Y _ llrmy Planning Potential Force of 200,000 lien nr noooms now osmoti- mu some Writer oscslwaan 19. 194s / OTTAWA, Dee 17—Wii.h the trad- I itiom and the lessons of a major war behind it. the Canadian Army l; going ahead with its plans to Lraln. a potential force of 200,000 men, both active and reserve, for any eventuality. To meet the inspect of the gtomin age, Army headquarters has created individual training com- mands for each oi the arms oi the service, from infantry to ordnance, from artillery to signals, with war- trained officers to direct than. To link these individualitiee. it has somewhat revamped the long-stand;- lng office of director of military training and entrusted it to CoL R, W. Moncei, O.B.E., DS.0.. of biontresl. who at 27 was command- er of a fighting armored blishdfl uIld the youngest Brigadier in Can- gdian history. - Now. at 29, he has insane the co- ordinator of all army training, the man who maps out a broad policy at the direction oi the Ohief of the General Staff and leaves it to the training commanders ‘of the various nrnls to work out their own details for a potential force of 25,000 per- manent and 180,000 reserve soldiers. The sharp changes in C. O. T. C, walnut; at the universities can be cited as an indication of what may come about in the whole field. The main momentum oi the college soldiers’ training now will rest in the full three months of stmamer training he will take as a second Lieutenant. rising to a Lieutenant after vwo summers and to a Cap- tain of reserve army status after three. 'I‘his concentration of effort CH lihe one class of roll-filly 2-299 m"! —- Much of the attention glvcn to automatically raises the problem ofI opening week oi Australia's 18th how to prevent disparity bill-We" it and theothere. composed d! oiiloes-s who must soldier be among those under intimate study at headquarters. with 511 these problems. however a. framework or silhouette sharper l i l filler‘ ing his first work and in spare time. Methods)? Federal meet this situation are believed 10 i l l than anything a peacetime Canada‘ lifi§ ever had is taking shp-Pe- 51°“ tn its rootsare the new. llama-Mi.“ srhooll where the latest methods m the various time Wm 5° "WM pi-unarily to permanent or force men in and other reservists in summer. 1n line with a. policy of bulldlngj government oi that pcriod. i university BT85- liraltgitlililfssticgraiuly 0f memwldil“ for the active army. about 26 9"‘ manent forte officers have m! sent baok to colleBo l0 Kathe w“ degrees since the end of we“; They are men Whose courses u inerrupted by serviee but eventua y the universities my be trawl"! shhuaig shouts; peiflgeflntlfgtmomiclz: ranks m” requirements. This mph directed toward! nucleus ugh’? 02:" :*,§’,“°.°‘....,"‘,°‘l..“ul’8 s... 1e ......-iu ...“ army of instructors m?! evil: lighting army W" l“ ‘unllties. 0on’t Make This Mistake When Child is Constipated ra- oii‘. b15351.» socially no laaaa upon education l! may“; ' the with histhlv The Dtmw“ witbea no one til! evaa the fuuialt c d won't 051M V’ mg an. Make laxativotaklnl‘ "I!" ‘"7 2”,‘ lid ahd youndl. motherl Get Chll u‘ Sn ‘new bode! at your dwelli- l MAKING oaosno sons Salt brine is treated electrically o produce caustic soda. and liquid tlllorir-e. active Long in 1961 was a. central figure wlmen to the C.O.’I‘.C. in events which led to the downfall ‘that. i-ho Labor oarlv was in a TljlE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Receive liatlonal ilertitlcataa Front Life Underwriters uaaow c. aoaaxan Three local life insurance men, Messrs. Harold C. Bohnker of the sun 1M9, Edwin C. Johnstone. 0,1... U.. of the Dominion Life and Thomas A. MacAvlnn of the Great West Life were honored yesterday with the presentation of National Qlll-llly Award Certificates from the Life Underwriters Association °f calladfi- The presentation‘ t i. made by Mr. c. h. Black, CLU Q, m9 mimully luncheon meeting‘ m‘, _____________ -—-l Veteran lahorite Slams Government in Aussie House B: WILLIAM srswanr (Qlllodlan Press Staff Writer-t; can-smarts. mo. 1'1 (co. Parliament was captured by m. year-old John Thomas Lang may. appearance in the House of Representatives somqw 15 years after having been one of the most widely-discussed public personalities in the coun- FY. A bitter foe of Communism who once also fought a Fascist organ- ization called the “New Guard" which sprang up in New South Wales‘ during depression years. of Australia's short-lived Labor A powerfully-built six-footer taooularlv known as the "Big lla." Lang was the idol of the orkintrman in New South Wales. Australia's largest and most in- dustrialized state. Twice stats» nromior, his second term ended ln 1932 with the dismissal oi his Labor administration by the state governor. Lang had been a menaber oi the slate parliament for 33 years when he resigned in August to contest a Federal seat and lead his own nartv oi l1 men in the recent general election. It was his second attempt to enter Fed- r-ral parliament and among his nrmm he was the onlv successful candidate. He hurl tried in 1943 "ml missed narrowly. ' An unexpected turn added in- terest to his maiden soeecb in (‘ovslhrfffl durimz debate on thr- rvdrlFPSR in reolv to the speech frow- ihr- throne. The debate had barely started when Lang dolivnrfid an attack on the re-elceetd Labor govern- ment which be charred had be- come the “right win! of Con- gm-yqgigm)‘ when he sat down. the debnte whlrh usuallv secs on for several davs. collzmfitfl- Possibility oi‘ Silllt In his speech. bang contended position similar to that of PHYlV depression vears uficn n Doll" disagreement snlll it in two and brouaht about the defeat of the fslbor government or hmes Scul- tln who is still in 1b.- honse and one of Prime Minister Chlflcyb anwm c. JOHNSTONE, c.|..u. the Provincial Life Underwriters Association held at the Charlotte. town Hotel, with the Provincid President B. J. Rupert, c.1,u_ p“. siding. In mflklng the presentation, fir. 313°)‘ Dointed out that the certifi- cates were awarded in recognition of a superior job of quality life underwrrting. The recipients had met 99115111 high qualificat-onl — namely the writing of a substan- close advisers. In the party split and government defeat Lang was a major influence. A member of the official Labor party until seven years ago Lang of New South Wales from 1925 to 1927, and then from 1930 un.i. his dismissal by Governor Sir Phillip Game in 1932. At the time a dis- pute arose over Lang's roposal for a 10 per cent state tax on all mortgages. to be paid~by finan- (‘lill organizations holding them. During his first term. Dang in- troduced such measures as vlidows pensions. family endowments the 44-hour week and what was re. carded as Australia’; most, liberal wnrkmens compensation plan. The Scuiiin government had been in office slightly more than a year when Lang became premier. usain in 1930 as the depression was inking hold of Australia. During a series of conferences between federal and state govern-l ment representatives on depression‘ financial policy in 1931 Lang pm. posed whisg became known as the. "La"; Dldh" including reduction of fixed interest charges on Rlvcfn. ment bonds and reduction of in- terest rates on loans from Erit- sin. Alternative proposals the Scull!“ government believed itself forced to accept included reduction of Wflses to which Lang refused to diiree- The disagreement Drought the break in the party. The Labor government fell and its succeggnr was a government of the United Australia Party which included several former Scullln ministers. iiustom and Law Differ on llrink SYDNEY, Australia, Dec. 1B - (OP) — A woman's right to drink at the bar of a hotel with her menfa-lk is recognized by lsw In Austnalia but not by custom. A custom of many years’ sland- ing decrees that hotel bars remain sacrosanct to men. and that women who want s drink at a hotel con- fine themselves to lounges and indies’ parlors. Hotel managements maintain the custom by keeping women out of bars under the law permitting them to reserve the right of admission, and the custom has become so firmly entrenched in Australh that few women ever attempt to obtain. or think of obtaining, a drink at a hotel bar. One Engllshwmrlan new to Aus- tralia. and ignorant of this cus- tom. recently tried to get u rirlnk in the saloon bar of Sydney's most fashionable hotel, as she would have Was Labor premier and treasuzirl THOMAS A. MacAVINN tial amount of “quality" business during th, preceding year. lie com- plimented the recipients and urged thou present who had not already qualified to stri-ve to do so. leveral important business mat- W" 01 the Association were dealt with at the meeting. including the appointment of n nominating com. mltiee to present a slate oi officers for the coming year, at the an- nual meeting i-n January, The barmaid refused to servo her, and called a uniformed att-"ln-lnnt who escorted her to a nearby l lounge. I The incident received great pro- jminence in the Australian press because she was the first woman for many years who had tFV-JC to flout this custom, and it brnqhl to the fore the strange nnolnaly | between law and custom. also back- 1 crl by lmv. Much public and editorial (lis- cussion followed the incl-dent and this has since brought to llzlil Fri? g fact that the custom may gradual- .iy be lareaking down. I Newspaper surveys 61591059 t\vo of Sydney's 640 hOlPlS MVP taken thc revolutionary stI-r. of allowing women into bars. Both hotels are in the suburbs. and both are well-patronized by women- One hotel permits women ‘o use the public bar bubonly in oil-peak hours. and the other allows them to use the saloon bar without con- dill-on. Both hotel managers say women are their best-behaved PuS- tomers. One manager savs: "They are so quiet you wouldn‘t l(l1')‘N they were there. I'm going to szlvo the adequate and suitable in.’ ac- commodation as a reward for "wit oruprletv when the building sllua- tion permits." that Ganada ll. S. Ties Remain linruffled in Troubled Worlti By C. R. BLACKBURN Canadian Press Staff Writer WASI-HNGTON, Dec. 19 —-(CP) —A yem- that saw representatives of almost every country cumin; i0 Washington with pleas or coin- pialtrlts left apparently unchanged the serenely efficient relations Le- tween Canada and the United States. On the surface at least the mu- tual respect; and friendly feelings that have made Canadian-American relations a model. remained unrul- fled by the fefrific ploy of wordd events which made 1946 int-mor- able. The Republican victory in No- vember putting Congress in the hands of that party for the first time in. 14 years brought no for- seeable threat to continuity of hose relations. There was a possibility that tbs Republican majority might program of multilateral free trade agreements but these negotiallons are so closely tied in with foreign policy that it seemed unlikely that high tariff influences would oo- erate. It was reason-able to expect that the Canada-United States agreement on development c-f St. Lmvrence _R.iver power and navigation would make greater progress toward a- chievement under the new congres- sional regime. for two reasons. t l. The great uungalldlfil18l prop/i .1 nent of the scheme is a Rcpubli-l can, Senator Aiken of Vermont. l 2. Two soft coal strikes an 1048‘ emphasized the necessity of estan- lishing greater resources of hydro-- generated electrical energy for in- ri-tstriai and domestic use. | The agreement under which Oan-| eds took over maintenance of the Alaska Highway, and other post-l war settlements of projects ‘loln‘-| 1y handled during the war. "rem-l ed to be working smoothly. Nego- tiations were golmg forward to lm- prove border-crossing formalities; with respect to both persons and materials. and the yea-r brought considerable simplification. Inch country handled its price control and de-eontroi grobiems. withbug seriously affecting the other. Embassy Changes 14h in the year the popular Ca- lldldn ambassador, L. B. "Mike" become under secretary for exter- nai- affairs. Ha mthle experienced career diplomats. who fittd himself into the Washington some. m». Wrong, familiar with Washington because oi his set-vi» ltd!‘ when the embassy was n logs- tiep.‘ found no difficult problems awlitln his attention. PR8! ly the most delicate exist- ing time between the two coun- .trle| itn to do with fairly secret done without trouble in Euglalnd. the‘ handicap the administration "n its l‘ -kenzie King to the White House lprobiems bedbviliing Mr. Pmman. th Pinon. was moved to Ottawa to M, g lying and being on lot thirty-seven _ W" lildcf-‘QJW 5V in Qllpfla’! Odlllty aforesaid bound- Wronr» one o! Canada: mast ed and described u follows um is l l FOR featured, which ore A PLEASING GIFT — i\T . LEASING PRICES -- - $3.50 to $5 COME IN l AND LOOK THEM OVER l‘ l HENDERSON & CUDMORE discussions. in the ioint defence permanent committee and else- where. o/n development of defence. weather and flying facillttes tn |the Canadian Arctic for the benefit of the whole continent. So far as can be learned these long term planning talks are proceeding with- out rancor and without [Test dif- ferences of opinion. Visits of Prime Minister Mac- vru-e not as frequent es when President Roosevelt lived but that was not surprising. The late presi- dent and the prime minister were old friends. President Truman at once sought to perpetuate the ciolq relations between the Canad- ian prime minister and the White House. __ But, both Mr. Mackenzie King and Mr. Truman have been busy men this past year. particularly the president. and fortunately for Canada that country has Ilui. been involved directly in many of the Mortgage Sale To be sold by pablio auction in front ei file Lew Oollrh Building in Charlottetown on Friday the lrd day o! January. 1041, at the leek noon all and tony: COMMENCING at the eoeocn lIu-oe day o! December-L“: 1m eynonualav. Enquire. land llfvlyuholllltbonortll Sport Shirts ore worn the year round by young Vmen—und men too! SPORT SHIR TS l YEAR ROUND WEAR A lucky purchase on o recent buying trip enables us to offer for Christmas Giff Giving the smartest sel ection of Sport Shirts since pre-wor days. Especially in the handsome shodll Seol Brown - Ton - Fawn - Green - Canary and Blues. Sure ” thirty-seven aforesaid hounded and rained in an Indenture of Mortgage described as follows that is to say: bearing dist; ti); 12th day of Febru- COMMENCING on the east aid; oi ‘ary, 1917 made between Dnnlcl the Dromore or Little Hell Bond in lllughes of Dromore. Farmer, and the northwest angle oi a farm forQJane Hughes his wife, of ths cm merly in possession oi Michael Mr- part. and Edwin P. Moore, Fred- Guirk now in possession of Patrick erick s. Moore and George M llieGali-k and running thence east Moore, Executor-s or the w||| 01 for the dlltance oi one hundred Thmpntlu, Moon,“ the on," m“ four chains and twenty-four links and ten chains thence north five and which mortgage bv divers m ti“ eastern boundary of u“; I chains thence welt to the said road mcsne assignments is now ‘vested in llld three hundred l/nd twenty l and hence south along the said the undersigned. acre; of land aforesaid hence south l "lid l0 "In 91MB 0f vfimmmrb-l For flriber particulars apply to along the some twenty-nine chmhishlent containing flflty-flvg aerel of ‘McLeod t Bentley, Barristers, IM and twenty-one links to the place j lend e "m" "W" or lees. and is,l'rince Street, Charlottetown, Prince of commencement containing one the farm or land conveyed by deed ‘ Edward Island. hundred acres of land a little more from the Commissioner of Public Date-rd fourth December, 1840. or lean. Lands bearing data fourteenth day ‘ ALSO all that other tract piece of December i881 to Hugh Sherry. or parcel of land or premises situ- The above sale h made under and ate lying and being at Dromore lot by virtue oi a Power of Sale con- twest along the said north bounds y ‘of Mrs. Hayes land for the distance 10f thirty-four chains a/nd twenty- four links (34.24) thence running north by the magnet of tho year 1764 twenty-nine ohnins and twenty-four link. or to the north boundary of Ed ard Mooneyh land thence east along the same thirty“ HERBERT W. PLATTS. MELARESNS. i-ll-l-ilil Allgnee of Mortgage.