FEBRUARY 19, 1953 0. Arnold Wlghtrnan. Forty members and eight gum. attended and enjoyed a tasty up. per provided and served by mem. bers of the Women's Auxiliary 0; the church. THE GUARDIAN. WN PAGE EIGHT N0 stmou assume auonssrorrrinr south Africa-. (OP)-The Orange Free State au- ".horities decided not to relax the provincial ordinance which forbid: angling on Sundays. The C-...no.. rejected appeals from anglers af- ter one man was fined about sit for fishing on Sunday. THE EASTERN L GUARDIAN Georgetown-Montague 1.. lP.w.c. Principal ltlll.lssI".ilir!e'ol' Mn - gl I Al. Men's Cllill AGENT GEORGETOWN: Weldon LIVIII. ' ' The Guardian may he bought at the following places in Montague: ....'The Montague Shrnohewks and Georgetown Eagles played to . Frank MacI(innon. prin- clpal of Prince of Wales College. 5-Montague. D. Macl.-can 18231 Penalties: None. Second Period 6-Georgetown, H. MacLean. 2.. School from the proceeds of tin ' Elue Dome Restaurant. and Guardian Office" in Georgetown: The TODAY - FRI - SAT ' . V . a 7-all tie at Montague last night Post Office; in Souris: The Snack Bar and H. ;;Ig',hg1'Qj 5 sag, in the first game of the King's ment fund, was given. -..'HOCKEY Montague rink to- M W” decided to have y chicken 1 ....'AT'rF.NI) the Murray River A demonstration of the slide pm. l Jector, purchased for the Sunday . 't cent-a-day sunday School Oql.lip.. fl " , evangelistic meetings at the "ill". 500”! Bantams and School County intermediate hockey ser- v Charlottetown. was u t L: - K ' "' Church 0! Christ. Tonlkht Mixed Wm ”' M”""'3"e B”""""5 "id has. The fast rugged game bmuzht 7-iloniil:::Le;:iiver """"""""""" " 54 at the regular morithlii 55:39:; slimeiivilgnuliieniiigmniigiiuizugt lb. 3:. . T 8 W r quarictic and ladies Tduct iron; Sclllocl T99m- 7130 P-"L 15 and 35- the packed house to its feet on (N.,;,.,,,) ' 1529 meeting 61 the Men's Club of 'rrin- to hold a white elephant sale psiig ' I dssygg.” , i- h Monlague.”S9rm0n he call 0 ”.M'& Phyma Cl B id - more than one occasion as close pmontague, 3,339,. ity United Church. Montague. entertainment, . .'. llss. e the Cmss' town. was a week-enlliylvisillorgio ifftilfllfllgfie N335.-s xtiaiilolzivrfiliitthpelilififii (Stewart. Madden) 14.34 ilvfhlilii Wu haul able.” pm. on Fonowmg I hen” mm-mus bat , . -- - charmmmwm guest of her aunt I P . Penalties: None. o ay even ns n Maoxenzie by the president and sccomps l d l CORONATION china by Roy and un Xe M d M H ce. V -mum I-9,10,; Hall. , on me mam, by my 3. M. Flu" : Ill Albert. First showing. Cups and Ch 9 - Ts ll" 75- - W- Georgetown led off the scoring 9.Mom,,g.,ep Davis 23 The president. Mr. Gordon Cof- Mr. coffin introduced the gum; saucers 51.50. Other (iitegnf sl.0g.up1. 3'' yvy Mulrphymbangetd ;he ln- 1om(;eo,-gemw,,p A. Mu”. 3' ifln, preslded.dNlilniti;1e.a of last meei- speaker. , 3 Also Petit Point an .i ver irc , y. no a y in o e ne rom a (MECNEHD P U 145 ng were red y e secretary. Mr. Dr. MacKinnon's address paiicrnslin stock. Boehner's Jew- m;:::llN:7:”t:eYf:Ei3:P'g'ede3;:: 91055 "I 5i-'r3"lble- M39L"l'E 1"” 11--Georgetown Bflifurphy 8.20 ' the history 0! Prince Edwin,-:3 105': ellers, Gift Shop. Montague, P.F..I. S. MacDonald of Monfmgue who irfihe Shmvilliltwkl dipped N110 his 12-Georgetown. MacNeill .. 15.05 . land, from the early days to the -..n I passed away at the home of M” Snglpot trlc s to Vglhlllt two patst 13D(;eoi-gctown, Stevens . 16.36 present time. He outlined in very . 'BiRTHDAY PARTY - the James MacLm.en' Montague on U W”! p 0 EVE 0" 38118. 1 E 14-Montague. Nelson 17.53 interesting detail the difficult poi. immediate members of the family February 16' was held yestlerdlly leadv Whlcll W35 500" lied by H- Penalties: Nelson, Davis. itical. financial and economic prob- called on their brother. Mr. anemoon from the home with the MacLea"i H”weVe'- they dropped Referee: John Davis, lincsmen.. t lems encountered by the early gov. back one when D. MacLean for MEN'S G. Murphy, M. Goodwin. 0 ernors. members of parliament,.-ind CAPITOL Christopher Mcauigan, st. Road. on the evening of Feb. 18. to celebrate his birlhd!IY- M11 Mcr Gulgan is well advanced over three score and ten. He is quite active and interested in his present oc- cupation as farmer on the home- stead. Mr. McGulgan was occupied in the teaching profession for sev- eral years. During the First World war he was engaged in military training as lieutenant. During the evening a chicken dinner was pleasingly served by Mrs. Martha .VlcGuigan, Mrs. J. A. McGuigan and Mrs. J. C. McGuignn to the satisfaction of all present. Card games were enjoyed for several hours until the group despersed wishing Mr. Mcculgan many years of health and happiness, and many birthdays in the future, Additional to the members 'of the family pres- ent. were Mr. and Mrs. William Daley and two daughters. Jose- phine and Ann. Archie Lanigan and Lawrence Janiieson. Montague church Group Meets 'Thc Young .:dulls' Club of Trinity United Church. Montague. met in Mackenzie Hall on Mon- ciiitfili ililll . . dd BERNARD 3g& lillilElll4lillllilli - tiiii iuwis ; Billillllll iiiis ALSO NEWS -- COMEDY - CARTOON Showing At 3:30 7 and 9 1 ." THE BOWERY BOYS ARE BACK AGAIN FASTER iN FUNNIER, VQIILDER 'N WACKIER THN EVER BEFOR! . day, February 16th. Mr. W. A. Hil- chey presided. Minutes of the last regular meeting were read by the secretary, Mr. Horace Fraser. The devotional period was con- ducted by Mrs. Ilorace Fraser who afterwards led a discussion pertain- ing to the work being carried on by missionaries in Angola, West Af- rlea. Dr. Sidney Gilchrist. a talented minister and physician. has devot- . ed the greater part of his life to missionary service in that field and when his name during discussion, the members were very greatly interested to learn that he had been a class- mate. at Plctou Academy. of the present pastor of this church, the Rev. J. M. Fraser. At the close of the meeting. lunch was served by the committee in ' FOR 'A MIDNIGHT SHOW AND THEY ARE Refrigeration SALES and SERVICE Repairs To All Makes MOTORS Rewinding and Repairs E P451315. ,- l: f wt git "(ill-lNC'Y STREET BOYS" ' ' . ' . ELECTRICAL lE0 GORCEY HUNTZ ilAil GABRlElDEli BILLYBENEDICT APPLIANCE ADDED SPECIAL: "Stooge" Comedy -- Cartoon Repair! PRINCE EDWARD Friday At 11:30 Palmer Electric T ' PW” 14” FRIDAY PRINBE EDWARD TODAY ..,........,,.... More Music! A p More Action LL; ' " l indiiesivg” l Q "-qouiglfdsamu 1 , .' ; ;iD0N PEFORE-'i)i)Bll3lSii2li53 Kennedy, Interment was in the Coinmunlty The members v questioning by committee was mentioned. service being conducted by Rev. J. M. Fraser assisted by Rev. W. A. Paterson. The funeral was un- der the Masonic Order. Hymns sung were "The Old Rugged Crossf and "Abide With Me". Pall bear- ers were: S. S. Hessian. Percy King, Cecil Drake, Guy Nelson. Milton and Arthur MacNeili. Cemetery. Montague. ....'HIT.LSIDE LODGE 'Ml:IET- ING-The regular meciing of Hill- side Lodge, 1.0.0.1-I. was held at Montague on Tuesday night with N.G. Bro. Malcolm Mackenzie presiding. Twcnly seven members and three visitors were present. were pleased to have Deputy Grand Master Clif- ford Keenan. District Deputy Grant Master John Van Maarian and Bro. Percy Acorn all oi Char- lottetown. pay an official visit to the lodge. N. G. Malcolm Macken- zie extended an official welcome in the Grand Lodge visitors. After the meeting the members enjoy- ed a hearty lunch prepared by the lunch committee under the direc- tion of Bro. John MacDonald. A number of the Rebekah Sisters called after the meeting and a slug song was thoroughly enjov- cd. Bro. Gordon Coffin led lhcr singing with Sister Winnie Vick. erson and Sister Ruth A. Mac- Leod as pianists. Electoral Reform (Continued from Page i) ern equipment. He submitted several exhibits with the brief. but most of the or-nibcis centred around analysis of the results of a questionnaire sent out to member groups on the subject of electoral reform. The questionnaire was sent in 3'15 groups in all sections of the Frovincc. Of these there were i121 returned. showing that 880 people had passed on the matters set out in the form. The first question dealt with the subject of property voting. In fav- or were 334 while opposed were 455. Another 45 made no answer and 26 believed in voting on prop- erty only in the case of resident ownership. Compulsory Voting In the matter of compulsory voting the result was sanguinary. 338 favored it, 398 opposed it, and 124 did not care to answer or had no opinion. The suggestion that there be smaller Districts, each with only one member, also saw a variety of opinions, or lack of them. There were 404 favoring the proposal, 240 opposing. lei with no opinions and 56 who believed that the same districts should be main- tained. but that there should be only one member for each. A great majority favored the lowering of the voting age to 18 with 526 expressing approval of the plan, 266 opposing it and 48 with no opinion. The percentage of those favoring rose sharply in the matter of the elimination of bribery where 758 voted for this with '12 opposing and 30 having no opinion. That there were so many opposed or of no opinion evoked surprise and laughter from the committee with one of them asking "well how can you elimin- ate something which does not exist?" The rather confusing question relating to representation based on population and convenience of a district geographically brought 312 votes in favor. xis against and 292 of no opinion. Mr. Dewar explain- ed that perhaps when the form was sent out the explanation of this question had not been made clear enough to the people at- tempting to answer it. Small Proportion It was this phase of the brief which brought forth most of the comment. l-lon.Mr. Matheson noted that of the 3'15 forms sent out less than a third were returned and these indicated that only seven persons had answered per form cent to the meetings. Of these 1l2 sent back to the Federation Mr. Dewar said that while they were representative of the Island there was a higher proportion of returns from Prince County. He explained that the Federa- tion brlef was not making specific recommendations on the points brought out. but he felt that the figures quoted represented a fairly even division of the general opin- ion. ..............-....-n..- (Oontlnued on Page 15) the locals soloed with an angle shot. with one and a half minutes go. The scoring was light lni the second session. but the hockey was first calibre as the two teams put on a dazzling display. H. M:icLean again tied the score. but once more Power and Fraser sent llie locals out in front as the Shmoliawks held the commanding edge during the period. As the locals began to feel the ilring pace in the third period. llic cdge was lost. and although Davis put the locals up to'a three- goalllcad, this was soon cut to zero, as the visitors turned on the steam, and with four minutes to go look the lead when Stevens slapped the puck past MacDonald. The locals rallied then and fought with fury to regain the lost point, and the rafters vibrated to the jubilirnt cries when Nelson sank the disc to even the score at 7- :ill. The crucial and final game will he playel at Georgetown Friday night in the home and home games, goals to count series. Lineups:- Georgetown: Goal. Sullivan: de- fence, W. MacLean, MarPhee, Johnson, McConnell; forwards, A. Murphy, B. Murphy, F. Landry, A. Landry, H. MacLcan, Macswain, Stevens. MacNeill, Publicover. Montague: Goal; MacDonald; de- fence, Clements. MacDonald. Dav- ls; forwards, Power, Nelson, MarLean, Fraser, Stewart. Mac- Lure. Summary:- Firiit Period 1--Georgetown. H. MacLean 2.19 Z-Montague. MacLure. (Power) 4.30 3-Montague. (Power. Nelson) 5.46 4-Georgetown. H. MacLean, (A. Murphy) ........... .. 7.38 DEAN AND JERRY MAKE MER- RY IN TI-TED! BEST YET. ”JUM'PlNG JACKS" Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis will beat! on another of their hilariously iinipredicable adven- tures when Hal Wallis' "Jumping Jacks” opens today at the Prince Edward Theatre. This Paramount release marks the sixth screen ap- pearance of the sensational com- box-office history since their first film appearance a little more than two and a half years ago. Most recently seen in the Wal- lis productions of "That's My Boy" and "Sailor Before," Dean and Jerry now strap on their 'chutes and climb into jump boots to play a pair of paratroop rookies who have the joint (Fort Bennlng in this case) jumping with laughter at their attempts - to qualify as rugged airborne soldiers. Dean is the sky GI who has all the girls falling and Jerry. of course. is the terrorized trooper who gets dizzy just from climbing into a plane. In fact. Jerry doesn't belong in the Army at all. He's a song-and-dance man who comes on the post to liven up a camp show. is mistaken for a genuine GI, and can't fight his way back to civilian life. 9 This sets the scene for a lot of mayhem. music and romance ps the unwilling recruit and his bal- lad-slnging buddy put Army rou- tine to route in their eye-openinl attempt to wangle paratroopera wings. Among the comedy high-i lights are a mass aerial drop in which Dean and Jerry frwerit some uproarious new uses for a para- ch-uto. and some war maneuvers that are probably the wackiest in the history of armed combat. Assisting in the revelry is viva- cious Mona Freeman. who emerges as a shapely charmer after I. long series of adolescent roles. Mona joins Dean in wsrbling a bright set of new Mack David-Jerry Liv- ingstone tunes that includes such hummable entries as "1 Know a Dream when I See One." "i Can't Resist a Boy in Uniform" and "The lParachute Jump." i "Jumping Jacks" was directed by Norman Taurog both in Holly- wood and at Fort Benning. Geor- gla. Good news for those who Ion for relief from rheumatic pain. but fee hopeless! Thousands get y relief from rheu- rnatic 'and arth tic eulering by using T-R-C s. Don t let dull. weariaoine aches. and sharp stab up you any longer. Try olotu'a 1'-R-C's today. Only 65:. IL35 It druggfeu. I-lu edy team that has been writing . 7?Aeumafie niii Montague 0.W.L. Monthly Meeting ..tThc regular monthly meeting of the Montague O.W.L. was held at the home of Mrs. F. L. Coyle on Monday evening with if mem- bers present. The president. Mrs. Coyle, pre- sided, and opened the meeting with prayer. The minutes of the previous meeting were read by the secretary. Mrs. Levi Power. and approved as read. Mrs.iP. .1, Mc- Kenna read the financial report. which showed a. substantial in- crease in funds owing to entertain- ments held durlng the month. Correspondence included a let- ter from Miss Jean MacDonald, matron of the Convalescent Home. thanking the League for gifts re- ceived at Christmas time and an- other from Miss I. Arsenault, re Red Cross work. it was moved and seconded that all bills be paid. . The next meeting is to be held at the home of Mrs. P. J. Mc- Kenna next week. The following ladies were appointed on the lunch committee: Mrs. J. Lanlgan. Mrs. H. J. Hynes. Mrs. P. J McKenna. and Mrs. .A. A. Fraser. Following the meeting a delici- ous lunch was served by the hos- tess assisted lzry the committee in charge. . neighbor's farm. His wife. who was at home with four small chil- house before it went up in flames. Monday night. very short time the barn was also a total loss. tempt to save a few clothes that after she had first they would follow her into Milchell River ..tFlre Monday night destroyed pe the home, barn and all belongings 0l"Mr. and Mrs. Artliur MacDon- ald of Mitchell River in an cnrly in night fire which is thought to have a started on the roof near a cracked chimney. Mr. MacDonald was ab- sent at the time working at a th dren. noticed the fire and had only time to get the children out of the fanned by the high winds blowing In fifteen minutes the house was consumed and in a Mrs. MacDonald made an at- were within reach inside the house. removed the children. However. the children followed her so closely that she. was afraid to venture in for fear the flaming house. Although R considerable number of people gathered they were un- able to do anything to save any belongings. fl: is understood flint there is a small insurance. :Jacques Cartier brought some cattle to Canada but livestock was nearly a century later. ject. The appreciation and thanks of not permanently established untlllrn Isl the people. He also gave full par. tlculars of the building of the 13. 1:, island Railway, Confederation, and many other problems which the ople of the Island have encount- ered throughout the years. Dr. MacKiimon's addrue Wu tensely interesting and showed profound knowledge of his sub. soc present were tendered to the speaker by Mr. Edward Bulnitt. The meeting National Anthem. closed with the urisn Schwartz - 9 oz. Glass PEANUT BUTTER. only . .-. 29: FINNAN I-IADDIE. lb. 4-Lb. Toy Pail . . . . . I9: CODFISH lskinonl lb. .. . . 19: PEANUT BUTTER . . . . . .. 31.59 coo FILLETS . Choice Quality Tomato ,IIallbut, 'Corne(l Mackerel, etc. Haddock Fillets, Smoked Fillets, Smoked Iflppers, Fresh Haddock, Fresh Salmon, Largo SALT HERRING. 2 for .2 . . I5: CLAMS. Ztins 79c FLUFFO. 2 lbs. . . . . ... . . . 55: TOILET TISSUE. 3 for . . . . . 31: JELL-O. assorted. 3 for . . . .29: 288's-Large Size Sunkist ORANGES. 4 doz. . . . . . 32c JUICE. 20 oz.. 2 for . . 29c ' ' ' ' Choice Quality - 28 oz. tin TOMATOES. 2 for .. . . . . . . 45c Smelts, Eels, Hunt's - FRUIT COCKTAIL. 2 for . . 55c (Bone In) . CHICKEN. 15 oz. tin .. . .. 69c .Cin.rk's BEANS. 20 oz.. 2 fins . . . . . 35: Garden of the Gulf WAX BEANS. 20 01.. 2 for . 39: Fresh Ground- HAMBURG. lb. 41: Cat and Dog "si.oo rooo. Extra Special. 6 fins 49:: I PHONE 2593 ANDREWS” . "The Home of Eroven Values" UUR BOARDING Fiousis. Plllilli 2697 Molar Hoople 23 TIME5 I6 4- lCAE5AlZ'5 GHOST ' I vou V iii? &'Ii2:ia??,'333- .:)(2-Jieiz”-i.lii”.i”A.i ngtgimo M iBACi-l5LOR6 NTHE ALL-AMERICAN & czoesuas 2iirv2i.'”1”C.f.3'””U ?.?Aif2””Su”-?” iiiiititi-”32f8 d L13 d rt" : 'Ci-lAi2M Ti-(EM ALL! S Aim 'l'l-lA'l'- TEYTHAT nouns .w Pizicev AT 522.45 A tor-oi: on AM 4 r . eaci-i--uM-!6Av, INCOMETNK K2 SLAM