘liaison Wine Golf Tournenent GREENSBORO. N.O.. March M -(AP)-Byron Nelson won the $7.500 Greensboro open olf tourna- gffldtu uchinhmh In: “Ids ‘lit’ , aaco e infivetgleuysfinbissiathclths r . 'I'h T led , Oh! , sharp!!! tel‘, victo; ovgr gammyoSnead, ofooflot Springs, Va., in a play-off at Char- Iotatte Wsdncsda fired rounds meets to go. Snead was far down the list at 287. Williams Wins In 3rd Round PHILADELPHIA. March It — (AP) — Dusky Ike Williams. Tren- ton. NJ., knocked out Dorsey Lay. Philadelphia. in 2:46 of tho third round of their scheduled IO-round bout at the arena tonight. Williams tipped the beam at 13d. Lay at 138. championshi defeating a team from No. 2 Wm tlon School at Charlottetown U- in a suc- game. The Mount Pleasant teem was eliminated from the playoffs over the week-end when they lost to will Charlottetown and Sumner- Ihlrlier the foam from No. 2 A. N. S. had won the city batctball league ch ondd 0, Thomson Danny l Webb Wins B-llound Decision LONDON, March oo-we Cable) _Dnnny Webb. Montreal Negro boxer and Canadian Arm ‘corporal took an eight - round dec on rom Ben Duffy one of Britain's best featherweight-s, in the Bil-m b0"? at surburban Stoke Newington to- night. Webb weighed 127%. 3% pounds lighter than Duffy, a Royal Navy petty officer. Both boxers boast. victories over Jackie Paterson of Glasgow, world lfloyvgight champion. in non-title u . . Take 2-Gamc Lead ‘TORONTO, March 2B —— (OP)- St. Michael's Majors tonight took a two-game lead in their best-of-flvc series with Porcupine Combines for the Ontario Junior hockey champ- ionship when they subdued the-in- experienced but stubborn north- emers B-S in the second game. Gives Address 0n Problems 0f Education A wiser selection of teachers and better pay for all members of the teaching profession were ad- vocated yesterday ln an addras given at. the Rotary luncheon at ,The Charlottetown by Dr. G. D. pal of Prince of Wales College. ‘ Admitting the present educa- tional system had many faults, Dr. Steel suggested there were ex- traneous matters which while af- fecting the efficiency of the prek- ent system. were not in any way to be charged against the system. One of these was the absence of children from school. School at- tendance in primary schools isvl only 85 per cent. Dr. Steel said. Uni conditions were such as to allow the school children of even the most remote areas to have access to modern educational advantages. it was folly to talk of saual educational opportunities for all. Dr. Steel also advocated the elective system, now alflplied in all colleges. to the pub c schools. Mrs. A. Johnson rendered two vocal solos which were warmly suded. Included among the guests were the Rev. T. I}. MacL-ennan. I... W. Shaw. ‘ Mrs. Gordon MacDonald. Mrs. Harry Cudmore. Mrs. Bram- well Chandle. and Mrs. W. l. Scsntlebury. . P. Imfcheson Ind William ltowe were co-chairmen. BOWLING - Tonight at. the Charlottetown the City Powllnl e will ‘get underway at '1 o'clock sharp th the league winning Beds meeting the Rangers. The Colts and Oards maet at 0:80. ‘Phsemi-fialwiilbo . 0h“!!! BURN A THEATRES JANE EYRE Orson Welles Joan Fontaine Margaret O'Brien Peggy Ann Gardner John Sutton BOURKE. THUR». I P. M. MONTAGUE SAT. 1:“ and 9:45 P. M. St. Michael's Majors “ Bowling Alleys the semi-finals in i Skide Airmen We. P. E. _1. ‘ Basketball Champzonshzp IIOGKEY —Middlcton Bombers trounced Summersidc stals 9-1 in Bede- ue Rink on iday evening and 0k the South Shore League play- offs by wlnnlng three games out. of four. The Bombers controlled the game all through but in the last period they really went to town ally was scored in the second per- N ampi p by tin! °4-- s avy team. There was little to chooshet f‘ SUMMARY umr.=:::r.;r:..:" - =~ n- W masses... -- awn- w‘ 7- "mm" a’ °' Z-Migdlct e r McWilliams out’. H."- “s” *- No 1 i?“ BM N‘ a: Bogtock L Penalties‘ - None. Johnston 2. MacMullen 0. Duck 8. 5”,“ pm“; a-hilddleton, McFadyen ) . l". McWilllams 5-Summer ide, C. Gallant (D. Gallant) Third Period ' McDonald. ‘ McDonald. ‘ ‘ ‘w Bradshaw ( .- nnnld) s-Middieton, McFadyen (F, McWilliams) lo-Middleton, McFadyen Penalty - McDonald. Referees-J. Green and I-I. Schur- man. After the game the presentation of cups won during the season took place. The Bedequ Rink cup was resented to Jack Schurman for She highest total of points canned during the regular league schedule Walter Simmons received the Be- deque South Shore Hockey League cup for receiving the most stan; uring the season. The Horace Wright cup was pre- sented to the Eiummerside Crytals, the team finlshzzng first in the re- s schedule. The J. snk Anett cup was re- sented to the 1v" Bum er! the team finishing second in the regular league schedule. The Simmons and MacFarlane cup was presented to the Middleton Bombers the team winning the South Shore Hockey league cham- pionship War Savings Stamps were pre- sented to the winners oi’ the lbw? star competition during the season. Gifts were presented to Charlie Hogan and JessevBurns in recou- nit on of their services as referee respectively during and reporter the season. Dairy Ghamp CALGARY. March M - (CP)— A banquet was held here Saturday night to honor a cow-Alcartra Gerben. The six-year-old Hol- stein had just established a world's recon! for butter production for a BOB-day period. During the year ending Saturday Alcsrtrs Gerben produced 1.409 pounds of butter fat. seven pounds more than the previous record. By The Canadian Press Three years a to ht Joe Louis. now in Uascle Sanrhl’: 'army but still heavyweight champion of the world. fully title for the 2 st out Abe Simon. OYSTER DIJCACY Most of the eggs spawned by oysters are consumed by other scoring five goals. Summeraidefls lone‘ h dozen wounded with us. Machine- guns Athletics llave Almost Entire Team 0f 4-F’s ‘ FREDERICK. Md, March :5 _ (AH-The Philadelphia Athletics counted up today almost n com- piste team of 4-F’s, with all but wo of the m players in that draft category. . The arrival yesterday of Dic Slebert. veteran first base n and the A's leading hitter l e. P-gg W". The reclassified him gigreiteral instability of the left No matter what, it was good news . to Connie Mack. The az-ylear-olg. president and manager of t e Am-i erican League pennant contenders beamed when he greeted his hard- hlijtting firsghsacker, who has play-a e more an 100 games during‘ each of the last six seasons. I Siebcrts arrival placed the Ath-. letics near fullstrength, save for‘ pitcher Bobo Newscn, who is sup- posed to be working out at Harts- ville, SL‘. ' Outfielder Larr Rosenthal and infielder am Mc hee are expected‘ momentarily while outfielder Levy is at Orlando, 71s., trying tci fBBain tho 35 pounds he lost fol- lowing an operation on his back. The latter three. however. are classified as reserves. Outfielder Ford Garrison and pitcher Karl Scheib are the only lA players in camp. Garrison is ‘slated to report next ‘Thursday. mxti Airborne Eyewitness Editor's Ndie: Robert C. Wilson, BO-year-Arsoclated Press War Cor-l respondent. volunteered for the‘ dangerous job of covering the‘ Allied airborne operation across the Rhine at first hand. Feared mis- Slnk f0r a time after his plane was shot down, Wilson has returned safely to Paris with this spine- tingllng story. BY ROBERT C. WILSON PARIS. March 8 (AP) - Twenty - nine parachute troopsi hurled themselves from the C46 troop carrier on which I was a passenger at 10:16 AM. Saturday —Just three minutes after we crossed the smoke c st an altitude of (D0 feet. I Suddenly the huge plane shud-' clcred. A wing spurted fire. Therei was c sickening thud as German‘ iak ripped into the ship. A few minutes later I was crawling out of my parsmutc in a plowed Ger- man field six miles east of the river. Things had happened fast - it seemed only a matter of seconds as the crow and I plunged from the burning plane. l was too stunned by the terrific Jar I got when I landed to recall much detail. More- over, I was too occupied with get- ting out of the paths of swarms of British gliders that were swoop-l ing‘ into the field - One of the ships struck power_ wires, careened past me and| crashed with a big burst of flames. Anotiher headed straight for me. skimmed inches over my head and then nosed into the earth 20 feet away. I thought everyone was killed as the big ship plowed into the ground, but within five minutes a half- dozen tommies spilled out and] looked cautiously around. e pointed a gun at me. I waved a white handkerchief frantically, shouting: “I'm an Am-I erlcan. Dent shoot." K That was the first of a series of close calls crowded into the next 2i hours in the “little Arnhem" these British airborne soldiers and I had for ourselves. Six Milo; From Rhine By ll AM the British soldiers had taken a farm house at the end ‘ of the field in which there Weft 51x German soldiers. we had a chattered nervously and snipers‘ bullets whined outside. We were six miles from iihe Rhine be- tween Hamminkeln and Hagen- bu B‘; noon we had an anti-tank gun set u-n and one artillery piece in place. then we just waited At 3 P M we were still waitins Heavy bombers had ccmr. in at suicide heislht ——l00 feet — to drOP supplies. But. they had missed curl immediate axon. We shot up a German tiger twk across tlhe road to our left. Mont- gomery's artillery from the west. was pouring thousands of shells over our heads into German pos- itions. But tihe enemy had not vet tried to overrun our position. After nightfall an eIBhi-mim patrol went out to raid a German adt-ack emplacement. Two came back Only UTE terrific roar of artillery and planes broke the sus- pense for the next few hours. Then it 08MB At 2 AM. the tremendous roar of a German field gun shook the ihrmhouse in which we were hud- dled. A machine-gun opened f!" and rifles began crackink I WM sihaking all over and could hardly write as I tried to take n09.85- Shells hit the house and set. it on fire I raced upstiir-S to a back bedroom with a half-dozen British soldiers. They kickrri but the win- nlarine life incl l g ow and jumped duwnilfle 0TH- mc names seoaruvé cum TONIGHT Music By ANSONAIRES, R.C.A.F. S-Piece Band TIME: '9-l2:30 ADM. 30c Hockey Night Again AT THE FORUM New Glasgow Bombers h (Maritime Civilian Champs) Vs. iio. 2 A. ll. 5., ll. B. A. F. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 8:15 ADMISSION 50c Sponsored by Hi-Y Grads. 1 REGULAR SKA TING TONl-GHT-"B to IO THE FORUM Bashing Jockey Finds Himself In Plenty Trouble MIAMI. Fl .. M h _ " Dflshinc aDonflrlideazraise. “hi3; atormy riding career twice before Si" mtf-‘mlptfld by 1on8 suspen- .§;“:..r:."..”:::..r: ti“. us“? r- Guild to boot. ° °° w A few hours after Meade w“ 33¢ dawn by stewards of the Ifipo- clitimefDe Las Americas at Mexico l’ or reprehensible conduct." seneral manager A, J, (Jug) §l§§‘.".“‘“.‘2.“..'l%°".§2§§ it. h“ "r mgimiz“ on. e riders timed that no question of aging ‘niwrlty was involved," curserg 352w.‘ but that. _Menqg and M ex cans as individuals exico as a countryj’ uN° 1°13“? who belongs to oug- omcnizeticn can go into a friend. l? will"?! and curse that coun- gj? i" it! people." Cieary‘ mm. ma“ ll ' cm“! gefi5yyelflmi-fldcgildl?‘ I dc‘ I waited for l5 minutes and Whoa quieted a 1h»- 1 dYWPDed .3?“u..‘°€.“lf.’éi‘§" Thefl“ “'55 “ENNIS everything 11D like daylight. I heard a Ger- ma“ shiiuflflfi “Kamerad." But thgliggigs nofanswer. ‘mm m9‘ $181012? hloiggeflwliisilirnwhg gsxt fficlllf hours I walked. crawled. ‘Haida’; "flied my way through and élig; glelhjs owieiileldfloin Artfitllery‘ wit’!!! sides of me. g g 0' on .8t 6 25 AM. a couple of American helmets popped up a DIFFERENT (Continued from Page l) - make a strong contribution to the preservation of world peace. He read into the speech a diametrical. l)’ QDIJOBRG to that re- ceived by other members. It is inevitable, in looking at the proposals made by the Prime Minister in- regard to San Fran. CISCO. that their appeal in the com- ing Federal election should be con- sidered. Mr. may have made an atteznpt to please both sides of opinion in his original speech- those who want to play a strong part in world security and those who distrust the surrender of any national initiative to a world sec- urity organization. It. has been ap- parent, from all sides of the House, that the former group arc in great. e!‘ Eift-‘flgih than the latter and that they are a-ble to carry the mfllflfiiy of Canadians with than if; faking part in world security D ans. Would it not be the 1 a hing m? MY- K1118 to haveogrfilof his cabinet so Interpret hi; 0,31,“; speech that the support of the strong internationalists would be secured? And if. at the same time. M1 Kings speech could be inter- preted to the moderate isolation- im as supporting them. would not the Prime Minister be Ln eh; happy position of being able to appeal to both sides, although. diametrically opposed, with gho same words? A. l-I. Bence. (PC-Saskatoon. Sask.) added another brick to the structure his party has been raig. 1118 against the Prime Minister's DTODOSBIS. b)’ emphasizing that Canada should now be grown up, and it was time she acted in whole- iiearted concert with other nations n {he Preservation of peace. Now was the time to acknowledge hor- responslbilitjv. and to make the f"! Yards away, I made it Benevolent ANNUAL Wednesday, March 28, at 8 p, m, IMPORTANT All Members are Requested to Attend P. A. LAFFERTY, ""5581? commitments towards world security. Irish Society urrrma Secretary. We Said e Would liven... WHAT? The largest assortment in the city of Ear-rings, Glamour Pins, small, medium, large, in all colors. Also matched sets. WATERPROOF WAITJHES-Five different makes, beautifully designed, fully guaranteed. saunas’ warcnns in and 17 Jewel movements. fect timepiece. three different makes, l5 Don't fail to sec this per. All guaranteed. in other lines we have Sterling Cigarette Cases, Sterling Com-pacts, Lockets, Crosses. Pendants, Lad- ies’ and Gent's ind. Discs, Signet Rings, Diamonds. Bridal Wreath, Bangles, Mexican Bracelets, Gold and Silver Bracelets, Baby Rings, etc. Everything new, up to date. CHESTER A. ‘BAMPBELI. Reliable Experienced Jeweller 157 Queen Si. 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