"IIDLLDWARE NOVEMBER ~10. 1948 l‘ is A Minimalist-.. TOOTH POWDER GIVES DULL, just think relies on dent lrium t0 llllll'lrrl zmewea‘iea/ » PEPSODENT IS Tl-lE ONLY TOOTH POWDER CONTAINING IRIUM NOW PROV! PEPSODEIIW MIRAGE TO YOURSELF] your dentist cleans them! denial whiteness: and he move the ull, dingy film that becomes harmful, ugly tartar. And Pepso- Tooth Powder is especially made with that trouble-causing film ...right in your own home! Change today to Pepsodent Tooth Pow- der with lrium for teeth of dental il/bitencss. DINGY TEETH how white your teeth are after That's red auuler tn rc- safeiy- remove THE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN Appreciative Letters Re I.0.ll.E. Gifts‘ ____. "Diapers were the biggest pro- blem, and in some layeties we had to use old mattress covers which l bauded out with foster parents in Devonshire —- children from broken homes." The Mayor of the Borough o! Kettering, Farnham; the Mayor of Basingstoke; Urban District Coun- cil, Hunts; 5t. Just Urban District Council; and Bpalding Rural Dis-= trict Cottnctl, have all recently ack- nowledged receiving large bulk we gave to the mothers to cut up. Once or twice we were able to ex- change baby clothes for diapers with one of the other Relief Agencies". From the British Save the Children Fund in Budapest comes this cry for diapers. In the same letter they thank the Im- perial Order Daughters of the Empire for cases of beautiful baby clothes, boys trousers, socks and Such B5 YOU!» hell)! them t0 KIIOW warm puliovers, "How we l iliat they still count." Granny pQuntjcd on the bgyg‘ trousers" ‘Hunter of Knodishall. a remarkable Mrs. A. H. Roper, National l-Zx- .0111 lady of 11111Bty~fivc years. w» cutive member of the I. O. D. E. in i’ ‘li-‘liahted with her shawl, and. Prince Edward Island stated iliatia boy 0T SIXWBH 1/9815. W110 W85 the Order receives letters from in- [born healthy and enjoyed school oividual recipients as well as from $590115 1111111 U19 Pa“ YEW Rafi. hid those in charge o! distribution in {just returned from ramp where he Great Britain and niany European Iliad received an I. 0. D. E. per- countries where the l. 0. D. I}, giiis lsonal comfort bag and was delighted are being distributed by the British ‘WW1 111B 11111113’. useful articles con- blind and aged. meal. writes in appreciation of a monthly food parcel. "It is nine for in these difficult days when youth is so much to the fore, and a gift u! limiiiin unis lilll ENlIliiY Still Costs Less Than '.§’;»./@ a fi/of Bred/as!‘ of aux/me 0422s‘ are/er ggy/ They Want Gifts 0f Fine JEWELLERY ---- From WELLNEWS it , ___q_ mm til-uni: Gifts “"1"”! ‘"1" RADIANT DIAMONDS a $50.00 llll hassling diamonds — in exquisitely matched 14- id kt. gold settings. ODMPAOTS A choice of enchant- ing styles - ell beau- tlfully engi-aved. n» lllm! ‘ ERIIEN WATOIIES ma“ WNW“ Dalntily styled watcher 511i"- wlth supremely de- All handsomely designed — pendnlflg "QQIQIQ" mo". with Precision movement “m1, _ for true reliability. Tlattorlng smi _ iusnious PEARLS Glowing. flawlessly snatched strands of pearls - in one. two or three strands. Flee Sllvsrplatod i QQ/ There's e gleaming selection ti gifts she'll be proud to rinve In her home. wfloidfidbsidO PUBLIC FORUM This column is open to the discussion by correspondents of questions ol’ interest. The Guardian does not necessnr- i) lly endorse the opinion nl correspondents. ®i0 ¢<§>ee JQXWOMOOOOOOQQ Continued from page 4 uiiies. To these, new obstacles have’ been added in this area, for those who desire to worship at the New Dominion United nuust negotiate by skilitul manoeuvering over a longer route, the curves, the dips, and acute angles of this modern and most amazing transportation artery. , And so, Sir, would you plzase let us know if this is really a new mittee, Excter, of which Mr W. E. z idlng and toys : Save the Children Fund and the i tained therein. I-Ie had a crippliflil British lied Cross, Sh’: nlsoexiilziiii- illness and can't walk and in his ed that clothing, bedding, shoes, interesting letter he said: "You can personal comfort bags and nursery see what a plight 1 was in. I looked bags are amongst those things at the water and bathers and which are eagerly received for dis- ivislied I could swim. There are‘ tribuiian in Europe "In addltiommany normal pleasures I miss, but to u;.-.-' rps n-f 11.1.- .’ the !y‘i;-,I have a Mother, THANK GOD." ional Member said The Order; A girl writes: “I received my has sent tons of Food Parcels nicely coloured personal comfor. through the Commonwealth Gift bag when I was in a. Guide Cent/re of the British Food Mission Cripples‘ Camp. I am twenty-three as well as 2.000 individual food par- years of age and been in the 5t. cels per month by parcel post to Benedict; Hospital quite a few families whose names were provided years now and I go to the Girl by Lady Reading of the Women's Guide Camp every year for a holi- Voluntary Services in Great Eri- day". tain." "Many of these letters tell In conclusion Mrs. Roper said, of the great distress which was "The members of the I. O. D. E. alleviated by the flfflvlll of the will continue with this work as I. O. D. E. gifts" Mrs Roper said. long as such assistance is required" and she quoted the following ex- cerpts from ‘Thank You‘ letters received recently by the Order: Devon County Education Com; z Gardens i of the Dead Continued from page 4 Philips is Chief Education Officer, thanks the I. O. D. E. for the large quantities of clothing. bed- “These gitts are being distributed to children in Remand Homes, Hostels and those 0§Q+10+4 i laise where under s hot August sun four years ago the ripe wheat rot- ted in the fields while Canadian soldiers fought their way inch by precious inch along the twenty kilo- meters to their goal and the de-. structlon of the Seventh German‘ Army. At Beny one can look out! road building techniquc. Incident- ally such a system is not x101 for these with high blood DICESUIE and recently in this 8,185., ncw highs have been reached, I ziin, Sir, etc, SOUTH SHORE TRAVELLER l l l i on Sunday evening. Thoy left yeetxmlly WELLNEIVS JEVTELl-EIS SIIDE 1080 The Drevvs Arrive (‘ulmiol and Mrs. (ieorge A. Drew, as they stepped n" tho mama licrc tlay In Charlottetown Monday-Photo by Saunders. Conservative Leader With Local Party Representatives Colonel Gmrgn A. Drew (centre) national rroyrcssh-ii Conscrvnwtlvti Party lam! on arrival at the Charlottetown Airport an Sunday evening. 0n the right are lllossrs. the left Hol- DI. W. l. l’. llnolllllsn, Provincial lender, and Ill). I). L. lhtlsleeon, to the Channel where the choppy waters carried that brave armanda which landed at Bemieres and Courseuilu one bright June morn- I ing in I944. At Beny many who came ashore over the Calvados] beaches remain in peace forever more, while further inland still more of their comrades lie at rest by the side of the road running straight from Caen to Falsise nesr u Bretteridlle-sux-Lalze. l l 4 i IN BELGIUM i I was able to spend a brief period lat Ypres in Belgium, so well known to many thousands of Canadians during the First World War. The ibesuiirui Menln Gate still stands at the eastern approach to the town, and nightly its high arches echo the shrill notes of the Last Post, played by Belgian veterans in honour of that vast throng of over lnny thousand men of the British Empire who perished in the holo- icaust that was the Ypres Salient |and as the inscription reads, "to whom the fortune of war denied the known and honored burial given to their comrades in death" During the retreat of the allies in i940 it was necessary to blow up the bridge over the canal which flows on the east side of the Menin Gate and the memorial suffered slightly from this demolition. Bul- lets from pursuing German air- lcraft scarred the walls, and the lion fvi-hich sits atop the monument was {also damaged. These ravages are ,now being repaired and workmen ‘are busy restoring the Gate to its ‘original perfection. A new 010th ‘Hall has been built on the site 0t the old one on the market place. although some of the ruins of the lold hall have been left in their loriginal position as a. constant re- by plane for Halifax utter a busy - shipments of Food Parcels, which they are distributing to the siclt,f Mrs. Senior eighty-one years of: age, who cooks and enjoys a nice ‘ the older people to be remembered ; l l l How Mute. But Elequentl How Quiet. But Challenging They shall grow not old, as we tho! are left grew old: ' Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn. At the going down of the sun and in the morning We will remember them. MOORE 8i McLEOD LTD. November 11, 1948 This Store vvlll lie closed Wednesday Afternoon and all‘ day tomorrow. Novflllth. minder of the tragedy which war once brought to the town. General H. D. G. Crerar, our wartime commander, was a member of the special Canadian Mission which was present at the coronation DONAGK CRERAB/B TRIBUTE ‘—"' Bflllll visited m; home in Donldh recently. MN. Patrick 1311x101, is now visiting m; Upped Mir. Harold Doing-h, States. of Queen Juliana. or the Nether-i lands this past August and. follow-i T1" 1111111! friends or Mr. n". ing the ceremonies at the I-Iagueflhe" T751110!‘ W111 regret to lesrri he made s. tour over the battle-j“ h" °°11¢1I111cd illness. fields where his Army had fought| ——-—— fcur years ago. The General was‘ Th’ M15595 M1631”! 0'Shes and vitally interested in the Canadian Mic-hill Bfllzan of Donagih left cemeteries and made it a point to- ‘Wefllly for Ontario. ~ .___._ visit each one of them. On the day| I left the Continent I was priv- Y ileged to be a member of his party 55°11! River was s visitor o! Don- when he visited the Canadian ll-Zil- "$11 YQEHMY. 1J1! 8116s?» oi’ itary cemetery at Adagefii in Bet Fred MacAdam. gium. not fai: from the Leopold Canal where such bitter fighting took place in the fall of '46. My ter tall vacation under the cap- last sight and memory of those able management of M15, manor hallowed fields was a. warm one. or MaoKinnaii. ihe former Army commander pay-g iiig his respects to his comradesw ln-arms who had made the sup- reme sacrifice without which vic- tory could never have been achieved. Mrs. Maclilachern. LUTDN. bird, flying into a newly dwofilvi Koughan are now attending cor. bedroom here, stripped wallpaper. n. with members of tho welcoming party which met him It. ltny Holman and W. Chester S. DRCLIIIO, M12, end en M. L. L-Phooo by Saunders. Mr. Leo Welthenble of John-‘ Mr‘ ed Charlottetown recently. Donagh school has reopened n. itlng in Fort Augustus. Mrs. Fred MacAdam, Donagh, l5 Sllefldlni e few days in Charlotte- Wwfl» tho Euest of her mother, day night. Enlmnd " icP)" A, T1" M55598 A1111: and Florence of! the coran‘: Business College in on“. lottetown. i Miss Eileen Mclaiinon and the M15"! stlllhtn McInnls and I-iiid. son sheehan of selkii-k visited Q°l1118h YAIN-‘Htly- the Rllest of her 515i". Miss Eleanor MacKinnon, The Misses _’Elfleanor McAdam and Mall’ Heron of Donagh and IIIKIIIDTSKTIT n! Tlllfllllflll Donny Holland of Tarsntum visits Miss Mary Koiighan of Dough returned home recently after vie. Mr. Willie Quinn of Watervale Was a visitor to Donagh on Bun- qg‘ "INA lcl ‘IO 6§NED IN ‘TH’ CNKLNEN A l I§\$ ONA DAV LIKZTNIJ-‘DVXIT * O 000 1- cuaek CHICKIU ' 9m N: uuudU n» fimnOIQ ti- l0