...,.,_ .- THE 7 GUARDIAN, (JHAREQ'I"I"ETOWI:<I_ race. NINE "I'll raise with a package of super-delicious Post's Grape-Nuts Flakes" Hog pal. That's a blue chip if I ~ 53w one——speaking delici- “Atid these malty-rich. honey- fnlfltfll Post's Grape-Nuts Flakes t’ n whole stack of good nourish- IIlPII " \ spadellll of carbohydrates for elm gy." "And minerals for muscle and growth and rich blood." "Using two grains instead of one in making Post's Grape-Nuts Flakes is a pair that really pays off -—in double breakfast enjoyment and rosy-cheek nourishment." “Fellahs-I think I'll pop over to the grocers right now and buy up enough Post's Grape-Nuts Flakes for a full house." \V.C.T.U. NOTES L094? “ i/GZ-Kidlfiii Till-Z PRESIDENT'S LETTER 96- 3.1;‘ lf1>t White Rdbboners: The it’. ha". agreed to give us cdwnrtiou in the province. ' 'l.de scholarships. Let to the attention of in the temperance ium ince. l? lieu our winter's pro- .ttlr zeal. faith and hap- rrtr Sunday School Con- to Mrs. R. T. Chis- . lirllllllllillll, to be lJWIXlClHI prizes. wanton are coming into Le‘. us give them some- ltng to do. ~Edlth McNeill. PERSON \l. RIPS. AGE FROM THE PAGE EDITOR Ladies. This is my .A. E. Cook as- s ity for the page zcmltcr‘ lsnle and the re- Provincial Convention Ill under-took the Oct- ~ 1e and the report of the ll School of Narcotic Ed- l. ‘The thanks of the pro- p. t» these two ladies. And please rend in your S. 0. S. call ~Elsle Wright THE LEGALIZED LIQUOR TRAF. C. a: carried on in the . qi gr-ngslrops. is the trag- cvilixzriion Good cltcnship and requires that what it would not only be made . l l‘ he made prevalent; and l ii rvil should not only but dcstroycd. The orcd itself to be the ~ the most blighting "FUR" of tut rnntlcrn civilization. v.l‘._v l am a practical ti» lrixitlcu is thn,t leg- alizing the manufacture. sale and use cf intoxicating liquors as a beverage lg wrong—as all history and every development of the traffic proves it to be o - moral, social. and political wrong. ~—Abra- ham Lincoln. in campaign for state prohibition law in llliorrls. 1855. "DISEASE SOLD HERE" Alcoholism is a disease; or. ii’ you prefer. a sickness. We license places where you may go and expose yourself to this disease if you wish to do so. 1n fact you may buy a case of what causes alcoholism at hund- reds of thousands of stores main- tained for sale of this commodity. In order that no one who wants this disease will be unable to know where he can "catch it". approx- imately one lllIlldl‘ECl million dol- lars are spent every year adver- tising how and where the disease nray be acqulred.—Badger" Pro- hibltionist. U. S. A. DID YOU KNOW THAT Beverage Alcohol is (l) a cort- tribirtlng factor in deaths from Cancer; ti!) provides a favorable environment for T. B.; (3; is re- sponsible for from fifty to severity- five pcr cent. of venereal disease; t4) causes alcoholic gastritis (in- flammation of inside of stomach.) I5) blamed for cirrhosis of the liver because it is thought that cirrhosis is related to a nutritional deficiency which may be caused by heavy drinking; (6) causes delir- ium tremens; ('7) causes alcoholic deterioration (weakening of the mind); (S) is considered as one of the four great health scourges of nrodern civilization (the other three are cancer, tuberculosis. and venereal diseases). "l DIDN'T KNOW WHAT T WAS DOING!" It always seems a weak and rttterly silly excuse for a person charged with reckless driving or. indeed any misconduct dangerous to oihcrs. to plead before a magis- katc: "l was drunk and I didn't know what I was doing." To ac- cept such a fahlous excuse would relieve a ‘person of any guilt of any crime whatsoever. Nor should the excuse be considered as a reason why leniency should be shown to- wards the offender. For any person to indulge the liquor habit to the point where stupefaction sets in. and he "doesn't know what he's doing." is in itself a major offence because it renders that person a distinct menace to society. f-‘reqmy tongue-tingling ‘ Bxgeppermlrrt. richly coated with g °°lll. delicious Moirs chocolate. 1i “airs Portland Gale 0f 50 Years Ago Is Recaflgd PRDVINCEIOWN. Mass, Nov. 26 -—tA1,-‘*)—.F‘1fty years ago this week-end the steamship Portland sank with all hands in wild weath- er off this rocky coast. Today her loss is still a mystery. What brought the Portland side-wheeler her course? Where. actually, did the ZSO-foot craft go down? . Old salts from Cape Cod to Casco Bay still chew over these questions. Not one passenger or crew member of the 176 aboard survived to answer. More than 100 other vessels were lost along the coast from New York to Maine in that hurricane, always called in New England the "Port- land Storm." The Portland cast of! from Bos- ton's India wharf in snow squslis. Most of her passengers were Port- landers on the way home from Thanksgiving visits. Two hours later she was seen passing Cape Ann 1n a growing blizzard. but still on her course. By the trout night-Sunday-her wreckage and dead were strewn on Cape Cod beaches. 50 miles distanz. Wires were dorm and roads blocked by drifting snow and it was two days before Boston got the news. For seven days more rampaging seas tossed the ‘Portland's flotsam on 25 miles of beaoh from Province- town to Chatham, but only 34 bod- ies washed ashore. It was widely thought that the vessel sank _near SO-fathorns-deep Stellewagert Bank. 20 miles off this port. but in i045 historian Edward Rowe Snow of Winthrop. Me.. said his divers found the Portland's hulk four miles off Highland Light. Nnrtlr Truro. SHOW is historian of the Portland Associates whose relatives ‘went down with the ship. They set up the organization in i908 and have held annual memorial services in Bos- tnn. Most of them are getting on in vcars Snow said. and have decided to wind up the organization. The final ceremony ls the dedic- ation of a memorial tablet at. High- land Light November 27. Tribute Paid To Mr. W. S. Thompson MONTPuEAL. Nov. 26 -—Walter S. Thompson. director of public relat- ions and advertising. Canadian National ltailwoys and Trans-Cun- ada Air Lilies. ls relinquishing his air line activities as of December 31, it. was announced today. follow- ing‘ a meeting of the T.C.A. board of directors. He will devote his full time and attention to the railway and its other ancillary services. GR. McGregor. president of 'I‘.C. A.. on behalf of the board and him- self, made "grateful acknowledg- ment of the valuable services ren- dered by Mr. Thompson to the air line since its inception in 1037. His outstanding knorvledtze and experi- ence ln the public relations and ad- vertising fields have been of im- measurable advantage to the com- pnnv." In ll years TKEA. has ex- panded from 122 miles to nearly 16.000 miles of scheduled routes across Canada. to llnited States centres. across the Atlantic to Great Britain. lo Bcr-muda and to the Caribbean and Mr. Thompson felt. in view of his other transportation responsibilities. that the t'me had arrived for the air line to establish a public relations department of its (HVII. Revivdliritaiws Oldest Industry LONDUXQ. Nov. 25 — (CP) -— Bnskebmuklng in Britain is taking on a new lease of life. It is the nation's oldest industry, going back to the days of the ancient Britons before the arrival of the Roman legions. In the period between the First and Second World Wars the indus- try was hard hit. by imports from abroad. These were sold at prices which would not even cover the wages of British craftsmen. During this slump the willow beds special- ly cultivated to produce osiers for baskettnaking shrunk from 9,000 acres to only 2,000. ‘ During the war there was a big demand for home-made baskets. Large quantities were required for airborne supplies as well as for sig- nal equipment. The willow growers re-organlzed their industry on a voluntary basis with complete suc- cess to meet these demands. Now that. Britain is restricting imports as much as possible in ord- er to save spending abroad this wartime activity is not only being maintained but increased. There are now,7,000 baskebmakers and the aim is to raise the figure as high as 25.000. This will include blind and disabled persona for whom basket weaving is an oc- cupation particularly well suited. Mansion Man Sentenced To Four Years In Prlsn (By The Canndlen Press) DORlCi-lESTm. N. 3.. Nov. 26- Immk Thatcher of Moncton, NJ. yesterday was sentenced to serve four years in the Maritime Pen- "itcntiary for armed robbery. Thatcher. proprietor of n. Mone- ton dry cleaning establishment. was charged with attempting to force a Monctnn real estate agent to sign receipts for payment of went. William Bainbrldge and William Souooup, also of Moncton. pretri- ously had been sentenced to serve l. two-year term on a similar Boston-to- so far of! charge after being found guilty of atdixfl ‘flint-oboe in the robbery. THIS BILLION-DOLLAR Across the nation - in cities, towns and villages -- the B of M has kept your money, and the money of ' 1,700,000 other customers, hard at work in 1948 . . . helping Canadians in every walk of life to make a better future for themselves and for Canada. Here is the money that: makes the wheels of commerce 1 turn . . . that provides thousands of business enterprises - from the largest corporation to the smallest one-man show _ with the credit they need to carry on from day to day. To citizens on salaries . . . to farmers with seasonal p incomes . . . to merchants, manufacturers, business- \ men in every worthwhile line of endeavour to municipalities, school boards and governments . . . t0 churches, hospitals and all types of \\\\\ e \\ CASH: The Bof M has cash in its vaults and money on deposit with the Bank of Canada .\!r.<)lllll‘l1§', to MONEY in the form of notes of, cheque» on, and deposits with other banks . 114.887.350.95 INVESTMENTS: The B c.’ \l has over a brllz" 1: ll 1l~r= invested in high-grail: government bu" ls and t 1 st d1“- public securities, Wlllill have a ready r.. '5‘ - on tlrc Bank's hooks at a figure no! gr market tvrluc, they amount to . . . . . . y‘ l»003.5l3.959~0? . .=t.'-'»"¥ a. The B of M has other bonds, debentures anti it. stocks. ‘representing in large measure as<rstrrrcc to 1 5-- inclustry for plant development rn the post-war period. These investments are carried at . . E 12520379988! CALL LOANS.‘ The Bof M has call loans which are fully protected by quickly saleable SECUIIIICS. 'l'hcsc loans amount to . . . . . . . . . 31.1773 18.00 QUICKLY AVAILAILE RESOURCES: Tixc zrccs Irstell above. all of which can quickly be tumcJ into msf unfit‘ 7509f} of all that the Bank owes to the public. These "fluid: assets" amount to Sl,~4.90,359,l97.01 LOANS: During the year, many mllllOflS of dollars have been lent to business and industrial enterprises for production of every kin<l—tr» farmers. l-ISITCT- men, lumbermcn and IJl‘|(l1Ll'$——l\l (iiizcns in all walks of life, and to Provincial and ltlunrcipal Governments and School Districts. Tlrcsc loans now lmountto.......... IANK IUILDINGS: In hamlets. villages, towns and large cities from coast to crust the B0.‘ M scrvcs its customers at more than 500 LllllLCiTllC value of the buildings owned by the Bank, togetlrcr with furniture and equipment, is shown on its books at 45 6,26G,Z44.2) /—-—-I:'—§\ l. l‘. 1}‘ ,2 » . i 15,39l,60-i.7l OTHER ASSETS: These chiefly represent liabilities of customers for commitments nude by thc Bank on their behalf, covering foreign and domestic trade X10 transactions . . . . . . . . . . " 29.325.602.12 TOTAL RESOURCES WHICH THE Bot’ M HAS TO MEET ITSOBLIGATIONS. . . . u . . . . . . $l,99l.380.648-07 "—i-@1-- 7/7; STORY public institutions . . . hundreds of millions of dollars are being loaned by B of M managers at more than 500 branches from the Atlantic to the Pacific. That's a glimpse of the 01948 worksheet for your savings...the sum of your contribution to Canada's progress added to that of 1,700,000 other Canadians in the B of M family. BofM depositors’ savings-your savings - thus play a vital part in maintaining our high Canadian standard f living and in making Canada-thelthird greatest trading nation of the World. Yes, by saving at: the BofM today, you are helping to build the greater Canada of tomorrow, while securing your own future. l,\\ \\\\\\\\\\\\\‘,...... WHAT TIIEI of M IIWES T0 IITIIEIIS: DEPOSITS: While many business firms, mmufr‘ merchants. farmers and people in every type of busi- ness have large deposits with the Bof M, the bull: of the money on deposit withthe Bank is the savings of well over a million private citizens. The total of all deposits is . BANK NOTES: B of M bills In circulation, which ‘are payable on presentation, amount to . OTHER LIABILITIES: Miscellan items, represent- ing mainly commitments undertaken by the Bank . on behalf of customers in their foreign and domestic trade transactions . . . TOTAL OF WHAT THE BofM OWES ITS DEPOSITORS ANDOTHERS. . . . . TO PAY ALL IT OWES, THE Bof M HAS TOTAL RE- o ‘fi "l $l,s11,otr,226.a! (244,! 1.7.00 27,185,565.” $1,905.44 l,(07.4l SOURCES, AS SHOWN ON THE LEFI‘ SIDE OI? THIS STATEMENT, AMOUNTING TO . WHICH MEANS THAT THE B of M HA5 RESOURCES, OVER AND ABOVE WHAT IT OWES, AMOUNTING TO 139138054897 8 82.959.240.64 This figure of $82,9S9,240.64 is made up of money subscribed by the shareholders and, to some extent. of pro fits which have from time to time been ploughed back into the business to broaden the Bank's services and to give added protection for the depositors. I U EARNINGS —Aftcr paying all overhead expenses, including stafi salaries. _ _ making provision for contingencies, for bonuses and contributions to the Pension Fund, and after and for depreciation of Banll premises. furniture and equipment, the BofM reports earnings the twelve months ended October 30th, i948, of Provision for Dominion Income and Excess Profits Taxes and Provincial Taxes . . . . . Leaving Net Earnings of . . . This amount was distributed as follows: Dividends to Shareholders . . . Balance to Profit and Loss Account . 4 . . - 0 8,459,659.“ s - . 1,980,000.00 a a r 8 5,459,669.54 n n | 0 3,600,000.00 . . . 1,859,669.54 BofM EARNINGS ON THE SHAREHOLDERS‘ INVESTMENT | ' On each dollar of the shareholders’ money Invested in tho l Bank of Montreal, the Bank earned 10.17 cents in 194$. AND How To TAXES . . . . . a - 5-59 “I!!! THEY WERI To SHAREHOLDERS | a a 0 4.54 cents DIVIDED. To SURPLUS , . . | | , 2.24 cents BANK on MONTREAL fiaadda 70:4: ?ué...woar<ruc wrrl-l CANADIANS IN lvuitr. wxrx oflrrn SINCE urn maid. Walter Peters. brother of the bride. attended the groom. The ushers were Joseph Collins and George LeBlanc. The bride chose a floor length ntcdcl gown of candle-light sat-in. It had a scalloped yoke made of Belgian lace and the skirt fell ln full folds. Tire lollg sleeves were loco and were tied at the wrist (WEDDING A wedding of wide interest to many friends in the Maritime Provinces was solemnizcd o-n ‘Thursday morning. Nov. l8. i948 in Stella Maris Church, East Saint John. when Rev. F.J McDonald. with nuptial mass, united lll mor- riage Hilda Mary. only dnirghtcr GUIMOND-PIIEII dress. baby mums. of Ml‘. and Mrs. George Peters. .\‘l|h hows of sJlill. Both her drtss East Saint John and I160 J0\f‘.‘,‘ll.ll'llCl tnwrr-oirlcrcrl veil were sliglltlv parents. only son of Mr. and l\i."s. Henry cntrainc. {he carried a Cftscaie Ml". bouquet of Better-Time roses. i Mrs. Rfillt" wore a floor lt-n-th. ‘ire-n ct ycllotr- moire taffeta Hnflfazcn Street. Guimond of Bast. Sriwt John. The nuptial music was rend-red by the church organist. Walter Klnsella. Paul Gallagher- rvas {HICWIHFHTHIKESS and long gloves o'er.» solold. handc rtl llYIlClliIlg mftitrlul. Sl-c ‘The bride's .attcndant= rvsreltr cd an arm l-ouquct cl ntauve Mrs. Jo-hrr Rcvie. tnattron of lrrnlt‘. ‘-t‘t.- nrvima Ali's. Flclgci-‘s dross lent c-i a and Miss Mary Flcrgcr. ttitlw-i - "r tp-trc and-dream and glove: were also made of the name materiel a5 her Her flower-a were After the ceremony. a reception was held in the Admiral Beatty‘ Hotel. The toast to the bride was proposed by Rev. FJ McDonald. and the groom responded. Toasts were also proposed to tlhe brides- maids. to the parents and grand- and Mrs. Gutnond left on a wedding trip to Montreal. Upon their return they will residq at. 108 The hrlde was on the secretarial staff of the Catholic Welfare Bur- eau and had been made the reclp- ed back to disco‘ tlrfrp-IPBI \ iirnned embers into flames which mahogany loffrtn Hcrltlrblc. The groom ls a i-,lr;"r_ic?l ln- destroyed the build "3. yellow lamp. ding were: Mrs, Savoie. Monctcn; El. ..<~_. Mr. l‘ His u- Mrs, strrmor 0n the staff of the Saint John Vocational School. sociates pruented him w“); OWTMIW" Euests at. the wed- Levatn LeBlanc, Mrs. Yvon Brun. Mrs. Severe Du. puts. Mamranrcoolr; 118m; and Mrs. John Bowlan, Charlottetown. FOAM LAKE. SlSlt.-—(CP)—The volllniktr flro deparment scarcely had finished conga ulattng itself aecently on extix. ernoon blaze Wlltll ‘ring an alt- ircy were call- wind had P.- KEIP TOURIST! IIIAIIIII IDNDON-(CPJ-U d new national heoltll cilia-Elk” visitors from abroad are now on. titled to free medical treatmen] visitors staying a mOnIh or long: cr receive a leaflet giving m!) d“ tails of the scheme. explll an accident. WOOTUN BASSETI‘. Wil England — (C?) - Runninl picturesque rambling vicar-age h "places too great a. strain on wife and pocket." writes Geoffrey Lummitt. explaining w hr: has resigned as vicar. procedure i! they fall alck or he