whine Illlil. mmited. Ken- i-8i-2-4-6-4i nesdsy, hi). O. I-fl-I-I-d-l-‘f-l snersi "MT", matures:- A - .- frun uwfii-HF-il w-Ja. medium 5% DU l mum oho dsy, Isb. Freetown ter. - mmm-Min feeds; In,“ delwery assured HOCKEY Bede- Arllnvkirillueldinesdly. 3- - ei~"=~..2::."= "due. players to is - _ _ _ ‘Ilium l a1 2 2i Jemima symrarnr 4m. _ _ 1 Summorsids N- for h Ififygipathy of her ends the death of her mother, MI!- “ n. Haliett which took place Lfloilfvhlhflfiliflgu reasons-bio ‘i Bgfffi vs. Middleton. Woo: Rlihfbtgl. N S. transferred to Quebec -8 -—OAINIVAL Beilliill rink W06- lkste on’ v I-l-Ri Iii] sd Rev. (3.8. Tanton who h bein? u ifllfiiiilil TO - DAY / The lovely new ‘ I ,.i‘/Il6lIl6 $7M -:.£.""'::i' '" "' ‘eu cw ‘m? Jflowiniellieiey I , r EH10‘ » m. GUY u M; home in Fredericton on . “w” ”‘,’"s..__ Personals " uocxg l?" 5-3: Miss Tessie Mclnnis returned ‘ ORIA WARhN Wnwtlglgide oiymvlie illgvea as’: to her home in New Annan after " — " ,‘ , .miéigltgzan. 131x011” glam; “m; visiting friend; in Beyside-S, ALSO NEWS __ i nun. 9'9"“ -asr. sud Mrs. Robert Waite and SHORT SUBJECTS i mpi-Is- — Tenders ""1 "a blltlim gal b212,“ on ~ a‘... t, u... Undersignedwm n, v v~ - snows mo and, 9.1:. WWW” ‘Sm 1 ' -The union of including inmonfi credit G d ‘or liuttcArgiajigcéruolilviiorKseexlh ohliiver held sn enterteinmentnlin momnuon may be M4 the hail, Jen. i0. s very large Pull ' Manager m, qJcron/gadsiesnded and s goodly sum . low girqgiilegtnut necessflily aireiit- 1'" Mmtagu‘. “i W'L'D°1MW' z-i-s-e-ia-si. V-The own around River. ihsd s card __ ' y end deuce in I38. - Tenders will brill-pie Leaf h , Jan. I0. The the Under-signed ‘ JIIND to following were prise winners: WMY February istihuyfltllidrs. Howard MoKinnon and Mr. of cream to thelweeiey McDonald. A good time " u“ ndDlasayixnrgn fie; was enjoyed by sit-s 30m. Bonn d-Ilisslernioslnrklmstem- In“. etc. may be had st 01%: gy-gpher st Mount Plessant lit- d Manager. Lowest- °YtgW i" L port is visiting nei- i, w. I! “Emmy r“°°°l§_2_'5_°_12'_44_ and Mrs, Ed Lei-kin, Bayside.—S. .. rnar. ADJOURNED - A “,1 mung of the special session g u” supreme court, which had gen called to hear the conspiflwi’ use, was held at Summerside yes-I is-day with Chief Justice Thane A. i (gppbell presiding. The court had w; adjourned to this date for the retrials of John (Holman) imam. and aniuew Perry dis-r- wlth conspiracy to iliega dis- h“ alcoholic spirits. At the orii- nu trials the iury had disagreed- onsiotion of council for the y» session was further adjourned alil April ll-S. —Illster Ted Brown of Blyside is s patient in RC. Hospital suffering from sh sffected hend. His rnsny friends wish him- s gDQQOY recovery-S. —Mrs. Michael Morrison, Bey- side. who was very ill with pneumonia is well on the roldto recovery and her many friends v-v-ilsl be glad to ses her out again. -Mrs. Preston Noonan of Sum- merside accompanied by her littlO son, Billy have left w visit Mrs- N ‘s moth Mrs. John Sul- W-hile away take l course in —Mk. L.W. Hancock of the In- zemstionsl Fox and Animal Foods Sumrnerside h mm s business trio to 11PM Province which he attend- ed th Mon Fur Auction Sale 53¢ “CUM! and Osnldian 1hr Boles held in MontreaL-B ._ggt_ J. H. Waugh who gradu- from No. 0 Station, Mont Joli. has been mending the ten dsys It his home. in Wilmot Valley. the _5 guest of his mother, Mrs. Harry Waugh and other relatives end friends. S69 Waugh left on Wed- nesday of lest week for No. 3A. G S. l. Three Rivers, Quebec. whine he will receive advlrfesd the psiren of’ t‘...'.’..‘°u.°°""."“““'.i.§’.i..“‘i ve ey m flisshows Vllilifli Quebec tun. ll. Wedge I: lie-Elected Oounciiar Henry ‘Vatleldgeogweg re- fitted as esen v um- senile’; wee end war; in yu- °i i" l§§ Mdzl/‘n civic election by s insjor- he 0;“, ° “m. w” hem M whgch ii! 0i lflvotes over his o ponent m. ‘vmnhfifi “mm-m w“ d» hum‘ mm‘- Th“ l ' ‘ snd Mr. Andrew IAClMi" r-ide Church on Simdly eh s i-opresentstive was t e only v. lusts re-elected by scclsmltion. , is councillor Wed e's fourth iltive term in ths ward. i tiled M’! votes lnd Mr, Gilli: " THANKS Oeocrai P. ifwd. a. c. . n, "h" to thank south $1010 m” league. Bedeque. and muliids in sLimimei-side for their 9m 0f r h“ departure. gv-efl-li. Borden _ “In. I. ll. “(Jamil and flaw end with relatives st Bt- John, N. B. Mrs. George Osudet. who has beennlfl bright! inthe P2133‘ ggugsiq an I ' leran b2: lefties to ‘her home‘ n . Mn, lsiph Lelrd of [spent the week end st Halifax. Ilse ms Whiieof hordes r wee s wim- to Sunisnsrsids ovI the week-end guest of Nils Plu- line IlleIsese. » Friends here ere ma te know thlt Mrs. Mlfilret s- his recovered from her recent iilneel cizuss v‘- atgtw sbll a» be up Ind s- 1We are mu as near ‘hm-aw §u$ymwm_ mum; i" Y0u as Your Gslent of Borden underwent l serious appendix operstion in the Prince County Hospital Mail BOX was Joyce Love of DimfI-erside rum her home in Borden over “If Mlii Deplrhnent nlis the week-end "H We: u won s. It is ._.._. . "Mm! and it i- sent to you The reguilr suction plrty of the ,_°"°°- 0w Dru Store il Borden Women's Institute rm held m fiinilha best Jeeves in in the town hell‘ on Thursdly with h "mm. t; Ind everything eight tables plsyinl. lsdies ‘I a V "Iii-lbw n; won by . Aloysius Croksn. Ile ecllgzcuzwrervieefl“ t: 33 “m, pflnflilollw mflridaseslphloiolilflflto 0h - “m u m‘ ‘A "4 ‘m’ m“ wendeli MeeA-gley end ll!‘- Cieo W1" .£:cripilon| n" m“; u, rvtvim b Mr grater Nicholson lvsiilbis m‘ m‘ m“ n‘ y ' ‘ -'A "Hill. ""1"- mlll. acme éillilllliiltllii °°'-‘.'"“I.IIIITEII surmusms _ A Mi, _ , . slonmnufidiirs -(cP)- niivur Hsrris '11, general nretsrv of the south Wales Miners vim-won for :0 years until hil {lewwvsnt in lbfl. died at hil hbflle "B . ~ LONDON -—(OP)- Ollbt. ‘L. D- Gsmmsns, Conservative M? for ‘lornvev, m4 a meeting recently i1! we! filth-inn v0.1 this will be the let black-cut winter s! is II. r _ rsry. Flt-Liam. THURSDAY A1‘ 3.30 SUMMERSIDE ifillfililfilfilfflfillfilffli . Ahegweit Chapter I. 0. ii. E. Meeting Th0 T881113!‘ monthly meeting of Abezweit Chapter 1.0.0.2». was "=14 an Tuesday. Jan. 2'1 in the Council Chamber of the Town Hill. the Regent Miss Hunt pre- flidifllz. After the opening prayer and exercises the minutes of the last meeting were rend and adgpt- ed. Letters were read from National Regent, from thg com. mandcr of the adopted ship and from several of the boyg who were most grateful for the ditty bags sent by the chapter. The Treasurer's report showed good balances in both the gen- erel fund and war fund. The war convenor, yrlsg wand; r Wyatt. gave her report and stress- ed the need of more work, espe- ,clallv woolen goods for the boys of the navy. In December the following do- nations were made by the chap- ter: . for the sailor's and mine-sweepers fund; $50.00 for the Prisoners of War fund: $25.00 to the British Children's Clothing Committee; and $25.00 for the _Polish Relief fund. A barrel valu- ed at $75.00 was also packed and -sent to these suffering peoples 1t was reported that in Decem- ber 206 heal: had been sent to the lirport from the Camp Lib- Thls was dcknowledged by Woo"~ide. Mrs. Colin Stewart report'\ that 110 maga- zines and five ..ooks had been sent to the port and requested that "~~-- having same would phone her. Mrs. W. A. Allen. convene: of milk committee said that 40 needy school children were be- ing supplied with milk and 175 children were paying for it this wag nomination day Mrs. Tompkins and Mrs. F. J. E. Wright were appointed to be the nominating committee. Two new members Mrs. Lee Linkietter and Mrs. Hopkins were received into the chapter. After the singing of the Net- lonai Anthem the meeting journal-S. [This War-Four Years Ago (By The Canadian Pres!) FEB. 2. 1940- The Red Army used parachute troops and steel- roofed sledges iii an attack on the Msnnerheim Line. “Flfinigoigxlllgd o - t.."“€é‘.5€§..€i2..f"i‘i’° n. an» at seerch neutral mail. i!‘ i You Wani- RELIEF FAST from that GOIIGII, 00H! BIIONOIIITIS, ASTHMA Take... IIGILEPS IIXTIIE It's All Medication No Syrup- IT'S FiFl l YR ITS Hilftil ti: "w IHATQS WHY MES INDIGESTIDN Wiillfll’ Y0" BEIDW TIIE BELT? run I m-v n-ruoi leielgatlifilfslsi:lslh"l'sfie ins Golden Wedding Mr. And Mrs. Robert lthynes Todly Mr. end Mrs. Robert "W110. Dunstsff eeiebrlte their golden wed rig, having been married at Burghead, a gap- port on the north east of Scotland, 0n Feb. 2, i894. Natives of Moray- | shire they have been settled st Dunstaffnagc since 1910, when they came out on the advice of the late Rev_ Mr. Winfield, who visited Scotland in the inter- ests of immigration that year, p". VIOiI-Bly Mr. hes had been three years in South America, Where he made his mark as s rail- waymen. He belongs to an enter. llrising and successful family. one brother being Superintendent of the Natal Government Rail. way, South Africa; another on the staff of the C.N.R. in British Cfllllnblfl. while s. third is owner of a. number of drug stores in Vancouver: while his sister is married to a leading journalist on the staff of the London Times who is due here in the interests of his paper sometime this gum. mer. Mrs. Rhynes has a brother recently retired from the Im- perial Oil Co., Toronto. another connected with the leading ex- port fish industry in Aberdeen, and two sisters located in Edin- burgh. Of their own immediate family, Robert. Jr., farm; at Prenchfort, Alex. at Maipeque Roagi, James in Manitoba, John in the Middle West. Anna, mar- ried to Mr. R. P. Wlgrnore. Mai- peque Road. Elsie, married to Mr. James Leblanc, C.N.R., Saint John, William on the homestead. Arthur at Dunstaffnage and Douglas, foreman of a large weld- ihg plant in Montreal. There are also 13 grandchildren. The re- markable fact is that the family circle ls as yet unbroken by death in the children or grandchildren. Mr. and Mrs. Rhynes are at home to their descendants in the pro- vince at the homestead tonight. Local li.G.il.V.ll. Officer In Action" Friends will be interested to learn that one of the gunnery off- icers on the "Prince Robert", the first agti-aircraft cruher, 1.000 ions to oe built was Lieut. Kenneth Birtwistle, R, C. N. V. R. son 0i Chief of Police and Mrs. Birtwis- tie. The Prince Robert was in .a. two hour clash recently off the Azores while doing convoy duty, fighting German bombers, sinking a torpedo boat and destroying s. subm inc with depth charges. Lieut. Birtwistie cook over command of H. M. C- S. "Queen Charlotte" here early in the war. after Iiieut. Commander Connolly was transferred. Later he himself jcelriui sustain I Thlsell—nh rldvel sflseslinllled, but ll”. almlrwllnsrusrlly lhleinsdvsnee. COOIBfcrPhotos. CO s SU TION LUI IN rum clfcoss snnuli m , Chsrlettetown new, rriday, . 11- z-s-ii 2-1-2: TRAIN AND IIllIY-Jfhl fltin left Borden hat with w! nme.”""““"t..' .'.'?‘Yéi“ni'.°'f.n§”§..if. QUEEN'S CANADIAN FUN ‘as A ctsitribution of $18-00 hssliieui by the Royli Com- 51‘; hl€"1..”‘~.‘i‘.°.“°h.e§°‘*“ M‘ “ma. r - us Can- OAI COLLISION YISTIIDAY -A collision occurred at 12:39 n, IL. yesterday. when 2 csrs. bound in °i>bosite directions on Burton Street connected Slight damage to both our; resulted. FUNERAL TIIS iWIZI-NINO — The funeral of Mrs. Minnie Mc- Fnrlarie. widow of the late you; Mclihrlane will be held from her, late residence, 91 un-siton gym; at, 9-45 this "Wmmfl t0 St. Dunstanls Basilica. Burial will be in the Ro-i man Catholic Cemetery. . HOTEL PROPERTY FOB SALE -In another part of today's issue of The Guardian will be found the advertisement offeri for sale that well known hostc ry "The cox Hotel." Souris, Prince Edward Is- ll-nd- Am one interested would do "=11 iv 100k up the ad. The hotel can be purchased with or without the furniture and equipment. The reputation of this fine hotel is well lmwn throughout the Mnritimes and beyond. covnse 11v rouumv AND EGG GRADING -— A short course in poultry and egg grading under the Youth Training Plan is being held at Prince of Wales College. There were 24 students registered yesterday when the course open- ed. It will continue until the em; oi’ the month. Inspector J. B. Arsenauit assisted by Mr, v. “c. Eachern, will be the instructor-g of these student; who come from all parts of the Island. Due to heavy increase in production, the grading stations find it necessary to take on additional help. W, A. BRANCH MEETING - The regular monthly devotional and business meeting of St. Paul's Church. Branch B, of mg wn. 1118.11,»; Auxiliary w;.. held in the perish hall yesterdgy afternoon, at which the President, Mrs. Ernest V. Bell presided. Dele- gates chosen to represent Branch B at the annual Diocesan meeting to be held in March, were Mrs. Harry E. Miller and Miss Ross Longworth. The words of the Master "Freely ye have received, freeiv give," were exemplified by the wonderful response to the unified appeal by Canadian churches for famine and medical relief in China and India. This small group of ladle by their free will offerings contributed consid- erably over $100 to this worthy cause. This Branch of the WJi. has also given a generous dona- tion toward a much needed X-ray machine which has been installed in the Bishop Holden Indian re- sidential school at Moose Factory. Personals Miss Tove Peterson, as , re- tumed last evening from Montreal. Mrs. Wl-I ‘Townshend has re- turned froen her summer ho Rollo Ba to her residence bongwo Avenue- Corporul J.C. Peters, Debert. ar- rived in the city last night, en route to Mt. Stewart. where he will spend his leave. was transferred to H. M. C. S. King's for s course in gunnery. lnd where] he later served as gunnery histrucfl w. from Sept. i942 to May iml when he Wfls transferred to Es-l qulmalt where he joined the Prince Robert under the command of Capt Hope with whom he ser- ved under while in Halifax. In a recent letter to his parents Lleut. Birtwlstle said that while in England he wen; by seaplane to the north of England to visit his “bud- dy" Flying Officer Jimmy l-Iornby with whom he spent a couple of, hours. While in England he also‘ visited a number of relatives. THE BELLS 0F ENGLAND f hear the bells of England ring. Howlpioud those English voices 8 n8. lery thmwh heroes that will never 0f the years one by. Of e. Three years ago" in silence kept. The bells of land never wept A vital job was theirs to do To herald invasion as we all knew. The bells today ring mightier still O‘er the land and sea and mill; Soothing notes bring pence to alL Thst heed their ever distant cell. Prom towers overhanging lean, Pouring forth notes serene; Sweotening sir the echoes ma,‘ Whili: many to the church y May England's hells forever ring. May England's voices always sing, victors in their lengthy pest, Forever this ferns may lest. —- 1:0 Wlllh DISCUSS POST-WAR WORLD SHZIIFTTEID. lligllnd -(0P)- More than so delegates respre- senting sli Chg univsrsHies of Great Britain attended the universities‘ ninth industrial conference here, Industry's pert in the DOst-wlr world was the main !lib_,eCt of dis- c-ussion. Seek Better Halifax, St. John Mail Service [anything that Germany ever Mrs Sadie Nevwham Cambridge. Mass“ n-i-ived in the city last nlg t en route to Peters’ Road, where she will visit her sister, NIH. Hugh Campbell. Mr. Lcgiis Campbell, of the staff‘ of West Kent School ls a. patient in the Prince Edward Island Hospit- al. He is oonvalescfi, after an op- oration, Petty Officer Augustus Burke, R.C.N.R. and Mrs. Burke, Syd- ney, C.B.. are visiting at present in Lower Montague, where . Burke is spending his furlough with his mother, Mrs, J. Burke. Cpl. E. A. Stewart. R..C.A.F., Mrs. Stewart and their son Ed- win, and Cpl. S, C Biggers. RC. Art, Mrs, Bigger: and little son Darryl arrived in Charlottetown yesterday from Arnprior, 0nt.. by automobile. Lieut. Emma L. Smith. 0.C. C.W. A.C., Sheibumc, N S . arrived last ht in the city, where she Will vist her sister. Mrs. W E. Macfn- nis. and her mother, Mrs. Mary Smith. Bunbury and other mem- bers of her family. COMMONS _, (wetland r@_i>m_1-_>_I control we; "highly provocative| and contentious." It provided for, the composition of a national la- bor board on which labor would be out-numbered five to one. Th; board took precedence over sny court. and appeal was depen- dent on the bosrd permitting it. . A worker was subject to three months’ imprisonment for going on strike for an hour. "That legislation. I ‘ rid. i8 as restrictive and as dangeroushlg a ‘before the Beichstlg," Mr. Adam- eon glid- Thc order ssid virtually that l. man charged under it was guilty unless he proved he was innocent. "I give the Minister of Labor, “mil. ““i?”.‘f.fl’ “Mfiil. "02; iris st es ¢ on the isth of th month it will be one of the greatest eeum 0i. HALIFAX. ‘lob. i -- (OP) — Improvement in the msll service bet/ween Halifax snd Saint John. is sought by the Board of here. The Bosrd has eg- te the Post Office for t e of msll on the trsin, Scotlsn, leaving here st seven o'clock nightly. At present, there is no nig t mail service out of Illifu 11/: muvu IYIf/f/f/I- 0/1 —Unioldilil.ifti- . letters as tremendously t - ous disabilities because rm: manwrrerown ouanpim PAGE seven 1 Mail for the Boys and Girls Overseas Wgé a: N eight recent trips n. giant Ii-ringincrl I Lancaster in the Dominion Govern- mantle trans-Atlantic Service operated iéy Trans-Canada. Air Lines carried for anndols active forms overseas nvcr 50,000 pounds of miiil-iipyirnvimriiciy two million lrttors—beiv.'ccii Lllontrczil uud Grout Britain. The Canadian Postal Corps estimate‘; that. the average (lanridian soldier writes three letters in seven ilnys rind receives almost four, Wliivli gives some indication of the viist numlwcr nf letters that must be ilcsp: i'li(‘.il by all forms of tflIlSpOTtiillnn each [- All personnel lmndi g mnii consider bio fuctulz-i safety riuil in the war effort and tl forwardanco are treated much carc and lmpnrtnnrc n . b» mz-nts o.’ Iilzincs, tanks, guns and shells. ‘Letters are rvgnrrierl as iifi important. l influence in maintaining the mnmln 0f - the boys n l girls in the rirrueil forces ' sporting mail is only min 1'3’ ii "Finns for \Yilil‘ll the . ihiiuininn (luvcrii- mcni. E vice um \l5‘~i‘i|. 'l‘livy also curry passengers on important wiir business, us well as tons of critically needed ma,- tcrial to our fighting forces. Yppcr photo shows the big rnliil lnnil for one of the flights living Ivluvrul in tlic 1 "sringcr r-uhin of ii Lulu l‘ by s: lrity police of Hi" ‘r ircc 'l'riinspnrt (‘onimiiniL The mail bugs alongside the aircraft ircre placed in the nose, us well us in tli just _:is tlic cargo compartment located in that are sliip- part of the piano formerly used ns the, ' s, n. 'l‘.(‘.A. vmpl fining her Elliiff.‘ to bruit Hitler by ass mg in loading the rmiil cnrricdi by the big I'd-inductors to the Cnnzidiziu ECfViCCfIlPfl and women overseas. I All decked out in the latest Canadian flying kit lady when they can hell! "m" ‘h’ “em” Q! u‘. Lending Aircraftman Bnlakuiziuran ltinnlvelu Tranjore, India, lg about lo trike mlllt at an air station near Wcyburn, Sask. We 0f a number of men of flue. Royal Indian Air'lt up in the imdiihml ‘whim’ Force who are training under the wealth Air Training Plan, in pr: of ‘ Jap from their off on n training LAC. Rejinilfl‘ He is India. A Sikh. izriinh Common- {his hnlr out. but ration for the ‘ the mechanics of I“ 50..., a, pgsslblg. WANTED Light Sussex cockerels for breeders. Apply Swift's Hatchery Charlottetown labor unrest that we have seen in Canada." Should Reconsider Mr. Cruickshanks said the gov- ernment would be well-advised to reconsider the labor order, and added “It in a most ridiculous piece of legislation to make a man prove his innocence . . I very much fear that this government will have serious trouble in Canada if 1 the order-in-council as- it. stands l Ii Present is enforced." Mr. Gillie said the order luid the basis for a. continuing disrup- tion of labor relations which might have serious repercussions. He endorsed what Mr. Adiimsoni and Mr. Cruickshanks said nbouti the "restrictions and totalitarian‘ set-up" of the legislation. Mi‘. Cruickshanks said tomato cannerie; in Ontario and Quebec are run on “slave wages," and British Columbia could not coni- pete with their prices. There should be s floor under farm prices and a standard minimum wa e across Canada-a standard wh ch should not be set on the basin of family allowances to be illid by the Dominion. The people in his riding. he said. cannot understand why a home- defence army is kept in service when there is a shortage of labor in mines and elsewhere. , Mr. Giilis said arrangements for the rehabilitation of veterans are inadequate. There should be care for men suffering from nerv- of their experiences. and there should be more welfare officers to aid vet- ersns Service in any post-war ai-mv of occupation should be on a vol- untlry basis. The first choice of lGYViCe in s Canadian standing -Cl(il'llil0ll of i917, mid not in llic with each given a month's furlough before discharge to seek work. Roebuck Critical Mr. Roebuck said Canada has been slow to shake off "the swsddiing thinking of our coi- Olllfil. era." but the House was be- ginning to realize Canada was a nation iii licr own right. At one international think- ing "from titled gentlemen in Downing Street." Thurc still were some colonial-minded people in Canada. But Canada. fig a member of: the Lcziguo of Nations which gave Gnrzii Britain ii mandate overi Palestine and a world power, had. the right to point cut that a Brl-i, tish white paper halting Jewish‘- lmmigration to Palestine unless! tho Arabs acquiesce was not A prn- poi‘ rendering of the Balfour Dr»; accept their host interests of the uurld large. Some 3.500.000 Jews liad been| murdered by the Nazis mid 1.500.-| 000 Jewish refugees had been! Zlf. jicsltioii on refugee emigration unis! "not such as to provide n salve‘ for an injured console-lice." Answers Roebuck l Mr. Adnmson said Mr. Roebucki lizid condemned the suggestion of, Lord Hriliiux. British Ambassador, to the United States. for closer Empire unity to balance other post-ivm‘ world powers. on nrounds Canada was a nation in her 0WD right, but Mr. Roebuck had continued to discuss the problem of immigration to Pnlnc-| line which ivris solely a subject for the United Kingdom Parliament. There should be opportunity for discussion of the Commonwealth Council plans: to reject all sug- gestions for change as coming from "Imperial intriguers" was to continue ll petty colonial outlook, Mr. Adrimsoii said. The Unemployment Insurance Act is the finest piece of social legislation yet attempted in Can»- n a. Too Late To Classify LOST - nr-zavv TRUCK 5A5: from Rustico to Charlottetown. Notify A. P. Gallant, Rusticol army should be given to men now sefvinl in a theatre of wni". Wlicu the war was done Canadian sor- Iicdneu should be brought home iynufin l-Tssiafvvfsrn‘ [s wants sowing by the day. Miss Gillie, 169 Prince St. 3-34-21 time ymlitlclans were prepared to .- 1 Mi‘. "scattered to the winds." Canada's] __ _ native land. Also st ‘Wyililfn l‘ Slngh Sandu, right, from Plkhfl Pill‘- LAC. Ssndu never shares or H" Here he studies usually washes it daily before doing a bomb sight. Photos) 3mg {on , 1 -iCP‘— When Lady BEL, 5n. of s/ir Bail! Brooke. prime minister of Northern Ireland, met Hugh Dans-n. Dfesld‘ ent of the Beard of Trace, recent- ly. she was werrriiig stockings which had holes in 1.. m. i Sir Basil told Lnis later {.1 n luiic l- ean to Mn 11mm and “confessed" m5; h.» had had the "ii‘ "f hi5 shirt, cut I lllfikvv‘ n ccllar- - "not £01" the KIN‘- s;i~ Basil ihnt Mr. Dallmi had been tIiC by quite a 1<>t 0i vt-umgn ccmple inf; ilia», stockings aiw- not n11 they might br- '.\'ir. Dlillflli rszilizvs that above every-thing cl 1'1 if 0i _i1\9 ladies mus ' ludv has n ho her morale fa AFFLECK — At the Priucr- CClllll- iv Hospital on Jill]. l7. l9i'-. to zuirl Ali's. Douglas Affirck. Lower Bedequc. fl daughter. Jane." Pearle. _ GOOD-In the City. Jun. 3i. 1944 lo My. and Mrs. Roy Good. I! iiailglitci‘. ___ WODEATIIS - IBURNSi-msildtlelily. at Hartford‘. Comm. on Jan. ltl. 1944 George Oi‘- ran Burns. eldest son M15 Bums. and the lvie JlimvS Bums f . L‘. X-‘igibqdlcis. - At the Prince Coun- tv Hcsyiital on February l. 1944 James D. Campbell of Spring Val- lav. aged 6B years. Funeral frcrr. his late residence Thursday M l p. m. followed by service at Mal- reque Presbyterian Church at 2.30 Interment in Miilneque Cemetery BIACLEAN - In the Provincln. Snnntcriun. cn Tuesday‘. Febrile?! lsi, 194i, John MncLean in his 32m yea-z: Hi5 remains were transferred frcm A. A Hennesseyk Miners. Home yesterday to his late resid- once at Elmira, from where lhi funeral will be held on Thursday morning at. 9 o'clock to S’ Cclun.» bn Church, Fast Hint. lntcrmenl in churcfh cemetery. N. D. MacLean IJNDERTAKER EMBALM El Charlottetown lnl North Wilisiilre Phone NI I.»€\4