imgfllimrmnir M! ‘sllllllllNHlllY otutrs ucxrolo - 6UP" "it" (mm WE A MARK vomit-v o; s.‘ x11 llcrc arc a scn s-nlanfls irlcns on. how to provide a cood limo for a‘ lervlceman if you invite him to your home. He sat-s: "Of course it is nwell for a couple to invite a scrvlrcmnn FtflllfPS-Jfllt if thcv really want tn show thcso frllnws a pond tlmc. ho ' how wr- icol about it I "We do not. like to be invited singly to n hmno whore thcrr is no onP Ollr REP in talk to. n‘.- kind of r-mbarrassins! to 2o alonr. t0 A hou=e Whrrn there is nn our‘: but lhc husband and rvlfo and‘ sncnd the time bciorr dlnncnl to their homo tinder anv circum- d rln clnnrr. and alter dinner Jtiiéld-‘fil , “mu 510N945 I Phi/volt‘ IE1) WA t.) m t3 MONDAY -- rue. -w£o This ls the GtreatRomance of _ At the Fighting Front. . . laughing, Loving, » Fighting Side by Side W truthful... in Paramount's PROUDLY George Reeves - Barbara llrittun - Walter Abel - Sonny lull: Directed by Mark Ssmtrlctr - mm n. lllur mu hlATlNEl-IR NEXT WEEK STARTo AT 2.30 arrowheads-roars.‘ Enjoy _a Movie Vacation - run msawwarowu‘ cusnnrm ~ -- Special llolidayr _Attracti0ns -- Bring the Family The Management and Staff of the F. G. Spencer Co. Ltd., Theatres Offer Sincere Wishes for A Very Merry Christmas i y ]_‘j\x!’ emu. EXTRA NEWS 0F THE DAY and "Stitch Merrie ln Time" Melodie Cartoon snows ronsr s1- 315 71'" axn 9.00 llalluve Saturday Afternoon -- AT " 30 - V? wuss‘ ‘KWEKWIKIKK!!! K IZMWK!‘ iiiii rue-v- HAIL” singular ........... a fi i‘rl-lvli~f'f€f'iillil'liiqgg rmtxrsrmnuuq 3.1; ttllrGt-Zdttu MP 1.x - "W TO-DAY and SAT. i CAPITOL -,.-- ro-onv AND snr. .. s1)l§i’t:tIS'-)-§J2I“":I1 tr y Jliilltiiidlli lrwrmn Mrnnmw" " ' > i DON “Id” DAIRY A! "ll WIS?’ MC‘? NQTQIIOUS OUTlAW $AVI$ Will-S FIIGQ y. FROM DISTRUCTIONI... Plus Chapter Western Fcattrrcttc and (‘zrrtoon SHOWS 'l‘0l).»\\' AT 3.15 — 7.00 -- 8J5 ll MATINEE SATURDAY AT 2. — “Junior £I£(((ti<_ (l-Siort 0t’ Tho Air” ‘v 30 GMIiPITillI — WEB. shrill; the 1 S‘! vgtf} HOLIDAY éaicfiii lEGiONS OF i051 ME"... i i o t Dangerous Figure of All! lolplt lolomy Evelyn Anltm loom Yum Etirtrrrtl tlorris (lrorlostolomon llontyllonlll MATINEES NEAT START A 1'1‘ 2.30 To bottle the Powers of two c'ontinents...to rip the veil from history's strongest secret! WE EK mam» chines-crew»- trsnvereteIQ-eQ-cqQuQQQQuQIQQMurmImQIII -< -“<'l'\'ll'l"< 1101'!“ Newiwliuhfilmhlor The Ritz Brothers Resumlm their film careers after sn extended series of stage anneal‘- ances the Ritz Brothers wlh be seen ay in Unlversals "Behind the tl-Ball" scheduled to open tlmi day at the Capitol ‘theatre. "Behind the 8-Ball." described s; a mystery-melodrama bunt-film layed against a "strawhat. thea- acksround. features Carol his orchestra. ROAST LEG 0F LAMB A leg of lamb when roasted and done to a tum needs no extra frills to make it appreciated by the family, but for varleivs sake. so that. leg of lamb can be served often, there are ways of maklni: such one different For instance. tuck s clove of ,‘1c to garlic ln the Joint of a leg of lamb before roasting. Then roast it lust , as astral: that is. lllflft? U"? lfll- hi‘ or cut sldc up on a rack in null _ Put in a mort- open roasting ban. l“ erately slow ovcn r300 dos- aud roast. it. at until it is done- 30 minutes D61‘ temperature. Before serving thc lot! of lamb. It requires about j pound at anstvrrlng questions about nur- sulvvs. our families and our jobn lll tho 1\l'll‘tV. .. “what we llke is for several of us to be invited to the same place. And it helps e lot lf there ts e girl invited for each of us. As Guests “It isn't much fun. either. to have to sit for a whole afternoon or cvotrilll and hear our host talk about his experiences tn the last war. "In fact we would e lot rather talk about, something besides the war-but. a lot of people 596m i0 rhlnk that. the nnlv wav to enter- tain a scrvircman is to ask him when he thinks the war will 6nd. and then trv to tell him why 116 Quay _ .. a > Chrlstmrrstlrle ts hers once would thank you for all your paironafll- bring you best wishes for a MERRY CHRISTMAS "IIIJ _ o ,1 A HAPPY NEW YEAR A. PICKARD & CO. ' l1 '€~l€i€l€l§!€l€4<€ us gaining s=rvtcemen in our homos- But. it should make us more thoughtful in maklna plan-s‘- so that we really can them remove thc clovr oi uarllc._ You‘ will be surprised at thc rtrllulll-llll flavor that this lmlvll "l WNW‘ gives to lamb. But in uslne: this: 1 you thirst. be careful that i110 ilflYol l 1 » of it is not. prnnmmced. A_ llttlor “pflk; goes a lonrz. lonll was. WU know. If there lsenoulzh flavor that lt can b: lcentltled as gar- lic. there ls too much- Of course. instead of ____ __ _ ____.. is wrontz about it. ~w¢ 11k; w be treated like anv- other truest. and not have 1t W‘ parent: that we have been lnvltvd into s home because we are scr- vrcunen QOInEbOdY feels sorry for." That criticism oultht Ml VJ k9"! from mini ahead and outcr- _uslna Rar- D. llttlc entertain more and 1106i" l" We would o Th f‘ l? ,. S. l k5 "’ that, tempcraturo- . this‘ ' during the wmuto ketchup which has seasoned with a little shire sauce. FRENCH AWARD TO CANADIAN Capt-din Gcnrze Bruce Buchanan of Mcrllrlnc llut. Alta" one of the first ninc (lnnndlans w be decorat- crl by the I-‘rcnrh since the beginn- thc War the in; of awarded ‘l! and disregard nf danger et Diclllfi- (lcrtcrnl ‘Mnthcnet. ls shown 97* senilnz hlm with ‘his decoration. lfanadln“ W Arrny_§)_v£r_scas Photo) flavor the lamb. you co_uld occasionally haste the leg of lamb roasting period with‘ 59°" r lend. Worcester- t recently French Crolx do Guerra with liar for his courage 24. 194a cnswsii-ror pnomnohl- commnansnon IJI-‘lt msun- mo: “l. m” “m” , - will sllwlAanlNggu bsoemlnr ma. h-za-ot. ANYONE to contrlbuto wlshln 3n§.'.‘?°'$“"r.m°“' ‘The °’ "Si. 0B 9 m‘ iii-‘zh-al. 168 Prince treet. OBNTIAI. PARISH. — Bund i. Deolnber 36th. Churchill 2.30 P M '1 P. M. T. W. Good l TO-NIGHT-EMPIREQ-SAT I conuwsu. rss-ronnr. lcusncu. —Servlces Sunday, Dec» 26th are as follows: Kingston l1 IA M N 3 P. M. Corn- Rev. J. H. Skinner. Minister. roars-u. BIL-AI‘. GRADUATES -- Ptol- lowlng ls p ltsr of R. u.A.F. por- sonnel who have recently graduat- ed from training sch-ads in the East: WA. Beer, 110 Edward 5L. Oharlottctown; L. l-l. Martin, Montague; David Leclu‘. Summer- . J. McKcndrlok. PO. B0! 12 rtlon; 3.5. Smith, 86 ‘Fitzroy Sh. Charlottetown: F. L. York‘ S.M. Mclnnls. 21 Baryfield BL. Phillips. 01cc THE BAPTIb- oflUllCll. — At the service of Momlng Worship A REPUBLIC . A., "From Durk- ‘ ‘Night ofi t» r c r u n I “° the Re\.‘_ ‘I'm mthem of the Water's ' urch at‘ Also Chapter 3 - GEM 0F A ‘aha Year 0f Attacks Ended Axis ltul: In North Africa BY ROSS MUNRO Canadian Press Wag- Cvnespondent u — (so) — oz "m: ‘not-moo was "Mediterranean Year" 1n 1M3 for Allied armies in North Atrics and rope. It was s year of attack. of fieme battles and of VICUOHCB-rfl year which brought, the eno of the Axis ln Africa. and the beginning for the Allies in Europe. In these l2 months of hard fight- ing from the duet-t through ’f‘un- 1818. Slcil)‘ and Italy, British and American afmifl changed the course of the war in a brilliant series of successful opcratzons. A Your ago victory in Europe seemed remotc. ‘today they talk ln T-mtdon and Algiers 811d Naples of 5011M P79519003 for e i944 victory. The tremendous effort cf theRed Anny was a major factor but. down ‘in the Mediterranean four armies _won other victories against the Germans and ltalans that carved a patch into the European main- Now tins allied fore: is firmly established in luly and s vista of from milltery possibilities lies before them. There are the boiling Bfllklng, southern France. Greene and even- tuallly southern Germany itself. At. the start of this eventful and profitable year, it gamed in ‘Tunisia that the Allies had blttzn off more than they could chew. The 1st British Arm in the moun- tain line. but the Germans were Jlrwking in troops and it. was pract- lwlly s stalmlmtc for several months ln the soggy val] s and windswept oases of that orbidd- lng court/try. But. the 8th Army was chugging along the Mediterranean coast. from “Secret Service In Africa” JAM, Comedy — and CARTOON SHOWS TQNIGHT AT 7.00 and 8.45 Matinee Sat. Only at 2.30 iriéléfirfiréfiihlz§i§iiirihr Valley. Tunis and Bisertc fell. By Mo)’ it it was nll over and Germans P. M. "The Prlnoe of Peace." Vincent's “There were Shepherds" will be sung by the choir. Mr. Ivan Robinson will s s selected solo. _John Inch, Mus. Bu, will be in - charge of tho music st all servces. PRESENTATION -— On Monday evening, Dec. 20th, n lav-gs num- ber of interested friends and neighbors gathered at the home of Mr. And Mrs. John MadMlllan, West. Oovehead, to extend good wishes to their son lame. and his bride. theufornner Misfs Edith Cem- eron, on 1e event o their recent. £52‘ advanccgl]. {it Al lad lleacgruiirltl; glilltfrlgge- 5%?‘ clahet h-llgl)! 5:23P‘? rs in gers en. wg en es .'. o ac Ellislerthowgr “and his staff workdkfuorfiilltln agdrcsiowasdxrcad b‘); ngl an ay ; we strgtgglc r. or can . an e we plan. Gen. sir Bcglhrd Montgomery ' ‘fyllled bulrl-se trxtssenlcd by ‘Illu- got his 8th rum re‘ cly. Th am“ A 1m- FM. a 0W Oanzvlianlstlnfantrgdrtvtgonwust: chosen words umnked all for their come from England with r- Canad- K001i Wlihvs and klndnvss and in- lan army tank 1111321119. Gen Georgenfiwd thvie Puffilnl '0 Yl-‘ll them Patton was to take the American again. "For They Arc Jolly Good 7th army in e d the 45th Ameri- FBlIVW-S" Wes then sung. all" W111i!!! d? F?“ ‘l; 5”“? ‘T t“ l.;'.il3“'."f.t.‘“a.“'?....“.l.‘§$ “l $3 ec mm c or or e o assault on Gels on 5'cily’| south evening was luasmtly spent ln 5 n8. ooa . Psntfillerla was pulverized by sir ——-——-i—--— bombardmexit. tn a "test-tube". Mr. NLW. Wood left yesterday workout to give the North African morning on an extended visit to Poured into prison camps. Already the Sicilian invasion had been planned. Pro aratlons were air force; g chance to see mist. Montreal and Boston. while in they could do l1". daylight precision Montreal he will visit nls daught- bouiblncg. ‘Ihcv found the answer er. Mrs. V. K. Collins. for St ly there and the bombing j caNTRAL GUARDIAN . . ewDomlnlon 'wall'I.30P. M.S. School llA M YPU - Wenlhl was spoilt in Ramos and 7 sing-song. Iruncn was served. r BEAUTIFUL urn-g ' " Phone 1158- ‘Iii-flail: ‘ THE PBEBBYIEII ' ' i N CANADA-Servtclefinbggxihg? . December 36th will be a; rouqwlftl Jaledonla 11.00 A. M. wood mud; l .oo P. M. Rcv. T. s. s Duke, M111, E, m1‘- 12-24-11. STUDY YOUR. FOX '"' Show Prize Ust and 5101i: belts through the Pelt. Show Sununersfde. January 5-7;), ' - u-zz-m-n, for Parish Christmas of; - Holy Comm - ~ M. St. Mark's, ltustiontr Service 8.00 P. M. Sunda , u .. trss-"r- “ar- rrl ~ CHURCH NOTICE Milton and Rustloo. St. John's, Milton. ton 10.30 A- Carol Dec. M _ . Sidney a. Davies, Rector. lz-u-rrI ‘ nosa vnnuzv r. l’. u. - ‘m weekly meeting of the Rose vnuw . .. ., met Ln the Manse oh Thursday evening, December 15 Th8 president preside-i. Meettng Opened by slngmu Jesus Keep M; Near The Cross. followed by Scripture lesson read by Mildred Maclcod. Prayer was offered by Rev. D. J Morrison. While Sh herds Watched Their Flock; x: Night, was sung The Dlilfllig‘ 01' t the last meeting were read am l approved. It was decided to g1" the sum of ten dollars towards tho Manse fund ‘Pvrenty-t ~ members and nine visitors we present, Collection amounted tc $1.35. A solo. O Little Town of Bethlehem was sung b Mary MolTiSOn. Th; lesson, 0hr the Fbrttlllnnent of the Law. was led by Rev. D_ J‘ Morrison, Away In A Manger and ‘ " What A Blend WE Have 1n Jesus were sung. Prayer Was offered by Mr. John Meclfay followed by u“ . -~ lord's Prayer and “enedlctton m unison ‘Ihe remainder at u“ at”. MULLARD-MaoNEILL NUPT. IALS -- 'I‘rlnlty church was m; scene of o. wedding of wide lntcr. mt; Tuesday afternoon st o'clock, when the nvctOf. Rsv. ‘ Canon O. Gordon Lawrence, unltcq in marriage Miss Gladys Patricio 1, MacNelli. No. ll Company O was 0., Saint John. da/ughtcr of Mr. and Mrs. Russell T. MacNelll of Hunter's River, RE 1., and um, Rodney I-Illl Mullard. R.G.N V1, formerly of New Zealsnd. now s staff officer at Plctou, NS Miss Ruth Clark. ER. 6.0.. presided at the organ and played the special _" nuptial music. Given in marriage“ by her falllfl‘. Lite bride was at tended by Miss Elizabeth “leeks, C.W.A.C.. and Captain mic 1) Blake. R.C.A., was tho grooms man The bridg and her brides» maid were both wearing the unl- form of the C W.A.C Out-ol-town guests at, the wedding included. the bride's parents and her sister, -» Mrs. George Clark of Cavendish, P.E 1.. and Mr. and . 1A0"..- Mullard of New Zealmd, plumb-L of the Broom. now residing in 1» Halifax. Lt. snd Mrs. Mullsrd are guests M the Admiral Bcatty Hotel and will leave later on s wedding trip bride’; home Island and with the room's DB1’- l. w: \ B? fl . ____--___ of Slclly started. Airfields. towns, Mlnard’; relieves sprain railways, dumps, roads and bridges were attacked. blitz grew. Bv mid-June the invasion [Hflfldg was ready tc sail The Royal Navy had the nos Inna th. Mediterranean cleared forces dominated tlhe slnes. The Canadians loft the United Kingdom and hundreds ot ships Bind sailed from there carrying supplies and nmnlunltion ls well. The 45th div- ision pulled into title Mndftcrrsnesn New York. On the afternoon o! July ti. 2,500 lhips end craft turned north from the rendezvous wuth In Malta. A stonn blew up. Canny Sir Andrew Cunningham. directing tho convoy, and nsval operations, watched the fleet move past the rod cliffs of Malta. f-fe mused the sea and the wlnd and the tough, old seadog sald the invasion would go on as scheduled, sea. or no sea running. | Many a landlubber lnfantryman held his brceth that. night es he watched great. waves crash against. the side of his _sh.lrp. But it calmed down oonsideracly in the early morning and the little boats bobbed ggvgd by the fighting spurt of the 5m Army, by a terrific L-llta by the allied sir force and by the speed of the out army which brought, it. up lo the rial-t flank 1n t/he nick of time. l Bensazl t0 Tripoli. slowly but de- termlncdly pushing Rommel! evident, however that tto German; coins w trim for "iunlsre. were S0 the bsttclvd 18b Army hed to beer the brunt as the enemy lashed out in en attempt. to smash lt before the 8th turned the comer at. 'f‘ripoll and Marcth and startled northward. Two gallant Brlrtlatn dlvlsions- - the 78th end the Btth ermored- - held the tenuous line from the Matcur valley on the nort-h to ouseltia on the central sector. while the Amer-loan 2nd Corps was stationed on t.hc soul-hem sector. Dv-sbltr- the defeats m the south at Sldl Bouzld and ln the granite mss at. Kasserlne. the line held and then Gen. Sir Ha Alexander, commanding the ltlth army gnmp of the 1st and 8th armies and the Americans. mounted his deadly two-way attack. e 8th broke through st. Mareth and its tank; and guns and infantry flooded up the cont. Th Americans pulled to U Guettcr on the flank end the Germans pulled beck into the Punis-Blsertc triangle. With l5 divisions evtlsble, Alexander then dammed on s trePPed enemy. Re felntcd from the south st, Dlfldevtlle and sent his rnsln punch down the Medllr- dsh River valley. breaking through in n bloody fight. so, Lcngstap h-tll and sweeeptnz tr. on Tunis. ‘nae “Americans 1n the north success- fully sttlecked down the llgetaur army ahead of it. It soon became‘ to the beaches. . The rest of the story l.s current‘ history, The 8th got ashore easily The Americans had e rough time let Gels fighting Qumran mrk ‘formations and then broke sway‘ to comquer western stclly end tov be the fl t, intn Mes-Sins.‘ M the smeto river brldgo south of Oatania the 5th and 50th dlvlsl-‘ns of the 8th Anny had a terrible battle and then as the Canadsan end the 78th broke around on he left flank tc Mount. Etna the Ger‘ mans drew back to evsxuutg their mauled force to Italy. The Italian army folded up from "the start. 0n sept. 3. with the lnlllan nrm-‘ lstlce already slmed and delivered. the Canadian and a lone British. division were ferried across the; Messlna straits to the beachrs at, Reggie and Sun Giovanni on the Italian mainland. The pursuit. of the Germans went on there through Onlabris with Allied sir forces pounding the o 9th All!!! was invasion of Illllflll mropo st the ohes price. British‘ troops landed st. Tet-onto end southern ercss of Italy were in Allied hands within s few weeks. right h powerful desire to kill first person he met. Stead"? ‘he ‘u’ ;But. “it. dldhpfiislerno: Bay ’w.u"‘"'rn$ 5th:d aaernard Butler, M-yesr-old former asylum Inmate, ls nhWII '1'.’ as he told Sheriff C. hard Close (sledding) and Detective 0"!” Pwlhkemls, n.1, how he murdered Lucille uwmm. "W, nurse, on u» mm of October 1s. mm" ma he rel: an "W". someone, l0 fool l, heavy stone lfltl attacked i“. ents. ln Halifax. —5aint John Teln- graph Journal. .. ncl 8th. now bolstered f‘ lby‘ more divisions. began a melhod- ‘,5 [teal oannpalgn northward through ‘ |Italy, with the Rroiriel Nov; aldlnl u, it from the sea. so. nls an corms , [were added to Allied territory and‘, provided some useful sirfields. _ i.‘ .‘ _ _c.‘ It wasn't, all clover, however. The 5th Anny. s British-American for- mation under American General mm Clark went into Salerno Bey. south of Naples. The Germans were waiting on the brldghesd. rnml was bloody fighting for days and st, tknes it looked as lf the venture would fall. r I. I’. McISAAG Halifax, N8. Director of Personal Services A MERRY ".4 HAPPY l i l ; l l l (,\-\R-\.5Tm_4s Glad Tidings mo, n \ for the Holiday Season We will endeavour to serve you with the same quality and courtesy. CHRISTMAS and NEW YEAR GILLIS