emcee "- " a" Tender ‘out m» pscraaonaa. YORK. l’. - with the lreat allied armi mm“: for the final membgr thflt H1856 l-TQ Britain (Wl wit)!“ alone has fig 0e ti .. British Naval i " "as... British Navy has imposed a block- lde on Germany. not only closing he": main normal sources of many viul ran’ materials-denying her, (o; gxamplQ almost 100% of na- tural rubber, 95% of natural phos- tes (fertilizers). 60% of oil, iii oi textile fabrics. a mmgme t.» l)“, i lid 00% of i th t ltmed m” iiunstringng e grea rs e ar- my oi Euro e's coastwise shipping: s task in w icii the work of night aoutal forces was by RAF minelsying. The results have been firstly, a serious manpower prob- iem in Germany the ne- cessity of diverting a m llion work- ers to extra food production, and ca m“?! h “i; on people with our Al- ma mva-rlaty Iwbieghwlll) eoek as Quick- mu at lluo la the tor we make this u l" maul Iron sever oost ef peaking and reeelvefresapsokagsefihisbeetaeedto- ‘ngggmsleneaebeetegrown byiulut ‘um m. mlglybrld 3.2.2’? Bonllt! Twat» "at h f III, t t! - m,,,,"¢h.::..:, Warba, u» new extra early Potato. and ‘my other reosnt introductions. Bend now to- ARTHUR VESEY rsraatrs r0 ALLIED vicroiiv rpNDON. Feb. l2 — (By Gable) as at“ o“ soil. it is impo n to re- aflmm the cul- mination of a whole series of suc- cgsiul Allied campaigns on a num- four w» oi land. sea, and air fronts. Definite "climaetreies" (Mr. Chur- chill‘: description) may be discern-- M h, the overthrow of tlfe Gor- mlll schemes for world domina- up“ n; the Allies have inflicted de- w" defeats on the Reich's land. m, and agnfttiirces and ‘her war 3mm, ree grea powers. '0 y th he Commonwealth). the u.s.A.. and the unsrt. sari-e ilie honours of these victories. but the British Commonwealth and bee in th 0 n m against Germany from the outset. 1t is also important to re- mgnher Lila‘ for the past three yean Brit forces ave been m, nging another war-in oom- ppny with the A — asainst Japan. from the outset of the war the in new and lllDNvsl strains of our 1945 catalogue with I. ISLAND l Drives East 1041 saw the first complete de- feflt of‘ the Italian forces in North Africa by British forces. three to times inferior in numbers. and then the frustration of the German drive into Russia by the stubborn Russian defence. especial- ly before Leningrad and Moscow. ‘Ihe destruction of the Italian Fascist army by the British in Africa oflusad the diversion of c011- sidersble German manpower from H. Thus both claws of the German pincer drive towards the Middle East and Asia as art of the plan for world dominat on in co- operation with the Japanese was decisively blunted. American Production Thrown in on the Allied Bide The passage of the American Lendlease Act on the 11th of March 1941, bro ht the vast industrial potential o the United States into action against Germany. while lhc Briish Navy played a vital role in keeping open the convoy routes for the American silPDiies to Bri- tain, Africa. and Russia, thus trans- lating this new blow in battle pro- duction into an effective weapon on the battlefields. The Lendlease "programme, as Mr. Stettinius ex- plained on the 25th January. 1943, sot only sided American defence by assisting the countries resist- ng the Axis aggressors, but also enabled America's production to be on a war footing when she actual- gnentered the war in December- Viotofy ll the Air Battles of Germany In March i942 the RAF‘ made its lPrlItI-atlon of the German "Pinoer" ward COOKS for Photograph‘. CONFED T suaAucisERATm" u" m‘ RESERVE Friday Febf-tlal‘ 1am M; fiigtggivéinliglgpogtinrogluitb um us é Recreation Center. 3.13.11 A'r non ‘I’ luncheon ye§§day_ ‘gala: fizzle? of the Eastern Trust rv es." lVlr. worth was the one L- emu)" Dresided. RESIGNS POSITION-M: L n Flood of the Charlottetown Postal Department has resigned h p951. l’ ill e l guest. ' Hang I tion because o em; t, w“ learned yesterday. He was em. P|°Y9d by the Postal Dept. for. OTC , outbreak of was‘. on s “g at me ISLANDER PASS l - FORNIA - Mrs. AriizgrcwNMgglge °Y cF-‘nllfll Royalty has received the “all "Ella 0f the death of her Ilzrothei- William Taylor. The late‘ Pil- Tfiylor was born in Brooklyn. El- ninety five year-s ago and Was the eldest son of Neil Taylor and Milly l-lume Taylor oi inst t There are left to mourn lliite sons and four daughters. also titre brothers. David in Callfornimi Di- Angus and Charles 1-1., in cmradil» U»5-A-, and one sister. . Andrew Macflae of Central,‘ RDYQIW. P.E.I. His Wife, whose maiden name was Margaret Gillis 0! Mmitflizue. P.E.l.. predeceased him three years ago. i SECRETARIAL APPOINTMENTS‘ -—M1$5 M-‘lry Hooper has accepteda, Position with the Family Allowance Board as secretary to the regio I director, Maior Alan Nicholson, M155 HOODer was formerly private’ secretary to Hon. Cyrus Macrvili-i lan. .\i.l=.. dean of the 31131151,. faculty. McGill University. Mont-i real. She is the daughter of Lt.- Col. and Mrs. J. P. Hooper. City. lt is understood that Miss Mar- ionne Sauiiders._ also oi‘ Charlotte- town, is succeeding Miss Hooper n; Hflh- Muolvllllans secretary. Miss Saunders resigned as secre- tary to Hernier J. Walter Jonegi last week and left yesterday for, her new position. three year's. Prior to that in. servedfl W0 hllfldffld and "RY ‘hm-Wind i0 first "saturation" raid-on Lue- llflmtflc mdmfl" ( and‘? beck. This was followed by a pro-i v in equivalent to one hundred inns). and secondly. the throwing of an extra burden on the Elam ean rail Ind canal systems. w in turn became RA!’ targets. The Battle oi Britain. Mae First Decisive Victory While the mute o! the first yuroithewartendldtos he myth of German lnvincfla ity. la i940 the RA!‘ in the Battle of lirllain, in which the Germans bit two thousand thre¢ hundred and seventy five planes by day in three months. and the British seven hundred and thirty three, rm the first proof that the Ger- mans could be beaten. 1n. tular. the noral fear of the waifte. which had for so lo Med Europe. was di rs , and lliit lesson was suhseqfieently em- Phillied by the way the British stood up to the ordeal of aerininste German hows. rm Battle of Ill also the first step in trition of the Luftwaffe, whose Wiles had by 1948 "mounted to seventeen thousa to he M!‘ and four thousand to the hilt?" “‘“'..-¥'ii.“"..“.‘.l§.t$’.lt before the invasion in the West. Pl Liilir DB1‘- l "i their day attacks on parallel lines fll- either by the RAF‘ “pinpoint” bomb- gressive stepping up of the scale of the attack from one thousand two hundred to 011g thousand five hundred tons in the thousand bomber raids of the summer of 1942, to a record- ten thousand tops in one twenty-four-hour period in 1M4. The American air force, which oined in the battle in Aug- ust , progressively stepped up to the RAF nigiht attacks. Hon; 1942 onwards. Allied planes. by new techniques. such as path- finders, the saturation of defences by quick mass attacks. and now bombing instruments. were able ef- fectively to attack industrial areas. This had not been achieved before. ing or by the indiscriminate Ger- man attacks. The military advant- age of the air onslaught, wherein the RA!‘ alone has dropped over a million tons (pitting the equival- ent o! a whole division into the air for major raids) has been not only the destruction oi Germany production. but also the Dlnnlliil- dawn of some three muiion able- bodied Germans for the ineffectual defence of the Reich against bombing. Stalingrad and Alanacin The end of 1942 brought B great Y. P. S. ltiEETlNfi-The Corn-| wall Young People's Society met at thc home of Mr. and Mrs. Reg- gie MacEwen on Thursday eveninni with a large attendance, the presi- ‘ dent. Miss Marion Bell presiding Gordon MacMillan acted as leader-I for the worship service with sev-I eral members assisting. Mrs. Stir- ling Glow rend a chapter of the! boo "The Emperor's Physician)". Committees were appointed on the program for next meeting which is to be in the form of a Valentine party at. the home of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas MacDonald. Mrs. Otib Newson will read the study book‘ m and Mrs. Elmer Hizzell will be the’. leader of games. A sing-song and‘ refreshments brought a pleasant‘ evening to a close. ‘PRE-NUPTIAL SHOWERS. — Mr. and Mrs. L. A. MacKinnon of Highfleid were in Halifax m Sat- urday to attend the marriage of their son, Paymastor Lt. L R. MncKinnon. R.C.N,V,R, to Margaret Atkins. Mlle M MacKinnon, Charlottetown, of the groom. was also in Halifax for the wedding. at which she was maid-of-hozior. Pre-nupilal show- ers for Mrs. L. Raymond MacKin- non (Margaret Atkins). whose marriage to Paymaater ht. L. R. MacKinnon. R..O.N.V.ft.. took place on Saturday in King's College chapel. included s miscellaneous shower given by Miss Mary Dev- anney at the home of Mr. and turning point in the landlwar‘: ti: évtixfgétfgilbg"; tzfvaalxl’; ielfggm German disasters at Russ an an _ at Stalingrad, and at the hand, u; Gwendolyn Holland. King street. Tl D? ti" “m” l" fgemm- ‘grmw ‘h? nMissnrtmrgolltlkiindl/itgie Ei-ldggggias hi»? I ‘bmdmmen ° m“ eam5° Mrs MacKinnon -- Halifax Ex- I lhsbwsrd expansion, while the co- chgfige ' lglggfflm" c" Y lossal losses suffered by the Ger- -.-;_ _.._'. _________::.- “n”. ans in Russia and Africa left m, 1 g W-"llll m Feel and leek our h“: fieuygigziti... ‘remasntg §.‘ ir.“y“.?.l:§‘.i§.u°§.i§ wflfi°nfgili O with CHIC “ I or o ' 5 ""955 11¢ V Y 0! N10 I‘ li,';"§fik flnlslifigi reieiiueu Allied pressure towards tun Coastal Command. which de- llzvmnhei- u, "h" u" RQMI- livelredl on}? hfiiirndred and fifty att- Vliyngglupofl "l, acsn e st, woyearsote gfiiémiliuvigioetgeooiibvliioirwgage-a ‘If... The Elimination oi the U-Boll war, compared with four hundred Mnmuflad ‘:1; d iieclosged with T111111 and fifty in the first six montns $§3§u°“ ma“ gm‘? The most important event o! ggwlngitiigidegcoolfiflerggwloxtto! i‘ ~ c rve es, "ii-t? ‘:2: 'i"'"‘ it“ .=.i.".‘.“t‘"= swears. ‘ti: n“ . ‘.'a°".i*".. “Pa” re la In; a 0. as e carrers. e a r nay ‘sea- Qflud “*1. =z wsvmtluareealiqi U-boats. Baulked by British sea- so" the mld-Aflgnflc up in m- ‘nsumui u». iuainfiuufnuwa w" °! the possibility of usiiis cover, and in addition the strength "While-Io 4 n“. —boais blockade Britain. 111E oi the U-boa/t packs were seriously F“ l Rapier m I“ . tomorrow, I mogul-silos: m“ QTICKIES M u-itaeyfiiifififlo-"L" " $7 Germans were looking to them in an extra "west wall" to impede- if le thwart. the Allied attack in the West. But by mid- 1043 the U-boats. for so long the attackers themselves. were attacked Ken Reyrrolmtlst‘; i-iT Qlhifiliiifi ":70"? I ‘know everybody would read about our ‘"1130 sale In ills Guardian Want Ads!” impaired by RAF attacks on bulld- ings yards and pens. Hence. when the invasion was launched in June 1944. hot a single vessel oi the Armada oi four ll ousand ships was lost to certain U-boae action, while in that month seventeen ‘Ll-boats were sunk in the invasion area. The seal was set on the Gennan defeat at sea by the sinking of the Scharnhorst by the Royal Navy in December 1943. and the ‘Pirpits by air iii/tacks in November i944: these two vessels bein the biggest units oi the Gcnnan feet that was a potential rather than an actual danger w the vital Arctic convoy route to Russia- The Final Climax The invasion in the West. to- ether with the general Allied of- gensives in Italy and the Russian border Rgpllbllci, set in motion the final German landslide. which has been ke t Y hamm lows in the west, south. and east. speaking of these three fronts Mr. Churchill declared on the 18th of January i946: "It is certain they will henceforwnrd be kept in constant flame until the final climax has been reached. But the final climax would have been unattainable without the cu- mulative effect of all these earlier Allied successes. i i l Norilieaal Airlines molrss two flight: dolly ham Mqngfgfl, N. I. lo lesion, with connot- iiom (or New York. Save many hows — gs Nodhoari. Call 296! or 540 g 511.15g; GYRO MEETING-JIM regular meeting of the Gyro Club was held at the Charlottetown Hotel last. evening. After w a very interesting talk by Jimmy Wade, who des- cribed something of the many fac- tors involved in the operation of aircraft in passenger traffic ser- Chsirman for the evening W" Gyro Trevor Waye. S. S Personals Mr. Moreen _-;lh_r , Cit , ha entered the Pllleiioespltal. y ‘ Mr. Herman Gill of Eillotvale, arrived home last week after spending the past month in Bos- ton where he was the guest of his sisters. Mrs. Edward Bcanlon and Miss Evelyn Gill. Mr. John A. McDougall left yes- “may miiflliflil for Toronto alter Spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Georveatt and his daughters in Rocky Point. Mr. W. E. Moran, principal of the Union Commercial College, re- turned to his duties yesterday morning after being confined io his home for the past ten days ow- ing to a severe fall. Mr. and Lia-s. Aubrey Dolrun, UPPer Queen Street hev, receiv- ed s. wire from their son Pilot Of- icer Leonard Dolron would arrive in the city on Tues- day. PO. Doiron served on opera- tional duties overseas for three years. Sgt. McCarvllle. A. L... of Char- lfllvtflidwh. was a recent visitor at the Beaver Club in IrOXIGOIl. Eng- land. The Beaver Club is current- ly operated by the Canadian YMCA, and is one oi the most popular leave centres in London. and Mrs. tan Mne- Cormac, arrived in t e city via plane to thielr home in 3t. John's. 1t with relatives, they will con- tinue their Journey to Quebec. Montreal and Toronto. From the latter city they will return via. “lane to thei rhome in St. John's. ewfoundlan‘. | rip- "f-IAIQLOTTETOWTV GllARDlAN ii In Memqriaml MES. CHRISTINA MACDONALD The death occurred at Char- lottetown, February third. of Mrs. Christina Macdonald, beloved wife of the late Mr. John B. Macdon- aid, Glencoe. Vernon River. Deceased was the daughter oi the late Angus and Eliza Macdon- 11d of Plsquid, P. E. I. She had been in failing health for the past two years. but bore her suffer- ing with great patience. She will always be remembered by her imnny friends and relations for he‘: ikindness and other qualities. Her {brothers Daniel, Donald. Allan Joseph and Reverend John A., Par- isnPrieat for many years at Grand River. , edeceaaed her s few years ago. A devoted and lovint! mother, she will be sadly mourned by her children. S.-Sgt. J, A. Macdoxinld. Hal-Wall; Elin- beth, Cambridge. Mass, and Mary, Mrs. P. Murnaghsn. Charlotte- wn. - The funeral was held February 5th from the residence of her son- ln-law, . Patrick Mumaghan,‘ 28 Pownsl Street, to St. Dunstan's Basilica, where " ‘ Requiem Mass was celebrated by Rev. K. nfacMillan, assisted by Rev. J. W. NfcCardle. Deacon. and Rev. L. Dougan. sub-deacon. His Excel- lency. Bishop Boyle occupied a seat in the Sanctuary. The pall- bearers were Mr. J. J. Duffy. Mr. J. J. Macdonald. Mr. iliaughey, Mr. A ‘Mr. John Cionnl and Mr. Andrew iButler. | The burial took place in the family plot at Vernon River. Fun- eral service at church and grove was conducted by ‘Rev. Monsignor |Msurice McDonald, Parish Priest. The pallibearers at Vernon River were Mr. Shaw MacMillan, Mr. Irving Tweedy. Mr. Ernest Mac- Mlllan. Mr. Bernard McPherson. iMia John Morrissey and Mr. Colin i hlacblelll. The numerous spiritual offer- ings. floral offerings and messages ‘of sympathy received, bore silent ibute to the high esteem in [which the late Mrs. Macdonald was held by all who knew her. Monthly Meeting iladies Aid Society 5P. E. I. Hospital The Ladies‘ Aid Society of the Prince Edward Island Hospital held their monthly meeting at the Cundall Home Monday afternoon. The president, Mrs. J. W. Mac- Kcnzle, presided. and there were seventeen members present. An interesting report was read by Mrs. iDr.) Campbell, chairman of the solving committee, showing that two hundred and sixty sheets and ninety-six pillow cases have been made for the hospital since last September. This has been accomplished by groups of three ladies sewing at the hospital every Tuesday afternoon; church organ- lzailons sewing at their meetings: sewing at the monthly meetings of the aid: and distribution of sheets to several ladies, who. though unable to attend the meet- , PACE THREE 8 ways and means committee, Mrs. G. T. Hurdle kindly_ consented toi organize the arrangements for hospital Tag Day, which is ob- served annually on Easter Satur- M . . ousekeeper at the hospital. was present, and pre- sented a complete list of the lin- ens in her store-room. She stated thatvslie has on hand, a greater supply of made-up bed linen, than she has had for several years, and thanked all who had helped with this work. Included in her list of requisites were slip-covers for eight chairs and two couches. CRICKETS NOTE The chirping note 0f the field cricket _is produced by the insect raping its brovm leathery wing covers above its body and rubbing By. The sum of ten dollars was given to Mrs. Bennett, house- mother of the Cundall Home, for the purchase of small articles needed during the house-cleaning quick sawing motion. curtain material, a carpet-sweep- season. Nearly 2.500.000 pounds of Mvt er, and many other articles which After the meeting adjournedi dlvi vrorc iorted from the Do the buying committee will en- tea was served by Mrs. R. T. Hol- mlcaii Rx: cic in the first nina 1 months of‘ 1944; at 1s a tannin foe I leather. extracted from the rvut ei dcnvour to obtain es soon as pos- man and Mrs. 1Dr.) Campbell. iible. lugs, kindly offered to take work {M9473 l/JP a 0Here’s what’s happening . . . Before the war, Nash had already WOn u. reputation as one of to their homes. ' Bel’ re i001, Swedish rulers were? the divi-tilvi tree and used largely know as Kings of Upsaia. ,‘ in America 47711.97! Owing to the resignation of Mrs. (Dix) Lantz, as chairman of the this continent's great industrial enterprises. Its watchword was progress. Today that progressive spirit, applied to war production . . . with vast new equipment, increased skill, enlarged experi- - ence . . . has canied Nash to new heights of capacity and .“know how.” Until the job is done, Nash is all-out for war production. But when peace comes, this increased tempo will be still further accelerated . . . for peace. Quick reconversion, maintenance of maximum employment, utilization of every new skill, every new facility, all the experience acquired in an exacting war job . . . these will be applied to peace time products. A new and finer Nash “600” in a new and finer Ambassador in the medium price field the low price field . . . of progres- . . . these will carry on the tradition siveness established by Nash before the war. All the advanced engineering features, the “years ahead” economy, comfort and efficiency, which you learned to expect from Nash cars will be embodied in the new and finer Nash . . . with all the experience and developments of wartime added! a a was” Morons or can/non umrrv ‘aw/vases. owner/a them one against. "he other in a