1'1-IE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWNc NOVEMBER 9 1953 r marriage of ten. for keeps. "Give 1f the The their No sooner had he our mischief making broke out :- gsm "and all went merr; I rcfall -Strange But True II: I. ll. MM-Arthur Chsptcr ll. SCHOOL DAYS gone as bell." Ifeacher tried to take up where he" left off. and once again the school room resnundcd with tli rat-tat-tat of dried beans at gslnst the blackboard. Thing were becoming natural again in the little red schoolhouse by the side of the road. My second and last ll-vacher be- gan hi! rlutis-s when I was a buy that some at the big boys had quit school ll 4') W This didn't maapd mat iers ya great deal for tho small boys had fallen 1f the old:-r pupils. and had pick- sd up quite a lot of now if their owl) 'r-in rats." was what the irusterx told. the new mastvr Lorri light at the bF,'.jll'illllllI and .wui'Z'. zet along fine." trustcns advicr into the il'1(”i plriitv "Put the loa into their heart could in THAT when It habits of lnilg-l.1l'.Pcl . moved Teacher No. 2 didn't neod. advice from anyone when it came to putting a school in order. He knew how to wield the "cat. '0 nine tails," and he wielded it with vengeance. But beforehe was teaching a. week he gave me the soundest whipping I ever received. but later discovered that I was not the guilty party , ”Ncver mind." he soothed. ”I will place this to your credit for future misconduct, and I reckon it won't be long before the ac- count will be balanced." His prophecy came true. The next day I put sneezing powder .. on the big-bollled stove. p . . 0 5 when teacher went to his place of boarding for dinner our gang rolled hugr snowballs often weigh- ing a hundred pounds or more. With those we barricaded the door .and kept tho master outside and 'thc girls lusldc. while wr ehrieked with laughter from the shelter of . the wrll-trimmed hedge that stood br-tween the south side of the School grounds and the nearest house. By working togethrr. the touch- nnrl the girl pupils finally ro- thr snow mounds and school resumed again as if nothing out of the way had ever occurred. But that wasn't the and of it. No sire:-S After school was let lout for tho day our gang was or- " l .9'I' 1. l S . have knptldei-ed to stay in and give an ac- theniselvos. count of our ovil deeds. very Day Sees New Values CROWDS Yes. GREENDAL'S continue to pile-out New Values Daily! And the crowds keep coming for values that know N0 Equal! BEDSPREADS -(All Colorsl Special 32.49 GETS THE lovely Si .00 and il.69 p l Not one of us opened our mouths. We had no comxnsrits to make. The next move was up to the master. silently we waited for him to open up and crack down on us. Suddenly his hand went to the drawer of his desk and as sud- denly- it came out--no. not with the cat 0' nine tsll.s- but with thte whittled down broomstlck which was used to point out places on the maps. We pupils looked at each other in amazement. Then we looked at the teacher. Sllraly he didn't mean to flail us with such :1 weapon. That was his idea. in xi nutshell. Each of us received five whscks on each hand-there were no gentl-2 strokes either. and there hci ng fourteen of us involved in the snoxvmound episode the t at :11 number of strokes added up to to 1403 Teacher's arm must have XlChPfl from all that whacking. I know that 14 boys went home uurslng swollen hands and began to believe that after all teacher was the real boss of our school. 0 I O Noon hour was always a gala time in the old country school at Cornwall. In summer we fished in tho nearby mill dam. or walked on top of the thick hedge to the soutlrof the school, or played a sort of baseball game with rules of our own making. In the winter we skated. fought fierce snowball battles. and tor- tured thc mull boys as we but been tortured by I generation of bullies before. Once during the height of I snow battle. Big Hugh Wslkor whamed me smack on the cheek with a. snowball into which he'd placed a tiny stone to give it morn carrying power. I thought some- body mid hit. me with an aka. Stars appeared in my crow-n for the first time. and for the space of seconds I thought I'd lose my dinner. But being British I man- aged to hold onto it. The side of my face where the mlssle hit swelled to twice its normal sin and my left eye looked like the moon under full eclipse. That evening a penitcnt Walker came over to our place Ind ex. me "instead of the squirrel he'd aimed st. of course, mother c:7idn't believe a word of his story ui head. and said. "Never mind. Hugh. I know just; how such things hap- pen. Never mind. Go home and be a good boy." 0 0 our school literally flovved- or should I say it swarmed with mice of all sizes. There won: little mice no Jonger than the first Joint of a small boy's little finger. We couldn't see them but we could hear them squealing or whatever klnd of A noise they h1ake- in big room was riddled with holes like the end of in garden sprinkler. and each hole was ma ed by the captain of the mouse In. At given signal from the leader. the mouse tribe camp from their places of hiding. seized a. mouth- ful of food and then scurried back to their place of hiding to eat. their meal at leisure. 9 What fun it was to watch tho micel But then there was always something exciting going on in our school. Not a dull moment ever, . The mice didn't have it all their own way either. Purdy r NEW BLOUSES l l STATION cons - Regular to s39.5o-vsizv SPECIAL . .. . . . .. .. Three-Quarter & Full Lengrh- si9.so up LADIEST COATS 349.50 for 334.50 for .. . . . i19.5o('.jm.Es- 339.50 for 324.50 329.50 ALL OTHER COATS AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES ..Ioc COATS LADlES' Pullovers-5 10 doz. New "T0070 Wool Sweaters ' CHILDREN'S Size 4 to 16 2.49 Cardigans-52.95 YES. USE LAY - AWAY l LADIES' sroaa GREENDAL 31.88 C 0 . LTD. 150 GT. GEO. ST. Try a much mrier way Plymouth Hy-Dive! You just shift into" high . . . then you drive without touching gcarshifc or clutch as long as yr" please! Stop and go i hills. And you've won smooth oil-cushioned Hy-Drive's built-in Huid torque. If yo: win: to back up, or need extra power In: to drive, with n rmflic . . . diml- derfully fast. pick-up with heavy going in sand or snow, you simply change gears in the familiar my. Tm the No-Slazft Driving E4,l'6 of PLYMOIITI-lay with 15')”-5.91157. .( you: cunvsiu-rrvuourn-rnao burn you A pmomrurion I 0 frlx Iawm-priad no-Jbifl mnmiuion cm! 150 rinplm-anilablc on all 1954 Plymouth ) mm!!! ,1 shall tell you about happened at V-lydc'5 dam. The boys didn't like Scott was their sworn enemy and it was he who look upon hizmself the duty of killing and roasting them when h-is luck ran higlh. Every noon hour Scott would stand in the corner. poker in mud. and whale the dayllghts out of rvery mouse that poked its nose out of a hole. These he'd roast on the top of the big-bellied stove. and threaten to feed them to the screaming girls if they didn't behave themselves and quit interfering with his job of executioner of the mice clans. When not going up and down the aisles on cntlike feet. teacher occupied a large chair in front of R large desk. The desk and chair stood on an elevated platform. so that from his place of vantszc. the master was able to cast on eye down on every pupil and thus nip in the bud most of the schemes forming in the minds of the scholars. I recall one of the boys who had a mania. for put- ting his large head through the frame of broken slates and anath- er whose chief pastime was racing ants up and down his slate, Then there was the girl who always (aimed at the sight of blood. some of the older boys would prick their finger tips with 5. pin and squeezo out Just nnough blood to make the young lady faint. - Not, all the pranks were plsycd during school hours. however. Some We played on the way to and from school. One of these the old miller and the miller did- n't like tho boys hanging around his pond, fishing and skating. Ev- rry day held ohass us away from his proprrty but we'd come back just as often to plague him. But the big day - it was after school hours in the late Fall nnd the ice was none too good-- was when Hyde came roaring after us and plummeted right into the water up to his chin. It took him some time to get out of his predicament and he had to man- age it under his own power. Not one of us as much moved I. mus- cle to help him. He actcd Worse thsn ever to- wards us "after that and to grt pvrn some of our gang went to his stable onus night and gave his milk whltc mare ll. generoux coating of sand and uolassee. Next monring when the owner of the horse went to hitch her up to haul his toll-flower to msr- ket. he found .Nellle's stall n wrzx-k. she had scratched her- sclf through a couple of par- titions, That same day Nellie got; her first haircut and you wouldn't recognize her as the mlllcr's old white mare. . . . To conclude the chapter on School Days. I must tell you a- bout the time one of my school- mates and I turned loose a swarm of hornets on a. couple of drunks on their way home from the city. The huge nest hung on o. limb right beside the road. so chum and I got a couple of long poles and lay nu on our tummles in the long grass. Just. when the fnebr-fated pnlr rl-mv'o by in their horn and wall- on we let the hornets have it. plalned to mother how he'd hit she smiled. stroked Hugh's a representative .....,,,. "And swing "That Gal "Behind You!" Q Igor Gouzenlio Has No Spy Data For U. S. Senate OTTAWA. (CF) - Canada has rsglccted the request of a United States Senate investigating com- 1mittee for permission to interview Igor Gouzenko, the Russian em- bassy clerk who exposed his coun. try's wartime espionage in Canada. An External Affairs Department spokesman said Thursday Gout 7.-enko has told Canadian authori- ties he gave all his spy informs- llon to them years ago and thc U. S. has been informed there is no reason for the government- gusrded Russian to talk to Ameri- can investigators. The Canadian turn-down came on a request, through the U. S. State Department. for an inter- view with Gouzenko in Canada by of the Senate internal security sub-committee, investigating subversive activities. McCarthy Complains Senator Joseph McCarthy. who heads another Senate investigat- ing committee. complained of the action in New York. "It is inconceivable that any friendly government would turn down A request for a U. 5. con- grcssional committee to hear test- imony of men who might give in- formation that would help crackl Communist conspiracy in the Un- itcd States." he said. Alleged Scalp Of Strange Snowman Shown lrlemple BOMBAY, tR9uters)- Buddhist priests in a. I-limalayan temple have shown Indian mountaineers a scalp claimed to be that of an "abomin- able snowman," the mysterious creature said to inhabit. the region. An expedition. now rrturned to Bombay after an unsuccessful as- kault on 23,190-foot Mt. Pumori. described the scalp as ”vnry thick." and covered all over with ”red- dlsh-brown . hair." The "snowman" has been vari- ously deocribed as it giant. mon- ster. halfway bctwcrn man anal lipc. a mountain bear-and purely legend. But the Sherpas. who in- habit the region. regard the "snow- -"i:7intracVt”iirliEe Continued from page 10 West! The latter could then do no. better than lead another heart. South would win with the king.:' draw trumps. and discard a spade on rlummy's heart ace. Now he could cash the king and ace of spades and ruff A third round - and if he found the fortunate 3-3 break. as he would have. he could discard a club. At worst. if the spade break failed to materialize. he would still be able to try for the club trick. it. How we laughed to see the drunks swinging their arms and hats in the sir. and making dod- perste. futile passes at the angry stinging insects. But the laugh went right out of our faces when we saw the men pull up to a. telephone post, tie the horse. cut a 'couple of stout awlchel. and take after us But youth snd four good work- ing legs soon put it safe distance between us Ind our ptrrluen. We never found out who they were and luckily for us they never learned our names. and the hornets let the men have (To be Continued) sromv wnvoaw For. snug Winter comfort FULL ' DUCTION THIS WEE - ALL SIZE. .. muss LIST vouas nanny i. M. Po0LE& co. om1Nzro'. T DlIl'.55.71 - .55." xi The priests. whose temple is 14.- 000 feet up in the mcuntsins. re- fused to sell the scalp to the party, but Russl Gandliy. expedition lend- er. said that 8. number of photo- graphs were taken of it and the . expedition managed to bring awny several mu-s. Before vie Rumians left Moscow to Napoleon's 'iu-my in 1812 they burned 30.800 houses. l1llE.tIFEy.I ;l il'(; Bel 5 time .3... . E:fg3,t, V i 'z'l”5il in- between the walls and guarded by I T T" ' A c 5”” thelr parents. aunts and uncles. Youthful members of the Junior Y. M. C. A. Square Dance team sre pictured At. the Maritime mid 'g"5t'3”"dp”""5- Winter Fair. Left to right (back row Betsy Houston, Bsrburs Stewart. Connie Davies. Mayne Mac- Tms happy umily ”h”Ved 0" Donald: (front row) Freddie 1-lyndmsn. Hughle Mac Lean, Jimmy White, Kennle Macxcnzie.-(Bartcr's cheese. bread crusts. and other 1.-gm 1,1,), odds and ends of discarded lunches, The four corners of the . many-ggm.,y,cnu H; Yeugwmh awe. EAST nA1,'n(; scnool. ' ....- Raport. of East Baltic School for October is as follows: Grade Ix-1. Bradley 1'lIb': 3- Ruth Fey; 3. Ian M1aoGregor'. Grade VIII-1. Sandi-s MscGreg- or; 2. Joan Dixon; 3. Anita Rose. Grade VIII-Philip Fay. t Grade VI-Joan Fay. Grade V-1. Ecbsr Dixon: 2. Mavis Rose; 3. Edith M.scGregor. Grad-e IV-1. Ann Pay; 3. Aub- ll. S. Air Canlers it Challenged By .. Transport Bd. OTTAWA. (GP) -.- O a practices of two Unltcd sdciluif carriers in Csnlds have be” challenged by the air truupm board as n nquol to Ill American "III that has held up u pmp.,,,d . Culsd:-Mexico service. ' The board has ordered 1:... ' American World Airways and Col- onial Airlines to show came by Dec. 15 why they should be allow. ed to continue procedural bsnned by U. S. Authorities for Tm... Canada Air Lines on its Mme, r,un. .John R. Bsldwln. board elm... man, said there is no llkelihoog that suspension of service by .1... U. S. firms will be ordered, hm the board "might or might, "M. mnke them discontinue the lung of operation frowned on by 1)., U. . civil aeronautics board 1. the case of TCA. Asked Sopsntc Plans. The board's action arose from. s C.A.B. decision not to allow TCA to use just one aircraft on its proposed service between Tor. 'onto and Mexico City by vuy of Tampa. Fla. In a strict inter. pretstlon of the U.S.-Canada Alf ....eement. C.A.B. ruled Tr"... Canada must uls Iepsrste play... on the Toronto-Tampa. and Tam”. Mexico City legs. rey Mscai-egor. Grade II (A)-Johnnie lhoheq. Grade Ii! (B)-1. Muuuct rum 2. Richard Msccvrcgor; 3. My-ti. Macciregor. Crude I-Bonnie llhcorsgor mg Janet Dixon. equal. Hlghcat average in senior gruhq Bradley ray, no-yr. , 1-Klghat average in Junior gndq Ann Fay. Mm. Mrs. Inez Dixon, tamer. trove it or not (Tl ttatrwaldde oaf The man whose picture belongs here is not necessarily a celebrity or a leading citizen- lndccd. lic might be a'ny one of million: of Canadians. How did so many people benefit their communities so greatly? Simply by insuring Ihflf Iive.i'l in this way. they set in motion a series of events which have far-reaching effects on themselves and their fellow-citizens. . g Take for instance the new highways. schools. bridges, power hospitals and other important works n jccis have been financed with money w policyholders. Or look at the workers streaming out from some new industrial lnnt. They my plants, homes, hotels. ow being built from coast to coast. Many of these pr!)- hich life insurance companies have invested for their OW! their jobs to life insurance policyholders who provide the money nee ed for investment in that plant's expansion. Go'od health. too, is promoted b life imurinicd policyholders. Several important medi- cal research projects, supported by li e insurance company funds, are waging war 883"!” polio. heart ailments, cancer and other dread dilcsses. . ' . But perhaps the life insurance owner's most important service is not any of these thlnf: It is the way he provides for his tivu or the community.- So, if you own life insurance, be proud that in all these way: you're helping to 111813 Canada. 1 better land to live lni Ar voun SERVICE family so that they will not be a financial burden to his re A muinod lilo ondorwmov, representing one of the man W''" 50 Ccnudlun, Irlmh and Unllcd Mom llh lmwanu G0" ' iicandnllddinl is r "and two. no.5: In. IycT:r';.o:re.'I.u NSURANCE couimuas. IN CANADA to is 6ocd.CMlronshIp-n'o1pgLl!!: fdmllv" dy Qn MM. mnuvf T ..-w - 1--