. is day in Hnwlan recently. . Miminegeeh and Mr. HT!-!'U'RSDAY. Howlon and Vicinity Paul Dolma we: in Bimrnenide recently. lrnest Brown of Halifax was in lcwlan recently. Mn. nlix Doiroa Iran a recent visitor in nowlui. Dennond Gallant of Duvar left Aug. out for Ontario. Mater Junior Gallant of sum- aierside is visiting in Howlui. ..:.. his-reine Gallant or W motored to Burmneui-2.. recently. ..u. Mr. Jim Murphy of Summei-side agent I recent weekend in Bull'- in. Miss Laurette Arsenauit spent a recent weekend with her parents in I-lowlen. Messrs. Joe Richard and Paul Gallant. lime gone TIHCK to Spring- field to cut pulp. Mr. and Mrs. Henry T. Gallant and family of Summerside spent. Mrs, Henry Gallant. and family spent a recent afternoon i-it the home of Mrs. .li-rry Arseneult Visiting in liowlan an August 5 were Mrs. Bill Pickering and Mrs. Joe Pellerin of Summrrside. Miss Anne Marie Richard and Miss Dolma Gallant were among those who went to Brae picnic. The sr .Anm- Pilgrims I'Plill"1Pd home on Aiicziist. 4th utter a whole vreek of travelling and sight-set- mg. Mrs. Jerry Arsenault, with Ger- trude and Roger visited her mulli- or in Duvar on the latter's birth- day. Mrs. Dr. Dewar of O'Leary spent a pleasant afternoon VH1!- ing with Mrs. Jack Piatts recent- 13'. Miss Beatrice Arseiiauit tpent two days recently with her ai3!er Lauretta. who is employed in Summerside. Mr. Hector Martin and tone Leo Len and Gussie were calling on re- latives and friends in l-loullaii one evening last. week. Miss Bernice Gallant, who spent. the past few weeks in Charlotie- town taking ii teaclieris course, re- turned on Au-gust 4th. Mr. and Mrs. Tenis Peters have risitimz with them now Mrs. Pet- rrs' sister from Montreal. and three of her childrerl 1 Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Pins-au with some of their family from the l'.S.A. are now visiting in Duvar with Wilfred's lolks. Mr.---and Mrs. Tenis Peters and air. and Mrs. Manual Peters spent a pleasant. evening recently with Mr. and Mrs. Gus Peters. Mr. and Mrs. l-inward Arseiiaiilt. and lll.i.iP Atlole spent a recent evening at. the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Finnnn. Wcndsiock. Mrs. .lnr Pincau and tiimily. Mrs. Freddie Martin and iamily. all of Durar, left recently to be with their husbands in Ontario. l.ni-rairt- Gallant motored 'to S.iimmei'sitir nn August 4 to meet sonic. of the St Anne pilgrims re- turning !rorn.ihrir weeks trip. Mr. and Mrs. Joe S. Gallant of Piiisvilln i'i.sit.eri at the home of Mr. and Mrs. I-TC. Gallant. How- iiin. recently. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Arsenault, Mr. and Mrs. hank Richard. Mrs. Sntiip Connors and Mrs. Margaret: Arsenault were visitlniz in Lot 6 zernntly. Mrs. l.rn Arscnnuli and Mrs. .Vem- Arsenault spent a pleasant. evening recently at the home of Mr. and Mrs. .l.'ll. Gallant at For- rst Vimir. Vlrs. Ray MacMillan and child- ran, of Saint John. who were Vis- iting her sister Mrs. Jar-Tc Gal- lant. Hnirlan, haw now gone to visit hcr mother In Dock Road. 'Mr. and Mrs. Francis .VlacQiiar- yin and family of Wiimot motored tn Hmvlavi rt-cnntly accompanied by Mrs, wiiiaii-ri ('al'lii.h('l'l and little son who had been visiting them. Mr. Avard Harris of Xniitstorcl was in Howlmi recentlv where ho procured some lumber in re-build it-is barn which was recently dr- itrnyed hy fire in an electrical norm. Visiting in Howlan recently were Mr. and-Mrs. Joe Doiicette and daughters. Thelma and Francis. of and Mrs. Robert Peters and their two chil- dren of Blomnfield. Baptlsed at St. Marks, Lot 7, on Sunday. July 23th was Alma Anna. infant of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Arsenault. Sponsors were Laiireltn Ar-eenault. and Dannie Rogers. aunt and uncle of the child. in. Oscar Gallant mcwi-ed r.-om L..M...h..-.---j-:- -rm: auaaoriiiy. CFlARLO,'l'l'ETOWN -.-..- Many Koreans Bitter over ll.N. Treatment By Bill Boas BUWON. Korea. Alli. &-(cPl- Kan Kl-sok spun: from the stinking fibre sacking that wss his "bed" on the "hospital" floor. He interrupted the conversation going on with the patient in the next, "bed"-33-year-old Chang Yong-sik. Chang had been telling Halifax on August 4th accompan- ied by Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Gai- iant, also of Halifax. and Mr, Steve Gallant of U.s.A. Mr. 0. Gallant returned to Halifax the following day accompanied by Marion Gallant. Plusviile. Mr. and Mrs. Mark Griifin and baby left Howlan on August 3rd on their way back to work in lo- ronto iiiter two weeks' vacation spent with their parents in How- lan and Lot 7. They were accom- panied by Miss Cirvrnents at Rose- viile and Miss Meurna Griffin of Lot 7. V Mr. and Mrs. Robert Arsenault had as gursls for 8 tow days, Mr and Mrs. Albert liotimim and their three children of New Wat- erford. Cape Breton. They left to return home on August Rrd. ac- companied by Miss Beatrice Ar- senauii who was going to Sum- morsirle. . TID DU Sunkist Largo New Local Outdoor Grown Large Outdoor Calliornla Red :65 like how he eame to occupy his cora- er of the foul, open-ended ware- house thei. hed been turned into a hospital. He had been aioosing his words cu-etuliy. Intiiriated by the riear-double- talk. hie neighbor exploded: "What he is trying to tell you la that we hate the United Nations. "when we were turned out of our homes and hiding places the United Nations promleed ua iood, and clothing) and medicine, and said acommodatlon was ready for us. Now we are treated like this. Korean: look after their animal: better." 0 The angry Kang. once a rest.- aurateur with his own business, and feeble Chang were among the more than 300 North Koreans in the hospital-improvised in emer- gency conditions by ii Canadian Red Cross worker, Jaci: Purvea of Cranhrook. B. C. In a. kidnap operation on ii gig- antic ecale, the U. N. military com- mand here has evacuated nt least 120,000 North Koreans lroni their homes north of the Nth parallel, most from the Chorwon-Kumwha. Yunchon' "iron triangle." A lurthcr 230.000 persona were evacuated from the front.-line ar- ens south of the parallel. Military necessity was given the reason. The sick wei-e ehelteimd in plac- this barn. An estimated 90 per cent of the evacuees were mal- nutrition cases of one degree or another. The move was not organized, the United Nations Civil Assistance Command was given no informat- ion on which to plan. Rice for Seoul Province's normll I8 N 1a5c . C.OC.O.'.OOO wi1il0m TR eeooeooooooo OXWOI. SPIC”".S.PAN FRUITS. ORANGES. per cloz. 436 IFi"E”iiv POTATOES. lilbs.for 23: CABBAGE. per lb. be TOMATOES. Zlbs. for ..........29c CUCUMBERS. 3for............ 19: lGRAl'ES. perlb. 25: '7 same CO-OP . AND SAVE requirement: has been running about at the rate of I 1-I metric tom monthly eince March. Now weir tortured population of 3,500. 000 in the province has almost l boo.ooo refugees and evacuees. Medicines are 'oned among the provinces at 100.000 units each. Seoul Province with its phenom- enal influx in groul, under-equlp- ped to heel its aick. Only four .gulaa- civilian hoa- pitale are available to U. N. 0. A. 0. 'me rest. are improvised in hov- els like um. Yet eeoul oii:y'a moo- bed city College I-loepitel. one of the largeet and but equipped in Asia, is unavailable. it was requis- "AID itioned by the militay command for other purposes. Says Purves: "We've been driven to improvise emergency act-ups in old buildings. disused etablel. bombed-out were- houscs - anywhere we can get them out of sun and rain. "me job boils down to finding these Pmple food. clothing 'and shelter wherever possible." Purvea has arranged a supple- mentary ration of powdered milk and vitamin tables, boil: it with rice into I lruel and his patients get a cast-otf beer-cantul three times a tiny. Purvee in this one warehouse has put :22 moribund malnutrition cases back on their leet again. But 27 died. Most of the North Koreans, though hungry in their homes end dugouts-in which they were hid- irig alike from the Chinese com- munists and United Nations air strikes and ei-tiliery-would rather have steyed where they were. They complied without demur on prom- ise at good treatment. 0000 at- A"g 1351"! O C Is"Progressivo" To Be Dropped? By GERALD WARINO C O O 0'I'rAWA-Juat about the last memento of John Bracken: un- inspired leadership of the Tory party in the almost contradictory tag ol "Progressive Conservative" which he wished onto it. Indications ere that tag won't live out this year. When the Winnipeg convention of 1942 wooed and won the Lib- eral Progreeeive Premier of Men- itiobe as the new chief of the Tory Dirty. part of the payment was noquieacenoe to Bi-acken's demand that "progressive" be tacked onto the party's name. Bracken hoped-and as every- one now knows. hoped in vain-to sweep the west with this appeal to the old Progressives of the limb. . Many Conservatives didnt like the double-barreled name, but the conventi eccepted it to get Bracken. Now, with Bracken long since east to the limbo, the party boss- es want to get rid of the awkward appellation. and return to "the historic old Conservative Party," as they like to call 1;. a O O 0 But they want to do it graceful- ly. without the connotation that. by dropping "Progressive" from their name. they are denying that they are progressive. It won't be as simple as ivas changing the name of Bracken l ' me C DEEP 0”" 3 r 'iumie xiii; did. which ,at that House. 'riiat'e an old brick home in downtown Ottawa which the party bought curly in the Bracken regime when hopea were high that I-xoneat John would lead the 'm-- in out of the wilderness. The Liberal Party had its Laur- ler House-or at any rate Mao- tlme we: just about the same thing. The 001'” had its Woode- ivoi-th l-louse; What snore fitting than that the Progruaive conserv- etivee have their Bracken I-Iouael But "Bracken" Home didn't go down well with Br-acken'e succee- sor. George Drew. It wouldn't have done to renune it "Drew House”. for people .would hove iaughedmnd attributed the change to Drew's vanity. So they decided to redecorstc the old building. In the process. the entrance was redesigned. The old porch with its "Bracken House" sign uas done away with. and a new and architecturally much more pleasing approach to the door was built. It was won an improve- ment that few people stopped to realize that the Bracken House sign had followed John Bracken. Graceful metal lettere affixed to the brick proclaimed that thiawas 'Progressive Conservative National Headquarters." 0 O I As far as the double-bu-reled name is concerned, most. Toi-lee either don't like it or don't mind -396 .39c 1 LB. 1: meeting of !.O.'e from 0! Qug. no resolution favoring such mun V-M ml? be the ones to ltart the ball rolling next all. the party will be back to the name it used in its heyday, when old Sir John A. Macdonald ruled Pointed by President Truman over Douglas" objections. already have plued 5 "cl! they drop the P. out of P.O., Shop it Few like it. The question is um mo” likely to come to a head when the P C. National Association meets in its annual convention here next November, Then somebody is almost certain to introduce a re- solution to rename the party the Liberal Conservative, Conservative. National Government and Progressive Conservative-but none of the new name: had the since then it has been variously National "Conservative Party". Delegates to I oooeoooooooe Heinz - Reg. Yellow Label New Cro Sine TOMATO KETCHUP 25c Crunoiile - 16 0:. SWEET GHERKINS 39c ', Luland Seville -. Lge. 24 0:. i MARMALADE. 3 for 51.00 SALADA TEA. III. 396' pares. pimd. 3Ibs.fer UH ED-DP SIJHE "SHOP 00r0P " commie: rm; mica: mm wxmr you '1': term rams mo mks arm: M555 FAM005 Bkxiivps .47 MWER Pkicm F oaocaams A Burford - 15 Oz. PEACHES. 2 tins for . .. .. . 39c Pvlbbell that Just plain Coneervat. ve had under Sir John A.- MEATS Sweet Pickled COTTAGE ROLLS. per lb. ' smoked Sbankleee - Average 6 lbs. PICNIC HAMS Regular Maple Leaf I-IAMS-Wlioleor Half Maclilnellieod ' BACON. perlb. Newseuon SALMON.,per.Ib'. 59': 3 sii.ms(:"';ii9”i'b: SHOP CO-OP .. N Bill. BATTLE-Sen. Paul Dou in, mi Sonata aiiaiciaxy Committee hearirgg inlont?l:De:)lIIi1t(;coly.eti:ai.a.irn' manta by Pruiaent Tnlmln of three Federal district 1uug..i..,,,'” l' glu in posed three men ft: the poets. but only Ono, .yo.,,,h'..m PER! (fight) was appointad. At left is Cornelius J. Harrington :1 M3 "SAVE j 943---... ......... .-- ....--.-'........-. . , mover in, 1,” "lb IFilii THE BEST iii niiiitisroiimrns; ; At t E -p...ui.u.u Auunhh Hon-one than t0N' l PHONE - auto 2 . . 69: 69c 75c 69: 35: L