MAY 9. 1951 per? (IIMIAO low! at salfmwlllli m! GRAIN WINNIPEO. May 8 - (CP) - Prices were firmer today on the Winnipeg Grain Exchange with better commercial demand in cats and barley and offerings not as liberal. Exporters took barley while flax advanced on eastern and proces- (or demand. Rye reacted to de- mand. Rye reacted in American house buying on both sides of the line. class two wheat and I.w.A, prices a bushel remained unchang- pd while only about 100,000 bush- els of wheat were reported loaded overnight for export. About 75,000 bushels went to the United King- dom and the rest to Belgium. Closing prices: l Oats - May 03'-L-E; July 92153; -- May Oct. 89'..'. 1.27963; July l.29!iB; Oct. 1.2531. Barley Rye - May 2.128; July z.l:W.B'. Oct. l.9BA. i Flax .- May 4.88: July sass;-. Oct. 4.5BA. SPECIAL STAMPS Postage stamps have been is- sued to honor all dead presidents of the United States from Wash- ington to Franklin Roosevelt. For everything youlwant; in an automobile exceplhigli cost The Austin A40 anon N43 DUVAR MOTORS 164 Prince St. nu Aasxm h'uvr.HtnMi'anvlanai-.1itMvviIIxwIvtmI.lNI It.'s smooth! Fast! Spaeiousl Finely appointed! Amazingly economical to buy and own! Forty-five years of. Ausrm engineering built into every solid inch of frame. body and interior. 700 dealers in serve you ; .: man in com! Justin 0. .......... VIMIIIVII YOU 00-YOU'LL ill AUS1'IN' Phone 1276 hum-.t .x Rocxme A stucco. AND cmrnr mm 0 ' PROTICTS - SIALS ICONOMICAL - EASY HROCKTITI is the hardest, longest-letting and most economical tinlsh known in masonry and stucco. it bonds right on to the wall surface. looms moisture iron viltivln. Use on all porous masonry, briclt. concrete surtoev Ask your point dealer for colour cord. PAIN-T IS TII5 '. ME easy WV 70 To IIOLMAII LTD. .3 "Queen Charlotte” Holds Proud Record For Efficient Training 9 '11-IE GUARDIAN. Ci'iAiu.m”rn'rovm it. Each nook and cranny of 'Il.ltl. C. 8. Queen Euston Street, and Vincent Pineau, to Kent street. Charlotte is utilized for training. In the shipwright shop are CPO'a Llewellyn Lockwood (left) . 21'! -R. C. N. Photo. text- ton. ;.. .( Epeclalised aeamanship is the chief study at 18 Park Street. and AB Harry E. Dunning. Kenslnr H. M. C. S. Queen Charlotte, so thesevlleserves brush up on chariwork. They are (left) AB James Caldwell -R. C. N. Photo. story of Queen Charlotte This is the story of a ship that made good. shorebound. she sails through the seas oi Time rather than real water, but once. she was nearly wrecked. She's the Royal Canadian Naval neservo Division at Charlottetown -411. M. C. 5. Queen Charlotte- ona of twenty-one dryland "ships" in major cities of Canada. A little different than some. she was one or the sixteen old-timers launched in 102i. That is. if you can imag- 'ine spare storage space in the loc- al Armourias a shlpl Men who realized the necessity for "ships ashore" look that -humble beginning seriously. Lieut. G. H. Buntaln (now Commander) was her -first Captain. A couple of yearsylater. a young Sub-Lleut- enant became Executive officer. He was John .7. Connolly. now Captain RON (R). her Command- ing officer today. and. in civvy street, postmaster at the capital. This ship, as the Navy terms commissioned ' and bases. increased in size. journeying to the old Navy League Building in l928 (now Nurses Residence of the r Charlottetown Hoapilnl). There, for six years, young bloods of P. E. I. trained through the winters. In summertime, they went to Halifax for fourteen days' This is CPO Stanley 0. lowies. 22 Granville street. veteran of 21 years Naval service and M. C. 8. Queen Charlotte since 1945. he is also a dead shot and D. C.- lt.A. rifleman for the Province. "P 4.. for five. i i y of -R. C. N. Photo. llAUTIIll'S' TO USE " DRIES FAST 1 2 cisrlsttstsvn Produce prices quoted here today as meat of Agriculture: road 60: A-puilsts 58: B 5.5: C 80. Receipts: l,lId cues. tau ab .7. ario colored so-mt, Ontario white ed 35. r.o.a. Mcntnal: ,whoiessls ont- W mo; "'3' Mn; no-.1. no. i an It. Dlulstutsva Plsss ll no. 1 10's .1:-. 1.45-iso, am. No. 1 10': .22-.29; Qudblc No. I 'l5'l 1.03-1.15; Cali- fornia No. 1 im sso-m. rnonucs MONTREAL. May a --- (CP) - reported by Dominion Depart- lcgs: Free cases. A-lsrlc 62: A- luttcr: Current receipts Que. No. pasteuriaed fresh sou: Que. No. but; wholesale Que. No. 1 pac- fresh sm-ea; first (rule . print job price mi-ea. in boxes. Current receipts, Ont- choose: !'.0.B. factory: Quebec color- Qusbco white 345 nominal. 0 colored 355i: Ontario white ; Quebec colored am. Quebec , ltc 85 nominal. Receipts: Nil. Potatoes: NJ. No. 1 "It's L25- 1 lots .'n..'rl: NJ Shipping News l AT ;..7.:.ix Arrived Tuesday Atlantic. irom Mediterranean ports. . lalisd Tuesdo spurt, for San Juan. Nova Bcotia. Liverpool. Miquelcn. St. Pierre. . Geneva, Curacao. as samr JOHN Arrived ruua-y Rumors Read. from Liverpool. .larbars. Baltimore. lailsd Tussda! None. . MADRID. May I -(Reuters) - Four thousand workers at Pamp- lona today went on strike in pro- test anlnst the hiah cost of liv- 1!!- iraining or, after three ycars' sai- lsfactory service. sailed on a West Indies cruise in ships of Canada's tiny fleet. sub-Lieut. G. A. C. Scarth (now Ueut. Cdr.) was added as Train- ing Officer in 1034 and two years later. Captain Connolly took over the helm from retiring Command- er Buntsin. CPO R. W. Rosa re- lieved Po .7. l-learn as chief In- structor. Without A Berth In me. the ship ioundcred bad- ly on the shoals oi misfortune. but was reflected. The Navy Lennie had to sell the building housing her quarters. which left the poor Queen Charlotte without a berth. Captain Connolly walked the streets to find another one. The chore drove him to the in- lane asylum. He wasn't deranged-Just happy. The aayiurn- a temporary build- ing used for that purpose and vac- ated when Faiconwood Hospital was rebuilt. provided the division with a home base smack in the middle of town. so the dryland sailors converted the building into a proper Naval barracks. in llu. the Supplementary Reserve of oiiicen was formed and seven were appointed to the Queen Charlotte which used the strain on the Captain and his training officer. Outbreak of was; neat your faund the ship established on I permanent basis for recruiting and traininc. A knot of determined Reserves encamped on the Ord- nance grounds under canvas; oth- ers were heading by rail for Hali- fax. Boys streamed into the Navy and Merchant service. Over lmti men enlisted-the greatest num- ber recruited per capits. in any Province of Canada. That contllct over. the ship cas- ries on, maintaining her recruiting standard. Liaison with the Armed Forces. RCMP and the general public is of high calibre. Total strength is 103-si now serving in the Permanent Force, with de- stroyers in Korea and other CPO Stanley Bowler. veteran of over 2i years' service to set ex- ample. the Division has never lost self-reliance. From its humble be- ginning in the Armouries, it has Exllanded to s. tour-floor building with adjoining sheds. Every nook and cranny is utilized. most of the work being done by the sailors. specialists. local Universities have Professors in the Ofiicers' Re- serve. so higher mathematics in navigation are imported with pro- fessional polish to trainees. The Provincial Department of Educat- ion helps save the Navy time and money too. by examining artisan 'rccruit.s in trade qualifications at lend a hand by providing the Div- lsion with use of their radio-tclc- phone facilities to reach outlying districts. The "Queen Charlotte" could be called a "Shootin" Division. En- ormous 'smount.s of ammunition are expended in the basement small arm range. CPO Eowles and big. Sca. John E. Maclcenzlc shot on P. E. 1's DORA team. The Navy organized the Garrison Indoor Rifle Dengue in Charlottetown. this year occupying se i fifth and eighth places, with CPO Bowles shooting 95.3 and PO A. Ioverock. EJCN (R). 93.1 l-WYCCM individual averages for the regul- I! SBESOH. ships of the Fleet. with men like - Special Role p special role at the "Queen Oliarlotte" is to produce seamen the Vocation School. The RCMP. 48!" HIGHLANDERS CELEB one of Canada's famous Red-l menls, mi. Highlanders of Can-1 ads. will celebrate their Diamond Jubilee May M. 26. and 2'1. 4,000 veterans from all over Canada are expected to attend thel reunion in Toronto. I-lis Excell- ency. the Governor General and Lady Alexander will attend the Troopini cf the Colours May 26th. Show above looking at a picture rAGE SEVEN RATE DIAMOND JUBILEE of the Iii-s't Commanding Officer of the Regiment. Lt.-Col. John I. Davidson. are. left to right. Major Alex J. Sinclair, veteran of the Boer War: LI.-Col. M.E. George. present Commandln Officer ol the Regiment: Lt.-Col. George T. Chisholm, Commanding Officer of the 92nd Battalion in the First Great War; Li. J. M. Lowndee who will carry the colours at. the Gov- ernor C-eneralts inspection. To welcome guests hi? ..s....... suituuuuuuinuuncousiosut. CHARLOTTETOWN, J. & T. MORRIS P. E. TED PHONE 191 LIMI I. " smznv " non! 5MOioE, SPEEDV! 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