11m GUARDIAN, cnanwrrsrown _” raga TWENTX-QWO / Teen Town Danc e Held At Y. M.VC. A.. OUR BOARDING HOUSE EF vou SNATCHES No, NEPTUME, A NAP, MlSTAH ‘ii lime it lands." Dumbar explained. MASOR HOOPLE HEREs W5 FuflLE! MAISOR, MEBBE TNE SCANNED CLEANED A ____ E-Avs IT you DREAM 0e THESE EMTQiES GIRAFFE <~= ‘MEANQ A DAT DUBBY TlLL MY - - PLPo/lNG CAQD MMTURE viluuerz AGAiN! TEMPLES ARE --THEN THE 0F GOOD Ann noes ~lou CQPNE THRoBBme V GIRAFFE sAue BAD Luck‘ SOME c\-\EEsE Z i-uM THE who“: You DERBY NiANGR. GONNA i LOOK rr UP.’ ' ETTER STOKE UP ON SWiSS AND TRY TO ‘ "i ssa t‘, r. m. sec. u. s. Pu. a 4 lzeAmswAn/u! WHAT'S THAT HSHBQWI- H/MQAFHB! NOW see em" To no wnu n? zsusr ANALVZE ~ BEEe FOREST FULL 0P M\J DREAMI-A ZEBRA PLUCKED ," A GIFZAFFE GAME wTi-Vébi THE- GlQAFFE- ANNOUNCED Q F E "ST VAUES 1N rnunsnar -- rsunmr sarunnar \.... DERBY WiNNER-w. ‘I. SiMPLY MANY TREE! SIM-us COOM ALONG wlz CLEAN no A cAvzo / THE NAME or: THE HUNT ANIMALS -~ eE-r ARE woT vou CALL oesor "rt-us MAME!» KHNGAROO.'--~ COMPOUND rr, sncm HA! VARY I THAT. The chance of a lifetime l-o obtain your Summer ~W¢drobe cl tremendous savings. Come in. our offerings- _ i‘ . -. 1 .- . i, a‘ y‘ m 2b m “i ' ‘ZEBRA-w 1H5 NAME-c... -' THOSE E665? Dartmouth Glider Club First Of Kind In‘ Canada DARTMOUTH. NS. May 4 — (C?) — Th; Dartmouth lakes. sports centre of this Halifax har- bour town, lend themselves to year-round sports - ircm aqua ‘meets and yacht rsclns 1n lum- mer to ice-boating and horsg rac- ing in winter. They have also been used as a landing strip for a glider club. The Gull Glider Club is one of the first of its kind in Canada and the only one in the Maritlmes. g st winter the club took its 1cm off and landed it again on ice. President George Dllmbul‘ says it is the first time this has been done in Canada. i About a year ago a half-dozen "men pooled their spare time and after some 2,500 hours had com- pleted construction of a glider. It weighs 280 pounds. is 24 feet long and has a wing-span 0i 39 feet. Club members usually do their {gliding from the old l'v.C.A.F. field |at Stanley, 45 miles sway. After a ‘winter ln the hangar - except for lino-Act Plays Slyiy Satirize Canadian Scene (By The Canadian Press) A new book 0i five plays, "Eros At Breakfast" by Robertson Dav- ies (Clarke Irwin), is slanted dir- ectly at Canadians. It is an en- tertaining plea for Canadian arts and a witty condemnation oi the attitudes which stifle the devel- opment of Canadian culture. The bearded editor of the Pet- erborough Ebranuner has produc- ed a group 0f one-act plays which will bring him even more fame than the "Dairy of Samuel March- banks," a penetrating, humorous commentary on life as viewed from the sidelines. It is this sanne clever combina- tion of wit and thought which ‘ its mp off the ice - it now is be- ‘ihg dusted of! again so pilots can log more gliding minutes. To get the glider going, a jeep tows it down the runway. When the glider reaches 600 feet the pilot yanks a lever releasing the Lctw-calble. It stays up only about two minutes. ‘That's from the time it releases the cable until the W-ith the exception of the pres- ident, most club members had no flying experience before Joining the group. Dumber took to flying when he left his native Stellarton, N.S., to attend McGill University. He be- came a chemical engineer and at the same t'me joined the college flying club and learned to handle an aircraft. His vwife has also learned to manipulate the craft. She pitched ln to help with its construction and sewed m0st_of the cloth cov- ering. She says she also got to he pretty handy with a saw before the glider vras wrnpleted. Dumber, instructor as well as president. says the pilots have as much control over the glider as they would over a motor-driven plane SOUTH MELVILLE Mrs. William Gillespie, Appin Road, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Provencher. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Shaw, City, visited their summer home last week. Master Barry Dunsfcrd, son of y?! LAsso AN‘ traverse».- EXTRAORDINARY,’ Willi Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Dunsford, has recovered from a severe attack of pneumonia. Miss Jean Higgins spent the Easter holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Higgins. Mrs. John Dixon returned 110mg "Celml! having spent a couple of months visiting her daughters in Ontario and U. s. A, The many friends of Mrs. Home! Provencher are pleased to see her out again after her recent illness. Mrs. Harold Donahoe, Cornwall, spent a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Flood. Mrs. Bssler and daughter, Sum- merslde, were the guest; o; he; sister, Mrs. George Villett, on gun. day. . M!" Gwfsllla MacKenzle, De- sable, spent Easter with her PB-fehta. Mr. and Mrs. Harry M“. Kenzle. Several of the young r011; are confined to their homes with the mumps. Mr. Wallace Johnson, North wntlhlre 118cm for Rawleiglfs pro. ducts. urn-ode his first trip or the Year last week. Mr. and Mrs. Ebby Boulter, Vic- toria, was the guest oi’ Mr. and Mrs. Harry MscKenzie recently. The ladies of Melville L. O. B. A, are to be congratulated on having completed 51X quilts for the Red Cm" "u! mrins. Quilting part1“ were held at the following homes’ M"- Georss Villett, Mrs. Thos‘ Hlsalns. Mrs. Windsor Bell, m; Homer Provencher and Mrs. John gm"- ThQ 1011110 members wish to Ink Mrs. Lorne Fer-gum“, Mm _Msnford Beer, Mrs. Will Dungiopd nlll/[Irskwlndsor Bell and Miss Bus] ac enzle for their splendid as. sis-lance. m‘ (qféAfllBUltY. Bucks. Eng1and._ ) _' 9- whm-M. ‘I4. has com- PMM 54 Wars‘ work on the “m, farm here. He is s thatcher and martyrdom of the Jesuit mission- characterizes "Eros At Breakfast." Davies uses a subtle, tongue-in. _ ».MAY*§,194 USSR. I941 , -; ‘iv/nu YUGOSLAVIA 900i non ms on ‘IITO NAME$ ' ‘ITIQ . . rams AS one»: or "uss AND suuotn" av "fii-Siiki" * ‘ SOVIET. IULGARI WELL A5 WEST . ‘°M‘N|AN‘ pouézz.‘ r“- uuueanlsu. CZECH. mmnm outowm J. 0 GONE FROM CAPITAL i o e ~""'4 ' o Belgrade J‘ ' luu l 4 "‘ ~ YUGOSLAVIA susreu 1, ‘millet nseuunoug.‘ ...... a, eggsgggigggug: H" sate.“ l’ customs AGAlNbl XNHLTRATION, REGISTERS consensus. YIIIIINIAM s‘, cheek approach in his satire on the stupidity and dullness of the average ilie. “Eros At Breakfast,” the title pieoe of the book, won the Barry Jackson award for the best Can- adlan-written play produced in the Dominion Drama Festival in i948, The play pokes fun at a conven- tional college boy. I Another play which rates as high with amateur groups is "Overlaid," the delightful story oi an ornery Ontario farmer who wears top hat and white furnace gloves when he sits in his kitchen listening to Metropolitan Opera broadcasts. "The Voice cf the People" is a more pointed blast at stupidity. Shorty Morton backgrounds his ideas which finally result in a let- ter to the editor of the local newspaper. False religion versus art is the thtme of "Hope Deferred” while “At the Gates of the Righteous". presents s. picture of the youth-f ful "free thinker." i A significant revised edition of an outstanding Canadian novel has just been put out by Macmil- lan. ‘The Champlain Road" by Franklin Davey McDowell, first published l0 years ago, and win- ner of the Governor-General’; 1989 Literary Award for fiction, now appears in the Htuohian edition. It marks the tescentensry o! the arles during the extermination of the Huron Indian nation by the Iroquois. Jean de Brebeuf and Ga-bniel Lalcmant died It the stake in March i649. Since the original plibllcation of ‘The Champlain Road” the arch- aeological excavations of the Un- iversity of Western Ontario on the site of the Jesuit mission near Mldlmd. Ont, have revived pub- lic interest in l-luronia. Important historical information has been turned up by the trowels and spades of research parties. The new edition Ls shorter and the tempo of the story is conse- quently speeded up. The author's fore-word, a feature of the edition, analyzes the military and econ- crnic significance oi the struggle and the basic elements in the clash of civilizations. Endpapers by Kenneth Dawson depicting s. Huron Indian, the founder of the Jesuit Order, lend distinction to the second edition oi "The diamplain Road." The jacket ls a reproduction of hist- oric Fort Ste. Marie, residence of the Jesuit. Mission to the Hurons, painted by Dawson. ORWELI. COVE W- L The regular monthly meeting of Orwell Cove Womeirs Institute was held at the home of Mrs. Walter MaoLeod on April 20, with an attendance oi ten members and bwo visitors. The meeting opened with the ode. The minutes oi the previous meeting were read. adopted and signed. It was moved and second- ed that Orwell Cove’ Institute ul- opt the Hatch End Institute in llingiand. Three thank-you cards were re- ceived. ‘Iihe government grant was received. A list was made out for the contents oi the parcel to be picked for Britain. A lottery on a cake resulted in $18.56. Roll call for next meeting is to be an- swered by an exchange of seeds or plants. A dime lottery is to be held at next meeting. Mrs. D. MacDonald is to donate.the art- lcle. ‘m0 program was put on by Mrs. J. Macltae and MmWJisc- Leod. The meeting then adjourned arms of Frame and of Loyola,“ The relative political position of Yugoslavia in connection with the Iron Curtain countries is a ques- tion western diplomats are pon- dering now that the North Atlantic Defence pact has been signed. The above map shows the current European situation. Yugoslavia has become a country without a friend. and a bigger qufisf-lfm ""1" ever. It has been nearly 8 Y"? since Marshal Tito balked at fol- lowing Kremlin orders. Moscow rebuked him. but Tito stood his ground so Yugoslavia was kicked out of the comlnform. Ever since. Russian satellite governments have seized every opportunity to criti- cize Tito publicly. Tito has indi- cated a willingness to co-opcratc with the west. but not at the ex- pense of shunning Slav nations to the east. SHORE FISHING POOR LUNENBURD. N. S. — (C?) — Scarcity of fish and bad Weather have greatly hampered shore fish- ing here, but fishermen are expect- ing increased catches as weather improves. Most bank fishermen have completed changing over from fresh to the salt fishing industry and have sailed for the Banks. —————i—-— \ MONTREAL — (C?) — Seventy- flve Montreal Chinese recently took the Canadian oath of allegiance to become new citizens. It was the first time Chinese nationals f0 here have been admitted to citizen- ship urlthout first becoming fam- iliar with either of the official languages 3-DAY MAY SALE ‘Thursday, Friday and Saturday May 5th, 6th and 7th Misses’ Wear Ghildreifs Wear For Girls Lost Season's Cottons-T to 14x s2 s3 4.00M s Cools 1cm mh 3 Dozen Misses’ Blouses. m. $3.95 n. $4.95. Each... ' Z Dozen Misses’ Blouses. ' Reg. $2.98., Each .1 loo All Lost Season's Dresses (12-18) clearing o - . . -_-_-_. Reg. $13.95 n» snout DISCOUNT ON sxlnrs. Ar Each ' 10% Off All New Merchandise A159 Queen Si. ' .P'_'°“e 92 sites- whlch a delightful lunch llaylrick builder. *7‘: _\vas served. assassins! rant: l "P purchase st. a ‘ $49.50 s‘ m of QrAISOIFTILY Ill! u extra pair pom y: _ KB m»: sows '5 W EA n c e so $15.09. d 0wli”0N"MEN’s A’ _"" 3.. sétlibli‘! cm. HALF r-mc: 10% 0n New floats h... 5m Shortics and etc. _""_f'f*_“_{__ 19o "n-ls mssss v l HOLMES a BRADLEY Every article in the store been slush- ed to give you buyingvpulsllci-ih‘ t greatest saving in yous.‘ OIIQ \ .