m cnowms m; MIX BORDEAUX .. rxnr" cones IULPIATI mciobatlllzluihd old time w?!" loin h “ulna always been used for Bo ‘hm’ "m, 1o paints earefull! Ill l" I!!! 0"“ arming! Triangle Brand "Instant" fist sulphate mil: "sonutbins ta .- fl" for itself. lmmtnui how eo- lglfiwfim copper sulpllsflta is infill! I “Jionirolofmiatlsre mixture. SAFETY ijflemfiesaed safeti- . . . Dlssolvlfilflll hfiflfllfpllflaim no stitatton. _ _ N u, e sodiinsn ne #5931911‘ 8mm: T31: lies n‘ aim “ nicr . . . east we. 100% Ill-dent- gmuiu quicker use of fresh solutions. . . . B ti .' ollfliXnflAflqloifltstiuy in 3n: ‘ um com . . . aubu- Pnaent for slakinl lime and tuck solu ons- nmxmyy; QUALITY . . . Standard for l0 is the oldest and best known brand. ifucturing methods assure nev- gh quality in over! D . . . Sillfllard unal- M no extra coat, you get the beat in fikgproof bags and steel-hooped . |.|CEi)lll8l.llilEPLlilT8...Yonr dealer can always supply you because of 3 strategically located 91m"- yrsrl. Modern mam [r failink culrlprwgjspiuiulkriiirl ASK YOUR DEALER Brand "Instant" dusts. Write for 74ml‘ the new Bordenul Het- __-¢—— MADE BY -—-—-—-i PllllPS DUDE! llilliillll CORPORATION Refine/s of Electrolytic Copper Olllces: 40 Wall Street, New York, N. Y. 230 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, . my 0i I n. 18. 1941 THE GUARDIAN PAGE FIVE STOCK QUOTATIONS Montreal Stock Exchange (Canadian Press) Stocks Bell Tel B!‘ an Cons Smelt Gypsum Int Nickel tl Power i s.- Int-Ire a?! | B “l,” 3G gal abssgeegaul . 5t 0f Can Montreal Curb’ ‘i, i ' BANKS (Canadian Press) ea s D swén Abltlbi Com Abitlbt Pfd g Bathurst .4 10 Imp Oll 9 (Canadian Press) * and i0 cents for every additional application. Advertising Rates _ , Mimlmum (‘Iiarge for Any Advertisements 25 Cents l Central Guardian locals, 5c per word; Western and Eastern locals l 1c per word; Announcerrcnte and Corning Events 3o per word: Classified 3c prr vord: In Memoriam Notices 70c per inch; Lin; n: l-‘iorul and Spiritual Oitcrings, Cards, eto.. 5o per name; Letters cf Condolence 70c per inch Wedding engagement 40 words for $1.00 Appreciation, 700 l" Inch or 4c per word. Lists I S h. l l 49 cents per men Addreu and Presentation $l.00.°0th:rg::tpeleo:: Payable in Advance 3 words. Notices of Thanks and Female Help Wanted EXPERIENCED MAID WANTED. Apniy Guardian. L-B04-4-17-2l. T-ATVTEI) - campus WOMAN, country home. Small family. Au- blv Guardian. L-817-4-17-2i. Maren AT ONCE-GIRL on vrcmnn for housework. Apply “J" Guardian. L-786-4-l6-18. For Sale FOR ssinlvizw YORK WESER. piano. Apply 106 liilisboro. L-830-4-l7-2i. FOIPSALE —- FISH (DRY I-IAKE.) Wlllf‘ W. L. Jordan. 295 Fitzroy Street. L-807-4-17-3i. FOR SALE~IIEAVY CARDBOARD in sliecis l7 x 22 inches suitabe for lining outhouses. 50 cents per hundred. Aonlv Guardian. Male Help Wanted WANTED — A REGISTERED EGG Grader. State waxes required.‘ McGulgan 6a Boyle, L?844-4-18-21. WANTED — MAN FOR FARM work. Apply Harold Gillespie, Central Royalty. L-738-4-16-ll. WANTED - A COOK FOR LOB- ster Factory. Cook for fishermen only. Lloyd Cox, Moreil. L-850-4-18-31. WANTED — MAN Oll. BOY FOR farmwork. John Murm. Marsh- fleld. L-835-4-18-3i. Wanted _._.._________--_ WANTED — MODERN! 1:01.152 T10 J . D l! réllgldklefffim ‘me 12821-4-13-31. Men Wanted b282-2-28-tf. PRIVATE SALE HOUSEHOLD BEGIN MAKING MONEY I'M- iill'lii~iillll-ZS of . P. Douil ln- mediately seizing Fanulex Line chilling two electrical supplies. 213 from door to door. Our name is a Eusirn street. mornings and ev- araritee of Service and Satis- Cliiiiiis. L-798-4-l6-3i. lsucuoh. Experience “HWWWY- -—_@.______.__ 00d earning, m hard workers. FOR SALE~1939 DODGE COACH Try 2 months or more and Rel: 4D 9v. in excellent condition. Au- niv. 107 Richmond Street, Char- lottetown. (Phone 313.) L-820-4-l7-2l. ROUND EDGE BLACK RUBBER. Traces complete. Also 'I‘race lengths. C inton Morrison, Dealer. new and used belts. L-836-4-18-2i. Alltlillh SALE A tharlottetown Airport r T0 he sold singly at Pub. If Auction on April 23rd, i911 ni. 1 P. M. on the prem- ls". lite dwelling house and farm building formerly “Ymd by Mr. Fred McRae situated on the south west millet" of the land known as t Charlottetown Airport. urchasers to remove im- mediately- Full conditions at sale. J. A. FULLERTON, 11-827-4-17-19-21-22-2? “y Clerk COMMANDS BRITISH ‘ l‘! “Menard. General Sir Hen gzlgaltifl Wilson is commanding nwtitiati troops In Crisco. it was “on. d in London. under direc- omklll General Alex. Papagos, wmon blleiafnmander-in-chief. Geri. mind‘ ~ame general officer com- "! the British forces in Egypt We“ .c and directed eratlons B? arried the Biiti troops {neck forduwld raoggs- Ask particu are an _BE ' iogue without obllf-lflllml- Fannie)‘- 570 St. Clement. MontreaIiFSmA _.__‘ Lowly Earthworm insures Fertility By “Plowing” Land 5o you think the earthworm is Diem’ 10W II“ “thigh utblethq-i‘ nag: . s - ' things? e worm WMndISOUI} become cold, hard-boundfisevlolélntlliy other words. uothinfl wquld grow and it wouldntd teak? long f0: us to starve to e8 f- And the author of that statemeru was no crackiwi W°mfw‘"'smPPeF- ‘§§§t“vv§i§i°i“.‘ Ensush meow“- G“- The activities of one worm 111 burrowing throu-Bh u" "ml ‘m acting as m 111111914 Pwwmm ‘N pretty ins! nllicant. but ll h" been estlmaed that an acre of land is inhabited by 53.000 olutixfg narrow-waisted Wanderers. o t keep moving faster than apartmen dwellers. however, t ltN 2):; stantly on the 001m °f W, 11011168. new travel l‘ u which explains Why 3° 33% '5“ we... gxpect. curing or “EL: Riifiiigh a worm looks like g disorganized mass of tissues. he my complex mum’ Hgadi‘ y? system ll almost as commas as mire-tn? m, m) gyu or ears. fgr m’: would get in the W01‘ 8-9 £9 ms m, w”. through the so - sense of touch is as sensitive “If; m “hing moth, and he (g1 ma the difference WWI"! 113 dark. ii-i new is sfififi ‘1"3°°#1==- lore“ “t the mouth and flattening dflwn Eu ms sail. It's been net i" established that a worm feels no ‘pain, which mist be s consola- tion when he gets stuck on s U511- emien‘ hook The ‘W011i! does have a. brain. l!" though it's very 5m 1 and QhP‘ gahrently he dcesnt think mu i at. seems to be another case 0 Mother Nature taking care of her children. Probob think! worm ‘l m‘ be blooded which included rowing throulllh ducting mblns. moles and be Isaac! Weitons. TENDERS mthinrt but 11111‘- the ground and would- Markets At A Glance -____- (B! The Canadian Pres). Tllmlll-slwls narrowly big er. Montreal-Gold shares over: in- dustrisls higher. Ne‘: York-Stocks closed slightly Wlllwlllil-Wlleat unchanged at_ Nil’!!! levels. New York-Cotton and rubber low- "; sugar and coffee higher. Montreal Exchange MONTREAL, liipril 17—(CP)— Leader; lodded erratically along on the s k market today with gains and losses, mainly confined to fractional amounts, g q,- bout even. ‘The utility average was glightly higher, aided by Bell ‘Ilelepimne and Shawinigan. which firmed 1-2 and 1-4, respectively. Montreal Pow. er traded unchanged but Brazilian and Power Corporation, which dropped to a new low at 4, gave up Twine. ‘M 0m . pa s were slightly c1435 as National Steel Car backtracked 1-2 and Dosoo and Bathurst slipped 1-4 each. Im- perial eased the minimum a.- mount and C.P.R.. and St. Lawrence Paper Eager-red mowed no changes.‘ Cons tlons and metals pre- sented a somewhat brighter aspect. Steel of Canada Jumped two points, Noranda gained 3-4 and Aigoma added 1-4. Dominion Coal preferred closed up a point; while fractionaliy higher at the end’ were Ogilvie, Im- perial Tobacco, Canada Sieamships- and Indilstriai Alcohol "A". Total sales: 10.400 shares; Indus- tsgaols 9,200; Mines 1,200; Bonds Produce Prices MONTREAL, April I7—(OP)— Produce Market. prices here today, as reported by the Dominion De- partment of Agriculture, follow: Butter: first grade creamer); prilllS, Jobbln ‘price, 31-32; first grade solids, flab irig price 30 1-2- 31 1-2; Que no 1 pasteurized, fresh and resffldfid. wholesale r.ce 30 1-4; Que 110 2 regraded ~resh 23 1-2. Receipts 1,667 boxes. Cheese: Western white, current receipt price, l4 15-16; colored, 15 7-16; white and colored, wholesale price, 15, which price is applicable to cheese manufactured on and 5f. tel‘ Aprl 1, 1041, for shipment. to the United Kingdzm. Receipts, nil. Eggs: graded shipments in vised free cases. sold at A-large 22; A- mecilum 21; A-puiiets 19; B grade 20. C grade 18. Receipts 1,227 cases. Potatoes: Que whites no 1 75's .50 -.60: no 2. 25-40: NB mountain no 1 75's .65—-.75; PEI cobblers no 1 75's .80—.90; PEI mountain no 1 75's 35-35; Bermuda reds 50 1b crates, 1.50 Grain WDTNIPEG. April 1'l—(CP)- Wheat futures closed at their peg- ged minimum levels on Wmnlpeg grain exchange today_ May at 75 7-8 and. July 77 1-2 cents. CHICAGO, April 17—(A.P>— Wheat closed 1-4-7-8 lower today, May 91 1-4—3-8, July 3-4-7-8; corn 3-8-7-8 down, May 67 3-4- 7-8. July 08 3-8;‘ oats 1-2-3-4 lower. FINANCE By Frederick Gardner Associated Press Financial Writer NEW YORK, April l7—(AP)— Weakness of steels put breaks on, the stock market today despite a mild rally of rails and scattered in- dlsstrials. In the Canadian section Interna- tional Nickel and Ford slanted low- er while Walkers and Imperial Oil improved fractions. The Assocla ‘ Dress avenge of 00 stocks was of! .10! a. point at 40, putting this barometer only .2 of a point above the years low, Dealings were negligent through- out, transfers for tihelull proceed- ings totalling 401,400 shares against 4.87.460 yesterday. Among prominent losers were U. S. Steel, Bethlehem, Crucible Steel, Youngstown sheet. Chrysler, (which hit a new i941 bottom) Eastman Kodak, American Can, Standard Oil of NJ. and Allied Chemical. Finishing moderately ahead were Santa. 111e, Pennsylvania Great Northern, American smelting, Ana- conda, Sears Roebuck, Pere Mar- quette pfd. .Ci0odriich, American elephone and Western Union. ' Toronto Exchange TORONTO. April 17-(CP)— Mining stacks regstered their best form in the final hour today w.th trading volume pcking up. volume of 106.000 shares was the smallest for a. fuii session since last October. Upper Canada was active on a gem of 2 cents to 1.77, Brouian also moved 1n fau- quantity at s narrow price advance and less activs issues gaining 5 to 10 cents East Maisrtic, Macaasa ‘Mm:- Leod-Cccksltutt, Preston. Madren, Perron, Pickle Crow San Antonio, and ‘Deck Hughes. uffaio-Anker- lie gained 25 cents to 8.70 and Ktcgrégddison WIS l5 00MB hlflhéi’ a . . Senior base metals held unmet)!- ed but for a gain of 3-4 for Nonin- da to 53 3-4. Pond Oreiile Ind Ven- ture; were up moderately at the close and Steep Rock finished un- Tenden will be received at the f ‘m; dufiApmlll: hci Conan“ to be seen at En eer. The l0 I . gy?__,"rf_i\c7,_lie:le“was then appointed mam» "It! became military ‘ ‘owml’? 01 91M provlnce, British troops in. . t _ M HQQWrIIIIyADfHfiLEBTON. City Clerk. L-‘IW-l-ld-SL office of the nndersi ed onnplzlhzlfi" h changed at $1. Gains of c. point or more were aid by Bank of Montreal. Inter- national Metal "A", Lake of the Woods Milling, Massey-Harris pfd. National Steel Car and Steel of Canada and pivotal issues ruling gtrongerwere Bell ‘Intentions, Bra- zilian, BA. Oil and Lobiaw B. Fan- New York Stock Exchange‘ ___ _., (Canadian Press) Stocks Close ,1.'Y ‘ Am O and I‘ 2A 7-8 Am Tel Tel 158 1-2 Anaconda 23 8-8 m n 25 8-4 Baldwin Loco 18 1-4 Bendix Av 83 3-8 th Steel 71 1-4 Ches Ohio 38 3-8 Chrysler 60 on 20 Elec Auto Lita 20 8-8 Gen Eco Gen Motors 30 8-4 Gt Nor Pfci »_ 24 7-8 Kennecott i 32 3-4 Mont Ward ,, 33 1-2 N Y Central 4, 12 1-8 Nor Am Oo i, l8 8-8 Penn 2.4 l-B hi1 Pet 88 7-8 Std Oil NJ 34 8-8 Texas Corp _ 37 1-2 United Air 35 3-4 U S Rubber 21 l-B U S 8t CO 53 Vanadium 25 1-4 West Union 0 5-8 West 00 1-8 Woolworth I — ,_ I l’ (Canadian Press) TORONTO, April 17- Stocks Close Alderman i0 Ang Cdn 57 Arntfield 4 Astoria. 3 1-2 Aunor Gold 175 EITRHEIT-il ti: 1-4 ar Exp Beattie 105 Bidgood 8 Bobiio ~ B 1-2 Bra orne 965 Broulan 85 Buff. Ank 875 Cal Edm f3 1-2 Caribou 252 Cent Pat 170 Cent Poro i5 7-8 Chester 134 Con smelt 35 Denison 3 1-4 Dome Oll 22 Duquesnc 9 1-2 East Mairobic 249 Eldorado 33 1-2 Falcon Foundation 3 1-2 Francoeur 39 GodsLake 27 Goldalc 11 God Eagle Gold Gate 6 7-3 Gra Bous 2 Gunner Gold 23 Hallnor 500 Hard Rock 75 Hollinger \, i2 3-4 Home Oil 165 l-lud Bay Min 26 Int Nickel 32 1-2 J M Cons 3-4 xen- Add 875 Kirk Lake 84 Lake Shore i8 3-4 Lamaque 440 Lapa Cad 9 Lieiich 47 Little LL 130 Macassa. 380 Macleod 18B Madsen 65 Malartic 100 McKenzie 105 Moneta. 46 Morris K 2 Nat Pete 5 Naybob 24 1-2 Nlplssing 110 Noranda 53 3-4 Normetal 36 OBrIen 64 Ome a. 13 Pace ta 2 5-8 Pahiour 127 Partanen 3 l-2 Paymasier l9 Perron Gold 135 Pick Crow 245 Pioneer 204 Preston 300 San Ant 223 senator 46 sherrltt 89 Stscoe 85 Sigma 715 Slave Lake i0 Steep Rock 100 Straw Lake 4 i-2 sylvanlte 250 Teck Hush 805 Upper Can 177 Ventures 340 Waite Amu 310 Wendigo 21 Wri Hers 555 UNLTSTED Kirk Town 8 Pend Ore 130 Currencies unw YORK. Aim-ll "-461"- Ths Canadian dollar gained 1-8 of a. cent to 38.50 cents, a discount of 11 1-2 per cent, on the free foreign exchange market hem today. (Ottawa rmeiaa Firehouse 0on- u-oi Board rats 0.00-0.01 per cent discount.) The pound Surlin at $4.01 for open market cables cosed l-2 cent off. Earlier the pound set s. n_ew low for 1041 at .00 8-4 but railed in the late des ll. Slightly lower we the Swiss franc, the l-Iong Kong and Shang- hai dollars and thg Argentine free peso. War—25 Years Ago Today (By The Canadian heal) APRIL 18. IBIS-British troops stopped German attempts to pene- trate defence positians near St. Eloi. Second ‘use of the Battle of Verdun en with German failure at Pepper Ridge. APPOINTED anorexia: rmsmros England - (on) - The Loci chancellor has appoin ed E. A. Stevem to be reg s‘rar ef ny Fame: and Ford A weakened slightly. - , i Hastings and urns count" oourta. AND TH S ElR THE STORY OF THE "COUNTY OF PIOTOU" The "County of Picfou", 6B3 ions, built in New Glasgow in ‘I865, was the loaf ship built by Copf. George McKenzie, "the fofher of Nova Scolla shipping." Al Chrlsimasflme, ‘I879, the ship was soiling in ballast from England for Philadelphia when she ran info o gale. Peter Carroll, u young sailor, described how he saw a huge sea that's anothu- story. Today let's try to besut"! from beneath. that feature whiclli if stick adirns: mouth and lips them- selves. Beacuse a wide, full mouth registers agreeably upon the Scrern Hollywood has made it tho.- v:gue ‘That mouth has mobile, expressive lips, is generous an size and is adaptable in picturing the actress’ moods to the audience. S0 be happy if y:ur mouth structurally is of that type. Once it starts to sag. though. your mouth may be worse off in a You can alter It YOU! kllllfi-Edge line. your lip lines frcm beneath. is true that y;u “make mouth." Do it by acquiring correct, speech and d ciicn habits. Let what, you have to say come out of lips that w rk, Sircak up to keep lip comers lifted. Avoid mumbling. Use lips as unrd formers. Thcse lips you make indelibly stzimp your character, Speak ill’)! And laugh. more. Smile as an exercise for mouth youth. and you will keep mouth beauty. Open your mcuth nYhen talking. Do not. chew your words. merit. in mouth youth, lip mobikiy. Smile through the fullest range of smiles y:u know. Purse out your lips in imitation of that once- popuiar "bee-stung" lock. Blow through lips. Whistle. Laugh 08am, smile again, make lite larg- est "O" you can. nfiw the smallest “o". (Ten times for each exercise.) Next from right to left, roll, twist and tum lips 1:1 a wide cir- cle. Begin at right mouth cor- ner_ end at left mouth corner. (Ten tzmes.) Reverse (Ten times.) Now prut. Now pretend to blow bubbles. Puff out. cheeks. mounting ostern. Ii caught him o: he sprang for the offer shrouds of the mlzzen-rlgglng and carried him 25 yards out lo sea. Then another sea engulfed him and washed him back info the main In’ ,. The wheelsmon, Murdoch Morrison of Dolhousle, N.B. also was swept overboard and fhen washed -' back on board. The ship had to be abandoned offer the \ crew hocl been laken aboard a passing steamer. Package 15¢ I Handy Humidor Pouch 15¢ P c Vmhfinn, IPE TOBA CO BEAUTIFY YOUR. MOUTH beauty way than is the out-of-daile Open u and y:u will have more (Ten times for these also. We ?—— rrsebud mouth. folks llsan to what you say. told you you'd laugh at vuursdf. B ALICE WADE ROBINSON. bet your lips "give" -- to keep a Go to your room. Shut the A lovelier mouth and a fiiiicr l.p- Lpsl-ick needs nqseiiing t; you. youthful mouth. Exercise lips for door. sit comfortably beam g Lne should be that iziughicrs be- You know its friendly virtues. mouth flexibility. That way you well-lighted mirror and make faces llilfisl- i Maybe YOU 81c not so stalled in its ivlli avoid lip-sag. ‘that way you at yourself. If you laugh, all the use as youd like to be. Bill. will even "r111 out" your mhented better. Every laugh is an irivest- ‘ ‘J Started Chicks This week you can buy, STARTED CHI ‘KS at clay- old prices. WHY NOT BUY, YOUR CHICKS TODAY. DILLON & SPILLIGTT Charlottetown, P. E. I. Has BY EDWIN S. JOHNSON Canadian Prcss Mfiitary Correspondent I UITAWA April 17-<CP) —Int techincai schools and other vcca-E tional institutions strung on’ acres; the Domlnirn sclccicd soltlnrs of Canada's active army nre iin:ic.-; going specialized lluning to meet, i114» growing demand for ski led tradesmen. Transformation of the army to a su cr-mcchanized stoic. crmbincd wfh depleted supply of désllflbifi‘; specialists in the" 1°11 labnrmarlzet , influenced the Deprfmoni oi "Pi-l Uonai Defence to train and develop i its own corps of Clililflllfll. As a result former sirzld-iruiiiwiii clerks may be ‘earning the l quotes of electrical 01121110!‘ salesmen the art. of “Widiiiiiiiii” while peacetime iishernicn. farm. 5nd others are being moulded ‘ experts ‘n the various lrafrts ihriti gruablg the modem army at home or c In Army Crafts “Who Knows HOW” ' Steady Jobs Trade School Opening in Hamilton, 0nt., May Will Give Chance For Practical I Application. 1n the field to function efficiently. Tllp schzune envisages three phases of iiziinhg. Dulxng the first phase. 01‘ the basic mlliiai-y trninfng period. the rrcruii. is inicrvrlcukad and igivcn ilcnal aptitude tests to deter- I . whclhci" he has the necessary ( icniisu-ril bziclcgrotmd and inher- c L alriiiy i0 qualify for a trades- milfs course Tho next. step takes a successful candidate to a youth training cent- re or some other civilian training fnstitiiiion. There he undergces B-n intensive c-cilrsc in the trad... for ivlfrh he has been selected under rxpczt. siiprrvisicn. Thp maximum period of this phase has been fixed at. three months. some of the courses are ccrisiderriblv shorter. Noiynzilly. the anon 8'0 nssfcrned in schools within their ‘mmciiai... training area but lli some inftnnces where a recruit d . has izccn re etced for a. highly spec- inizrd trade he may be sent farther afield. Above pictures show Canadian soldiers at work in a Technical gen-cl, The“; photograrhs wr-ro thin-n in Ottawa but they can be duruugm l“ mast of ilic couniryis teofnlrdl schools. Upper It'll: Part i-i’ the clr-rtrlrnl class. Yppcr fight; Mr. (l. A, Yeo. in charge of electrical instruction, is showing gunner p, F, p”, TAUGHT FUNDAMENTAL During this stage the soldier is put through the elementary “jump? Just as the average schoolboy ex- periences in ifs first year of techni- cal training. He is taught the lim- damentals and. brought to a point from where in many instances he, ‘never expected to get such (ill op- will require only practice to ccm- petc his training. Finally the embryo craftsmen will advance to the army trade school at; Hamilton. expected to be opened early in May. Here they will be taught practical application of their learning to military requirements At Ottawa Technical High School typcal of other training centres throughout the country the trainees are highly enhusiasilc and eager. They realize their ultimate role Mil be just as important as that played by the man behind s. gun. For when they berxme proficient it will be their duty to repair, maintain and €D€1Y1Ie the complicated machines, weapons, equipment and instru- ments which make up the present- dav army. Undergoing c0l1rses in the capital are men fzom all parts of Canada. {mung them is Gur. H. Howell of Czimribellton. N. B.. who played centre forward for the Compbeliton "Tigers" back in 1929. Since then he lws been employed as a pulp- mill worker and as a. gold miner. Now he is learning to be an elec- trician. In the same class in Gur. H. L. ‘Barkley 0i Cornwall. Ont... who has been c. pastry. bake‘: for 11 years. Barkley who worked in an army idtchen for seven months said that he had “jumped at the opportunity" to learn a new trade as he left he had been too long in the baking business. “From what. I have seen of the ck-ctricai trade I'm going to like it much better than baking." he said. "I hope to make myself of real use to the army." Gunners C. ‘Benrvell of Winnipeg formerly a. soda-fountain clerk '1‘. E. McQulnn of Stbnt John, N. B‘ erstwhile salesman and l... E. l. v- ote, Woodstock. N. B. 1i. house painter in civial iifc. a’) are hiking the elementary electrical course. Benweli dscribcd the course a; "great stuff", and added that he portunity when ho joined up. Th4 men said that. if the" came iiiroiirrz; the war safely they planned to pur- sue iheir adopted t:a:ics. CHANGE OF TRADES Huddled about lheiy work bertdiel the men were busy on electrical hook-ups. assembling n1o‘o‘: imit- ing switches and oihcr . cvssvrica and learning how to wire {or power and light. Irfthe machine shops and wood..- turning class-rooms there was the same evidence of enfhiwasm and activity. Her.- the same process of remaking cmflslncn “'35 in pro- gress. SDI‘. R. W. Gaines one-time waiter in a. Montreal nigiht cliils was learning the rudimenfs oi‘ car- pentry. l-lls starting assiqrwnent was the building of a mlnnturc JTYYW hut At a bench nearby was Spr. H. Ncit of Ottawa. who was overseas with an artillery unit ma? _ i0 months ago. but was invokded home as the result. of n knee in- jury. A miner in civilian l'fe he volunteered to try his hand at cor- nentry and added ho was no! sorry he made the choice. The men march to wrlc from their camps but when their semicol- ing keeps them up diiflnq tho mid- night hours. as it often docs. i118! are transported back in army lor- fies. And athn they report for classes they are greeted bv :1. motto over tbs doorway: "Tho mfin who knows, how has a job-The nun ulio knows) whv is h‘s boss." R.C.A.. how a trans-former is built up; in the foreground, Print.- II. lnlonde sindlea the intricacies of an electrical motor. Lcrvcr kit: Instructor L. .I. Clarke shows gunner .11. McNutt. IT. C. 11.. hon- to handle a drill prcas in the mar-hing shop. Lower rlzht; Part of lira woodwork clans In the same school; the civilian in the right centre I Mr. 0. B. Pengsliey, instructor. 3m- ‘ i ET' i" Eben-r;- - - . rv— . . ‘w I“i‘%‘ni“m n4 on».