. i‘ Quilt PAGE - FOUR, ' TIIE BIIIRLOTTETOWII filIAlllIlAll iPoImlod h: llfl l Iorlllhl Dally Precision ueut. Col. W Chute: B. Mela!!! visa-Incident: J. I. Burnett. I-J l- lccntary: Llcat. Col. l). A. Maolikmom 0.8.0. “m: and M ' Dlrcotor: .|. n. Burnett. F-J-I- lloolato Editors: Frank Walker and Heat. ha A. Burnett. I..C.N.V.ll. (On Aollvs Service) ‘The Strongest Memory u Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.‘ THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1945 Reconstruction Program Reports from Ottawa are to thc clfcct that the Federal (iotcrntitcnt is amazed that it has received no application for financial aid from this Province tinder the Reconstruction scheme. Every other province has submitted plans and proposals, and has rcceivcd financial contri- butions from Ottawa, but we‘ here, the most needy and best deserving, have made no appli- cation and rcccived nothing. Provincial Gov- ernment spolcesnieti, on the other hand, main- lcin that detailed plans have been prepared and submitted to the proper authorities. In any case it would sccni that in this, as in other mat- ters, to him that hath shall be given, to him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath. One trouble may be in the procedure we are following locally. Ottawa, it seems, insists on (loing business through its own provincial committee, or ‘Regional Reconstruc- tion Cotincil, as it is called, which according to Premier Jones in the Legislature was set up without consultation with the Provincial Gov- eminent. The attitude of the Federal Min- ister of Reconstruction, Mr. Howe, was plain- ly expressed in the House of Commons the other day when he said: "I fcel that ottr solution of a number of reconstruction problcms can be assisted great- ly if the provinces, the municipalities, industry, labor, agriculture and the other economic groups concerned will make use of the facilities offer- azl by the regional councils. These councils will bavHcomplete information on the policies of the Dominion Government, and inasmuch as they represent all sections of the community, can serve a most useful purpose. Criticism has been made during the war years of the tend- ency to centralize administrative functions in Ottawa. The existence of the regional councils is an attempt to meet that criticism in the period of post-war reconversion and reconstruction. As l. Minister of the‘ Crown, I am, of course, always pleased to meet delegations from the various ports of Canada. However, I suggest that if full use is mode of the facilities avail- able in the rcgiotial councils, much time and expanse will be saved by those who wish to sub- mit their roconvcrs-iqn or reconstruction prob leml to the Dominion Government.” a Hcrein is the distinction and the differ- more. The Mirtister at Ottawa, to relieve him- self from the visitation of delegations, sug- gests that the regional organization should be approcthed. But we have another organization appointed by the Provincial Government for a similar purpose, known as the Advisory Recon- struction Ommnittee, and the question every- one would like to have answered is, which of these bodies mttst be approached? At present we are losing because of having, quite evidently, Oo0_ many cooks spoiling our post-war recou- atruetion broth. The Legion’: Appeal 1n I941, when the fate of civilization was hanging in the balance, the Canadian Legion addressed a strung appeal to the Prime Minister of Canada, urging the immediate, complete and scientific mobilization of all the nation's re- sources. Thc Legion now addresses itself to the people of Canada, warning that total vic- fory is still to be won. _ “Victory in the field,” says the Legion ap- peal, “must be matched by victory at home, ovcr evcrvthiitg that weakens and divides the nation. . . - After the First Great \Var most of us felt that our efforts were finished with the winning of the war. Now we,kn0w that the job is not ovenbecattse military victory has been achieved. The conflict will continue with the forces of good and evil arrayed against each other. . Our fathers, inspired by a vision of Canada dc- votcd‘ to the service of God, chose as their motto: ‘Hr r/tall liar/r dominimi from rca l0 sea.’ This is the heritage we have received, and on this heritage we must build our nation. The chil- dltn of our country, who are its greatest Do- tcntial wealth, must grow up in this fighting faith. They v/ill then respond to the challenge to live to make their country great: This pur- pose will give them the incentive t0 lcarn the dignity ofworlt, the value of a task well done, and the dynamic qualities of teamwork. Only thus can national unity be achieved." ‘ Too lengthy for full quotation here, the ap- peal’ is one which should make a deep impres- plot: .on all Canadian citizens. "Hundreds of homes will need to be built,” it says. "Yet homes are more than houses, and Canadians I luvs the challenging task of creating the kind if isomer ‘and family life that will make this Ililltift strong, cltanfunited. t To build the Can- we want is an enterprise which re- ‘ the wnliined initiative and imagina- govemntqtt, tncnagemetit and labour, that the menace-of fear and greed. Made ilfijpkill gifts of every race within it, .,will.tlten.ldeatonstrate its answer to the ‘(H161 o} racu which, throughout . . ‘ die prune of the world. ui¢~‘vlsion..of our King i i 7°" m? W5 b0- “ _ Ila world will fol- mv-sl-n loll-virus? rltrc~w v= - i. -EDITORIAL uorés- The neurspaipcf is the daily bread in the mental diet of the people of Canada end The United States who bought 48 "lmlml “Die; daily last year; they bought only 3° minim! 103V“ of bread daily. i i U “When the cat’s away the mice will play," we have been assured, and that perhaps accounts for rumours of dissension in the Provincial ad- ministration since the, Premier went to Ottawa. It is also common knowledge that the Premier was opposed to Christmas b,\'-<"l€Cll0l1S in PTlflCC County but his hands were forced by threats of resignations from _his cabinet. i i i it In the shipyards of Messrs. john Brown at Clydebauk, Britain, a,‘ 32,000 ton liner is being built for the Canadian Cunard White Star line and is the first example of the appli- cation of_ the new and specded-up method to British passenger litter; ctlnstiuction. Research scientists in Britain are using [miticillin to cure dairy cattle of mastitis, one of their most serious diseases, reports the Man- chester Guardian, The results are “almost too good to be true," says Professor Scott Watson, who is chief Education and Advisory Officer b the Ministry of‘ AEIlCLllIILTC- Canadian newspaper readers and editors alike have grumbled for years over the con- fusion arising every time the word “King" ap- pears in a headline. In Canada, the word can mean either King George VI or Canada's Prime Minister Mackenzie King. Last week, The Ottawa Journal came up with a solution. Struck by the possibility of misunderstanding in a first-edition, eight-column banner, “Attlec and King arrive in Washington,” The Journal’: enterprising copy desk produced for t-he next edition this deadline: "Attlec and Macking Reach Washington." Canadian newsmen were betting “Macking" would spread and stay as long as the Prime Minister is in office. i i! F I ‘ The Ottawa. Citizen, a journal which wav- ers between Social Credit and Socialism, urges the rationalization of alcoholic and malt bev- erage manufacture, remarks The Better Review. The paper observes that "the present system of private enterprise by manufacturers and Gov- ernment control and distribution (under which all Governments, Federal and Provincial, pro- fess to restrict the sale of liquor, but actually relish increases in Government revenues from its sale)" is not satisfactory. Therefore, we must turn over manufacturing to the same Gov- cmmcnts, which will double their incentive to dc- velop this sort of business. A recent C. C. F. meeting actually went on record, at the same moment, in favour of Government activity to limit the sale of beer, and a system of Govern- ment inspectors. to see that beer glasses in pubs are filled adequately. Any comment on this sort of argument would be perfectly useless. The Saskatchewan Government, at the same moment, announced that the profits of the Liquor Board for the first six months of i945 were one million dollars more than in the sim- ilar period of I944, which makes the good pro- hibitionists who voted C. C. F. see very red 1! i! 1k 1‘ The result of the provincial by-election in Bcauce riding (says Montreal Gazette) ‘IS. in a large seusc a case of the Liberal opposition to the Duplcssis regime being hoist by its own petard. For the conversion of this local con- test into a gauge of political currents throughout the province resulted mainly from the intensive effort the Liberal forces threw into the battle, and the declared basis on which they fought it. The Liberal spokesmen stuck their necks out a long way in the campaignfand plainly gambled heavily on s favorable result which would justify their boldness. That they have stiffer- ed such a serious and decisive setback is due in no small measure to the_fact that they them- selves set the‘ stakes, defined the tiaturc of the game and magnified the significance of the result. In view of the status conferred on the election, both by the Liberal tactics and the vigorous cotuiter-cantpaigtt of the Union Na- tionalc, the vote can hardly be regarded as in- conclusive, of minor importance or as open to differing interpretations. The overwhelming maiority given the Union Nationals candidate is plainly a sweeping affirmation of confidence and renewal of mandate for the present Gov- ernment, and :1 reicction of the Liberal bid for strcitgthcnetl support of its opposition. i i! Ill l‘ Thanksgiving Day, thc great social and religious festival of New litiglaitd, from which it spread all over Anterica, was celebrated to- day in only two States, Tcmtessce and Arkan- sas, due to difference of opinion between the Federal and State authorities as to which Tues- day in November should be recognized. It is a. legacy of the Puritans\wlto abolished Christmas as a. relic of papery, or of prclacy, which they held in equal detcstation, and passed laws to punish its observance; wanting some day to re- place Christmas, thc colonial assemblies, and later the governors, appointed: Thursday in November as a day of solemn prayer and- thanksgiving for the blessings‘ of the year, and especially the bountics of the harvest; but the steady increase in the population of Roman Catholics and Episcopalians, brought back into vogue Christmas which is also kept by Pres- byterian: and Unitarians, with the result that both days are generally observed. In issuing the first presidential proclamation naming Thanksgiving Day, Abraham Lincoln specified the fourth or last Thursday in November for its observance. Observance on the fourth Thursday in the month became customary; The late President Roosevelt sought, with only partial success, to clump the day to the third Thurs- day, on the grounds the traditional“ was too docs to Giristmas. This year, in Nov- ember has five ‘lhtmdays, found fi states cele- brating the day on the fourth Thursday. ‘Fm- acacee and Arlnalaa decided to on the N. tes By ThehWay The war la ovob-“blf definitely,” a; the bobbysoxers would say. That. sinister subject, the tariff, ls am 51.131115 its ranged head. ant- Iord Expositor. We an forced f» the conclusion that lt Ls unwfso for Japan to have a free press and that the Amerl- cans are making sure that. it. will not have a free press, a very wise policy. But why disguise this de- cesfon by nonsensical flub-dub, “ordering Jap edftors to be ‘free’ "l -Owen Sound Sun-Times. Prcaacd wood lap, made from vacate witch formerly went. into the plant's boilers, are being pro- duced by a lumber company Northern Ontario, and are said to burn batter than the original wood from whlch they have been salvag. ed, as s The Hamilton Spectator. This the sort of lndustrlal in- genuity that will find new markets. Canada may vlcw with some pride her public school system. It may have its defects, but it; has turned out generations of fine men and women. It will continue to do so 1n spite of the many problems of tlhe day. But that task will be made the easier as more parents come to understand that this, too, ls their business, and that 1t pays to look at. your own bustness once 1n u while. -—Viotorla Colonist. The Kremlin will shine blah with golden domes and white stone bulldings. The extensive restora- tion work 1a under the direction of the well-known architect Nlkolia. Vlnogmdow and the artist, Aca- demfclm I. E. Grabar. The Krem. lln was covered with a thick coat of cantouflnge and sham windows and roofs were painted on the walls of the cathedrals and other Krem- lin buildings. These valued mem- orials of antluqulty will not. as- sume their original splendon-USSR Bullcttn. 111s lapuncco ,. , llo enter a team. in the international Davls Cup competition next year has re. cslved the immediate rejection 1t deserved. It indicates, however, an attitude on the part of its gro- ponents that needs correction. The Japanese will have to be taught that, war ls not a game tn which the loser alts down in mutual amlty wlthtltcwlnnersssoonasftls over; partfcularl if the loser con- ducts war 1n e bestlal irmnner of the Ja ancse. It. may be a long time yet efore the lotter- are per- mitted to participate -1n spheres wherein sportsmanship as we know 1t Bltays s. large part-Victoria Col- Oll . A few raindrops slashed against the leading edges of tlhe record- breaklng Meteor jet-plane's wings as she streaked from Moreton Val- lance (Glos) to Mimston (Kent) and, because of her tremendous ed, chl ped into the paintwork Ill e a. , says The London Eit- prcss. Maln-tenance men who spot. ted the dtunage when she arrived wem busy filling tn and smoothing of! the chlpplngs. which 1f left un- attended would mean several lost miles an hour on the Heme Bay record flight. Bordeaux, huge Atlantlc seaport of France, is gradually resuming its normal up amnce and e soon to hazide more traffic than in prewar days when its average monthly shipments totalled some 400,000 tons, says French Informs.- tlon Service. Used by the Germans as a submarfne base and shipyard, Bordeaux itself endured a minimum of German vandalism. Forced to evacuate hastily at. the time. of liberation, the Nazis had no time to blow up valuable port installa- tions, but they did succeed in bot,- tllng up the harbor channels by scuttllng some 20 ships and by planting numerous magnetic mines to prevent passage up the Girendc estuary. After lakln leave of the Kin: the Duke of A ba made a statement on his reasons for resigning the post. of Spanish Ainbassnior in London. He declared his disagree- ment; wltlh the Franco reglme, “holding It to be harmful to the best. interests of Spain." and real. firmed hls faith ln the itionarc‘ ' His resignation. he said. ‘tad m: cnaiuorrcrlown GUARDIAN l“ a; its Religions lnuugnt ln {he Universities (London Calling) Tm very ffrat point. that. I, want to make tn connection with the un1. versltles tn this island ls that we are still the freest lutnllectual 1n- stltuttom in the whole world. In race of the greatest tyranny that has ever threatened muiklnd, we have emerged trlump” ‘, we have shown that free lnstltutfuns 1n a free society can m v themselves - successfully against any other 1n- stltutlons preaching a sot doctrine. It might easily have been other- wise. In wartime we have had to undertake many tasks. l1 not at the dictation of the Government, at least, request-educating Bervlcc personnel, conducting research to order, lecturing to troops chsnglng courses for degrees to eep pace wltlh the Ministry of Labour Ream. ll R l9. B. H. HUGHES “|\\l HI t. l7.) ml l |.\ N] AUTO l\|‘l{\. lIl|\<. IGRIII T0 IIOVIIII}; Dsopgln tho valley new Nwgmb" , lloluatb l ‘PM "muffin ' r ‘Abuwttvlllfiw "umilon ‘her nllhtty . ~ mo ‘ North stlrunlwfilllrh.“ u“ . Tall trees stand ‘tun-d upon m. mounta 1 Jowclled w," o, myllcrlous m. Illatehiiih ‘Smalldiflmmllvca, bovvltgh“ l’ll()\l tAnd 1n the u-k Id whlts-rnbed night. . t° '~r.:z~...t:r~ - "fir-i- Hsre 1n the moon-dunk, imply u latlons for the call-up of students. Yet, 1n essence, we remain intel- lectually free, pledged to no creed except that of Iree intellectual cn- quiry. . Officially, we are pledged to preach no set doctrine except, of course, from wnvfctfon; our mem- bers, whether students or staff, may profess any creed or no creed. This was the posltfon before the war and n remains unaltered. How gould kit be otherwlséauvzlheenthnour oors ave been open eto refugees flying 1n terror from Eur. ope, the Far East, and all the parts o1’ the world where frea men wan persecuted. . ' _ But. note that I sold ‘offlcfally’ pledged to preach no set doctrine, and I mean ‘offtclally as intellectual institutions.’ Unofficial] , and 1n a variety of ways, the ol er universi- stlll bear the mark of their medlaevial origin, Christian 1n sptrfr, and practice. Even the newer ones. most of them founded 1n the Ian century show that. found and thrive 1n y which ts essentially Christian. Let me give one instance. On y 1n St. Andrews there was an official unlversfty holiday. Unofflc-lally, a Sci-via: was held in llhe middle of the omlng tn the College Chapel, a building built. in the fifteenth century. Attendance was voluntary, for students and staff alike. Before the doors were opened a queue of students, hun- dreds of yards long, was assembled in the quadrangle waltlng to enter the Chapel; and during the Bor- vtce them was scarcely a vacant space ln the building. It. was a. tre- mendous voluntary and spontan- eous nvsrk of thanksgiving for de- llverance from a deadly foe and a rededlcatiozt for the taahs that still remain. And yet. Within a month or so. 1n the sumo university, I was rector of a school at which were present representatives of more than thirty nations some non- Chrlstlan. the whole fhctns of which was n. study of free Brltlsh lnstf- tutions as practised 1n the Com. monwealth, our Government, and in education.‘ ‘ Now I know 1t. 1s difficult to rec- oncile these apparently contradic- tory vlews. The first. thtng to grasp ls that. any religion ls the expres. sfon o1’ an attitude to the universe. 11 it is to survive and not become mere superstition it must be under. food; and understanding 1s some- thing intellectual. There must be free enquiry into its hlstory, lts creeds, and its modes of worship. Moreover-and this ls the real crux of the matter-there must, also be free enq into the universe 1n whtch we 1nd ourselv to see whether 1t ts of such n. nature that. rellglon is even platmlble. Re. ltgton, at bottom, is an e resslon o! what; we believe about e nat- use of the whole ‘world. _ u. Now Chrfstlanlty 1s an extension of beliefs that arose 1n the cradle of civilization. Christ. himself was a Jew; so was Paul; but. Judaism was nurtured ln an atmosphere where religion ruled men's llves. Lately I was 1n Baghdad, and I visited the site of an old heathen city and temple at Aqarkuf, rne mltes out of the city. not far ruin Babylon, I also visited EKYDt and Cairo‘ and spent some time in the museums there; and I vms very 1m- in them a very marked difference 1n oat their work ins with their may are more mono take world more osrlo , and 1181011 more aerfo wo e 111d Kiwi.‘ t? %lr case. to the 6N the hollness of 111s throttgh missions d5- °11 "191! 1111810115 tradition An th ln other lamps. nicks. aboes. were ducted by the Vicar. the Rev. A. Beddoes was a miner's wow and vocation. ' East village on the Nomi-East. coast o Enaland. with ot over 10.000. 1s modern M. v. PRINCE: NOVA SCHEDULE CHANGES EFFEO n a VIMBII l» 0 IIIIMIIIII Unis Between Nova Booth 4.4] Prim; Edwu-q] m“; l!“ NOVA SCOTIA - PRINCE IDWAID ISLAND I'll!!! SIIVIOI WOOD ISLANDS. P11. ’ SAILING SCHEDULE‘ . ALL SAILINGS STANDARD Luvs Wood Islands Leave Caribou noammuainmn mums manna cannons-sown. ranwn IDWABD ISLAND tgplnlom us Just as varied. A: spoo- they may be or" ,, 6d; but on many other to ice, a. part from the fact may be well-trained generally, they have no specialist kznowledflc. And so, to ask whether than is slgn of a. Christian revival 1n unl- , for example. .111 chemistry, thatth minds NW ukmg i! In)‘ Gbrfsflan re- vfval in Great Britain. a b o Plrat and of this I am confident, t-ftudc of student-l ‘ ’ . Not only are they work. 51m". but. they are working a Purpose: in orc pkwe 1n aoclety 1 B012‘. LUNCIIES I SERVED joy or n In atlll ablo u; s. l‘. New ltliflgewfeblmfggwcr when 1pm,‘. O aaamlng-deatl fu ark Novombq Would Ilhad an . —Bl bell Stewart Ph u‘ Manta-u! still!" i“ m‘ IMX FAGTOII Pancake Make-up EC mm . . who for-Id wig?’ 321i... “.312 rollovvlngudm. TTVINO OAIIBOU. N. S. (0 Ulla: from Plololl) (DAILY INCLUDING scum!) run: 0mm. 19,", 11pm. 19,“, town-up, more y emsclves more actrloualy, the their re- y. Their moral messed. as one la l hard cots of belief 1n which rum out the whole of their dis. °I1 I11 $091M. a core based was a good mtldsm on all matters. political Nllflotia. It was fashionable 1s 1n to be skeptical. We saw m much of an turn whlch was my rats some lmes cynical and Philosophical lltera. 11 not shoddy, at ‘Contlnued out Pogo a The "Pit" Goes To Church A slack of coal. pit. sclet/y shovels and ponies’ plsocd 1n Easlnsztzon >atrlsh Church on a rec- ov when momma serv- doast from there l1! ice was the BBC. The choir and conun- ization ‘ ortzanlst was a miner. and m: mm- servlcc was fntxtoduced by s. "Bevin bows" (boys who. when called un for national service, autclnatlcallv received one of the numbers which marked them for work 1n the cool-mines) were also the connettatlon. The theme of the service. Colliery. a mlnlru; a mutilation of the cries 1n the .. 011B 111% relgun, and, 1n w rcllslon. IIJVATOI 00. Dill NOV. D -—(@)— Wd lodny 0X fhn 5s’ a ills? Comps . 1M. was with anyhoafl attack while on his way w Morldu so rectifier-ate 1mm lll health. i , i lségi? “mu-Elm tolllliovadboly TllE 2 MAGS MAPLI rmms sonooi. Report I N vambor: Grade VlIIrI: f. Emits lrna. Grade VII 8n: f. MA Calms. 2 Josie Murphy. 8. Ms cs Mm‘. aims vn .71.: 1. hlnols Camp- ll Grads VI: t. Ills Cairns. l. Diana ‘momma. 3 can Walsh Grade V: 1. Joule Duffy. 2. Jlm- my Duffy. S. Iorne Arsenault Grade II: 1. Norman Arsenault. 2. Lewis Walsh. Teacher. Mary Conway. on. .|. n. snout Hal Reopened Hls i‘ DENTAL OFFICE it MT. STEWART Office Hours: 9:80 - 12 1,3, 1:80 - 4:80 p.11, "pi/snug l.IN|MENT Professional Cards P“ "m" 11hr who.‘ ur faith m “m,” pressed with the way in which the - religious spirit dominated the whole of their llves. Pagan civilizations ll tendered immediately after Dot Juan—"whom I consldcr nay git’- erelgn"—lssued his lYl-‘lllfC'~?llv ‘a-t, March. Don Juan thcn (‘l'lll'.‘l7.f'(l1 the Franco regime. "mo:h='l"d on] the totalitarian system of the Axis; Powers," and provokln" the dan ~.' o1’ a new clvll war 1n Swzfn, and oft isolating spaln from the rest of] the world.——Lcndcn Times. i, A Brltlsh scientist hub lnvcuti-d specbicles whlch can bc "olden on, dropped or bent without being dum- aged, He Ls Profcsson Low. ll‘l'.’P‘l-‘ tor of the bifocal lenses uni the‘ contact, invisible lens vllrkh f“: over the eyeball, Hls lctest luv 1-} tlon, unbreakable RIHSMF‘, wri s. less than a uarter of an nnrue. They are ma e from r110 niece fine wire with tlny, hvlf mo-m lenses set just below the line of vEs. ion. The weaver can lift his cyzp. from his book for noruml sit-slit without Interference from the. glasses. U. K. Information Office. Santa Claus ls not a mtmhv- mby escape from the world. He hath: alter ego of reality. He 1s the companion who brings relaxa- tlon from worknday cares. He ls more necessary to a sanc world than any invention of the 20th cen- tury. Certafnlé you can't see the true Santa lcus. You cans see friendship of klndlfncss either. But ~ou can see the effects when they ve pald n v1s1t. The professor b would brtlie first to lln s should be h. No, the time mart coma to abolish stints Claus. We neat! him more than oven-Minneapolis Star Journal. Little-known lash about Hm ave- rage woman are recounted by The Montreal Sh: alonl w lh a sound observation on moat ves’ msln t, no Average Wontan. e our am. do“ the followlnc: Bhemarrlnstflteaaeolaf. M; font twice a month with her husband. ' waahlna’ dlahol. In flvs dd. four Incl}? tall. - 2,700 bum ( vc years) seq.‘ ta sunfish-u ill DU she ha!" film's. utv and you like, but religious civilizations, people with whom the Jews were ln constant contact; and out of all that sprung our great European tlviimcion with lts Christian re- llglon, ..nw if we are to understand 1t. there must be free and unfettered enquiry into its history, its teaching and iks development, an enqup-y nominated by men whose only elm 1s to get at the truth, men entirely unbiased except ln the direction of truth. And thls, after all, Ls the en-d for which our Christian unl- vemitles were founded. . But, you m y think, all this ls ftnnlliar. What we ant. to know ls whether the war ha made any dlf. fcrsnce with regard to your attitude to Christianity general y. Is there any sign of u Christian revival‘! Now I want, first cf all, to try and go‘. this 1n its proper perspective. Remember that a university is a social. of men and women, ex- tremey varfed ln their occu anions, most of them t studying fferent topics: On many matters they arc just. like ordlnary people and thslr that satisfies her husband. Buys 369 halts and m dresses. Devotes the best peven years of her life attcmptln tn make her husband over-wlt ut success. Ruins three fenders on the car and tears off one craze door. Occazl es she'd mar- ried someone else. Lives flvo years lmur than hot vhusband, Duns pairs of socks. Never learns m drive a ml! nth. out hit her thumb. And m a darned Iood wlls 1n spltn o‘! 1o all last Thursday, todn . Canada our limo ma: emit mflgo midlands I l wunk-rv and one of the lamest. emiploylnl 2.800 men and boys. The shaft was sunk over half a century mo on vlmln land. the alnklnk and slnk- etrs‘ cabins bolus! the only bulld- lrnza ln the near countryside. ex- cept for a few farm dwellings. The vtllaac and community new as a result of. and with. the colllery. Mr. Beddoea. who had worked 1n a minim: parish before comluz to Easfnzton Colliery elnhtcen months auto. finds tthe closely-hilt min- im community produces as fine a crowd of folk as one could wish to work with. The popular con- ception of the miner as a man who goes underzround to work with a shovel 1s as far removed from tho true miner as chalk from cheese. Mr. Heddoes says. He re- nmls himself as a vicar a parish craftsmen. where 1n- terest 1n music. literature and kindred arts 1s slnaularlv high. JUDGE GETS TICKET WA'I‘EIR!IUWN. N.‘.'I.. Nov. 2B -(AP) Cltv Judm- Mlchnel Ren- " ......'" "a. l us". .1" mo neoevc par -c- hsla when their automobiles were stalled 1n a 86-inch snowfall. He flnlzd himself at but excused tbs 0th It n00. l. or! tnoausc heli- fault-but. “on not of God" Attention rnimns Rush tn any Mink or Muskrat vou may have 1n order 10.!» 1n tlmo for the first ulc in Decom- ber. We pay hlghoaf. market arias. ‘ PLEASE NOTE: For the con- vonlcnco olfhs puhllo our ofllcc wlll be open ever Saturday night from seven until nlns o'clock. nnso: We have ‘Dgfihl! puis- llwble lump trawl for flu-a. .|. “n. JENKINS ' "f" an norm. ACKINI Q, Charlottetown 11-N- WANTED _» MUSKRAT" MINK - We roqulta lugs quantities of Muskrat and Mink lmatgdlauly to flll order for a largo Canullanmannfcctnrcr. - You m mum] of full market price when you coll your fut: to us. We mats; g V vol. _ B alil with la f m l n; Gmt v, .,:.,'~ your fun l- (w. n. alarms) postage or express on all A altlp- lminatlliitcly to: . c. It 8L, Charlottetown‘ I ' llell W. Illgglns Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond SL Charlottetown P.0. Boa 60 YKXX McLeod w. l. sum-us; a. c. .|. s. suns-us. k. o. Bl-"llim and Attorneys-av ., Law i urn-mu Smut ckfifime-ws- es-wwc v. I Lhmles R. McQuaid n. A. Iarrhhr, Solicitor Mountain. omit-lumen "' ramp 1m a. alienate. of Charlcrcgl Accountalil! r lam-nuance.“ Charloflcawa uncertain-unmet ‘f- Publlc Stcnoflraphl! all