PAGE FOURTEEN , H mg. mp GUARDIAN. Cl-fARLO'I"l'ETOW'N- ”' 2. 1951? Advertising liates Payable In Advance lliumum charge lbr Any Aslvutlluneal so Cents Octal tlrnrdlan Louie In per word; Welfare Int lulu: i In par vvord; Announcements and Oonlu Ivonne Is our Ulaaalned In Ilor word; .11: ill notices Me per turn um or Eleni and aim-nun oust-um, cum. etc, 0: per name; Melon ol Condolence no per inch; W Ito- gisgeiueute Ill wunla tor um and 10 cause for every aumuunai U stoma; Natures of Tlunlie and Awnsciauon, use on sup an 00 you wont; hate or bubwtlptlnnn, so come pa tun; mm... .,,--.c.-- and Presentation 53.00. cum Betas on application. no ulvenless agree: um use puouanu shall not be liable for uuuagea anew; out of errors us advertisement: beyond the amount pad for the wane actually occupied by that portion of "ID --5V0fNlIlII9nt. in Whlnh the error occurred, whether such error to due no the negugence of ice senung us otlwrwiu, no there shall be no liability for nun-Inaeruun of any -uverueemeui word ; .3, -. beyond use amount paid for ouch -.:ve-rtlaesaiens. time in 1050. The sl.os0.000.ooo Valle for teen SW9" in I llfelimlnl-ry estimate by the Bureau of statistics compared with 390l.ooo.oon for me. It also 9""-'”Wd Wlkilllly. the Bureau feported. with a 045000.000 value so years ago. The actual 1060 value probably was ecnaiderably higher than the official fitrures. for a significant omission from the total was the out. Boarders wanted STUDENTS (BOYS) ACCOMMO- dated at 85 Cumberland Street. AWANTED-TWO COLLEGE: Students. Boys preferred. Phone 591.-L. , WANTED - WOMAN BOARD- era for warm private home. out- side city limits. Write Box 178. Guardian. cars & Irueits For Sale FOB SALE-19-H DODGE. OWN- er leaving Province. Phone 20354.. for item FOR RENT - TWO HOUSE- keeplng rooms. Apply 39 Water Street or phone 19984.. tier Sills FOR SALE--HALF TENEMENT house and furniture. Write Box F Guardian. FOR SALE-KANGAR00 BEAVER Coat. Size 16. Splendid value. Phone 27004. m- FOR SALE -- BABY CARRIAGE good as now. Mrs. Seymour Birt, Cophead Rood. FOR SALE - DRTVING SLEIGH good as new, George Carson. Bonshaw. WOOD FOR SALE - HARDWOOD split blocks. Also sawed soft wood slabs for kindling. Percy Downe. 5 Esher Street. FOR SALE - 1000 FEET OF 2- inch oak plank. Suitable for boat building or flooring. Apply Alden MacLaren. Brudeneli. FOR SALE - WELL EQUIPPED Grocery Business in good res- idential section of the city. Im- mediate possession. Write BOX 179. Guardian. PROPERTY FOR SALE AT WOOD Islands. 33 acres. one mile from Ferry. with good buildings. Hot and cold running water. Priced to sell. Good chance for Cabins. Write Box 177. Guardian. NOTICE TO FARMERS. HAVE in stock one No. 30..onc. N0- 40 Cockshutt tractors. fertilizer grain drills. horse and tractor hitch. also power lift. Above will be sold till Jan. 6 at May- l9S0, old prices. Spring settle- ment if desired. Weeks Farm Equipment. Found FOUND ON HIGHWAY NEAR Hunter River. measuring tape. Apply Macfccvra store. Albany- Fenrale llelp Vlanteilg lAN'l'El)- GIRL OR. WOMAN to help with housework in country home. Four adults, all modern conveniences. A-ppiy Mrs. Elliott Wright, KlHk0Fil. liouses-Ants. Wanted W A N T E D .. UNFURNISHED. heated Apartment. Apply Guard- ian, Box 175. Lost LOST - SANDY BROWN COL- lip dog. five months. Named Sport. Rr-ward. Phone 531 day- lime. 2863-L evenings. salesmen Wanted WANTED - RELIABLE MAN Ail Dealer in some good rural locall- ties and in Charlottetown. Exper- ience not necessary A line oppm- Wnily to Stet) into old nrofliable business where Raxvieigh Pro- duct have hecn sold for all-.ars Biz nmnts Products furnished on credit. Wriic Rawleizhhs Dept. MI.-A-470-103, Montreal. ...A.:..mA:? W A N T B D -. EXPERIENCED salesman for North Shore of New Brunswick and Prince Ed- ward Island. Must have high school education and references. We-supply trailer sample rooml and pay part expenses, Please .. submit. photo with application in -own handwriting. Man ownlnc v,his own car for winter travel would be preferable. Bluebird ' Novelty F mpany. Amherst. N.S. opportunities uilunonmnr-caaaua. mu- 2 tea st.atee..Alaaka and foreign till Opportunities. now. when. where ff. to apply. Bend 01.00 for latest ,-(4 employment report listing tlrma hiring. service Bureau. Dept. BI. P. O. Box 1215. Saint John. Norton 0. Cutting lumber on ' . ithotlt . my A ' ” flue law - .Iihereby.glve warning to E l ' wdcelti with f WANTED - .-o's.?.ii6.v as COM- pamon to elderly lady. write Box 176. Guardian. WAN TE D-MAN WANTS ROOM and board in private home. Write "K" care Guardian. WANTED - AT ONCE. BOOK- keeper saleslady. Apply" in per- son. LePa.ge shoe Co.. Ltd. WANTED - BY FIRST YEAR Prince of Wales College student. room and board in exchange for light l10llseu'ol'k, bahy-sittillg, etc. Phone 2880. Stocks BEER? New Highln 1950 By FORBES RHUDE (Canadian Press Business Editor) TORONTO. Dec. 30 (CP- Prices on the Toronto Stock lin- change advanced strongly in 19.30. throwing off early-year uncertain- ty and overcoming two sharp drops caused by the Korean fighting. rial stocks reached 291.31 Nov. 28. highest since it was started in 1934. and compared with 19t0'a close of 207.36. Base metals reached 164 '35 Nov, 24. highest since it. was start- ed in 1938. compared with 1949'.- close of 113.19. Bath ended the year around their peaks. Di.-spite progress in explm-ni.icn. increased facilities and laying of pipelines, Western Oils were rela- tively tame. This may have bv-en partly due to lack of sensational developments of the nature of Led-uc or Redwater Fields; partly because of heavy capital expendit- ures required to develop the oil industry; and partly the result of waiting for the opening up of new markets. , Oils finished the year ahead, but their high points in the index were 90.34 June 23. and 92.85 Oct. 2. They ended the year around '15. compar:-cl with 1940's close of 64.13. Golds. faced with a fixed price for gold at the same time that pl")- duction costs are rising; drifted, in the main. on 8 do.vnwa.rd course. with their index finishing the year around 75, compared to 1940's close of 105.30. In general the market, after the early-year hesitation. seemed at lastto throw off the doubts that had assailed it since 1946. It seem- ed to become convinced that, oome peace or war, there would be high business and industrial activity. Large sums of investment money decided that common stocks were good buys. Many people sought this way of owning a piece of something tangible which would go up in value in case lnflaticn continued. and so increase the amount of their money and make up to some ex- tent ai: least for any loss in its buy- ing power. Perhaps most impressive were the rebounds from the mid-and latr- year setbacks caused by bad news from Korea. A strong start The market started the year from the highest levels of 1909. and a feeling that it was due fcr on ad- justment from recent advances was followed by a mid-January drop. February also was uncertain. Corporation news continued good. however. and ln general there was evidence that people were willing to keep on buying goods. in line with this the market launched cn an advance in March which con- tinued throullh April and May. with May seeing the largest volumes nf trading in the history of the ex- change. Only golds lagged. June continucrl the advance lin- tii the outhrenk of Korean fight- ing brought the steepest decline since 1929. In the period between June 23 and July 13 industrial: de- clined 31.07 points. base metals 14.90, western Oils 23.25. and golds 26.90. 1 By mid-August the general mar- ket had more than recovered the icst ground. and an upward course was followed. with tminor dips here and there. until Nov. 28. Then, the entrance of Chinese forces into the Korean fighting brought something of a repeat of the June break. but on a smaller scale. . This time the market bounded beck fut. though in generally quiet trading. and was in a strong poa- iticn at year-end. - Volume for the year was more than 500.000.0011 shares, compared with 2ie.ooo.ooo in me. while value of the trading was around 05.000.- 000. , S with last years 05!.- 000.000. c , LOIISAPPIAL MONTREAL, Dec. 80 - (CP)- llohom taint. convicted a year ago Qll I "lllbilltlll criminal." yesterday tien and life sentence. 3" 599!!! VII but lilfloll on 03!! '01 the ..Young was oboe Province an a habitual crim- chlfge was added to Odds -"'3'. "I" P The exclmngefs index for indus- 000 at an appeal against the eoavlc- " put. of pitchblende products from he Northwest Territories. Produc- tion and value of these products - from which atomic fission materials are extracted - are secret. 0016. worth 31e8..':oo.00o. again was the leading mineral product in value. The quantity recovered was up 7.3 per cent from 1949. Value of all metals was 9020.900.- 000. compared with 0b38,0oo,ooo the previous year. Price advances late in the year, after an early slump. hrovuqht higher average returns than in 1940. 000081” production slipped slight- Mineral Production In Canada At New High - j cent in value. Nickel declined 4.3 per 0'1'l'AWA. Jul. 1 - (GP) -our cent in quantity but gained 14.5 per Ida's mineral production went past. the tl.o00.o00.00o mark for the first cent in value. need was up six value. Substantial increases in Alberta's crude petroleum cutput were lame- ly responsible for a to-per-cent in- crease in value of mineral fuels to a20l.'1o0.oo0. crude petroleum went up to i.000.000o barrels. compared with 2l.(ll0.000 the year before. Onal d1'owed slightly in tonnage to an even 19.000-000. and its value also dropped from g1io,9l5,ooo to 8ll0.0f.'2.C00. The mineral output value by provinces. with 1949 figures in brackets: Newfoundland, szaeooiooo (037.- 500.000:) Nova Scotia. 000100.000 (s50.000.000l: New Brunswick, :12,- 600.000 ft7.l00.000); Quebec. 0211,- 600.000 (t!06.000.000i; Ontario, 3362.- 900.000 f03?3.80O.0o0l: Manitoba. 832,600,000 Is2a.aoo.ooo): Casket- ohowm. e0o.I00.ooo (t3o.ooo.oo0): Al- berta. 81.54.500.000 (ll13.'i00,000): British Columbia, s142.l00.00o (0138.- 300.000iZ N01'fhwe.It 'Iler-ritoriea (ex- clilding radioactive products). 88.- 100.000 tse.so0.ooo); Ytton. 81.000.- ly in tonnage but was up 1'7 per 000 lS.S.DO0.DD0l, 'ANUAllY 5. Brilnin end: relations with plan ngnillsi Russia. J l'.2. British suillutlrillc 'Iil'lli'uienty rllnintcd and sank in Tllanlcs cs!-i um-y; 65 Inst. 17. Bandit grills robs Brim"-x'Si Inc.. IIL Boston of more than S1.-i .000. 24. Dr. Rajendra Prasad named President of India. 25. Alger Hlss. formcr U. S, Sililp Dnpartnient official, so.-ii-ll one-ti to five years for perjury- in New York spy trial. 26. U. 5. transport plane disap- poarg in Alaska-Yukon area; 44-; abnlird. . 1 29. More than 1,300 killed. 120 villages tics-troycti in Iran cartil- quake. (ll. President Truman nrri.-rs, prcriuction of liytlrngen sup-.-r-I atomic bomb. 1 l"Il:I!Itl'ARY 4, Lord Norman. 78. lforlucr ROW-rnor of 'Bank of Enifiilfld-1 dies. 14. Russia and Communist Chlnnl sign 30-year friendship and mu-v iual aid llPIi”l. 23. Labor rcturncd with owl'- all miijoi"il.y of seven seats in British general election. 26. Sir Harry Lauder, 73. (H55 at Strathavon. Scotland. MARCH 1: Klaus Fuchs. scientist and, Communist. sentenced at London to 14 years for giving British and U. S. atomic secrets to Rumi- 5. U. 8. soft coal miners and (our-week strike. 6. Albert Lebrun. 78. former French president. dies at Porn. 12. Eighty killed when plane carrying Welsh football fans from Dublin crashes near Cardiff: Bel- gian referendum favors return of King Leopold III. 14. J. Albert Guay sentenced to hang at Quebec City for murder of wing killed with 22 others in f,lmg.bOmh cxpiosion aboard Cann- dian Pacific airliner, Sept 9- 1949. 23. Australia invokes cmerzenvy Crimp! Act. powers lnpflllht 130'” disorders and communism. ao. Lcon Blum. 7E.'f0rmer 50' ciulln Premier of France. dies at Puril. APRIL 1.1-min Atlantic Treaty Delano? lvlinlscm at The Hr-sue norm” collective plan of self-defence. 4. Indian Government llflllhfi plot to assassinate Prime Minister Nah.-u mid nlhPl' Congress leaders. 10, India-Pakistan pact to PTO- zecl. minorities ratified- l8. U. S. charges mlsslnl MVN patrol plane was shot down Over 3,.mc 5.. by soviet fighters. 21. R-ll River begins to rise It ' l c . W-53," pr: r.-r-dsrlc .toliel-Curle- ,,hysi(-5,. pm.-i Cnmniunlsl dismis- sed as French Hikh ?0m"”"l"" er for atomic encrB.l'- , 29. London's 11-tiny dork-strike collapses. MA 1' ll, Rlmoulki. Que..- fire causes 520000.000 . eatimatet!- damnat- 8. Red River' flood forces 12.- 000 from home: between Wlnnlprii and Emerson. Men-: 15.000 work at flood-fighting. 12, 31; Three Foreign Ministers in London agree on .l0iVI"il W9” Germany economically and Dolli- lclily to rest of United Western Europe. 14. Democratic Party wins Irurkish general election defeat- lb. Stalin receive: Trylve Lle- U. N. secretary-general. 10. Commonwealth conference at Sydney. Australia. agrees to lend 110000.000 in addition to 18.000.- 000 for technical assistance to count;-log In youth Illd IOIIIIIEIIC Asia; ammunition barges explode at south Amboy. N, -1.; 31 killed. 00 lnlurcd. .21. Earthquake kills so to 50 pee in in Cuzco. Peru. 2:: Field Marshal Earl Waveil. 0'i.'dlea in don. a. Threat of further flood als- te llmttrroln Winnllul and sthboniface: damage estimated at U”: ' 1 JUNE ii. Plane en route from Puertfi Rico in united states lost. in M- lantic: 22 lllilllllj.-ltl I re- WORLD DATES OF 1950 By The Canadian Press Ciilliesra Nationalist Governlileilltj 20. South Africa parliament 6. North Atlantic Part ll3”'J1l3lplSS9l hill to suppress commun- npprvyp Vi'esiPrn Eilrnpe defencep ism. 1 u-ill: aggression in Korea. in; Pruldent lnenu'a.govcrnment. 1 n."'men of on-. Wbean socialist partiea approves Schilmln Plan to pool European coal and steel. 24. Nni-iinrcst, Airlines plane inst nvlcr I-ilk:-.MlL-iiilzrtil: 53 missing. 15- N”l'Hl K0l'NIn forces launch drive nrross Siliiil parallel into South Koren. 2.. Anlcrlcan air and naval forces ordered to fight with South Korean army; South Korean Gov- ernment ieaves Seoul.- 28. Britain places naval forces in Japanese vmlcrs at disposal of U. 5. JULY 1. U. S. lrrlnps land in Korea. 4. Alit'll'O1 Groim kn. Soviet hep- ii'.l' FON'izn Miilislt-v charges 17.5. 6, i' 5. iren'l'ls fight first nln.l'lr cllzagcnicnt. ngninst. North lin- renns south of Suwnn. 7. United Nations ruzukcs Gen. Dmlclaa MacArthur suprcnlc com- mrindcr of U. N. forces in Korea. 9. Colombia earthquake takes 270 lives. 11. lntcrnntinnal Court of Jus- tlcn at The Plague rules South Africa cannot modify international status of Southwest Africa with- out Unltcd Nations consent. 17. Defenders abandon tempor- ary South Korean capital of The- jon; General Evangeline Booth. 84. Salvation Army leader. dies at Harlsrlale. N. Y. 22. Former Prime Minister Mar- kenzie King. 75. dies at Kings- mnre. near Ottawa. 23. U. S. and South Koreans pushed back into 90-by-90-mile semi-circular bridgehead north and west of Pusan; Britain announces she is sending combat group to Korea and putting Far East. fleet on war footing. 31. Canadian destroyers Cayuga. Sioux and Athabnskan join U.N. naval forces off Korea. AUGUST 1. King Leopold of Belgium agrees to abrlicaic In favor of his son. Prince Bnudoin. 7. Prime Minister St. Laurent announces special force to be recruited for U. N. in Korea or elsewhere. 14. Indonesian Parliament ap- proves new draft constitution for Republic of Indonesia. 15. Daughter born to Elizabeth and Duke of Edinburgh; major earthquake rocks Eastern India. . 22. Canada-wide strika paralyze: railway and telegraph services. 30. Railway strike end: after Parliamcnt in special session pas- sed Act providing for resumption of railway operations; 55 killed in plane crash in Egypt. BEPTEMBEF 4. Typhoon in Kobe and Osaka, Japan: 109 dead. 1.000 injured. 5. King and Queen plan tour of Australia and New Zeaiand in 1952. 11. Field Marshal Jan C. Sn-nits. M, dies at Capetown; 32 killed In train collision near Colhocton. Ohio. .12. Gen. George C. Marshall ao- polntcii U. S. Defence secretary. 13. New series of earthquakes strike North Assam. India: 1.000 killed. 15. U. N. invasion forces land at lnchon. Korean west coast port of Seoul. - 16. U. N. forces open leneral offensive In South Korea. ' 19. British Commons aupportu government 'rlei:iaion to proceed with nationalisation of iron and steel industry. 22. Dr. Ralph llunciie announced Ia Nobel Peace Pr-in winner for N. U. N. forces liberate Seoul: so miners tile in colilery fire at Cro-swell. England. 30. Government frees Canadian dollar. - OCTOBER 5. U. 8. Government announces - M750 American casualties in Ko- ru: Commonwealth Ministers in London approve Ipeadsr plan of aid” for Asia. 0 in - 0. Bodies of Mill) uth Korean men. women and ehldren-mule dared as entl-communists - found lnisourh Karen. ' - '7. U. N. General Assembly given I moral approval for occupation of all Korea by U. N. fol-eel: NW York Yankees win World Series against Philadelphia Pillls in rm strallltt Ilmet . 11. North Korean Government . D9? cet in tonnage but off slightly in Searelf-for Pesos Goes on in lime, After six Months Christmas Day-the iday of the Prince of Peace-mark ed the six months anniver- sary of the start of the Ko- rean war. The. action-pack- ed six months have seen what started as a "police action", which the Western World hoped to confine to Korea, flame into a fearful crisis that threatens to en- gulf the world in a third all- out war. Here are illustrat- Prlncess .1, UPI! the intrusion into the MASTER. STROKE was the luc- cessful landing at Inchon. port of Seoul, designed by UN Commend- or Gen. Douglas MacArthur. It cracked the buckhone of the North Korean Army which scattered northward in confusion with Allies in hot pursuit. ed monthly highlights from the invasion of South Korea by North Korean armies to pic- ture of the gigantic Chinese Communist military ma- chine. RED DAGGER was plunged into unprepared South Koren June 25. Bewiidered Americans were Jarred out of peaceful Sunday pastimes, Two days later President Truman or- dared U. S. military forces, to wondered what it, meant. South Korea's aid. Old ice-covered Yaiu boundary of Manchuria. of the North HAPPY WARRIORS plant Glory on the River Military potential Korean Army was reduced to nothing ns UN army smashed to- ward the frontier. Looked like it wag all over but the shouting. JANUARY OUTNUMBERED "Id ouuunma PUSAN HARBOR was chief my G1, W mm" into hm: ply port for Allies bottled up if. 5 d"9 m , I ' V: the famous Pusan Perimeter. tiie” dmgn 91l”""1't"P,5' W? ' Backs to the wall, UN aoidiea 9d""” ”"t'm"""1,? "" V” ” "'.foughg desperately for time I 9"! e:i"”I:l;':';cu:”vith v;i;:;':1VN:t'l;':'”'f fresh troopsinnd vital suppiie fmgpsgunm yank! toe "me poured into Koren only deep tank: of their own. - A draft hIl'b0l'- WITH UN forces fighting desper- ately to hold precarious lines. UN delegates struggled to obtain a BIG BROTHER showed his hand as hundreds of thousands of fa- natical Chinese Reds poured across the border. Vanguard of the cease-fire truce. Red China's rep- mllllommun army stopped the -rescntatlve, Gen. Wu Hslu-chuan Allies cold. cutting off their nd- -devoted his speeches to sneer: an Pekin laid down terms. harsh peace vance units. Another heart-brealc ing retreat was underway. with General MacArthur at Wake island; Ben-Gurion Government of Israel resigns. 16. French in Inclo-China aban- drm 250 milcs of China fl-nniicr lo Vlctniinh Nationalists. 19. Sir Stafford Cripps rcsiznsi as British Chancellor of l-Jxrhrn-' ucr; silcccoriod by l-luzh Gniis-kcli;i Atlslrztlia bnns Communist party. 20. Korcan Communists massacre 88 U, S. prisoners near Sunchon. 22. Chinese Communists move into Tibet: capture Lhaozong. 26. South Korean troops within 20 miles of Manchurian frontier: new British House of Commons opened: Canada and U. S. form- ally pool rcsources and skills in common dc-fence against aggres- alon. 29. King Gustav V of Sweden dies at 92; succeeded by Crown Prince Gustav Adolf. 30. Anti-U. S. Nationalist revolt qllcllcd at San Juan. Pucrto Rico: 23 dead. NOVEMBER 1. 'Assassinatlon attempt on President Truman at Washington by two Puertn Rlcan Nationalist-; one Puertn Rlmtn and one police- man killed: Chinese and North Korean forces start new offensive forcing withdrawal of U. N. troops: Pope proclaims Assump- tion Dogma. 2. George Bcrnard Shaw, 94. dies at Ayot St. Lawrence. Eng-- land ' 4. Western European Foreign Ministers at Rome call on Rus- sia in open frontiers. 7. Advance party of Canadian troops arrives at Pusan. Smith Koren: announce” reciprocal Can- ada-US.l plan for priority in es- sential materials for defence can- acts. 9. Estimate 300.000 Chinese troops on Manchurian border: 60,- 000 join North Korean Reds. 13. Canadian chartered airliner crashes on Mount Oblou. near Grenoble, France; all 58 aboard- 57 Canadians-found dead. 20, Most, Rev. G. F. Kingston. 61. Anglican Primate. dies at.Hai- ifax. ' 21. Twenty-one killed. 58 injur- ed. when troop train and C. N. R. transcontinental train collide near Canoe River. B. C. 22. Seventy-eight killed. 333 in- jured in New York train crash. 20. Snowstorm over Northwest- ern U. 8. causes H6 deaths. 21. Chinese Communist defun- tlon attends U. N. meeting at Lake Succeu. 28. General MacArthur warns of prospect of "an entirely new war" against Communist China: Chinese troops pour throulh col- lapsed- right flank of U. N. front in Northwest. Korea. W . 30. President Truman declares U. 3. will fight on in Korea Ind use atomic bombs if necessary; Russian veto kills ulx-power 09- mand in U. N. Security Council for withdrawal of Communist troops from Korea. DECEMBER 1, President Truman ulrs Cen- arm for 317.850.000.000 for mil- itary purposes. ' 4. Attlee and Trtiman meet in Washington; U. N. forces with- draw from Pyongyang. North K0- reen capital: 8. Miles, Truman pledge appeasement.” 10. Attlee in Ottawa confirms that Canada and United Kingdom have "general identity of views" on Korean-Chinese crisis. If. U. 5. 25.000-man force escapee North Korean trap and makes for lllllhtlilj. 11 Former N Zellentl Prime timer Peter aur. dial It cillneton i " 13. Britain to and Marshall aid: Gsnereux Meat. 54. sentenced to hang March in for murder in con- nection with P. Airlines plane 0 i 1: so esni"fw'o.r:hkdiMt.' ' m 0- my 1 . . . C. U. . den b r":-i.':.,'.'.-"'.:.-..i-'....'.:fl...r:'i.l..-.:';. . .-'i- p.- ' 0 Hon. L. B. Pearson of Canada fol attempt a cease-fire in Korea. 18. President Truman proclaims national emergency; U. S. places economic sanctions on Communist- Chinrl. i 10. General l'-Ziscnhowcr nppnlut-- Pd Supr-lnlc (Tomnlander of arm-i ics of dcniocratic countries inf Europe; U. S. 10th Corps hangsi on to llungnam evacuation port in North Korea; 2nd Battalion of Princess Patrlciak Canadian Light Infantry lands in Korea. 22. Communist Chinese Premier broadcast: rejection of U. N. ccase-fire proposal. l 23. Lieut.-Gen. Walton walks.-.f commander of U. 5. Eighth Army, in Korea, killed in jeep accident. 5 25. Historic stone of Scone sto-1 Iden from Westminster Abbey, Lon- on. . 26. 105.000 Allied and Korcani troops evacuated from Hunglltim beachhead. i 28. Chinese Communist Govern-'i ment orders seizure of all U. s. property in China. 29- U- N- fnrces driven hack in skirmishes along new Allied line in Korea. OTTAWA. Dec. 30 - (cpl .. A familiar figure around Parliament ;m1'5h"EB5! Biork". for 38, years. We? 1-evcfque. parliamentary elevator operator. died today. He Was 61. Among his many personal friends were Rt. Hon. W. L. Mac- iffrfllmlie Kins. Viscount Bennett and e Minister St. Laurent. carmoa PROVINCE or PRINCE aowmm ISLAND IN -rm: rnoaaaa COURT The 15"! day losfsollleeembcr a.n. In Re Estate of OLIVIA M D . ALD late of ChIl'lOl.f.Cl:l:lI!lOblIYl Queen's County in the said Prov- lnce. wife of John A. MacDon- ald. deceased. festatc. To the Sheriff of the County of Queen's County or any Cori- GREETING: WHEREAS at Petition on file l3i,h.-xiii. ,3l('o;-53:; of Roseneath in King's County, sole Executrixcf the above named es- tate. praying thaL..a..cltation -may bfe issued for the purpose herein. 5 fer set forth: You are therefore hereby required to cite all per. sons interested in the um Eu.” 9 be "id lbpelr before the Judge Dresent at a Probate Court to be held in the Court House in Char- limei-0Wn in Queen's County in the said Province, on Friday, the four dly of January next. coming, at the hour of eleven o'clock forcnoon of the some day to shew cause if any they can why the Accounts of the- said netata should not be passed and-llhe Estate cloud as prayed for in said petition and on motion of H, Francia -Maclilree. Esquire, Proctor for said Petitioner. AND IT is HEREBY ORDERED that a true copy hereof be form. with publilhed in some newspa- Per published in Charlottetown aforesaid once in end: week for at least four consecutive weeks train the data hereof and that a true copy hereof be forthwith parud in NI! following public place; in. apeetively. namely. in the hall of the Court House in Charlottetown. M. or near the Bank of Nova Sco- fil Building aforesaid and at or near the Royal Bank of Canada Building in Charlottetown aforesaid, all in Qulren's County aforesaid, so that all persons intereeud in the said Estate as afounid may have due noun thereefm. a . 1 WITNQDB oaour Harold Menard Palmer, Judge of the slid Probate Court at Charlotte- town in Queen's County, the rim and you first above written. '1 .33: the Court. , , .(C in Charlottetown - in V V - p p (gidixszurm wiuorrf. shipped to stock farms in Ontario, Saskatchewan. Alberta and British Columbia. as well as to Chicago for distribution to western United States points. Livestock Arrives From Scotland .AlN'l' JOHN, N.B.. Dec. 30 - u -- Livestock valued at more ihttll 5.300.000 arrived here frrm Scotland nbord the motor vessel Salacln. The shipment com- DUBLIN. Dec. 29 -(AP) -.Maj- Charies oisullivan. father of film star Maureen 0'Sullivan, died to- priscd 08 head of cattle. 36 aheeP- day in a nursing horns. Tlhe 20 pigs. three horses. six goats and daughter flew from the Unltcd a sheep dog. After a period in States last week to be at her 'quarantine, the animals will be father's bedside. my dear ism Raven? V You enjoy smoother, safe: driving when shock absorbers are right. A check by factory-trained mechanics takes only a few minutes. If new shock absorbers are needed, you'll like the low cost of Cbryco Shock Absorbers, and the diderence they make in your motoring pleasure. Drive in for a shock absorber check soon. '4 mdeaurt ql the Chgefor Grfeashbu ql Unlud Aliollll.-r Gu(1rnnli-wt Cilryiv; Vroducf F:-ulurcd by Your CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH - FARGO OR DODGE - DESOTO DEALER Valuable city Businessystandy For Sale Store and two Warehouses on Grafton Street, four blocks from Queen Square. Lot 80 feet by 165 feet One warehouse one story. Second warehouse three stories. Store approximately 18 feet by 36 feet. Stock and fixtures including certain restaurant equip- ment for sale with real estate if so desired or separ- ately to suit purchaser. For particulars apply to: are... 165 Queen Street. Charlottetown, P. E. I. raltu rots saw 0 125 acres with buildings owned by the estate of Bill Thompson. situate at Mllltown Cross. Klngis Czunty. over 100 acres cleared land; balance good h 1-dwood. stream or water runnirig through the farm. For further particulars apply to:-- .z " 1 ll"-i"i""""'t