‘ s rm: ‘QUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOW-ZQ rncsislcrrr 412l- u--- A .- room Gene Tierney - Rex Harrison Tn "rile ollosr Aiili MRS. illlllit” Views - Cartoon — Shows Todey 2130-7-9 merino; EDWARD its uilvs Millie rue. wru. _ THE NEW WARN-ER SENSATION EVE ARDEN ”“'"°"" Aoutr tsrrearammrurl A ‘Fdttfretkausntkanefltisaeowm ADMISSION PRICES STARTING MONDAY Matinee Children Adults 20c .... 35c ow so >0 +0 oe e0 +0004» 000v Evening lolcony; Children . . 35c Adults . 41c Main Floor 48c ree~e0ee+ e04 re-ee-eeewe >004 0-0.0 0 0-0 e 0-0 e 0 e 0-0 0 e e 0-0 e 0090-’ o DOUBLE THE COMEDY AND THiRlLLS f . I Children 1 O Q 0 9 I I i 0 I o o I O T 5 I o O ¢ s 1 1 I i E U .5 O I I i O I O Z Q s Q s Q o O o 3 i o 3 3 3 4 i I O i Adults LQOOO§O+OQO4Q§ O-OOOQOOQO-O G-OOOQNOO&GO-§ MUST SUPPORT MARSHALL “LAN TORONTO. Jan. m- - (OP) — However much "we may dislike or even fear some of the lmplca- tlons" of the Marshall plan, Can- sdp must support it. Mo. coldwell, 0.0.11‘. leader, today told the Un- iversity of ‘Dronto students. CAPITOL rouilv ONLY “WESTREN UNION" Also Cartoon -— Shows 2:30-73:45 COMING MONDAY TING NITS ci.l_l>lliu FURY‘ ADMISSION PRICES STARTING MONDAY Matinee Evening 15c .. 33c 33c 38c THE BOYS ARE ALL AT SEA AND INA FOG... and isif FUNNY! I QHNHII“ \ gialllililil "SAP5 PT I st 1 GENEROUB GIFT ._-_ ' ICIUOWNA. 3.0. — (C!) __ A total of 87,350.70 collected in Kel- owna and vicinity was gpgnt w buy and ship food Parcels to' needy children in Britain, s; a wedding gift for Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philirp. Kelownab , _ ' g. fonts no more than 5,000. 3 cosrraarn l rnsunancs‘ p .se:nvrca alumni. THE EASTERN GUARDIAN TODAY aces-rs: monsoon: usrold r. Landry. Albert Aftken. Mrs. Byron Stewart. liflee Harriet Clair. a aaslvr GEGIGITOWN: AGINT! toilets: Miss snis luonards and Gordon rel-all Weldon Levers. . Show: 2:30 7 end 8:45 Tbs following places inlilontagne: Ia Georgetown: iieorgetowe And liiolnity ' Friends of Mrs. Nelson Hanson of Burnt Point are sorry to hea- of her illness and express the wisll for an early recovery. The Georgetown melee, infor- mediate hockey team are register- ing for intermediate playdowrls, the deadline for which is Feb- ruary 25th. l‘ - Arnold Murphy. 8t. Dltnstalfs student is dirt e few days at his home in Georgetown-Geo. lidanrv commercial travellers took in happier than tlhose of romantic ove.” Dr. Burgess suggests that our country is perhaps least suited to Prodlaotd b; Cfiibflf um SERIAL - COMEDY CARTOON - SPORTS OOQ-v romantic unions, because of the divergence of races and social backgrounds. "Our customs, inter- ests, and ideologies are more diverse than those of any country in the world." he_says. “And these and other differences militate against the success of rmtarltic unlons." - One happily married woman, whose attitude ie said to be typical Romantic Marria es °' ‘m’ ‘“ “W ““‘°'“' “ "“°‘°‘ g as saying: "The love we had when we were h jflrst married seems so small conn- g pared to the love we have ccme to I Yknow now. Sex life is not merely ithe physical satisfaction I thought ‘it was going to be, but it is an ex- Ipresslon of love—e. rnuchnrleeded ——— youtlet for deep-rooted emotion." Anlerlca ls the birthplace and the ; Dr‘. Burgess says that the custom cradle of rorrllantlc marriage, but lffof dating, which allows boys and Imfiy bewme the burial grounds 101' lgirls to informally size up one an- the some institution. For our shcrt- ‘other without gmbgfrgsstnenf, has lived experiment with romantic “gqng 1m- g, undermine (h, p11“. won-i. lprealint u they m. has osophy of resns-ntlc love and to pre- proved to be far flrom successful. pare the why 1m- gqflpgrflqnghlp n; Tlhls l! the vordlct of D1‘. Ernest fthe valid basis for marriage.“ W. Burgess. professor of sodomy; l-fe dismisses the rrmantlc con,- v! the University of Chicago. Wlhv ,capt of "love at first sight" as a reports in the current issue of Col- sound but; for marriage and pre- lier‘s the‘ conclusions of a 16-year “m; 5|; gm”; o; cgurtghlp which Study 0f the Pmblfl-‘Ilfi 01 fllllffll8¢~ lprovldes an opportunity or e. l-nam "Fflmnfi in love has been t-Ylelandwornan to determine whether sanctioned prelude t0 marriage l-n they can be hlppy 1n mpn-igge, the United States," he writes. "No- These stage; an; where else has it had so fair and] First, casual dating; second, thorough a test. But today even its keeping cmnpany_ but with the supporters are forced to admit Lhe 19mm”, o1 any,‘ 0mg"; mini, failure of this great Armor-icon ex- .305," “u.” and no; with others); perlmen-t. , Jourth, an informal understanding “The evidence of its failure is all ma; ymfll marry; fifth, a private ever the place. The divorce rate has engagement‘ m‘; 51Xm_ a publicly risen steadily until now there is one i announced englgflmmh divorce for every three marriages. “couples should find m; 1g they Divorce. once confined to our Hip-Rare companhmab], began they per and lower classes, has pene- lnwmy’. m} Bulge“ ayL “They trated into mrr middle class." i should m“ b, ma,“ and thgnloe Dr. Burgess declares that “physi- jovemn-Irhm they w“; not be in cal attraction or sex" should beithe dnmma 0g one husband who relegated to third or fourth place told his wife ha; he loved he;- but "o "senile" l" a “WW "mmwle- » did not like her." Mutual understanding, common in- AVONLIA W. I. forests, and temperamental com.- pstlbillty, he says, sire more es-l _____ . sential to a successful marital , Avon“; w_ L ma; n; m, 110mg “HIM- 10f Mrs. Allan Wvand for their Dr. Bllrgoss reports ihut, in his | regular meet“: on Janum-y 14"“ 15 "Us °f smdy °l ‘he pmblam § with twelve members and several °’ ma-“MBO mwsuds °f engaged visitors present. Due to the absence Guardian may be bought at any of the Mfal B. A. Llewellyl: like. CD1. The Poet Office: in Sonrie: Condon'e and Florence Roper. In 8t. Peter’ : The Poet Oflice. advantage of the clean thoufll illPiiory roads on Thursday end called on merchants of the town, among them being Vernon Wil- liams of Charlottotown; l‘. G. Ward of Charlottetown; J. W. H08- an of Charlottetown. Jimmie Cur- rie and R. R. l-iowatt w-bo makes ills home in Petitcodiac, N. B. The ladies hockey team made the trip by bus to Montague on Wed- nesday night in spite of the ill- clement weather, and succeeded in handily trimming the much publicized and hlglhw rated ladies tea-m of Montague by the score of 6-5. Local fans are eagerly await.- ing the return contest between those two teams which is scbed— ulsd for Georgetown rink early in next week. same. The January program on Citizenship was read and questions discussed. The program for the evening was ably presented by the convenorl. Mrs. Geo. Clark and Mrs. Sterling Stewart who had prepared a very interesting paper on "Some out- standing events and discoveries of the past year." Poems by L. M. Montgomery were read by Maureen Doyle. A dainty lunch was served and the meeting closed with the sing- ing of “The Kills." (MembsrshlP fess so cents collection $1.61.) The February meeting will be held in Rustler), place to be announced. Convenorll, Mrs. B. 0. Woolnsr and Mrs. Roy Woolner; subject: "What I would like to see accomplished in world con- dltlons this cornlng year." Roll call to be answered by a Valentine VEFSE. UNION ROAD Y. P. .U. On Jen. 16th the Y. P. U. mot at the home orNor-ma Yeo. The devotional period was in charge of Grace MrlcLenn. Meeting open- ed by singing hymn. “What A Friend We Have In Jesus". fol- lowed by Lord's Prayer. Scripture reading was taken from St. John, 14th chapter, read by Grace Mac- Lean. A poem, “The Old Year and New", was read by Marlorle La- mont. Hyrnn, “Where He Leads Me". Reading. "Challenge For The New Year". read by Marjorie Lamont. and closing hymn, “Blast Be The Tie 'I‘l'lat Bindls", was fol- lowed with benediction. Minutes of last. meeting were read and adopted. ‘Roll call was answered by 13 mefnbers and 6 visitors present. Collection amount- ed to 51.41. It was decided that the alok committee take some fruit to Mr. Prowse. Grace MacLean invited the mem- bers to her horns for next meet- i . “after s. period of recreation in charge of Malcolm MacLean and Norma Yeo. refreshments were ggrved by the hostess. A short sing-song brought the mwum "0 a close. en-d married couples have filled out ' _ m,“ Green’ detailed schedules, given frank glgehi MrfzrMi Cavendish "We" t” scores °l questmm‘ Md‘ resided The meeting opened with ni-evealed their inmost feelings and I Emil“ ‘the Ode and xepeaung me attitudes." All their responses have I t he“ cmfilated and lnallvzed‘ I svlei-fidegregitdoxillafhglareprgggtini M“? decmdng m” the "zemm 1e till s tlent i the hospital of the romantic movement coirlctd- ' p‘ n | ed Wm‘ me an“ of Rudolph I and all hope for e speedy recovery. vammno" whm counness Wmenllllat was rteported that flowers had ' _ een sen . fgitallfigrmgyalegsgtlsgs tggclsf; The minutes oflthe last meeting m“ n“ dew type o; relationship were read and approved, and between m? w,” w“ when) h, committees reported. Cavendish u“ making], |scho$ needs two new blinds and Mature md ‘numgmt you“; 1 drin ng cups and a new water people detecting the Sham and container. Teacher said she would me hénowness o! rumamicls-ngv h, purchase the latter and the new my!‘ “sought Sounder and mo" corrmlttee will get blinds and cups. sincere bu“ M. manmgp_ They Rustlco school needs a new world (mind it in companionship." map, a globe and s; new pencil H, "ports that m, Primafy w“. sharpener, but due to bad weather clusion of his study is that "ens;- not enough trrltembezs- from Rustlco nlonshi turn out o were presen o vo e on same. New Committees are as follows: I Cavendish School Mrs. Gough, Mrs. Geo. McCoubrey, Cavendish , Sick. Mrs. Geo. clark. Mrs. Alfred . Moore. Rustlco school, Mrs. Leigh i Warren, Mrs. Olaf Stevenson. Rustlco Sick, Mrs. Lorne Houston. . Mrs. Roy Woolner. I Correspondence was read and it | was moved and seconded that $10.00 be lent to one from each district who will attend the Dralnetlcs Ihjlrt Course in cherlottetown. A letter of thanks for fruit was read from sick person in district. The Insttute News was distributed and Preldent/s address read from SPONSOR! ill TIIF MIIKUIS llf llSSUlt lwamalulr reasons. PM“ . missionaries: INOITAQIIE I We have one of tho most u|l your " repairs to . A wwolwvv- MaeNGNEGOWS Jewellery Store repair departments in the province. A- . For pronpt and efficient ‘service on, ‘sil- linaa of jewellery rspilrs, ‘he ‘sure you bring ( ._.....-.-......... ..........¢,._ Q .__‘ _ , _______.___ 5011s are an infection caused by the micro-organism "Stollhylm-W‘ cuss pyogenes." Gloldhw ’4 C O U G H S Rte/Quad) Qtttij/Z/J/ Wise mothers know that early treatment is the important factor in ridding a child _of_ a cough or cold.’ The medicine must be pleasant to take and give fast relief. _ With the first slgn ef-a cough. train your children to ask or , Patton's Cough S p: It I brings faster l-eilef. p ounfi I and old alike, Poison s IIQ , Syrup is highly dependable and I very efficient for Coughs, Colds. Irritable Throat. Bronchitis and kindred ills clue to cold. Sold by all Dealers in Medicine‘ in 35c bottles. I POLSUNS COUCH SYRUP -to.-llato watch - - wonriaut NURII. Afvdtkli llN llH L. S. STEVENSON HHflNl H MllN/‘ltrtlr’ 14o alciiwlouo sr. Ailiintw. conrwvv I The IWEEK I l... so. u. An echo of our last week's‘ col- umn has reverberated from Prince County. The western commentator deplored what he calls our low opinion of the All Stars and our lack of sportsmanship. If we have left you with the impression that our opinion of the Summerslqe team is not very‘ high, we are sorry. Such was not our intention; we merely remarked that the All Stars "elected to play it rough". which they did. The Saints re- sponded in the same manner, and. as a result, in the first period there was more rough-house than hockey. This column is not in- tended to be an exlleuetive colli- mentary on sports 0l' on anything also. Any statement or comment made usually conveys the opinion of the wvhole student-body; and in this instance the general opinion of the students (and of the writ- er) was that the Saints-All Star game could have been s. mucn cleaner and faster one. A number of well-placed penalties in the first few minutes would have cleaned the game up considerably. Our apologies to the Summersirle team; if we have given you the impression that we sllghted them in any wayHit was unintentional. l‘ I l e Tile Saints played their second C.H.I... game on Tuesday lllglht. with the Navy. The score: Saints '7, Navy 3. It was a good game Lo watoh; it had everything—speed. clever passing plays. good defen- sive work, and excellent goal- tendlng. It is nearly impossible to pick out any individual stars, but we would hand n bouquet to both goalies on their performances. in the nets; e third star would have to be given to Oert MacDonald. who scored four of the vsainte’ goals. The Saints are now the only undefeated team in the league, they have one more game to play‘ with P. W. C, before the play- offs start. see St. Dunstan‘: now has a junior team, made up of players from tile high school and from freshman year. The Junior version of the Saints was formed with a view to placing promislns youns blow" under the direction of a coach. and providing them with experi- ence srld practice. We feel that the move was a good one. f0!’ these players are the Saints of the future and it is now that we must provide for the future. not at some later date when we lirlrf that the supply of players hos dwindled to a half-dozen or so. Formerly, most of the players on the senior team had to be good players before they came here, and those in the intramural teem had little or no chance to better themselves. Now the opportunity ls being provided for those who show promise of some day play- ing with the Saints; it is hoped that the experiment will prove successful. The A.A'.A. does not sn- tlclpate any difficulty in arrang- ing games for the team; it has n.1- ready been suggested that the Morel! senior team be approached for e guns. Personally we ifldOfli the suggestion; the Morel! tum may as well be junior mints‘ first victims. O O O ‘I The intramural league is now under way. Each class has entered eteamanditiaexpected thatlt will be a close race all the we?- especlslly between the lower class- es. After seeing s few games, we would soy that it looks as if the freshmen (last year's champions) are going to do it. all over again. we were talking with George Cameron only the other day about the freshman team. He left" us with the impression that they were sure of winning the trophy again this year. The Seniors and Juniors? Well, the Seniors are iust not in lt at ell, and the Jun- tore are omplairling that tho greater part of their team is now attending s college in Ottawa.‘ O I O I That seems to be it for this week; next week we hope to have more news for you than the sports activities. so ions. MORE FOOD FOR GERMANS WASHINGTON. Jan. 33 —- (AP) -'rhe United states Army plane to increase the basic German food ration from 159d to 1800 calories by July l. LL-Cien. Lucius Clay eeld today. (Dlctlciane recommend at least 2.500 calories a day for the average man and 4,500 for very active workers.) I . rmllr wncu “tom now-r. SERVICE " Mail or Irina your Watch I ' - '1 .. “Tlftiilvt - . "I JEWELLERS k fiheriotietovn 8r Montogire is fl rounded by their chilhefe hornee. the Heath Clerk piece. lived with his son siophen and family; his eld. est daughter Hannah was married nearby to William Murray; while Jesse Strong married to Sarah wright and Sensual an who had Lydia‘ " Wright to wife, were neighbors. John Murray's eldest son David, mar- , rlod to Nancy Penman, rounded out the little settlement with a honle of his cvwrl. The settlers on Lot 2d had been granted their lands by Governor Patterson who by an order-irl-courlcil ln 1782 divided thlg township ceiling the southern half the "refugee share." ownership bound; settled in Tryon. died shortly after coming to Dsdeoue Lower Bedeque cemetery is located. Theltobinlwwilf-yfurtlserdowutile Lowwledeqile readveti in I'M occupied by ledsquafe one recorded widow, afar! Boson Robinl _ relict of John Robins, one tinieenekn of the King's Ramon and inlet,‘ Lieutenant in H. M. Island of Saint John's Corps of Volunteers. Si! ' children under sixteen made her position anything but an envisblrm one. On the ot-hu- hail of the Naobinb Loyalist gran-t lived Dominant-fr Colo and wlfe. Isabelle nobles. whehed come into out of the provofiin of her father Richard Robina. the first d the noeoqus loyslllie W. die on the Island. Richard Robina had stayed on the Island of Bil-is: John in May of 1m while his son Jdhrn returned to New York to wort‘. his sister Isabelle to their new home. They arrived at Bedcque My‘; June of 1785 to find that their father had perished in a February‘ bill‘ ' zard and sleet-storm near sea-cow Head enter turning beck from s; . mid-winter trek along the shore to Parlottetown for similar. eorreot date is delsbflen Thomas resident over sixtv years of see septenlissr 10. 178d. spoke of the land as hundred eeree west of eiillkeri and his son Meier. lso sores ml with eight or ten cleared sores of the french eattlenlerlti and v happily the abundance of oyetore e quarter of a lniia from his door- _- The Lot twenty-six loyalists found shortly that despite some at the governor's conveyances they still h lord. Peter Gordon. who had ere share. no was not content to i tbs refill the settlement. An inland traot The History eta museum omen ‘ is Prisca Edward Island Tracing its Roots in the Cultural, Educational and Commercial Fields of the Ceesrnurlity. III-lb. _CIIFI'_TWO (Continual). Bedeque as an address covered e large area in the eeirly days; my farm bordering the bay wee in Bedeque whether in Lot 17, 1o, 35 m. 2o, but most of the early farms frlulod the Dunk to take advantage or the “Renoir clearings and the marshes. From reference to early map.‘ and deeds. fe-rrn settlement in both Lot. 8 and lot 3d was od a mov- ing pattern for the first fanr years. and not till 1100. which saw the fife‘, English census for the Island and the conviction of Bedeques 11m, flfiteen years of British settlement, does the pattern seem stabilized. = Plpnoee Holdings At North Beiieqlle in 17R than were five beautiful shore (gran f JANUARY 24, 1943 Bedeque United Church f sn- -‘=~'.-'7‘~‘T~>'ZT>.'I\ .1-IDD~'JJ:- . -.__. e e- 1», .i__._,.,.. __¢_ - correapondirlg roughly to the present day lsoldiriga of the MOM11Xdd5, Staverts, Clerks and Bakers. The patriarch: of the settlement. John f Murray and willful Wright, both over sixty years of age, were sur- I‘ William Wrllht, on what is now i" The northern pert was deaigaated as that of James Campbell who with A. Kennedy. hsd been Irentod the lot in 1167. landlords ever made any setiieluents er improvements, as they were h; in fact they never registered their titles. Jamel Campbell eventually sold the northern half of the lot to Captain Allan Maodotlald of RhOtJlnd and the 1798 census shows two Mecdousldll on the northern half of this ice. MINI end Ronald. who were married to sisters of Captain Allan lldeodenald and in poeseuicn of one thous- llnd acres each. llepllteeroel-rdlng titles in this lot were to hinder settlement for many years. Largest lettlenmt _ The largeot settlement. of loyalists wee on the south more of the no a my which has found its wow w» different The farms west d Wright's towarrh 1mm- Bedequi- ‘ were long leggy ones which bathed their feet in the Dunk end butted tllreir well-tread heads egeimtl the middle division line of Lot twenty; s x. OQIIOLQ A 1m plan with nouns; e few later additions showed an fdion- ‘i lng settlers from Centreriiie west to Kurds Point: George Mawby. Thomas Bower. Halos- Rowar. lain Jameson. Robert f, This tragic story. Wiiidi- has found from the French settlement whidr eaten Wright's mdll stream. with clearings relihly _ land north of the present Lower ‘ledeque road in that section. l,‘ 5 5 s. i § i 5 . i i 5 a K f. , armed the fan-n on which the its way into the history and has been drernatieed on the radio. was told, in her old age. by 189i bells Robins. who eeid the first llngl Robins farm at lower nedeoue near t shore. v is often given as February 110d but this cannot be reconciled with m. ‘BOW in Bdoffle was oll till; - s date of the petition to the Governor silnad be Menard lot-libs in May o’. 1184- T111; Ihbraery d the next year. - n! All these farms had a fringe of more or less cleared land: herlt s. ded from Hurst's Point . ; correeiwfldlfl! i" m‘ ‘n... r. r. , ‘Hooper. ‘lea. the first .r. n. for Dedeoue and only w in ma. writing from Bedtque Harbour‘ asreein present do! ed a "Ramses stiero’. but settlers en the river front. the only way of me day. eooid not aoereeibts a backwoods farm and profs": to become tenants. ‘lbnente tnq wne. m‘ YQITI- ' - who. settl at in i enllsn umgrseluorjmat. capo or seven hluuiod anal. the it tioned ‘flloflleee treatises-malted tee siio on the marshes near the I flflfbflolletill UNI a Wliist ol-ltt are present-ea! minute scribed on the fir-loaf "Donald dtwondlhll in Beam. Colorado. whooanlaebotiitbaeaelattnteelaobrweyot lan P011‘. norm uulnrousultoasoa i... . gm, bell: good (he had Iernwood was paying rent for many. . . W \ r-rseseauiaese l. hurmarfs soutl Nathaniel Richard Hancock. '. after tho? 'had at ad a l _' the northern half of the lot o lit. oes plsk the choice? W‘ 0 dssielbl‘ Neither 0'! the Dunk in Lot so which ares owned by Lieut. John Stewart of lowland and Meios- Petes- Gordon of St. Vincent in the West. Indies. William Schurrrlan, one of the most wealthy and enterprising of the loyalists, ' was settled on 850 acres in the Central Bedeque of today. His farm would comprise the present Leonard Solwrmsn. lldwin Lord. Charles Green and Weldon Oroelnen popes-flee. L. U. Fowler writing in the Prince mwerd Island Megaline of June. 19G), (ledeqne and fie Pee- ' pie, page 121) tells very interestingly o! achurman coming to the Island " in 1783 and merldim the first winter at ‘Pl-yon where he Whlpsaweri lumber for the Charlottetown market and hauled it over the ice i» the capital on hand-sleds. ‘ 1'4; aewwepar and nag-seine artieieecnledaeus. andwelsidbaliardtodiwumyetiaflse. list of loyalists who landed from eneiburna at Bedeque on the 8th July. 1784. the name William Stairnian stanrk out ea e possible mis- spelling of William Schiurenan, added to which the list of children by ages-two over ten and three under tom-agrees exactly with the Schurnlan record. Again, William Soinlmla-nb Inland o! Saint John socolmtboomettlipreeervedinaNorthBedeous bomaledetodfron? llunotlmeeonewdilldllpoeetfbohadbeendolmbtllnalpre- _' viously. ‘rhedatoofhiearflvelmasbeatrlflaunoertainbutthere nothing doubttulabotst the fact that William Scburlnan was Bedequnh rlst store-keeper and first lepeesntetiva in the Legislative Assembly. l Tbtilesouthofacburmenlivedhbnlseker who aoconiim e some was e former fellow-ethane d leblnmerfe in New Rochelle, New York, but believed by others tolsave been a native of Pbiledobillia In was not only a faunas- but Bedequeb first bleak-saith. occupying e solil. block of three hundred acres which eetended from line to ‘what later was known as the "old mill hill road." Wright. later known as the fethu of Methodint in Prince County, had and iii-t: SLOHII: _ 1 t O yfllli