A‘ i . ms é m: wrsrrnngourroun, . l0 Ottawa It. lillllllllml and IIINOI 00in!!! News, Subscriptions. Myer-fling underpin. Sand g -_---_- oooooooooooooo ooo oooooooo porno a u. AN lVERSARY SALE ‘rnoaspar. rains! Illll lsaruanat . y anon savmcs roi- Th8 ENTIRE ramp! This la the beginning ‘of our 10th year in busi- ness and we have taken ourvhigheot grade stock and cut the prices way down. Come in and look flrfllllld - - . the values are terrific. "7 mod-raise one-m ' ~. foilewraarueieeeaialfliittw‘k 5‘. leoiatdo, Wall ltloet: W» Ilia Wlifi Iii‘! GI "will Hater emu liar! J1 Granville ennui ia-erelle. or lb Ill was. ram as u» can ma. _cap Jhalwmuyoll we‘ army's-scum ‘de- L ‘g or “£2341. flout. a liar. -"km1‘.i.n BOG/QR‘? 0w ll/tvr: w» I/AVE M97’ JAI-"vi w wr]. chi. . tl- . . 3?... "vif-if-lhfi —I!0G WOIH used now. ayzgnlJf-figfif ensingtpn. 1i. _ ' " ' ' A _ Illa “III - Ill m“ ) _ k- Pearl Ni-HES “RM-W TUNE. claal end 1a rumor Piotinian anditonl- fiflsih dard Silver males. Harold B. Mll- ‘n, 1mm smmneffl“ _ Ileybyivm Iiffirrc-sf-Vlllllfim ALSO NEWS - ' L , _.._'_ . F?“ JW§'!“M.‘3%&‘°“ W‘ Shows—7.30 and 9.15 Nfithlflifll .reoeiveda glen-m hetero . of ‘ ' CAPIIO l. W SUMMERSIDE é oooooooooooo Debate 0n Budget Ends UITAWA, Nov. 28 — (C?) ~— In Miss e, quick wind-up of the formalbud- get debate, the Commons tonight voted 141-47 against a Progressive Conservative mction oi non.con- fidence in the government. ' A few minutes earlier the House had rejected by a vote of 162-27 a 0.0.11‘, sub-amendment to the Pro- gressive gonservatlve motion. e C. .11‘. and Social Credit groups voted with the Government against the Progressive Conserve. tive motion. ‘ Progressive Conservative and Soc- ial Credit members joined with the Government in defeating the CC. F‘, motion. The sub-amendme ‘, moved last night by M.J. Ooldwell, 0.0 F. _- SALI- — 6 t I0! BALI meme‘ Radio, Ion‘ (sliver Mlle "wet-l Tug. lnmgteahlesPE-atmeron fiiirffsidiiigi u-zr-ail ._IUI BUYER — m. RN. O'- m-ygn n! HON RQIIIOW Hid 00» ,, will arrive first week oi Dec- will b0 announ- u-aeci .4101: SALIL — Nine year old horse, 1400 libs. Sound reliable. pflcg $90.00. Also 300 us. mixed aln at 55 cents per bus. Hilfred ling, Middleton. 48-2!- .-FOI QUICK SALE. - Few Choice Straight Standard Males and Females. Also Marked. n Matheson, Freetown. -r0a BALE- — odol A- Wool" resided. Guests included mission. carburetor hood rlol- w. some. lidcCardJe, Middleton, ear. radiator new to- bolt" - James moi-seer. lot 16: Victca‘ 8 i Lu" 8t. Eleanor's'» Stanley "2941- ‘Danton. st. lllemlor's.~'6 gh arts, 9 inch w eels. Mstgoiiald, Albany. 11 --'l‘0 BE MAIICIID 1N ENG- LAND — Many friends in Sum- cnmpnaws snons White. Brown and Black. 8"" 59c 1 to 4. eooaeoloo-ot Lamas’ snops Broken ll i W ’ - - and Mlssgsef SilliiQS. olllnlfrlril: gggnxlietmglnasl "iRBlack! Blue and Brown. All heels. $2375 to $395 ‘ml egular" 1.98 Special " " ugh Special MEN'S OXFORDS Men’s Oxfords, Black. Kid and Calf. Regular $5.00 to 3.50 for‘. EWEEEEEEIEEI =' ooioo ooooo —DOTABY ‘MEETING - The meeting of the Bummorside Rot- ary Club on mesday was devoted exclusively to ‘ ' matters. main discussion was on the “RH ' " Magazine. Due to the absence of the president and vice president. past-president W E Darby p IEIEIITTFJ Blacks, Browns and Blues in Pumps ‘and Oxfords; All Heels, $4.50 to 3 I _ . $5.95. Special . . ent member h d th 5910B three-fluid, (ilvgixcatloiiaiioiéedlt cal and Evangellstl if- MEN'S WORK BOOTS Men's Work Boots. Panco and Leather. Regular $3.50 to $2.95, For .v.. ‘ Men's t... R710 pours Men's Fine Kid Boots. . pair lot. Reg. . $5.00, for We also carry a complete line of Goodrich and Gutta Percha rubber footwear, high- est quality with newer and smarter styles. Lowest Prices. the Jubilee of the An at Dandi, all singing byggigr glsfiii’; 11"‘ 110i a 110lo- Dr. Cur-rich work am-ohs the boys and the story o1 great love the boys had for ._wAN'l‘ED — Couple of rooms lu light ho by middle-_ gged couple. Phone 1614. Aunt- Simian ‘M’ w‘ " ll-fl-li. _mmoannvo car Bulk Wheat a; Tuesday and Wednesday at ilflo hundrfilhgiélfll bags. M. K M“ Em‘ ' ii-ee-u. _..__ 0 410MB IIDM OVIIBSEAS - the service men recently ed home from oversees is . Ralph Bishop. son of d Mrs. Thomas Biehom. Staff Sgt- for two and ons- L-JIIEIEIEIIEIIQEJIE .. rel noes ooooooo study and follow God's word l truly mounts; Christians in u keroue and spent most of the war in a German prison ca/mn-S. --DIA'l‘!l A!‘ HAMILTON — Many friends in Malpeque. St. Bangor-é; and Heanilton. dootply reg e sudden passing on ov. - WILL BI a meeting ieth. of an old and esteemed lady d the Kensirigton bmwh- Gm- in the person of Mrs. Elisa Comp- U-‘ifl B- E- 5- L» 1'5‘!!! - ton. who died at the home of her nephew. James MnRamssy, Hem- Ml‘. LQui-B Mart n and Mr. - Martin who hsvlo spent thenmizt three weeks in Halifax returned) to their home in- Bloomfield on Thurs_ day night. i Mr. Leo Peters returned home rcm overseas this t , is the son of Mr. $5” Mgeeklelc-i’: half years-S. u o. l‘ l \'._ h i Clnuiredlsliain ma! mic way AA a-____.__. Allilllflil SALE Al‘ lPIlHGII-D llaalam at Stone Cottage. ll. on , IIIDAI. novnraaa me a1- ue otonooa on‘ inert‘ , . v_ ).. I llton. at the advanced age eighty-climb years. Her d came as a shock George affectl to St. John's Episcopal El when the by the rec- assisted n; u Ramsey. v’ “SUM! Bfllfil. on miset. ma. r d runairt-G. m -au-. m. claims. painst- tel‘ has plane from a d vfltto . lilnenten "Meeting In“ Sunnersida Recognition N Veterans m“; y" M“ °fl “Mllrevociing at .the m b Kinsmen u, of Summer-side at tho Olym- Kinamen club across similar "lull-P meeting of the Compton. 0f a onate nature. and own as Aunt Eliza. she men. friends. who delighted . venlng with her. hymns sung were eerer My God To ‘Buckaroo "Abide with Me." The Macdougan. and ‘Ilhe funeral was Joseph She is gone mem- f by blankets the leader expressed regret ‘that the Government had not proposed an effective full-employment plan which would require the use of “our national credit in terms of public need to make possible a largescale investment program, the ublic re- conversion o! war indus ies for peacetime needs, the public dove.- o ment o! new industries. of scien- resources." tcry policy had been advanced for the elimination oi extravagant ex- penditures and no program outlined or the expansion of essential ex- penditures for social security and purchasing power needs. Similar regret was expressed that tax relief had gone to corporations and high income earners rather grhankée; those in the lower income ac . The subamendment disposed of, the House immedlatel began div. lding on the Progress vs Conserva- tive motion oi want-of-confidence in the Government. lloveal llow rum Foiled Axis liadar wi- BY FRANK CARI! WASHINGION. Nov. as -(CP) ~ An eerie form oi electronic war- arc-radar coun that blinded and greatl ‘to 15515.13» partners .v to‘ their knees. it. was revealed to‘ v. First complete story oi a titanic battle in the other. in which var- ious Allied devices scientific jammed Gomian and Japanese radar sets or feiniod them out of the play at crucial stages of the war. was told by the United States Office of Scientific Research and Development. It is mainly the story of three ingenious techniques: . ‘me employment of millions of g lions from a1‘ shot aloft in shells and from surface vessels. The foil, bad: an "echo" to seam enemy radar sets. mom Allied craft from the foe’: radar beams. ‘lire development of a system or ffid‘ "this?" E. cans": 0n O e .7’ D0 all the sf Ber and from f. . J pitched ht olutterh . h...” o‘. r... v...»- m... "ha? ' which the radar 1:‘. e-naelih lpilee of which obliterate any target I can? OX1 vaiourroos sraaaow‘ m n. liah Jeri-aw has climate on earth . mun-tie: lam m an social time glitzy u , ‘ ‘buns ‘fl-fii v’ tfic research and oi our natural 4 It also regretted that no satisfac. n; Peters of Bloomfield. m"; other 503's. are lri the Canadian Army. Bert, who returned home g shgrt time ago and Joseph and Robert still remain overseas but are ex- pected home shortly. A Wflldlll! oi much interest to friends in this vicinity took place in the Alberton United Church at p. m. on Wednesday Nov. 14th. when Dorothy Man ece of Mr. and Mrs. James HOCig. 5°" 0f BTOOKIYTI. became the bride k. The ceremony was perform- ed by the bride's minister, Rover. end .7.M. Fraser. The bride w,“ becomingly attired in a grey tail. cred suit and the matron of honor. Mrs. Walter Wells also wore g grev silli- The bridegroom was ' by the bride's cousin, . Walter Wells, Immediately aftcr the cere. "lolly U19 IIBPPY young couple left by car for their honeymoon trip. On their return they will reside in Hosebank where the groom is a rosperous farmer. rlends wish W68 Wtlgere: a miscellaneous shglvf or a M; , Willis: ‘csiii-‘ufi of “Bitch” i'§‘§’in'éni1'“§..$“"‘i’°' °’ iiii"""°‘ I “lambda mp0 sent a 111s num- erous and useful gifts were opened by Mrs. Walter Wells and Mrs, Wll. lard Ozughlln while the accompam. I118 good wishes wero read by Mrs Rc Hardy. Miss Johnson very graciously rsssed her than the ems an ll “For She's shell?“ It 5t, E1 ' . H ‘ - ed it miiimiiiiismiiiid piafimfiifii. §3~mi“'“mn'st"i§i fie“? “ " "“ oollrtme 1h u» osnadiaiiqiiiia???" Ml’. and Mfrs. Fred 0, Mona; g1 Summer“ were wslcomg on Thursday at the home and Mrs. Robert Hunter- c! bank Mr. and daughicr, Hunter's Lodge on Mrs. I-Ieber Hardy and were visitor-g at Blmdam-p. -- __.._ ____.._-. IHSUHHHEE ALL LINES RALPH HEM ~ '4 y- ‘Q-l .."¢.Yi." i? trainiiiftiaa r. n iiioltrv _ PREMIERS HOLD— v gnlllldred Irving Hardy of 305s. - m In Momoriam EIEEHEEIIE '5' Wfilfiiiifillilr‘ SHOE STOR E SHEEN 8p MacINNlS JEiLJ SUMMERSIDE ‘giilffilfillililifiliilfilfilfifilfilifillfilfiiifilfilil EILHEITEEIEILEIEBJEIIEIEIEIEJIEIEEIEJBQEEEHHEIEIIEIE- (cxmtinued from Pane 1) woe-k must be done to tails of the Dominion Governments offer to the Provinces in exchange for the surrender oi taxation rights. y cases. The Guardian is informed.- lhe Federal PIOIDOSBB state a principle but do not state how far they are prepared to go in support of that principle. Th0 co-ordinsiing committee hopes t0 gee definite figurm in dollars and cents on how much the federal government is prepared to Wood on various maintenance and re- construction protects. Ferry Terminals . Dd rd Isl d has a bar.- Pm“ wt: in atxhe project of project. Nova Scotla members. particul- arlv those from Halifax and sur- rounding oonstituencfes were N‘- oused this afternoon by the rooort qlvan at a press conference v . Hugh Young. ter oral oi the adian Armv that British ship- m‘ “in. "i. "£8X.‘.““M§l$ Queen so » an - from the Halifax run. and-will BIRTHS fi°"§."i?.i'i§‘§§".§a‘n§i°'.ii€." ov. - ' gang‘ Godkih, City, a son, Charles Lgfig-LM Bowma ville, Ontario, Nov. 21th., 194d to Mr and Mrs. Fred Lane. nee a daughter. DEATHS waanuaron - At saint John. New Brunswick. Wednesday- NW- ernber 28th. Isabel Cogswell widow “m, m; Judge A. Bannerman Warburtcn. Hmeral private from 5t. Paul's Church, Charlottetown. Friday, Nov, 80. Please omit flowers Intermen ' People's Cemetery. Chsrlottciown. In loving memory of 9"" D- Nicholson who an: Nov- M ma. Th? month of November again is - here Ole of the saddest of all the with-E's we watched you slal- w: tended "T-iii.‘ 151R" eoild not make WI Iii!!- bedde your a: ' ion" lei‘! noon OI!‘ h 16h‘ I DQMacLcor imiisirraijlan EMBALMEII. '(Fred.:. McGuigan). m“ dcck in New York this winter. ‘even if their passenger-lists are chiefly returning Canadian serv- ice personnel. Gordon B. noi understand the reported de- cision at all. Quota Commodore "Sir James Bissett. Commodore oi the Queen Elizabeth". Mr. Is- rior said "stated that there was no port. in the world at which docking a big ship was less trouble than at Hal-fax, There is no con- gesflon in the port itself. and un- lcadings have run smoothly now for upwards of three years. Why someone has decided to operate these ships to and from New York instead oi Halifax is a mystery. It will involve expensive double handling of retiu-iring troops. slow down movements and add greatly to he expense of bringing fighting men home" he sold. 1t was equally a mystery to Mr lnnol‘ whv Canadian turkeys and plum-puddings for Canadian ser- vie» personnel overseas should be sent to British and European port-s from New York instead of from Halifax. It was possible. he added that, ‘at the particular time turk- evs were being shipped to Can- adlan troops. no refrigerator ships with cargo-space were avaailable in Eastern Canada. Farm Estimates Beginning morning sessions. the House of Commons today concen- trated on agrlrnltural estimates Agriculture Minister Gardiner told the House that it was not surpris- that so many people were leaving the farm in Canada. for the simple reason that the rural population was growing loo fast to be accommodated on the old "family-sized" farms He gave an example of a familv in New Bruns- wick which had lived in that province for four generations and had 810 descendants. "I would like ic know". he said. "how thev (members ialking about remaflning cm the farrm could keep 610 people on that farm". Mr Gardiner indicated the need of a- changed national farm economy and outlook. Repatriation To Be Completed By llxt Sept. BY JAOK BRAYLIY OTTAWA, Nov. 28 - (OP) — Repatriation of 128.000 service per- sonnel and MOT» than 36.000 war children remaining rseas ill be complete next August or September. Mai ~Gen. Hugh Young. DSO. quarter- master general, said today It a prun conference. The last Canadian war casual- rom the lmropean theatre will arrive in Halifax on the hos- Di l sh . . l0: personnel J Air rorce personnel ‘ ’ between Vii-day. 24. leaving us.- cl and l0 Isnor. Liberal mem- ber for Halifax stated he could More Nazi By NOLAN D NORGAARD NUERNBERJG, Nov. 28 - (AP)— A tale of studied treachery accusing German leaderk and their Austrian " Arthur SeyssJnquart of engineering the conquest oi Ais- trla was unfolded today before the International Military ‘Tribunal. The two defendants singled out as the chief architects of the an- schluss were Seyss-Inquart and Franz von Papen. both of whom listened attentively-end appar. ently uncomfortably-as prosecutor Sidney S. Alderman road ,lnto the record their own boastful words as evidence B-Btinst them. Sharing the spotlight was Rudolf Hess, former deputy fuehrer, who continued reading his 12th book in the courtroom as the Tribunal announced that a board of psychi- atrists had found he was "not m. sane" in a strict sense of the word, but conceded his loss oi memory would “interfere with his ability to make his defence." _ The ‘Tribunal will decide Friday what his status will be. Dr. Gun- ther von Rchrscheidt, lawyer for Hess, expressed the inion that his client probably wo d be tried in absentia. The court disclosed a ruling un. diers and 10,000 airmen will re- main behind indefinitely in the Occupation Force. The Navy re- ltself and offers no 162.000 rmel were moved home in six months following VE-dav - 12.000 ahead of the program drawn up lust be- fore the end of ills war. Bv the end of November the total num- ber of repatrlales would be 175.- 000 p to Nov M. 11000 war brides and children had been moved to (hnada but. the number remaining to he growing at a rate of -both in , . With the wounded cleaned up. ft is possible the hospital ships Lady Nelson and Letitia. and the trans- port Ladv Rodney may be pressed into service carrying war brides and children Railway Announces Timetable ilhangos MOIWTON, N-.B., Nov. a _. Commencin ing Halifax a}: 8.10 p.m., for Mont- real will be operated daily instead of daily execept Sunday, up is and including Sunday Dee, 90th accord- ing to en announcement from lie. glonal Headquarters of the Cen- adlan National Railways here. mencing Se. urdl»! Dec 8. the Mer- ltlme Express eastbound will leave J r Maritime points noon daily lung's‘ of daily causal. inclhtuflLkrflldflvgin In the opposite direction, com- v Treachery Reveal/ed At War Trial ‘ Hess Found “Not Insane;" Court Arranges For Britons To Give Evidence. der which the fcnner Foreign Min- ister, Joachim von Ribbentrop, will be able to get the testimony of high British personalities who refuse to s. a: ea witnesses. Un- der the nil g, he will be able to have mutt-appointed interrogators obtain statements from the wit. nesses he desires. The court said the four Britons in question-Lords Beaverbock, Kemsley, Londonderry and Vsrlslt- tart-may come to Neurnberg and testify if they wish. Prosecutor Alderman devoted al- most the entire dia-y to re- sentatlon of evidence on the or. man glut, to swallow up Austria Into t e record went a declaration "von Pa en made in i934. soon after he a ved in Vienna as German Minister, saying: “Southeastern Eilro to Tur- key is Germany's hin rland and I have been designated carry through the task of bringing it within the fold. Austria is first. on the program." The statement was attributed to von Papen in one of two affidavits by George S. Messersrnith. now United States Ambassador tn Mex. ico. who in 1934 was American Min- ister to Austria. The defence felled in an effort to bar Messersmitlfs affidavits from court, but scored finally in a fight to compel at least some of the accusers to appear as witnesses if their evidence is to be considered. The latter fight was based on ef. forts of the prosecution to l. ‘uca an affidavit by Kurt Sch , former Austrian Chancellor who was unseated by the Nazis lust befcro the anschluss. The court upheld defence objections and ruled that Schuschnigg was present in Nuern- berg and, therefore, could be sum- moned by either the prosecution or the defence if his testimony is de- Willi! Ylill EARN! WIN PROMOTION i New. in yew own hem you eon lroh join-self quickly for u belie! lvturo, with pvoeileoi, homo-study peer-see In loci-limping 1nd Mourning, Ienegqliy, Panel Ivonne: Ind Conyerldill» or snyol 23 cooler- wie- roan for hoe ' Feller Qn-qununn-uoaue- IIIIIII JIGAIIOIIV learn IDAHO U. _ ' howl. can. n1 .loetnlb - vdCI-a ' "‘ , ~ . ‘ i '. . '