no: EiiiiAiill.--To-tiay-Ttia.-Iod. =#=====sssssnrsss:s?s?s======= filial will“ I. “i!” ski M” PUWEii IMPII ‘ iAMY BIIISTAIICE liiiiiliiii fiilUiii ‘Ill Iii lIliliESTM ‘iiiiiliiii lliEliiliEii llililSE BEIVEIS liiilii lllBEi iiimisl i1 iliilillit lliil "M45000" ‘TnOniylossln “"h|A$AovuOISiors" AA/ldfkf CAPIITOL — Tfl-IIAY-TUL-WED. p 0m; MAGIC, mo, ROMANTIC NIGHT unosn ms wsrssn STARS ANDJHIEY BEIDNGED TO MCI-LUTHER NIP/Ell ‘She ._..a spoiled daughter _ ‘of the rich who defied u» I ‘world to follow the call of ‘be: hem. iic...s broased son oi‘ the prairie, unable speak the wdrds rim aurgcd within him. How could their happiness lie g 8 i Hill ii f»GAHY courts _MEHiiUB§HON AND THE n. PAlSYJiEliY - WALTER lliiiiilli I rulzi raisin - niszt rooo nzusv liillfol ‘ADDED: KIWI - CUMEDY SHOWS DAllfY AT 3:15 - 7 - 8:45 MILLVALE’ SCHOOL CHRISTMAS| Babe"—Mlldrcd Murphy, Buelah . CONCERT Hickox and_ Margaret Hagen. _._____ George White. The pupils of Mllivaic School Recitation "I'm Awful Cross" -- brought the Christmas spirit to Dialogue, Wanted—-A Housekeep- ihc hearts of ii large number of r. parents and friends when they Recitation "Why" -- Mildred presented n successful Christmas Murphy. concert. in the school. F188 Drill, Earl Murphy Clar- Thc following program was pre- ence Murphy and George hite. genimL Drill, Kitchcn Orchestra. Opening Chorus, "Shepherds on Chorus, “Ring Merry Bells." ths- hulslim," Instrumental Music Welcome--Mnrgarct Hagen Bruce Murphy. _ Recitation, "A Letter to St. Nick’ -Bierilng' Rarsons. n Dialogue, "Painting The Chair- Bong "Lullaby to the Illfflrlt E Action Song "Silent Night" seven senior girls. Recitation "Sweeping The Room" —Elmer Murphy. . Recitation "Dolly's Stocking" — Bueiah Hickok. Tableau,‘ "Cat Pie." Bong "May I Go Too" —Flor- ence Mur hy and Cecil Parsons. Darkie riil-eleven pupils. Song "PJiLI. Express" -Hennsn Parsons (encored). Son "My Old Pal of Yesterday" -Vel a Parsons, Edna Murphy and Marjorie Parsons (e coradg‘ lecitatlon "I Wis I d A _géttrtiingcaanunmb'vitn and s. .|.' iilililii orronnassr fitting and I‘! lylfll Glasses . . m ' _ ’ tsunami. lash‘ u A53". "n: you“. heist-aegis;- qfp“ 1 i, , , fl-Geor no u , uce ‘ Th": P. M. Morph , Kilmgr Rage? synd Iter- - . lin - srsons. - ltatlon "Goodnight" -!'lor- ‘snca Morph . Closing C orus "Jin la Bells." . Santa Claus than arr ved a d dis- , tributcd lifts to. the pup avid I "rhmoh Y" l?" 7Q Yew "wit" OTTAWA, Jan. 11 — Defence Mink hr Mm» 6w“ Headquarters tonight announced W“ 5' ""4 "WM" the retirement of four Canadian D i in i930 - wholesale business. iisnddals Loading Geologist‘ iiotll-ss l. CARNEGIE Jan. ll-(Ciel-Dr. Charles Camseli. Canada's No. 1 pionce , explorer and _ geologist. has flnall Iona on retirement leave at i. e age of ‘i0, five years beyond the normal age limit of 65. Amfdllll to present plans he Will retire almtlmkln Janet.‘ u‘ ac ovemou on e Canadian scene have made him a renowned iifura beyond tho boun- daries of h s lob and the Domin- OD. For flvayears. ever since he reached the age limit cf d5, he has sought retirement but each year his term of office has been extended. He will leave Government ser- vice with 20 letters after his name. including the C.M.G. and honors from universities and the world's most distinguished mining and geological societies. For two years he was a director of the American Institute of Mining and Metallur- gical Engineers, an honor rarely given outside the United States. r. Camsell was awarded the Murchison grant by the Ro al Geographical Society of Great ri- min n 1W2 for explorations in Northern Canada and was given the gold ntedal of the Institute o! Mining and Metallurgy of London with»? This year he, received the Vis- count Bennett award open to the British Commonwealth for a paper on Northern Canada. In i913 he was vice-president of the Internat- ional Geological Congress and in i916 he was vice-president of the Geological Society of America. He has a long list of norors from Canadian scientific societies. Thus, the boy who was Horn in one of the most isolated spots in all Canada. Fort Llard, near where the eastern boundary of Yukon Territory meets the northern boundary of British Columbia. has come a long way. His father was CapLJulian Stewart Camsell, chief factor for the Hudson's Bay Com- pany. and his mother a Winnipeg girl, Sarah Foulds Camsell. 4 Canadian Army ilffioers Retiring (By ThsCanadian Press) Army oflicers to clvll life. sy are:- . F‘. D. Lace of Toronto, na- tive o! QlfAppalle, Sula. former officer commanding the 13th Field Regiment, Royal Canadian Artil- iery in Normandy and Francmand later commanding Royal Artillery. 2nd Canadian Division, from Nov. 11. i944 until the close of itostil- lties in Europe. Co]. Charles Frederick Lbbott oi’ Toronto, Royal Canadian Army, Medical Corps, native of Smiths Falls, Ont., who took No. 18 Can- adian General Hospital overseas and later became oflicer command- . ' “‘ ‘ v (To Ia Continued) cans-sea vu Virginia had, gone up Pike's Peak. fl-hd 0D i110 II hid lIIiSOOC co . had been orivsp up a dlaoy ascent to a quiet s. tower and :1‘ eariltlion and lets kept v9 e xnesnogy‘ ‘- Rogers, and she bad» bad lithe chance i0 explore, because she had had to argue endlessly with, the proprietor of a lunch place about box lunches for next summor. She had sat in the offices of hotel managers and listened, though Teresa h cautioned her against that. “Don't lct them Bet‘ started on their sales talk. Th ‘ll recite whole pages from their fo ders, and then. when yowre completel numb and ‘post resisting. they’ end up by s on the rate " . On the whole she had done very wall, as well as Teresa had done the previous year. She ha weary at night, glad to lie i a hot tub, fragrant. with pine salts, glad to wrap herself in a sill: n and stretch out on the bed th n bc-ak, after the interminable re- ports to Washington had been dropped down time mail chute. And twice at nlgth she had been too tired to write a letter to Mike. There had been 'no letters from him, of course. She had left in such haste that she had had no chance i0 ammge for the for- warding of her personal snail. She mailed Mike's letters in care of Bill IPoster and realized that they might not reach Mike for days. pefnaps not fo-r weeks. They miaht follow him about and never catch up with him at all Mike had told her how he might go- pack-traln, buno. on foot. "Howflnvgill ha 100k when l see m l! would there be s self-conscious stiffness, a strangeness? Would they meet awkwardly, struggling tn recapture old ground again, rap- tune Past. dreams shared, that samcr fabric of love they ad woven together? Or would the same radiance clothe then? again -the some ecstasy sing n eir hearts. the same eager slarlness curios into their eyes? - "We had so little time." she thought anxiously. "Bo little time for love to growl" Like planting a fragile and lovely flower and then rushing away. trusting to time and the weather to water the delicate citing another dollar t ee cruel, doesn't it?" she said. "Such "It mustn’ die," she told N , Having ssrvedyiff approached by a n. My whole efforiflwilljbo t grsssive City. will?“ dstc. , i NO SLATE u ayIIpIIIIIIIIIIIllr/s _ Q l t let h 1f think of tholl‘ $3? :12 $155.». Cars biased. tearing alga recklessly. the driv- ers undisturbed by i119 “P!!! “finlfbcy llvo hm." 136M516 "They're $530751 l?» . 5 couple sin-yous tourists. ugh; u d and 113W 'do you. like: t at wo-r Wm em ' "It seems-too bis and almost tremendous indifferent. hnfeelinl distances between people.‘ "Left some/one behind. did you?" He smiled at her. “Oh. yes- numbers of people. f suPDose you did mo?" “Only my little girl. Meredith. She's eight now. We lost her mother when she was three Years old." He handled the wheel deftly with his left hand, took s. leather folder from an inside pocket. “There she ls--not' a pretty kid. but smart an they make em.” Virginia. looked at the kcdak pic- ture of an earnest, bJOnd child in white shorts and ieraey. who clutched stout short. arms. “Shefis sweet. Do you seeher often?" “Once a. month or so. M data: takes care of her. In B t-insora. She's learning to ride now." Virginia ached to time. but new that ‘roresa. knew. what did it matter‘! if she could talk to someone. her loneliness would a little. But so 1on8 B-s she held Mike to the ar- rangement. she felt duty-bound to keep silent herself, though now the whole thins seemed a little s11 , especially since that nasty lltte item in thogossip column. 8h wandered if tools. her pillow in a brief surge of mid- night panic. “It mustn't dis." naylifbt mourns oulct feeling of amusement for het‘ fears How covuld love die-Jot‘ peo~ pie who loved as she loved Mike‘! How Mike would laugh if ever she confessed to him the silly fears she had conJured out of thin air. “Ginny, you nutty-Ginny. yr/u slllv gngeli" And then. though she fought it ing No. 2 General Hospital in the Mediterranean theatre. . B. Kenner of Stratford, Ont., Royal Canadian Army Medi- cal Corps, who commanded No. l9 Canadian General Hospital over- setltsthCol. W. Victor George, who commanded No. 1 Canadian Radio Broadcasting Unit overseas and formerly served with the Army show. urn INECRANCE m cannon I TORONTO. Dec. 31—Saies of‘ “0rdlnary" life insurance in Cun- ada and Newfoundland during No- yembor totalled ‘10806900 ac- cording to figures compiled by the Life Insurance sales Research Bureau and announced by the Canadian Life Insurance Officers Association. By provinces, the sales were us folio 2 British Columbia . . . . . .5.0§4.00U Albe a . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . .. 1a], Saskatchewan . . . . . . . . .3.8i_J2.000 Manitoba . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5.2o1.009 (htario . . . . .............33.$39-00° Quebec . . . . . . . . . . . . ..i.i!.987.000 New Brunswick . . . . . . . .. 2.232.000 Nova Bcoila . . . . . . . . . . .. 2.813.000 Prince Edward Island 1W. Newfoundland . . . - . - . - . -- 39E 816946.000 ‘These figures are based on rc- ports which represent 87 per cent of the new ordinary life insllfflflfl! written in Canada and Newfound- umi, They designate only the ordinary insurance lust brought into force, and do not include d Vi‘ dens additions, reinsurance ac; qulrcd, pension bond! Wit-hi"! insurance, annuities. IPOJP m‘ An increase of about ‘i nor cent in sales for the current car as compared with 1944 is in icated. mam: snvnt A baler with a. pickup attachment has been used for haying 9P8"- tlons for the sat two Years at the Dominion imoni-ll 1'1""- mslsn Head. . The n-lsohiilo sales the nay tglrecgly ti?“ $01: wndrows an 0N y 0 l much of the heavy labour involved under ordinary methods. The qual- ity of the hay prcduced is improved by g reduction in the loss of leaves, made possible by less frequent handling of the crop. in down furiously, would come again that, winclng uncertainty, returning as a bitter taste returns to the tongue. as pain retiuns in the morning. ‘that black-haired girl —had she, too, thought that love ved forever? "Si/OD it. you idioti" she raged at her mirror. And deliberately and W191i ffiflicl calm, dressed herself 11D BITIBTi-ly to 3o out and beard the lines that Teresa had ordered bearded and signed on the various dotted lines; she was glad when Sunday came, and Bruce Gamble drove up to the door of the hotel in a rented car. "I hope you're not a nervous pas- senger." he said. as he helped her in. ‘This road we're driving today is a triflo steep and crooked." "I_ wont up Pike's Peak and dldfli Krab a thing. If the brakes 110$.“ f, Promise not w Equeal a "I ‘looked mm that. They've widened the road too, since the stagecoaches used to come ggllgp. ins down with the lady passengers uttering delicate sl-irieks and faint- ing at tbs foot of the mountain " ,"I couldn't faint if I tried. and Im not. sure I could shriek-A never have. that I remember." A lazy silvery October glow was in the air, the sun, wine-clear and golden. laid over the peaks, some of them already bginning to show Dale caps of snow thin bluish- chromlum haze. t “This? she said, as they begun tho dim» ascent from the fiat floor of the valley. "must have been the way it. looked when it was first made. all clean and new." _'I'ho way the pioneers saw it when they rode in here, dusty and Weary. on footsore horses .'I‘hey foiloword the gulahes mg the streams on the hunt for gold n they were a tough and salty lot. I! Ive often wondered how their women foil: when they saw these remote and savage peaks against the 8k)’ TO them, they must, have lookaed pretty grim." " ecaune.” said vlfflllflfl "woman on always 1mm around m» "W? quiet place here a little house could be tucked away. when n‘ came out hero in covered wn- QM. they brought along their “w” 59515 and Dewy roots and hose cuttings. And they looked an around this rocky wilderness and "WWW! WW imythins ‘could’ be persuaded to gTo/W here." ~ The custom of wearing rings was transmitted bv the Greeks and Btruscans to the Romans. teacher, Rita l-lorgan, from the heavily laden Christmas tree. The entertainment was brought to a close by the singing y: the National Anthem. - _ “But. after their men had taken a lfsew millions in gout out, u: mm - they stooped mounting gbgut their Posy Gamble ma. ‘The road was narrow and the curves the view downward a little terri ylng, but, vh-gmy, kept n" 9Y8 0n the distant Peaks and tosses-t calm and a "1 ‘ consequential ndfi “Twawner,” m. “whiny -somcthlng to show him how lightly aha was taking it. how in- it all was If Bill sent it to Mike would he read it and wonder l! she had seen it? Would he mention it in his M- ters-cocplain if than were any- lo explain. She could never, she knew, speak of it herself except in a gay mood of simulated amuse- ment She would not be a jealous wife. She wondered if lidike would be a Jealous husband. Would he be hurt and sullty if he knew that she was here today. walking the steep streets of this old town-streets full of the ghosts of men in boots and big hats. with pistols on their hips and grim lines around theirmcuths Shoals of women who looked from the windows of the sagging wood- e_n buildings, bold. painted women- timid, gentle women? Would Mike be stuns with the same uneasy iillliiwilti "l“i‘°i.“"...i“ii"“ "2""; C 8 B!‘ ll Wan er She looked at Bruce Gamble's Qrsylnk temples and nsidered the absurdity of that and um; M the dining pulled out her chair in \ IUIQIIUW llllil" lll-VIGIYII ll IIIIIWI Dependable-Housing Asiiani Etbo‘ City ca...“ _ . r‘ “Prominent citizen!» I cidad to nominate for Mayor of’ your city. A p, wholeheartedly with the Council sigma by you o different. flwarda. . a f‘ My platform will in announced in detail at a later . TOM ROGERS» NW. . a bewildered puppy in in .... I i s... and bsvlhi olnnaltoliilltarlottetown a Pro- l 1 mnaraupenr tttng them do on a table that had silk hat and cane of to e once held tho a President. ‘ _ O-QO-OO-OO-OE Ellenb Diary i 8y an island Farmer‘; Wm g (Continued from Page 2) a small wind was high above us the neighboring tree-tops and lantern held uailn its small have da- _ w.-...~st thestéies siiiiilng‘ A1‘ , . OPERATES on GIL!‘ FOR.’ me ow circlo of light. To our rl ht, UlO 1mm from u» city bright- cued the B"? 0i the horizon, when we set out, and away to the south those from assing curs giluths highway played) above the ' e q o ' Tonight s brisk wind from the’ west. tosses the branches _of the nearer lawn tress and blows clear and leasant across the pond-ice and a ut the eaves. And through tho lone rowan tree, in the bit of border, where in Spring. lacy- whitq swsst-smalllng flowers blos- som, and in Autumn orange clus- ters of berries hang temptingly for the birds, past the swa of its “ ahches, a new moon or a new an‘ hangs. Not too broadly lt ams yet, but reaches down to touch a star in the deap night sky.- But presently and ays will llngthsn. it will light up the whole countryside. A strange one is is far January with meadows mostly brown and bare and motor ve- hicles and wagons trafficking on the roads as in other seasons. “Ahp hai" James tells me when I men- tion it “you just waiti ‘one of these mornings we'll waken to find a blizzard.” But it is pleasant to- nl ht, so nice that James lays a- 5i e the paper and filling his pipe afresh begs me: “Let's s0 ovsr and visit the folks in the house across the lane." ' Until tomorrow - Diary --Good- night. - 0N HIS GENUINE TIN VIOLIN, Mr. Elle Spivak. Toronto Sym- phony Concert Master sndugucst on "Canadian Cavalcade. n night, will clay “To A Wild From his Stradivarius. W11 W hear Wieneawski‘: "Fflflifly 0n Ffiigig" same programme features: \ pretty Joanne Barrett. the Ilfl who bare-handed. captured I bl"- dlt; and top-fl Lug instructor. 50- year-old Len IDP- lflh" °l w‘ children and ‘Peony to owl!’ every flier of note in Canada to- wruns: m contour T0 -- c A N A D I A N QAVALCADE ....::..-.. Z, ,. c BA APPENDICITIS BRISBANE, Australia, Jan. 10 - (CP) - An Australian assay officer at; Mindanao. Capt. Robert K. Mc- Laren, of nd successfully operated on himself for appendicitis. , a veicrinan surgeon was attacked by acute appendicitis. Alone. except fon- a. Filipino boy, he cut his body open without an anaesthetic. Wh the Filipino held a mirror over the wound, he removed his own a and sewed up the incision. The opera- tion took three hours. N 1'0" A AN: IT'S‘ NEW TONIGHT! GOMMI N?‘ ‘POI PI ‘TQI V ‘VII-LI oassav-vso av val MILLIII_OI PiiRiTY noun yumiv on CARNATIUN [UNTENTED illlllii 0F iiYe-iiifr-sit. l ~- mi Dominion ELIE BPIVAK 9 :00 PM. fifliflilifiliilliiifiiifilifiliiliiilifllfilfiifil IE l?! 6E E El 2o %tifOi'-vAil out wattle. <=..... s ' _ " w . r r 1,3311 . A Grand‘ Assortment to, Choose From l _ i [g1 our. RACK or nsassss aanucao rusanns, regular so», on. and z -» * E] aetow cosr $125.1» clear at ' ‘ goo Rack of SKIRTS, formerly 12.98 and lAIfng£bl:f‘g-'50solmhtly stoma. v g shit. .. $1.00 " $2.39 Ltggglgn-ég M a t» runes AND WOOLS-Aii Shatlos m to = r ~ r a is» srigisrshsis ALPINE JUMPERB- - 1 Rm-“m mtladxss" - gtsn ars so, lar i 0 Ralro E8,allcioa 1 _ 85-98.reducod.to fight-tic“ illill’. . _ A“ .'aonm.nt of Fihflc I ' ~ IIICO n. - ba_“lb‘--§Q!I‘lf-‘Ihho. V - ' tome: no» m no. rodnosd o» .. . 9- 3;}: _ stun sup s uousttcosrs, ’ = . regularly-Midi, rsdocod to a ‘ g“ _| t!» " r~"~.» b