SANUARY 10, 1952 MY HIGH ENERGY TONIC HELPS lay iiluussllis , Scott's Emulsion- with natural A It Vitamins- p I u s a d cl e dl minerals--helps tone up adult stems-hel s so u n d t e e t h , strong bones. in " husky body! Try fl today! SCOITS EMULSION IWGH ENERGY rolwr 31-ecial for H:-ihrlay on that date. nctt 44 and Jack 15. cnsnnt to take. Won't trnm children tween 3 and 15. sweeten the sour stomach that often )1 nut-OI-ordur' buwels. Made by I reliable vrznluet. at your drunlst. only org assurance G4- psckago today FAMILTS BIG DAY PETERBOROUGH. Oni. --- (CF) . New Year's Day was something the Garvey family. shore three generations have their Grandfa- lhcr Timothy was 76, father Em- clvl-: Cold-Sick Child this.Pieasant LAXATIVE relief he bowels open without needlessly n Ereottlnu Ehiid-give Children's Own Tlblutl. pl ripe. For ey also help goes I: t e (We. THE CENTRAl. GUARDIAN This column is reserved for news of local Interest, but advertising of n newsy nature may be inserted st live cents e word. strictly pey- able In advance. .....m-mE....mj-:- JlMMY'S TAXI-Phone 525. Mas. soansrows Ladles' Wear. special values. nowlurn mammal roos- wnan at 175 Queen Street. ycaaswzu. for Better Photo- graphs. , MADE TO MEASURE suits for men with extra pants free at Jack Cameron's. PLAYTEX GIRDLE5 now at new lower prices at The Fashion Shoppe. . FROM THE Auld Sod, cloths. at J. P. MacPherson and Son. .l.ailored-to-measure sale at 2096 discount. FUNERAL YESTERDAY - '1'l1'e funeral of Mrs. Gilbert Arsenaul: took place Wednesday morning from her latcgosidence. 253 Fitz- roy street. to Si. Dunstan's Bas- ilica where Requiem High Mass was celebraied by Rev. Francis Bolger, who also officiated at the grave. The pallbearers were John Walsh. Maurice E. Griffin. Raney Gallant, Wilfred Doucette. Clif- ford Chandler and Albert Gallant. Interment took place in the family plot in the Catholic Cemetery. SAD NEWS RECEIVED -- Mrs. James VV. Stewart, Norboro. has received the sad news of the death of her brother-in-law, Robert Fos- ler. at his home 1120 Blanshard Street, Victoria. B. C., on Jan. 7th. Mr. Foster. a retired customs of- ficial was a native of Ontario. but lived in Saskatoon, Saskatch- ewan for many years. later re- moving to Victoria. lie is surviv- ed by his wife Minnie J. Mayne, formerly of Summerfield. P. E. Island: also a brother in Ontario. The sympathy of relatives and friends on the Island is being ex- tended to Mrs. Foster in her be- reavemeni. W s.A's TI 3 P E REG. VALUES EXTRA Pr. HOSE and FOR THIS Thursday - Friday - Saturday MEIIIS HOSE . . . . 69c MENIS TIES . . . . 690 In Following Combinations Two Poirw HOSE...........Sl.25 TWO see...-oosscwoeoso BALANCE REGULAR stock 2070 OFF 8. A. Mc"DONALD E&HOSE DIAL Hose 85c' to SL00 tries 51.00 to 51.50 SPECIAL TIE 31.25 SALE ONLY 'coffn'n 't'nrnnIbn" In 0 Winning Dcmrr Trylun oI"Coflee'n'Csrns- riodrg; I s cream -smzoch u e :Prepsre psc sge Nhniiia .Pudding rding to pscksge directions. but use 14 cup cooled oodee sad lid cups undiluted Carnation impo- rmrllllik I id.QtsIck, .............:'....ltl':. . o If you love good coEec - and if .'..-.. like so save money-remember this: Carnation Evaporated Milk brings out ' mm of the fine flavor of coffee than cream does.YetCamst1'ongivesl'tsexu-soochnessand richer never :2 ball the price of cream. Cunstion is double concentrated, homogenized and Iresnefined. his heavy enough to whip. No wonder is . mslnes coffee smoother and more delicious. "Iron Contented Cows" DRESSES AND COATS I3 11: OFF at The Fashion shoppe. BEFRIGEBATOEB. Ranges, Mo- tors and Washer repairs, Storey Electric. Phone 3001. BOMECBAFT will reopen Thurs- day, January 10th. at l oiclock. CHARTER. FIJGIITS to any point in Canads. or the United States for passengers or cargo Phone Maritime central Airways Limited. 3061 or 540. RANGE AND OIL BURNEBS serviced by Vlckerson Engineering 00. Telephone 2480. WEEK OF PRAYER SERVICE tonight at 8 o'clock in Trinity Church with sermon by the Reverend J. D. Davlson. FUNERAL SERVICE -- The funeral of Mr. William Edward Gordon of Guelph. Ont.. was held at E. F. McIntyre Funeral Home. Guelph. Ontario, on Friday. Janu- ary 4th. Interment. Woodlawn Cemetery, Guelph. Mr. Gordon was the husband of Lizzie Beatrice Cuscck and father of Mra..J. 1". Hersley (Lillian) of Kapusksslng. Elmer and Arnold of Guelph and John of Charlottetown and the late William Gordon of Edmon- ion. FUNI-ZRAI. -:1-'T.l-I-ZSl)Al' - The funeral of Mrs. Mary A. McKenna. took place Tuesday morning from her late residence in Glenroy to St, Bonaventure's Church. Tracadie. whore Requiem lligah Mass was celebrated by the pastor. Rev. Kenneth Mac-Pherson. The pall- bearers werc: Ambrose Mullen. Joseph Fisher. Alex MacKenzie, Joseph Barrett. John Lund and Patrick Mullen. Interment took place in the church cemetery where service was conducted by Rev. Reginald Phals-ll. FUNERAL OF MB. RYAN - The funeral of Mr. Albert C. Ryan took place Tuesday morning, Jan- uary 8th, from his late residence, 22 Union Street. to St. Dunstan's Basilica. where Requiem High Mass was celebrated by the Pastor. Rev. Dr. Patrick McMahon. who also officiated at the grave The pallbearers wctcl Lemuel Rush. Robert Gallant. Edward Stanley. Joseph Henderson. James Hughes and William MacNeill. The mem- bership of the Labourers Protect- ive Union attended the funeral. and preceded the hearse to the Basilica. Interment took place in ithe family plot in the Catholic Cemetery. The funeral was very largely attended. Personals , Mrs. Arthur Perkins and Mars. Frederick Blase. of Jamaica Plain. Mass. have returned touheir respective homes after spending the past month with their father. Mrs. Frank Hickox. Scpringfield. following thy: tragic den-ilh by accident of their mother. Mass Exchange at Pulpits Approved PRINCE RUPERT. B. C.. Jan. 9 - (OP) - As a gesture of inter- national good will from the spiri- tusl standpoint. Protestant Minis- ters ol Ketchlkan. Alaska. and Prince Rupert will will have a mass exchange of pulpits the first Sunday after Easter. A proposal for the exchange from Ketchlkan was accepted to- day by the Prince Rupert Minis- terial Association. IN MEMORIAM In loving memory of our dear Mother, Mrs. Cyrus Inge. who passed may on January 10th, 1951. We do not need I special day To bring her to our minds. The days we do not think of her Are very hard to find. ' Always Remembered and Sully Missed by Family. IN MEMORIAM In fondi and loving memory of my dear brother Funk Brehsut, who died January 10th. 1951, Sweet are the memories that lin- 101'. Desr is the one that Is gone. In memory I'll hold you dear brother. As long so the years roll along. I.ovi.n(Lv llamernbered by Brother Lloyd. T III MEMOIIIAM In loving memory of JOHN A, GLOW who passed away January filth. 1050. This day we do remember. ' A loving thought we give To one, no longer with no But in our heart still lives. Iver Remembered by wife and Fsmlly. i KINIJ Elli flt')I'l l,l1 Iii. w- I!4 -is THEE GUARDIAN. CI-IARLO'I"l'ETOWN ' PAGE THREE pp 3 WIDE STORE lWATClli7-(WBARGAINS T noI.s.A S'l'IlE'I'CIIEIlS CROCKETT AND STOREY LTD. The Passing Scene By Observer A news dispatch from Ottawa that one Federal Minister. ten members of the Commons. and thirty-seven of the Senate are now eligible gar old alze pensions is sure- ly of considerable significance. If cnyone had made such a predic- tion only twenty years ago, he would have been laughed to scorn as an Idle. foolish dreamer. It shows. among other things. how for we have gone as a people in our thinking concerning allow- ances of this sort. some will say the journey has ended on a note of ludicrousness. when even highly paid officials are given old age pensions. What- ever we may think of such a view. the fact is clear that old age pen- slons have at last. been put on a respectable. even fashionable basis. For the first time they are pen- slons in fact. Hitherto, while bearing the name. they were aci- ulally government subsidies paid to needy persons of a certain mini- mum age. There was always an implication of public charity which many deserving elderly people rightly resented. . Now that the well-lo-do and rich as well as the poor are elig- ible. a new cheerfulness has on- tered the homes of manv who are both "old and needy. They can step a bit more lively and face their "sunset days of life" with a little more assurance and content- ment. This is a fine social de- velopment in itself and it should more than make up for whatever economic waste may be involved in indiscriminate payment of pen- slope. The means test that still re- mains in a lower age group will almost certainly be removed with- in another ycar or two. Indeed. one would probably be not far out of line if one were to predict pen- szons for everybody at sixty be- fore another ten years have pass- ed. A Question Do our revered ancestors. if from some higher sphere they can wit- ness our goings-on. regret that they lived and died too soon? Or. are they thankful that they had their day before governments be- came quite so paternal with one hand and quite so demanding with the other? One thing is sure. Governments can give only what they first take. The more generous they are in old age, the more demanding they must be from middle age and youth. At present there seems to be no question about the coun- try”: ability to maintain its fin- ancial pace. witness the huge fed- eral surplus that must make the Finance Ministry Jubilant ”- it the same time. a bit embarrassed over its faulty mathematical reck- oning. It isnt likely, though. Hill'- the ministry will be too much con- cerned about that. It is much better to estimate a small surplus and realize a big one than to reck- on the other wsy around. What things will be like if the employment and general economic condition should change for the worse is another matter. No our. not even the most skilled economic experts, can see very far into the future. and perhaps it is I059: I! well. especially in our kind of world. The only thing any of us know very much about is the pre- sent, and even that, of course. is full of confusion. We do not even agree on whaty Sealed CHEST COLDS The penetrating. soothing but of Tnslusooslu Medicated Wool is so soft and comforting. ..wonderful for children. Helps relieve chest colds, sore throat, Nmchitil. Isis. and other schee Ind pains. p lnhels Tnnuoosus Rub, a com- penlon pra- duct. to help clear uphoed colds. Buy both at your dt :1 1 1 I e t today! THERMOGEIIE Mllllf Alli) WOO! we see. Three men look at s rainbow. The first sees what he calls a natural phenomenon The second speaks of it as :1 beautiful picture which no artist on earth could duplicate. The third is sure that it is a showing forth of the tzlory of God. so it is not surpris- in: that in an universal old age pensions plan one man sees an in- strument of political expediency and economic waste. while an. other sees an outward and visible sipn of the evolution of a funds. menial humanitarian principle. and 3 sound. wise. economic measure. In any case. I cannot believe that any person of good-will will be- Rrlldlze the allowances that go to those who have borne the burden and heat of the day. Nften with of this century should, in the longifor its own sake is not a parti- There can be no run, make for s more enlightened 0'-llarly worthy goal. A man who and properly adjusted society: durml; his lifetime sets his heart This opinion, however, was novlon it, coveting it above all other without its reservations. and many thzngs. is likely to find at the end dangerous potentialities were con- that it is little more than a wilw flI('I.. aidered. In summing up the dis- 0' the wisp. cusslons of the conference. an em- The best confirmation of this is moot professor of Sociology sairi- found in the Bible. ”He that seek- know what to do with it. wheniit should be so, but the fact seems the effort men make to they get it". or uords to that ef- fect. the summum There is no doubt that security is detrimental to the life of man worthwhile achievement without struggle and: no real, abiding peace without con- One of the fetishes of our time is leisure which I suppose could he called one of the by-products of security. Never in history have more people had more leisure to ”It is useless to after people secur. kill to save his life shall lose it." do what they liked with. Strange- iiy unless they are quite sure theyiwe cannot perhaps understand why ly. it does not seem to justify all find it. to be that desire for security as Indeed. it almost looks as If the Lonum of existence more leisure we have the more hec- Lic and feverish our lives become. iffy little to look forward to in the wav of socul-ily against ihelr days nf helplessness. Another Side i There Is. of course. another side. in all this. It involves the ques- tion as Io whether or not the cer- ininiv of some security in the fut- ure is likely to have any measure of adverse effect on the enterprise. initiative. and will to work of the, young and able-bodied. If this' should come to pass. it would be' iraylc in its consequences. There is no reason why it should. but the possibility is one which any student of the times must take! into consideration. I In his New Year's message Pre- nner Jones stated that there is nn acleqllate substitute for plain, hard work. It is an old fashion- ed doctrine which needs emphasiz- imz. but one wonders how well re- ceived such a challenclng message is in our day. Do the majority of people still cherish the nrlnclole it conveys. or do they scoff at it? A few years ago it was my pri- vilege to attend a cultural confer- ence in a Mid-West American col- loge. The lecturers were gathered from all parts of the English- speaking world. all of them distin- guzshed in their several fields of scholarship. One after another they laid stress on this very thing, the posible impact of increasing social services and security on the morals and culture of individuals anrl communities. As I recall it. the over-all opin- ion arrived at was that the evolu- lion of social trends which mark- cd the latter part of the first half SPECIA Campbell's Tomato SOUP. 2 tins . . . . . . 25c Bulk, WHITE BEANS. 2 'lbs Evaporated APPLES. I lb. . . . . . Lynn Valley PEAS. 20 151.. 2 tins . Aylmer Tomato JUICE. 20 oz.. 2 tins . Heinz Tomato CATSUP. I3 oz. . . . . Talisman Blend Domestic SI-IORTINING. I3. lbs MARMALADE. 24 oz. 41: 01147 Grant, srnrr: 9”4RLorr:rowN.nE.z. Pym; .. January Clearance . SALE Still continues All This Week V2 PRICE SALE llEMliAilTS NOW on Consisting of the following materials. Dress Crepe, Taffeta, Moire, Wool Plaid, Wool Crepe, Cotton Gabardine; also Wool Coatings and Linings, Repps, Damask and I-Iomcspuns; Print Cot- tons, Cretonnes, Curtaining and Col- oured Flannelettes. A GOOD ASSORTMENT COME EARLY-GET FIRST CHOICE THURSDAY MORNING 9:30 A.M. PROWSE BROS. LTD. TiS JUNE IN JANUARY When You Do Your Food Shopping aI'- ' PIERCEVS CASH and GARRY Best Ouolify - Best Prices - Besl Service FEATURE ITEM THIS WEEK New Crop Fresh BULK DATES. 5 lbs. . .. ....'...... LS FOR THE WEEK-END Machine Sliced 89: Juicy Florida 2, gAcoN, 1 lb; soc ORANGES. 3 doz. .. 98: I C Trimmed milk . 35: BOSTON BUTTS. lb. .. 55: GRAPEFRUIT. 3 for .- 23c 37: Shoumer I - Golden Russet , ' pong cl-cops . 59: APPLES. 2 do: 75: ' 35: roux HOOKS. lb. .. 21: Luscious - . 2” New London GRAPES. 2 lbs. .. 31: OYSTERS. V2 pint . . . 45: Corned . SPARE RIBS. lb. . . . . 25c CRANIERRIES. 2 lbs. 39: Sweet POTATOES. I lbw. . . . I9: . 95: ' ,:.'v-7sH-- CHRRV Qizuvrny up west "on not to man ms nu tome roan Mr!” 224fer22 5- In