OCTOBER 5, 1953 More than 30.000 killed in the enmtion:::l!2:l.ee'yeczr1t cane on Martinique in the west Tgig cloaking. Address Presented Further Details. ' uonoav, . . Hm "- & 3- MW"? Discovers Ancient Culture -2; ,'-f;:E-Z5331; uct. no Indian Navy treoee so his- tory from the formation of Eoest India Company Maine 1 l2. - E executive i; or Season In chitownl The first fall meeting of the Ex! ecutive of the P.E.I. Home and School Federation was held in Charlotteuiwn on Sept. 25. it was noted that a speaker on "Home and School" had attend- ed each of the eight fall conven- tions of teachers. Members of the taking part were: Mrs. Gadon MacDonald, Mrs. Basil MacDonald, Min. W. E Seamle- btiry, Mr. M, J. MacQuaid, Mr. J. J. Connolly. Rev Lewis Murray. The serious situation arising out rid the shortage of trained teach- erl to staff PEI schools was dis- cussed. It was felt that ways and means of making the teaching pro- irsaon attractive in young peo- ple should be siren thoughtful consideration by all Home and School groups. A series of radio talks will be rontlriiied this Hear. The opening talk wi'.l be given in October by Rev. Lewis Murray. The iollowtiiiz committee com- venere were aprxtinted' constitu- tion and rrxsoliit: Judge De- Roches. progmin- It Ann Mathe- eon; piiblicity-lti:'s. H. J. A. Brown. J Plans were dismisseci for the via- ll Nov. iii of Dr, S R. l.aycock who will address the se 1 annual meet- ing on the nl'e:':. iii and even- nf that date The ex vrfric meeting will be open '0 the ;i:ib1:c when Dr. "Education of Home. Laycocks topic n: be -A joint respoii. bility School and Commiiiiiir." For -Quality Milcinegss CANADA'S E-i.S'T)F'S'T SELLING CIGARETTE TOBACCO (GP) - werel .Lief the Lucky and the Bcandlna-i Vlan adventurers who sighted Lab-l. rador about l,000 AD the first Europeans to come to North Amer- Prmisomema, F? :2 u - l Dr. J. Louis Giddlngs, Jr, of thel University of Pennsylvania Mu- seum, believes not. ' The first Europeans probably came to North America and lived and died here before the dawn of recorded history, he says. i Dr. Glddlngs has just returned from an ancient Vlllfllze site heart ;Chiirrhill in northern Manitobal; There he found flint implements lwhich indicate that pcoplcs ofi European cultural background i lived in that region anywhere up to l0,000 years ago. 0! European Origin Implement: are of three types-: burins, or engraving tools, scraper-l blades, and spells, needle-llkei, flakr-s which came from burlnsl when they were periodically sharp- white chalcedony, a substance, and agate. The burins, Dr. Giddings says,l indicate the European origin oil the one time inhabitant of the vii-I ed from quartz-like ELWA CR0! Ii i i.i..- randy ior tlw mi. and .:. ilrh mm CLlliii,lll, liigim lltilil -ipmtirh, beet liver or vgqs l.lUliii'- 't'liil ad in young and old aiilw (nutty , ltlol.is.i.-i iieuly as a apt-:.iii Punt K i iv C-riiii ital Y3 HEEPA CAN OF X” a Q. erred. They are delicately fashion- 51 lage, or at least the European origin of their working habits. They indicate also that the vii- lnpe may have been part of a pre- historic culture that circled the top of the world. "The technique of making burlna was carried through Denmark, Sl- beria, Alaska, Canada and Green- land. Whether there was a migra- tion of people ,or merely of ide:a, is not indicated by the evidence." Dr. Giddings says that nothing is known about this polar people. It is not known, for instance, whe- ther they reached this continent via Alaska on the west or via Greenland on the east. They prob- ably were replaced in the com- lparatively recent past by invad- ing Eksimos. llunch Proved Correct Dr. Giddlngs had found similar burins in Alasaka and a hunch based on experience led him to anticipate such a find in northern Manitoba. A Chippewa Indian nam- ed Thomas Jawbone led him to the te. Dr. Giddings' hunch was that archaeological relics were likely to turn up anywhere along the edge of the. timber line-that irregular line in the northland beyond which the climate is too severe for trees to survive. Some times before Dr, Giddlnga' trip, Jawbone sold some 20 flinty implements to Mrs. Irvin Smith, an amateur botanist and wife of a business man in Churchill. Dr. Giddings, in Churchill to gather climatic data, was shown the implements and sensed he was on the track of an archaeological "find." He located Jawbone who led him 40 miles by canoe to a sandy windblown shelf around a lake-a small plateau that may have been an ancient ..v.-r terrace. There Dr. Giddings found 700 of the implentents. bared on the sands by the wind. He says a full-scale expedition. To Mr.W..I. llrawders The following address was pre- sented to Mr. W. J. Brewders by Lt. Col. P. S. Fielding, MM, De- puty Provincial Secretary. on the occasion of Mr. Brawders retire- ment this week as director of Child Welfare. Provincial Department of Health and Welfare: Dear Bill: "An Order of His Honour the Lieutenant-Governor-in C o u n c i l. dated August iith 1933 reads as fol- lows: "To be Superintendent of Neg- lected and Dependent Children in and for this Province under the provisions of an Act for the Pro- tection of Neglected and Dependent Children. Chapter 15. 10 Edward VII and with effect forthwith-Wib llsm J. Brawders of Charlottetown. "At the same time you received the appointments of Agent of The Children's Aid Society of Char- lottetown and Truant Officer for the School Board of the City of Charlottetown. "Then, more than twenty years ago, did you find your vocation, which as time went on became, a labour of love on your part and a blessing in the true sense of the word. a means of happiness or welfare, to this community of Charlottetown and to the Province of Prince Edward Island as a whole. "In September. 1945. another Order of the Governor-in-Council named you an Officer of the De- partment of Welfare. As time progressed and the Welfare needs of the Province became recognized the Department became thetyof Health and Welfare and you be- came Director of the important division which you have since headed the Division of Child Welfare. significant indeed is the fact that your influence with the children of Charlottetown for two generations was such that for many years a successor as Truant Officer was not considered neces- sary. "With regret. it was recently learned that the time has come for you to retire. concluding two decades, of devoted and untiring effort on behalf of the youth of this Province. ' ”On this occasion. therefore, are gathered many of your fellow- workers in the Health and Welfare field to greet you. to honour you and to wish you Godspeed. Not only have we here your fellow em- ployees of the Department of Health and Welfare of Prince Ed- ward Island, but representatives of other Departments, Federal and Provincial. of Municipal and Priv- ate Agencies of community and natlcnal groups, and, in thought, as evidenced by the mewiges re- ceived. those afar who at one time or another have been associ- ated with you in your good works. It is no exaggeration on behalf that the work and lives of each of us have been influenced and helped by our contacts with you. "Your knowledge of human na- ture and consideration of the weaknesses and fralllties of your fellow citizens have been your great strength in your Welfare Work. To your fellow workers and employers, your courtesy, affab- ility and loyalty have been a con- stant inspiration. Of MaoMlllan Will Further details concerning the will of the late Mrs Patricia Mayer MacMlllsn. widow of the late John A. Mat.Millan. former president and chair-man of the board of the Day- ton Rubber Co. were disclosed re- cently after Judge Rodney M. Love admitted her will to probate. In addition to the beneficiaries mentioned some time ago. naming the Miami Valley Hospital as a S1.000,000 benefactor, her nelce, Elizabeth MacMlllan. 325.000 and a weekly income of S50 to her sla- ter-in-law Mrs. Elizabeth MacDon- ald of this City (since deceased). there are many other bequests. One of the trusts provides 315,- 000 for the care and support of Mrs. MaoMillan's dogs and birds. Another provides 325,000 for Robert Stevenson. a veterinarian. for pay- ments to assist him in the con- struction of a pet hospital. Still another 525.000 trust gives Reuben Graves. a houseman of the Mac- Millans for more than 25 years, an income of s50 a week and any ad- ditional funds for hospitalization or need in old age. A fourth trust is established for a friend, Viola Sayre, Glendale, California. About the use of the MacMillan home by the hospital, the will of all those to say to you, Bill,' states "It is my wish that said home shall be used by the said hospital as a laboratory or test clinic for the study and develop- ment. .f procedures, medicines, cures, and specifies for certain diseases. The hospital shall place at or near the door of my home. a plague. designating and setting forth that this home is and shall be the MacMillan memorial so long as said hospital shall own and maintain same.” According to Attorney William G. Pickrel. who has been appoint- ed executor of the estate. the value of Mrs. MacMlllari's property will amount to 31,500,000. However he stated the the exact value will not be known .until an inventory and appraisal of all her properties and holdings are made. Some of these include 3.774 elnrcs of stock in 18 d”erent conganies. Also municipal bonds with a face value of 3154000. Securities held in a safety de- posit box in Dayton,Ohio. included 25,006 shares of Dayton Rubber Co. common stock and -11 Drefeffed worth 3500.000. Other bonds were listed with a face value of 310.175 ...D.-.---:------- appreciation. our respect and our friendship. "May you enjoy inany years of contrntiiicnt in the reflection of a life well spent and a work well done." .D:D.4-M About 621300.000 acres, or one- quarier of its total area. are do- vcted to agriculture in Saskatch- OWAH. h TM COMPLETE VISUAL REFRACTIOII AND ANALYSIS G. -F. HUTCHESON ' 8: SON Optometrists shares which are estimated to bet Indies in 1902. . . . l fife "EARlza”liZ1".Q two: A 3 HEART or your: . CAR vs.-we; :i.;::.. By the new Heart-Cur Process all the undesirable, . , loo-light and too-heavfponions of the crude oil are now removed and discarded at the very beginning of the refining process. Only the choicest and purest of lubricants-the "heart cuts"-are retained for further processing as VELCO Motor Oils. By no other process is this refinement possible. That's why Heart-Cut VELCO is the be;( on you can buy-refined from the been of the crude Plus valuable engine-protecting dditiws . 4914' Super-detergent action. F W TOP ENGINE PERFORMANCE LONGER ENGINE LIFE LOWER Oil. CONSUMPTION CLEANER ENGINE Change now Mororoil "On behalf, therefore, of your associates and working compan- ions throughout the years we ask 53 Grafton street you to accept this token of our ii GLAMOURIZE YOUR KITCHEN” probably would yield thousands of burins and other tools and would shed much light on the life of pre- ihistoric man. W.C.T.U. NOTES Nllll) for iveri recipe booiv. (ROSBY MOLAQEFE CO. LTD. SAINI ).JHN N ...-.. , ran an 4 i Why call it a bar? say whence is 0 ' 0 I I derived - This name for a depot of spirits evil, was the name by some sly friend of virtue contrived Or, IIKP the thing named. did it AOIL TREATED 4 - ,;?;y well 1mdPr8t.oOd A bar to the right, and I fort for the devil. "Pie in bar to all industry. pru- dence and wealth A bar to reflection, a bar to so- brlety. A bar in clear thought and s. but to sound health, A be: to good Cnl'l8CiCnO0. to prey- er and to piety. A bar to rthe sending of children "Iii ' " ' , w "I, come from the devil? A , I'll tell you whalr it means-"tie a 0 . bar to all gnod,- . ' And a constant promoter of - . E everything evil: o ' 'Tis a bar to all vlrtue- that's 9 ' - O . - C---. O It has high-heating value and low ash content. 0 It's d -cleaned to remove all lists 0 mike .:g( to and i erior coal. 5 It' 'l-t t d ' . - in; guorgheyotg rsltlrfgt dust filter it comes in the NUT size that is ideal or the new a see heaters as well as fgflrenaex an grates, an in STOK- - size--the-perfect coal for the 57?? lowest-priced electric liiichan cloclt in Canada Iron Firemen and other types of do- 90 8011001. lsneetic stokers. To clothing and giving them good ' l Q 0 h d b v ed tl ; ' Yol?'de:lsr leiitsuixalif lifting? ” A bx-mto0nt.he observance of every - it dye". ; ' it'll.” rvlmih if 1 re l 3 ” 4 I i - 9,c,uNAnoee.i.re.,murAx. Y 0 ' V” A" ” "MY 3, 3 V w"”'t'”'r' ”'"'"'”'"”" Ind M'uon' ' H7, i e e e 0 e O A bar the hallowed enjoyment of ' J g . . me. Here's a bright and friendly kitchen clock ' A bar to the holiest of earthly l . fruition: I priced to please you . . . styled to make your A bar that f rbids its 1 be ' - ' s - w..k.s coal Yard H. R. Lam. & co. ,0 mm, ” "W" " i I ,g ,1 kitchen gayer...built to keep perfect time for To the (eel and reward of I vir- tuous ambition. llillsboro Bridge 90 Queen st, A-4' years and years. Phone 1270 Phm” 10004001 A bar to integrity, honor and ' '- t T115 G'E "H51P"" hi” 3 WWP Wcolld Tnr.aee,?dImp and Wm um um G E N E R A L E L E c T B I c lrieagid anteiueasy-to-read numerals. Availablein 2. nu a ove. ' , . J, Arnfast Coal Ce. L. Hennessey & Son Tl;,,?,l,' ”"”" df"'""' ”"3l "l t- - my ow l . . W Longwm-ts Ave. Edward st. A bar J'.”.'lii'.ii”...'i"".'na Heaven l B” "" '” 9” this new 1”w'9"”d L i ”'0''09 24934499 Phone 108 -Wei ' G-E "I-Iclper” at your dealer's today. Small Appliance Department, Cahadiau General Electric Co. Ltd.. Toronto. iii , A. Plclterd 2. Co. Ltd. w. is. Gillie c... us CLOCKS I "”'”i'-i.l.l.';'t.'..ii"”'i """f.:..lZili'. ”" -E&''''':''.3-'2.-;."'3';"'S:s.''--'-- .- r A A - as-are-are-.3?-'?..?-.-E CANADIAN GENERAL ELEcriz.ic coMaAN'v LIMITED 0 i ' l. . j. I . I I