x e uardialz 'l'llE WEATHER Clear with a few cloudy Intervals. Continuing cool. West winds 15. low-high at Charlottetown 50 and 15. Covers Prince Edward 1 Island Like-the Dew 0 l6 PAGES SEE REDS USING CANADA AS BASE CHARIJOTTETOWN. CANADA. WEDNESDAY. JULY 13. 1956 "To the 'Glory of God and in liizmory of His Servants, The Rev; Geo. N. Gordon, 1822-1861, His wife. Ellen Catherine Powell, 18- 33-1861. and The Rev'd. James D. Gordon. 1832-1872, Devoted Mis- sionaries of The Presbyterian Church who were slain as Martyrs by the Natives of Erromanga in the New Hebrides. Erected at their Birthplace by the Presbytery of Prince Edward Island." These words out in black marble adorn a memorial cairn of field stones. 7' square at the base and 11' high, erected by The Presby- tcry of Prince Edward Island at the Gordon Homestead on the high- way two miles beyond Alberton to commemorate the heroic service. and sacrifice of two of Prince Ed- ward lsland's honoured sons and th-: English wife of the one. The calm was unveiled at a spec- ial service yesterday. by the grand- nephew of the Gordon brothers. Mr. W. Craswell Weeks of Alber- ton, and solemnly dedicated by the Moderator of the Presbytery, The R.v. M. Carl Currie. of Murray Harbour. Assisting the Moderator was the Rev. Geo. Killen who read the Lessons, the Rev. T. H. 3. Sum- e , Clerk of the Court who offer- the Dedicatory Prayer, and the Rev. D. A. ”:mpbell of " t , e, Convener of the Committee in charge of erecting the memo ial, who gave the commemorative ad- dress. In his address Mr. Campbell outlined the work of the Gordon brothers who almost a century ago left this Island to carry the Gospel to the far reaches of the Pacific Seas. The Reverend Geo. Gordon and Mrs. George Gordon were martyred in 1881; The Reverend James Gordon followed them to the same mission field and was mart- yred eleven years later. p in erecting this memorial the Presbytery gives pct inent re- cognition and offers a tribute oi honour and gratitude to these the first missionary martyrs of the Presbyterian Church in Canada. Assisting in the Service was the Choir of the Alberton Congregation and f.he'followlng Ministers: Rev. Donald Nicholson. Rev. E. H. Bean arr UNVEILIN CERONY Gordon Memorial Cairn Dedicated At Alberton A ti - Rev. L. M. MacNaugi..-... Rev. W. Harold Brown. together with the following Elders: Mr. Wilbur Mac- Willlams. Mr. R. A. Maclfenzie. Mr. Murdoch MacPhee, Mr. R. S. P. Jardine. Mr. E. A. Cudmore, Mr. A. A. Macswain. Mr. W. Brecken Simmons and Mr. E. L. Hardy. The Rev. L. D. Bartlett. appointed as supply at New Lon- don Charge. and Mr. B. C. Lowery, Student Minister at Wood Islands YESTERDAY were also present, together with lay representatives of a b Congregations tin ughout the Pre- sbytery. Special tribute was paid Mr. Wil- liam Lawson, Elder of Alberton, for his work of supervising the clearing of the beautiful site, the securing of the best stone for the purpose. and the erection of this every way of the high purpose it will now serve. Newtoundlander incensed By Regulations For Small Boats OTTAWA tCPl-No landlubber is going to tell a Newfoundlander when to wear a lifejacket. the Commons ',, committee was told stoutly Tuesday Hennan M Batten. a Liberal who represents the west - coast Newfoundland riding of Humber- St George's. protested that the RCMP are topping small boat op- erators from carrying friends as passengers because the boats do not carry enough livesaving equip- ment "I've got no objection if the rest of you are talking about a bunch of landlubbers who run around in pleasure boats." he thundered. BEST SEAMEN IN WORLD, ”But I'm talking about New- foundlanders, the best seamen in the world If anybody tries to tell a Newfoundlander to buy a life- jacket to go 1114 miles in a boat, why " . Mr. Batten, incensed over the whole thing, spluttered that if he weren't in the decorous confines of a Commons committee he would have a good deal more to say. Leopold Langlois, parliamentary assistant to Transport ' Minister Marler. said the regulation is en- forced for the security of boat owners. g Mr. Fallen. formcr naval lieu- tenant, was noi appeascd. He said that in one particular case boat owners have been pre- ilton was killed in the crash. plny. where the blaze tried. i of ii . I ' . . a 1 Sergeants AD.-.x Craig. 30, and The fire spread to an asdjaacent scgillglrla Ell-itishv lzisllllgnslnahlldlllllg ::l"c3.f.rpfllgwb.':C3,T,f,,::Q;,,,"',':,? T EJROAD (EOUNTRY Pll0l ml "la. Soviet a."'h"e.A""i O e S Wllllam Day. 29. suffered unde- machine shop and tire-and-battery British policemen have been come and 50 per cent of succes. sovlleet sU::i':Is5'”2:menac; ffrffsilllf llzliveiim illlizlcaiilwnliivlicrei wCll ell: termined chest injuries. shop. killed. non dunes, ' i P Illness Causes Some'Surprise ROME (AP)-The secret of her illness finally out. Clair Boothe Luce is returning soon to the Win- had suppressed for ill months as a possible peril to ltalian-Amerl- can relations. Timefs editor-in- vented from giving friends a lift across a bay to their place of work. They would go around by car-at a cost of 34. These men were being pre- vented from making a living. Mr. Batten contended. Regulations should be applied with some know- ledge of local conditions. SEA is HIGHWAY . Another Newfoundland . C. W. Carter L - Burin-Burgeo. said: "The sea has always been our highway. A godd many people have boats just as they have cars on the mainland. The regula- tions as they are applied in some cases are absurd." . Mr. Carter added that a boat owner can't even take a person to a doctor down the coast unless he has the proper lifesaving and firefighting equipment on his vas- sel. Mr. Langlis said the regulations could of course be overlooked in an emergency. "There are no regular boat schedules in Newfoundland." Mr. Carter said "Everything is by chance." PIPE MAJOR KILLED HAMILTON (CPl - The pipe major of the Argyl and Suther- land Highyinders was killed and two other Hamilton reservists in- jured in a car smash-up Satur- day. Police said Pipe Major George Campbell Wright of Ham- HELICOPTERS HAVE ROLE OTTAWA (CP) - Transport de- partment plans to improve search and rescue services were sketched for the Commons shipping com- mittee Tuesday. Leopold Langlis, parliamentary assistant to Transport Minister Marier, said some of the new de- partmental vessels will have hel- icopter ianding platforms. The department operates .'.'..iut so large vessels on the coasts. St. Lawrence River and Great Lakes. Most of them are old and are to be replaced in the next few years Many of the 1 w ones will be able to carry helicopters. However, 'lt has not been decided whether the department will buy helicopters. The committee '3 ” its study of a bill amending the Can- ada Shipping Act, the most im- portant change being a provision to license at least 200.000 plea- sure power boat operators in Can- ads. BAN OIL DUMPING The committee also approved a new provision which will prohibit the dumpin of waste oil by freighters into Canadian territorial waters. ocean and inland. Licence regulations will not be drawn up until after the legisla- tion is passed by Parliament. There has been no decision yet. for instan :, on the age limits ill for licensed operators or even what types of boats will be in- cluded. .. Wallace Nesbitt (PC - Ox'orri suggested the department hire un- iversity students during the sum- mer as a "student police force" Says Mariiimes Receiving fair llealln Taxes OTTAWA (CP)--The maritime Provinces are receiving a fair deal from the federal government under new tax-sharing proposals and a wide range of other grants and subsidies. a parliamentary as- sistant from Nova Scotia said Tuesday. T. A. M. Kirk, Liberal member for Shelburne-Yarmouth-Clare and assistant to Postmaster - General Lapointe, said in the Commons it is unfair for opposition members to say the Mnrltimea are being adly treated under the new tax- sharing arrangements. To be fair, one had.to look at all federal spending in the Atlantic provinces. Under the new federal tax plan. payments to Nova Scotia would Tlse by 4.770.500. an increase of 10.9 per cent compacd with cur- rent tax rental pacts. Mr. Kirk reviewed a long list of grants and subsidies now being made to the Maritimes in the fields of mining. fishing and agri- culture. He also referred to fed- eral participation in a number of projects such as the Bluenose and William Carson ferries. the nso causeway and the army's ew Camp Gagetown. BLAZE DISRUPTS POWER LISTOWEL. Ont. (CPi-Dam- age was estimated at more than 375,000 in a fire that ripped through a business block early Friday and left the town without power for an hour. Greatest loss was at the Listwcl Produce Com- to enforce the regulations. The RCMP did not have the staff to do this job. Mr. Langils said this was a good suggestion which would be stud- ied. He added that "re depart- ment ls looking into the possibil- ity of making more use of radio to broadcast storm warnings to small boat operators. Sketch Plans For Better Search, Rescue Service C. W. Carter (L-Burin-Burgeo) said the new regulations will cover Newfoundland inshore fishermen and asked that they not be ap- plied to the inconvenience of the fishermen. Mr. Langiis said there is no intention to force undue require- ments on the fishermen to pre- vent them exercising their trade. Father MacDon ald Vice Rector Of St. Dunstan's University Rev. G.A. MacDonald has been appointed Vice Rector of Saint Dunstan's University, it was an- nounced yesterday afternoon by Most Reverend Malcolm A. Mac- Eacherii, Bishop of Charlottetown at a meeting of the S.D.U. Board of Governors. Father MacDonald, who has been Head of the Physics Depart- ment of S.D.U. during most of his years in the Priesthood succeeds Rev. J.A. Sullivan who was named Rector on June 11 of this year. Father MacDonald was born in Annhndale. the son of the late Mr. and. Mrs. George MacDonald and spent most of his early years with his family in Cornwall. He attend- ed Prince of Wales College after which he taught school in the Prov- ince for several years. ' He continued his studies at S.D. U. and graduated in 1928 with his Bachelor of Arts Degree. He took his Theological Course at Laval University. Quebec and was ord- ained to the Priesthood on April 3, 1932. Following his ordination he did Post-Graduate work at Dalhousie University where he received his Master of Science Degree after which he studied at Columbia Uni- versity, New York. Upon completion of his studies at Columbia University he return- ed to S.D.U. to teach Physics and Mathematics. During most of his years at S. D.U. Father MacDonald took a very active part in military af- fairs. He has been Commanding Officer of the S.D.U. Canadian Of- ficers Trainlng Corps on the cam- pus since its formation in l940. He was an outstanding marks- man and twice represented Can- ada in the Bisley Shoot held an- nually in England. This summer Father MacDonald is teaching at the Royal Military College in Kingston, Ontario. Contract Let For Paving Railway Wharf OTTAWA (specialf - A cont- ract for paving Q pcutiovmof the Railway Whii'I”it"Cii'arlottetown has been let by the Department of Public Works, Neil A. Mathes- on, M.P. for Queens learned to- day from the officer of the Min- ister. The contract has been awarded to the firm of Matheson and Mac- Millan the lowest bidders the am- ount ls 58,800.70. The Queens Liberal member said he understood the job en- tailed the paving of the portion of the east side of the wharf over which iongshoremcu have to hand truck potatoes and other produce to ships lying alongside. The work it. A. F. Officer Killed By Greeks NICOSIA, Cyprus AP) - A Royal Air Force officer was shot dead by three masked men Tues- day while visiting a Greek Cyp- riot woman friend in a private house in a Nicosia suburb, The officer was struck by thre bullets, two in his head and one in his A t- The woman told investiagors the three masked men walked into the house. opened fire and fled. The slaying appeared to be as work of Greek Cypriot extrcmis.., but there was no immediate offi- cial confirmation. The officer was the list British serviccman slain in the is months since the extremists opened their ANGER MAY REFLECT WORRY In Ch'town had been lilanned originally for -lllt Year..but.k was held up-when certain all companies dug trench- m along the length of the wharf to put in pipelines from the doc to their storage tanks. Stresses Need For Federal. Aid In Education OTTAWA (CP)-Federal aid to education is ceded to provide all children an equal opportunity, a lwoman member of the Opposition said in the Commons Tuesday. The present system of municipal financing of schools fosters ine- qualities, Margaret Aitken (PG- York Humber) said. . From town to town and province to province, differences in wealth produced different standards of education. All children could have equal opportunity if the federal government shared the cost. Miss Aitken, a Toronto newspa- per columnist, spoke as the oppo sition continued for the second day its objections to new tax-sharing proposals made by the federal government, Before the House was a govern- ment resolution preliminary to in troduction of a bill to authorize new federal-provincial tax agree ments. They would take elfcct next April 1, replacing present tax rental agreements. Basis of the new arrangement is a provincial share in three di- rect tax fields equal to 10 per The federal proposal glgo pm. vldes unconditional share - the- wealth equalization payments to l033 Wealthy provinces. POWER 8 IFT Heads B And P Club Division In Great Britain Dr. Lily Ross of Newcastle-on Tyne, chairman of the North-East ern Division of the Business and Professional Women's Clubs Great Britain, arrived in the City by all yesterday afternoon for an informal visit. On her arrival she was met by Misses Helen Yeo and Bessie Prowse who took her on a tourlif Green Gables and a portion of the National Park. Today Dr. Ross will be taken on a tour of the City and to other points of interest in the Province. Dr. Ross arrived in the United States almost a month ago. where she attended tile convention of the American Federaiir of Business and Professional Women's Clubs which was held at Miami Beach. Florida. From there she travelled to Montreal where she was the Clubs of Great Brltian and North- ern Ireland at the congress of the International Federation of Busin- ess and Professional Women's Clubs. During her stay on this side of the Atlantic Dr. Ross has visited W-shinston. Ottawa and Glace Bay, N. S. At the latter place she paid a visit to the sister club of that of her home town. In professional life Dr. Ross is the Public Health Officer for mat- emal and child welfare. a position which she has held for the past fourteen years. She leaves the Province-.Thursday morning travel ling by air to New York where the B. P. W. Club had arranged for her to visit the UN building. On Sat- urday Dr. Ross returns by air to England. N. S. Fishermen One Bit Happier, YARMOUTH, N.S. (CF) - Dis- gruntled South Shore herring fish- ermen wcrc a little happier and S390 richer Tuesday after a Grand Manan, N.B. boat left for home lwith 130 barrels of herring in her The New Brunswick boat. work- ing for an unidentified firm, picked up the herring at the ask- ing price of S3-a-barrel from fish- ermen here in in wedgeport, N.S. About 50 fishermen along a Z)- mlle stretch of the South Shore lifted their nets at noon Sunday, protesting the refusal of National Sea Products. Vita Foods and Le- blanc Fisheries to increase the cu- rent barrel price of 32.50. A snolfesman for the fishermen said the action was 100 per ccnt effective. delegate representing the B. P. W! U.S. Se WASHINGTON (CP) - Chair- man J. S. Armstrong of the US. securities and exchange commis- sion indicated in secret testimony before a Senate committee that the C- munists may be using Canada as a base from which to invest in American industry. He agreed also that it is pos- sible that lron Curtain investors might, by proxy, get directorship on U.S. corporations handling sec- ret material. in testimony made public Mon- day by a senate internal security sub-committee. Armstrong said his agency is "extremely con- cerned" because of a situation arising from the fact that some securities of ..mcrican companies enter the U.S. from Canada and Switzerland and are traded in the Us "There has been a great deal of concern in our commission." he said, "because we have run into a number of situations where it appeared to us that it would be .impossible to obtain information because the holdings were in the name of forei interests." REFUSE DIVULGE SOUP 3 Hears Views PRICE Sc nate had trouble leaning whom Cana- dian and Swiss banks and brokers represent because of their policy of keeping secret the source of the monies they handle. A commission spokesman said later that Switzerland is the main source of this foreign capital but that a considerable amount comes from Canada, At the c..nmittee hearing. Arm- strong was asked by Senator Olin D. Johnston (Dem. S.C.) if lnveafr ment capital could be coming to the US. from behind the Iron Curtain. "That possibility is certainly there,” Armstrong replied. ”That possibility being there." Johnston continued, "they could come over here and. by proxy, get directors on some of our big corporations that are maknig sec- ret material at the present time, could they not?" "That," replied Armstrong, "is a subject which is a matter of great concern to us and which has been a great concern to the Senate banking committee.” The sub-committee plans hear- ings later on the extent to which unknown foreign investors have The commission, he added, has acquired interests in U.S. con- cerns. OTTAWA (CPI - Twelve Cana- dian airmen are stranded in the Arctic and may not be able to get out for another month. They are well supplied with food and fuel and are in radio communica- tion with RCAF northern bases. Six of the airmen are at Arc- tic Bay and Pond Inlet on North- ern Baffin Island. Both Eskimo communities and transport depart- ment stations, they are about 1.900 miles north of Ottawa. Three men are on Melville Island in the Queen Elizabeth Islands and three neg wager -Bay -lust halow the Arctic C The airmen will be the last of 333 to return from a 2lA -month survey covering a 600.000-square mile Arctic region by the RCAF's No. 408 photographic squadron. based here. They were left behind Nasser, Tito And Nehru To Meet Today PULA, Yugoslavia (AP) - The big three of world neuiralism meet on the secluded Adriatic island of Brioni today. President Nasser of Egypt joined Marshal Tito on the Yugo- slav president's island hideaway Tuesday night after a flag-waving welcome in Puia. Prime Minister Nehru of India is to arrive by air from Paris today. Despite Egyptian efforts to at- tribuic large significance to the conference. Yugoslav sources pre- dicted nothing more dramatic than a restatement of known posi- tions will emerge from the 24- hour exchange of views. l2 Canadian Airmen Stranded In Arctic By Spring Breakup when the spring breakup made it im 'ble for ski-equipped ,' to land and pick them up. A helicopter is being used to evacugte some of the men but the three on Melville Island are out of helicopter range and will have to wait until a float - equipped Canso can take them out some time next month. The three on Melville are Cpl. J. E. Titus, M. Sarnia, Ont., LAC. J. A. Repath, 23, Toronto. and LAC. J. J. Lat- reille, 19, Montreal. Senior air force officers empha- sised thattha men are in no dan- ger whatsoever and are being sup- plied regularly by planes operating out of a landing strip on the DEW (distant early warning) ra- dar line. Supplies are dropped to them by parachute. The squadron since 1948 has been ing exact distances between known points in Canada. Next year it will complete the whole of Canada when it measures the Queen Elizabeth Islands. op- erating from the United States air force base at Thule. Green-. land. These measu '3 are the basis of all map-making. To obtain the measur t . the squadron this year set out N radar - reflector masts on lonely Arctic hilltops. Aircraft fly be- tween these stations and measure distance by translating the time it takes radar pulses to go from the plane to the ground station. EVEN A WLL luoiim is not more tuffmc. '1 START JET SERVICE MOSCOW (AP)-Russia plans to inaugurate regular service next month with its big twin-engine TU-104 jet transport, a Russian pilot said Saturday. Gerald Dmi- trievlch Kuznctsov, a command 5.600 miles. hagen, and Moscow and Prague. British Army Su rrenders To You! 7i i -3 '7 by Tempera- the Top TORONTO tCPl lure bulls-tin issued CCMUYY Taverna Villa where ar- chief, Hen R. Luce, is the am- i C Other n osition me G. E I O . ""1" Whhc weather om” Tues. slenlc poisoning sickened her bassador-gnlmsbsnd. I called for l:i:,'(,cnu,a"zan0n OTZS; S e day night. mm”) m.” t rou h much o . . ern I i r ...:...... .. '..';r;."'" " "5 ..:'-".-.::,e"n”e;i..:r'":.:::..:: ...::::.';. ..:: :.".'.':.:1.:..r::;:'..'":.v.:- , g--H, 5.. 9...... or ........ -- :2 She is due back An . 15 from I r 0. , central ovcrnment to r ' .3""y "5 3”'"'"(""9” ' 9 R"iS,W0re un Ics icy ug 1 em- ancouv . 0 mane” knumm in Ema United 3:100? xigrlgfyalggulhtige ::'”z:I.aelalAll,l:"l'-- FIEJJN )o'llc)'mrensulie;i ftrom t:e'voi'iIon tot Amcrican i leaders! 'tl"hhe" same and mungmpal governmeagvgrgg: in its ranks can iicar any kind sclves. But there was always the Edmonton . 52 72 9.," M. hung. "mm. ma ” an , Nu" Ant,” ll "Pent. sting oh hSa:;lllIm.m e 11:05; progably s true 0 e a nation to me people. and any color Panties they choose. risk that at an inspection they Regina .. . 53 5 mad”! hummmm. U.s "nu department omcms be co.Mm;irged mum” n . nThuss'a. !n an un Rev. E. G. Haw" (scgmuy Also bras. would be caught improperly uni- Winnipeg . 2: 7 Bill M"! tarpaper coves the "M. ing.-.3 was "absolutely no em. Vl0l9'lt SWM '"l'9ll5 0" -700" A different note entered Soviet witheslmrtllassels :1 c.ol:sumer ':.oa3 laid) "ldlhe '”"llll'ln8 Pl!" Wlll l nedwas aTm:-try night while it formed' so they 80'' Dame Irene 1-ammo N 36 '2 hedmom cemu Pam omen"! dance” of an an-em! on M" Foster Dunn mdmm he muched smemems an" the Nhma d wri it I H I "M a increase cenmmnnon of power afst . bu: ue ay. he secretary on their side. and she campaigned Ottawa -" 1" hum” for her mum Mnnkmm Luci. me Y D . an exposed Russian nerve In M. csngnu M Wmch Cudmunuryz 'aVi;1i '.' 2:5 pguu ulrcedurvduinus HTM poop” an bcmwors "Ho state or ulgr, An'lihoI1.l Head. for a Imnnoy allowance and the Montrcnl .. . ”l'l"lh' 7”” l”'m3 "'0 M"? A Dutch doctor practicing is ”””c"”'"”" 05”” "'9 ""9 "l "'9 boss Nikita Ktu shchcv de- relrcasincg We Ii18II::lWel' fro ihn l'""l"”l9l 3”l”"9'"3' 3'"l ll"?! llllflhlgntdlrhllillinyeonnldszlllilndlg hhcdl illililnlllillrllciilltelon 0! gnwmmml Ll. iltllltlllcillrrilhu 'i2 57: W to roses su ted of filterin . Communist world 1 i don't like . .,-mgr . ' ' . g ' - me am -”-i-?”--m- on -2 i::":. ::i:.":. :'.:.':.::'"..:.. we -r we --aw -m .':.":.r:.:-..Ti.:':-.:"::.”:..”::':.' W" . :'.::":l2:2i:: ”""':”:"."...l".". T G W ”.5ii."'iif'ii.."”.il””"" it 2 hlonde envoy as she slept and ..g 1,. 9. my 3 (Wu... 30"” leldm "Id Pm! Mm! W suits of the congress showed a in the domestic Soviet ecdnomy What their provincial solrernmentn llloi-at-Ii "em" no i mmilr rlis " nfttll-ill th .1 'ts rill": cl-mwmn 53 7s "m'hil- gig in em, ":5 3” re," ""9'” deep '"”"'V "W Wlml” failure of Soviet policies' Pravda the Russians were quick to con- Should d0-" I The glrrlns of tll,cmlVRll:Ce4Wlim: ET-fin la rlld eth:r lnolrllcg to: Elmlel. ' s4 73 That iaaiaper was nailed up and Quint! 8 l”""'- l" ll” "l" 0' 3”""" ill" leaped on the statement and sider it interference in internal That had been woven In Que en's Ro all Armv Cor :- n d bee anothero ill ance Y L 0 n S '''''' " covered til safe paint soul after my. hum 3 1- 1 3,; mm 5""' mlgl" ""99 luml" ""c"i called Dulles an exponent of nro- affairs bec, where Premier Duplessis had f min ylnr eiar pl a ov rn . ow ' HALIFAX fCPi -- The weaths-.-r a pagan. f "3 ”"' "MS ” alone to thc ubiic both in Russia i (hg . . " .3 y .3 m" ll ”"' up; 1.-0 1-EN1-5 . - Ila actor-a U.8. state chic; of me (echmul division of long rig cold war and endan A You (Igys ago Pravda accused won repeated elections on the sp mont-issued panties. They are of 5 3 office says cool, dry Ill" ll EX illllartment spokesman called it lflenate of lead-was detected in "-0 Paint res. a less. th National Paint. Varnish and Lacquer Association. said that ii there was lead arsen e in the bed- and in satell to countries. It seems likely that the Russians foresee danger ahead from the de- siruction of the Stalin myth,and gerlng world peace. Khrushchev hlmsrlf acted touchiiy when Dulles speculated that cuts announced in the Soviet Dulles of plotting violent revolu- tion among tho soviet Union's Communist neighbors. This charge against Dulles has been peal of autonomy. John Blackmore iSC - Leth- bridgel said there aremoves in Canada apparently aimed at ultl. sturdy material, khaki in color, elastic at the waist. elastic in the region of the knees, and each gar- ment is of a size to accommodate Head parried and delayed. but when in the House of Commons Tuesday he saw Dams Irene glar- is expected in the weather. Prince Edward Island and New l)Anguwm "(my room ceiling paint " was added the slight relaxation of rigid rule. "med (om. ,.,,un,d mm Np , (ed I " 1 ' S. t d at I 0. b0 . "'Fw" mm he ”” ':h"'"o""c': In-',d. C” 'u M, 'aIrthoritios disclosed i,1:";",;"':f,,'”',,,',';".?' ” ”" ''””'”''' The 30'” 9'3; ''''m3;'";"' If" in ores-um This. said hush an:-?h's rl.::l:Is.ln K's.-rllirl cltv Elli.-fr. AEneri-llglmxcil.) n..'..5'L'iil' Selinliwinlm-lair: iii;-mo3:"'l to uni i:il.t.ial'oalllr'iwlallice ii-lrnunlil-l-r suns: intorvalsaucaatiaailt. cool: a... no unbuud . who mu .' m1lg'm:;:'P.";' '"'hi."” cliev angrily lo a French visitor at Poznan. wls one of them. It could be, and trench coat. clothes in the women's services.” pg-obs ll. law-high at ll- ", vm. Wm M" Luhhnm W" . e mKem'rmm llli May. was interference hi 80- The CuWl"II"IlSt leadership has probably yu, oesinsa to 5; . km Dame Irene. niagnarninous in casaphslitaa IO nd ,.. . ' . "M vie: internal affairs. had to shoulder part of the blame uni cheque for the spread of PW” F0! "R31" "A3 victory. mo: in. us Mcactea so D""",,",l:,,,'5',l:,f'",f3'n,3";';, ml '""""' "M" ” "'”'"'. .EnA1.m cm”; for what on son: wrong In the in;-mm. The trouble was. complained ''I thank the ministe now that aid . us saint ' ess. I 1! i SOY” Ina" 'Mu”,m.kl we ,i:u.:lh grit ti: bmgnedhas ' pp 't:'cngxirl:ett;ai the the battle" has been successfully m u gj 7;, i is coridimed. am Mrs. Luce. former pIay- ”-'5" 35”" '"""” l a' similar statement about - Ralin.pBut the cmnmunm lead- gggpmny noun; rim World war by some male ram might be way! to dispose H II tide today at Charlottetown m from V bmgtl been a "etD:rn"nedns'c'ts"i:'k. 3 Elm” nil” '”"'"'2.'."l. Wadi n mm wgrrilkilli " thei sloulc Oeyl r kiiiin 1?. tyne: c.'.'?'a.. ideas boa” 0' an "mugs? of ' ""wn'iS gem 3'3? .: Mas delimit on r onesearrnersare gveon atgested.'i'he s' ltrlv Mlnlcdnlahamnuo. uatsishe osmryco-In-Iniasiu-.nna Mm tiers-unless. well in IdVDcO.IilItS0elephantsIy!ariIia the figure-4ts union hadapiamsaid one: '-seumdsauamimmmercinam IQIIII I'll deer waaflaal won Coroniutiista usually halal these a interference ill ltttflll ; they shift the blame to American dhnpsign to protect their crops anger: . iinrpiu mm to people who want inttetown. sun rises today at NC assess aiiackssatbeaotion au.l.sas.isaaivoulIIlII1.v0.cec'bsbtiisa. tnssiagiraoioled. ost.af tsssirls and tssisahhtliairsai-dens. s.as.aaantsat1:Isp.n. ..., , r,;g.'.”” . Hing,-,.r, ,....,...-........g.va..A...m......