n. Mu rented .\ P‘ l0?!‘- gflfl v! f iii c it'll.‘ T l0 Hill trsl Miss 7tm. ints dltre. town 1947, Pltzr lit Fuller Ir. A mrs‘ “my has irainifl! rrtr Tllt‘ llfll first m ilitficiilt 111E165. Murchison. ltIcLHiLAN County Hbspital, June 14. 1947. 20 take Iii!“ Tuesday 9 o'clock from the home of her par- COADY -- At. Brighton. June 14.1947.Mrs. Michael Coady. of North wiltshire. P. E. 1.. aged Remains will arrive tonight llld will rest at the home of her it". W. T. Coady, North Wilt- Oy street. Charlottetown. i 58th year. resting at. the illnersl will d‘! rnnr rind "in ‘flaw: litter "as "Ina JUNE. ‘W ma’ thnuflll small. p.115 s 3- m, organ recital fr. d m» varicty of tone w,’ he showed if!!! ‘zinrlcrstanding. programme 0116090 -» :3!‘ second composition. hn, Sonata. No. 3 in an Con moto ‘tic majestic greatness h... hbriv peaceful 1h ‘lit’. ‘.1111,’ Mcriilllslmimz. ovomellf 01' this i: [not pedal “O ,,,.-.<1crn outstanding in all of composed fingering Choral Preludes (a) close. .__.._ oairied in the Roman included ELIZABETHAN WINE IRTRS. MARRIAGE. DEATHS 50c Per Insertion - BIRTHS ____________________ lnraamat spriiiglon on June 15.1917. to .\'fr. and Mrs. Ralph S. MoPnee. a daughter. Weight a lbs. -___.______ nnfiis NURCl-IISON - At York Point. 0n Sunday. June 15. Miss Alice Funeral notice later. CASl-‘ORD - Suddenly at Cay- ttwn. June 15, 1947. John Oasford tn his 70th year. The remains are ittiins at his late residence. Fun- notice later. the At Alfrcda nlcriellan. The R8! funeral will morning at in Grand River Church. from where the funeral fill be held on Wednesday morn- iii to St. Ann's Church. Lot d5. lnterment adjoining cemetery. MtFItNNA - At the Charlotte- llftlhital. Saturday, June l4. J8me! B. McKenna. 2d! in The remains are A. A. Hennessey from where the take place on Tues- Yiifl! at 8:46 to St. Dun- ll Home Kim's Basilica. Interment in the Man Catholic cemetery. _.__.___ 0F TIIAIKS and Mrs. Irank Murray to extend grateful thanks Reverend dieters of dt. attendant nurses. elefl! also to their many ends for sympathy es- fln the death of Reverend M"! Clare, 0.5M" through “minis. spiritual bouquets. Ind visits of condol- ll. Ittaclean UNDERTAKEI EMIALMER Charlottetown and "firth Wlltahire Prince Masai. Nine Roman Catholic Priests Ordained Meek. though born in Enig- ggkpn all 0f hid llllldlllll ' in Canada. and has for H, I...“ three years been with, l“ (‘bill-ch of. st. Andrew and st. glut. Montreal. Throughout the csrsmme which was well ‘said feeling with m. an old Flemish. w You“ we mm m. T0 .lrralvn_‘c_04iwaiv'rlos - ‘um a warmth \\‘l’ll(‘ll' brought out {hgfm beauty of the music. Th? MgmiElSFO l’: ‘are the following a‘ mnestoso, M Azirlante tranquillo. showed ‘m ‘ and llassalflf‘ ‘alternate d:-.l-i=.r.te' In.‘ ' number rnnialncn a great amount of very technique ‘Him wag played extremely well. selections. a Flin- .,_.., h.- Harold Darkc, and Cap.- m. Sup; by Peter Warlock again “Kn-Hi ~he lightness of touch arid m, depth of feeling which were Mr. “page ivurk. It Is interesting to “his that. llic second of these two numbers was bascd on old dance originally for tiring. and transcribed for organ by Mr. Meek. complicated handled with apparent Bach's mild jiihllb. (b) was ease i-n In ' "We All Believe u, One God. the Father." Prelude md Fugue in D Major, which brought the prgramme to a fit- KALIIFk-ix. Jilrie IS-(QPM-Rev. Joseph Woods of south Nelson. N. 3,, was one of a group of nltne or- Catholic priesthood toclay by Most Rev. J. T. hfcNallfv. Archbishop of Halifax. Nova Scotiaris Raymond MacDonald. Mulgrave. Rev. Francis Morley, Glace Bay. Rev. William Edwards. Sydney Mines. Rev. Seek was a kind of dry sherry of filtsebethan times and ~- was often mentioned in the plays of Shake- spears. H” organ Recital CIITIAI. IIAIIIAI “mg Alf it Trinity Church _ mjayable evening o! .\.\.~ heard by a V01’)! 399"‘ i audience j a Tiinily United Church llst. “.55.. MrrKennelh Meek. l, Mum, of Montreal pre- 11- a atliveasatsawasd abtaiaadvaaaa. BUSH FOE Knights of Colum- bus party at North Rustico leave Queen Street terminal at a oclock p.m.. ‘hlesdsy. June 11th. LIGIITLY INJPRED Robert Wakclin. lathe.- ,Wakelln of the City Police of Cst . l lrPQl-lll‘? iMr. ihome. hospunl Wnkclin vls treatment taken t ) ‘be held in conjunction with the Indies; Mrs ‘Henry Trainer. §voting delegate; Mrs. Frank Mur- rly, Honorary life hlenillcr Mrs iltlcMahuvi. Diocesan itoivn sub-division, ancl Miss Mar- cesan officer IIIVESTIEIIIMI 0F (Continued from Page 1) Journal today cditorlally ca‘ls on ‘Mr. Bridges to follow up the good work he has done to date and in conjunction with the Fisheries Council of Canada. processors and distributors. to raise the standard lof fish sold on Canada's Inland Zmarket. The Ottawa newspaper lpolnts out that the quality of sal- imon and Winnipeg goldcye lbeen maintained at top level and argues that the same condition (‘In be brought about as far.e.s other species are concerned. The Journal writer was plainly shocked over the practice alleged by members of the Commons that. restaurant-owners serve cheap spe- cles of fish to their patrons whtn It is listed om the menus as some of the finest cf recognized EWC195- So marked has been the pilbllc reaction to the debate over Can- ada's domestic market for fish Ind irregularities. charged that the matter will be fully aired durinfl the coming scssions of the Com- mons marzne and fisheries com- mittee. . TIIIIEE cflilisiicilii (Continued from Pale 1) fighter plane. Late Saturday night Mr. and MP6. William R Wolf s! DRY!!!"- Ohio. were killed Wllen their priv- ate plane fell into the Ailintic Ocean off Port Everglades, near Fort Laudcrdalc, Fla. Anothcr bctly was found last Mr. suffer- charred wreckage ed slight. injuries Saturday after- showed the airliners altitude at noon when. a‘. the corner of Grrif- the time of the crash ad 2.000 feet. ton and Queen. he was struck by Such an altitude. he added. would in passing car. His injuries dd not have been 600 to 600 feet above and the spot where the plane actually his rammed Kinkora, presfd-‘ ent of the DloCcsin Council and and‘ Parnell- Secretary, del- Yegate and President of Charlotte- .ion Conway. Sourls. a forme" dio-i has ‘ran cnakwrrarown Li * i 1150110. va.. June lo-(AP) l ~A faulty altitude reading of the 'nlane which carried so persons to dcaih on a Blue Ridge mountain- side was reporied today by a Cap- ltll Airlines official. lie said an altimeter. which measures the plant-‘s height above the ground. was found in the and that It the mountain Friday i night in the rain. and would have been enough to clear the crest. The Airlines official who told of song _ lAmong these who are leaving for finding the altimeter. declining to gndllli' lab Janaliltlcitlglssiaon £3129); Ottawa this morning to attend the permit the use of ht name. said 1mm. These fdiv ‘yen; pmyod lNatfonitl Convention of the caih- that if the pilot was dropping at simple in m?" v- ‘ ' ‘cllc Women's League which is to the usual rate to get on to the approach to Washington. he was Marian’ Congregg during the iwak "ivithin 30 seconds of safety." lle nmlalnad that it ls the prac- tice to ates-t descending ai the rate of B00 feet a minute after sing the Ridge. the last moun- tI-lli barrier 0n the route from Chicago to Washington The crest in 1M0 feet high; the spot of impact was some distance below. Aircraft altimeter-s are set by the pilot In accordance ivlth inro- metric pressure readings from the airport control lower A pilot normally sets his altimeter ai takeoff so that it shows zero when he ie on the airport. As he approaches the landing point, the control tower broadcasts the cor- rect altimeter setting for that air- port. so that the dial will read zerolwhen the plane touches down there. Most of the bodies were brought out of the wilderness today. tvlien 43 of the 50 had been brought out. only 21 had been identified. l t , fly CLYDE BLACKBURN WISEZINGTXCIPI. Julio l5 — (C?) l-lforiitrr vicr-prestderlt. Henry ivWuli-ace got llilnself all tangled u) |with coirespcrdents at a pris; oonfereznce today when he declared lthe Untied States and United Kingdom "would fight" Rus=ia ll necessary for Saudi-Arabian Oil and added “I think the Ru sians should be told that." Boviet Russia should be told "chat there was a. boundary beyond ‘Whit-sh their expansion could not proceed. he said. That. boundary was "Cen- tral Turkey." or the approaches t0 the Middle East oil. Asked why he fixed un that boundary he said it was because of Saudi-Arabian oil. The United states and United Kingdom should protect that oil but they should make it available to all countslts lncludllig Russia. _WalIace got on this line when asked if he believed Russian ex- pansions across Europe was a threat to pence. l-lls answer was "V65" and then he made his statement of his belief that the Unlliid States and Wallace Would Talk Tough With Russians l the UK. should give the "so VIM‘ and no farther" notice lo the Sov- iet Government. This brought a [lood of questions which devclcped some econcl lth thoughts in Wallace's mind. He said no one could ray w certainty that there was any Rus- sian expansion in Europe. The ‘Ifuman foreign policy ivas en- couraging the rank-and-file of the Balkan peoples to fly to the arms of the Russians. Russian expansion- into Turkey could be effected cnly b1; "stting the Red Anmy rolling and clrop-. ping paratroopers" and not by l1 ccup inside Turkey. E Wallace never mentioned the, United Nations throughout the tn-‘ tel-view. i Asked why he opposed United‘ States aid to Turkey in view 0i’_ his belief that a fight against Rus-. siarr expansion should be made in‘ Turkey. Wallace said he was still‘ against it because it might lead toI “incidents or accidents" which. would bring war between United’ States and Rilssia. l t Crashes: Lost U. S. Army Plane l 2 Killed SPRINGFIELD, Vt.. June 15— fAP)--A lost Army plane-desper- rately blinking its lights l-n a last signal for aid-crashed lnto the side of lonely Hawks Mountain in a driving rainstorm early today and an Army spokesman said “it ngv: looks as though l2 were kl-ll- e _. . Cc-l. E. L. Tucker. commandant “mm b," ssamhcrs at ma scene o, at Greater Field. N. 1L. said the _ I n 1d. 3-29 Super-fortress had l5 aboard gmglgahindsegtgn in] ‘as, when it left Tucson, Arlz.. Satur- accident to l2. In the crash of the day. but the passenger list was circled above this Vermont village at 1.000 feet-or less. “It was lost or in llfOllblfi-WVB don't know what kind." sai-d Ma- lor Donald Miller, who sped from Greater Field, N. I-L, to the scene. Aviators In the area, including Albert Wheelock. a civil air pat- rol flier. said that a difference of‘ relatively few feet in its elevation ur course-or 20 minutes in time- might have saved the plane. Clearing skies a short time after the crash made the cloud-capped ‘the late Brother James insofar For I.I.S. Tribute a Plane Crsiah To Late Handler J. Ii. Idclieiine Officers of the Benevolcnv frills society last night issued tho fol- lowhig tribute to the lair Jami-s H. McKenzie. a valued member oi the organization for l‘! years. The tribute was signed by three B, I. s. officers. W. W. McCarron, president. .1. A. Callaghan. treas- urer and E. W. Hogan. secretary "On Saturday. June l4. 1947. Jhere passed away at the Char- lottetown Hospital a valued mem- ber of this. the Benevolent Irish Society of Prince Edward Island, H. Mc- Kenna. "Although the members of this Society were aware of the jate Brother's recent illness, they were rndeed shocked ai'his sudden passing. I "Since he became a member in 1931. he gave generously of his valued time and efforts for the betterment of this organization, having filled the position of Pre- sident for several ycars. Under his leadership the society progressed rnpldly both in numbers and ll prestige. "As this 1s a charitable organiz- ation. his efforts and labours ivere anasset to the community in acn- iral, and we mourn his pissing." - Sentenced Tc Three Years At ilcrchester 0n Hold-up Charge William Alexander Martin. var- lion River. appeared for sentence before Stipendlary Magistrate K. M. Martin last Saturday morning and was sentenced to three rears imprisonment in Dorchester Peni- tentiary on a charge of armed robbery. 'I"he accused was convicted on lilay 31. remanded for sentence to June '7 and on that date further remanded to June 14. Two witnesses were heard at his trial. James Power and Cst. Arthur Bishop. On the night of May 27 Martin walked into the store of James Power on Queen Street and at. the point. of a revolver-which later was found empty in a near- by alley-demanded money from Mr. Power, who gave Martin all he had in his pockets which was $4.75 in fifty and twenty-five cerit. pieces. Martin then ran out oi’ the store throwing the revolver sivay as he ran through the alley .petween the Toombs Music Store and that of Mr. Power. A few minutes later, he was picked up ricer the A A. l-lennessey fun- eral parlors on Kent Street by Police Sgt. Stems Webster and Cst. Bishop. Later that night he was identified by Mr. Power as the man who had held him up. AHAQE YE Islinylkart Prelsst ls lssrisg Cenaletien A s i . ,...,-,_.»,,-=._-»-~ “Work rm fha Railway.‘ ' thr- Cl'.;iiloit=i..lu"n -. cxj-zctiu to be c ‘iii::imrl' o: ezcuj,‘ and Saturday. charge. Al’. the prcaeit and 30 workmrn TC-lllliftlflg the \\. ~ ivllrirf fscl- p22; lzutticssru \\i.l cl jcf tile DXOJPCT. {is believed. l The work, which was .- jlast summer, l5 being done by the J.P. Porter and Son; .C0. under ‘- l ‘Jeri Burg- Gcvsrnnlclxt FflgLFiTCl‘ on the .pl"ojcct ts Lloid Wcilner. l The additional re-infozcentcnt iivork iv=ll be done cub lost-foot lsqunre lcl"c.a of solid lozrert. and late-cl rods running out to the main i Mail. I The major part of the prcject [has been cunplcted. and mo t of ‘the cement ha: been pouzed, with Jthe cxceptzon o! the Exlffnlo end of the pier ultlch is yct to be clone. After the re-iriforcing is csmpllted and the cement. paused at the and of the pier, there will be consider- able filling-in to be done to finish the job. Ait tthe present time there. is much aCtVly in the driving of fender lpiiings along the west wall. j The approximate estimated nest '1 tgllgomject when completed will . . l Mr. D Lauder, Genera} super. intendent for the Construction 00., who arrived here yesterday by plane to inspect the job. was quits satisfied with the progress being made. show two views of the Railway “fharf The above pictures as it appears today. great deal from malnutrition. Hi; children celebrated. their- birthdays i Capitol Airlines plane near L885 ed. In lndo-China In addition to the domestic Pitnfl accidents, l0 persons. four children, died in the crash o a Junkers plane in Indo-Chlna iiY ing the Saigon-Dalnt route. Senator Owen Brewnrr of three discstrolls DC-A plane Brewster. chairman of the committee on aviation, told a r porter his groups invesligutors W crashes, that ncar Leesbuig. Va Evidence gathered thus use, is called for. 200,000 EXPECTED (Continued from PAP i) sociation. whlclThavsW-ialistgwayswizég to extend its present contract. Action of the M.E.B.A.'s 15.000 members was undetermined Bun~ day night after their president. S. F. Hogan. formed the Depart- ment of La or the nishi b0i°f¢ 'Ing committees to “rt-innit! 1m“ any strike action until further M- iice." No subsequent word W88 given immediately. Previously tile union had stated it would walk out if other unions failed to reach agreements. The N.M.U. asked for s 304781’- cent wage increase overtime in- hour week instpad of 48. inddlllfi manning. severance pay Dwvmtlii‘ and welfare funds. ‘the a.c.a. asked a weer-uni increase and other contract chant’- cs similar to those asked by the N.M.U. Wages for NMJJ. members now M." .1 glee g month for ordinary sea-men. with able-bodied seamen. use largest category. Melvin! $183.50. Electricians get 0304 monthly. and marine engineers‘ wages range from 8377-50 t" $533 monthly. Federal conctlletors said they had nothing to report after a series of meetings Bundly. Union spokesmen going Into n lwiifi" committee session and ahIPVWTiQ" representatives also were silent- A country-Wide walkout would affect, 200,000 members of the five Uni-ans and tie up a large pro- portion of the American merchant marine. ships manned by Ameri- can Federation of Labor Unions Ilene 1Q also would be affected by an en- gineers’ walkout. burg, va.. all .50 aboard were Kili- Pillsbury“ Including (Rep- Me.) said Settminy the occurrence crashes within :1 fcw Wevk-B "strongly suggests a ntrucillffil failure." iced states Senate ccnurieice sub-V‘ c- lli 133k into the latsst cf the three‘ far. Brewster said, indicates that "care- ful scrutiny." of the DC-A. a foil!" engined plane in wide flcmmfffiili that he was Instructing nbiiflllli“. creased, extended vacations. a 40- - _ changed when it refuelled at | Tonight a little more than 20 .hours after the crash the Anny Ispokeeman said a. 12th body had been found by the weary search- ers beating their way through up- rooted trees and burned under- brush. The huge craft. based at Tuc- son. Arizona. had refuelled at Pittsburgh on a training flight that was to have taken it to Bed- ford Mass. But it was lar off its course and had been out of radio contact with Bedford for an hour ,nnd a half when lt roared out of C a i i l 1 um rain-laden clouds at midnight and mountain tops visible. Miller said it appeared that all the dead except one would be identified. The task of identifica- tion of the mattered bodies was made more difficult by the fact that the number of bodies found exceeded the number known to be aboard when the plane left Tuc- son. Names were withheld notification of kin. As the plane lunged from a lowering sky above Springfield. windows in homes vibrated from the thunder of the big engines and many rest nts rushed out of their houses. pending - I Says Capitalists Must Adopt‘ Illadical Changes l orrroado. June is - car) _ Cyrus Eaton. Nova Scotia-born industrialist end banker, geld sniff“? mill. "t0 avoid extinc- tion capitalists will "have in make immediate and 115mg] Ilolgsnscs in our attitude toward |.a or and our methods of deal- .ing with labor." "We will have to begin by muzzling such organisations u the National Association of Manu- facturers and by recognizing, and sincerely regretting. that there i, bad feeling on both sides." he said. i In an article. “a capitalist looks ,at labor". published in the our- rent. issue of the University of Chicago Law Review, he discus. zed labor legislation. . "Int no business man be naive ‘enough to believe .. .. . that re- strictive legislation will be any irnore effective in bringing about industrial harmony than the fvoletead Act was in discouraging drinking." i Eaton. who has broad interests ation awaits only the magic to of some dynamic personality. "Then, if capitalism has already gone by the board. its continued existence will be corri- pletely at the mercy of an estrang- uch l-le credited John L. Lewis. head of the United Mine Workers Un-l ion, with exercising "wisdom andl restraint." duidng the soft coal‘ controversy last fall. and accus-l ed the mine owners of worklngl "under cover _, . .. feverishly. night and day. to keep a torrent of abuse turned .on the miners and their leaders. through every! channel of publicity. and to urgef all three branches of government “executive. legislative and Judi-l cial-to crack down on labor." l Eaton said the Supreme Court‘ decision aglunst the miners "will. be productive of untold evil in the whole field of labor rela-l tions." Deny Food Shortage At Sable Island HALIFAX. June 16-40?) -An 3.0.A.l'. plane on a flight to Bable Island Saturday to bring back the ’il\ the iron ore. steel. coal and railroad industries. asserted that Hcapitailsm cannot survive with- cpt the support of labor." He added: "The casualness with which we capitalists seem willing - nay ’cvon eager-to invite the collapse ,nf our economic system in al- most every industrial dispute for the sole purpose of thwarting labor is utterly incomprehensible. Labor not only produces the goods and consumes a large part of them; labor also has the votes. "I also believe we may ulti- mately see a strong alliance be- tween lsbor and the farmer, ac- companied by a tremendous ex- pansion of the manufacturing and selling eta-operatives. The effect- ing of such a formidable combin- I body of a worker who died sud- | denly carried a cargo of food on the‘ outgoing flight but officials of , the Federal Department of Trans- port denied that there was a food shortage on the isolstedJs-nds- pit 150 miles off the Nova Bcotla trout. Although it had originally been reported that a food shortage ex- . Isted among the i! employees of ' the department on sable. C. l-Ll lfostermlaxr Marine agent. said herd tonight "there '1! enough food for 100 men on the island." i He said “there is everything there you could want. except fresh meat and the plane Saturday car- ried to pounds of beef as well as o lot of private food parcels sent by relatives to people on the is- land. M.’ tended a wanm and cordial welcome ed 0d per cent of the electorate." n" ' ‘mm ml‘ °“ "TM “m5 three times during their intenri- lfflPllll. 'l‘licy WEI‘? liberated through the action of U.S. fumes and some iiwo months after the war were released firom the camp and were flown by plane to Peking. lSalvation Army j Missionary ls jSpecial Speaker Following the war. he took charge of the Shanghai-Naming “W'- area connected with Salvation Major Leonard Evendecn. who, r ‘r ' _ t lrl has recently returned from Clll Arml acnlma and took p" j m‘ U.N.R.R.A_ displaced persona pro- where he has spent a number of . Jams in Shanghai, ma...” WM, wears on missionary service. was ma C_I.;_N_R_R_A_ program go,- I the special speaker at tihe Sa1va-t-‘ fjom. djatnbutjon in these ch19; lion Arm Citadel last week-end. i w, 3,50 serwd in cmmdjm Reg ‘He was accompanied here by lifaj- ~or and Mrs. A.W. Dixon, Divisional i Commander of N.B. and P.E.I. iuho. Cross and Canadian Aid to China Fund Committees. Evlajor Evenden, with his fa-rnily‘. returned to Canada in Sept. 1946. ,and is now on deputation work for . the Salvation Army- H6 is. leaving for Nolvfnumdlnnd this creek. conducted the local service. Major and Mrs. MalcLean and the local branch of the Salvation Army cx- to the visitors At the Salvation Army Citadel’ Sunday evening, Major EV§11d0l1~ ' Seven United Church a - a services where he spoke on “Pence! Major Everiden. who was born in England but was brought up and educated in Hamilton and Toronto. went to China in Feb. 1925 where after undergoing a short period of language study. he took urp his dut- ies with the Salvation Army. l)'.ll'~ lng his first winter in Chtnn lic worked almong the Chinese Govvrn- olf China." He also held services at the Infirmary and the Sunday School. and at the regular morning SACKVILLE. N.B.. June l5 — 1GP) — Swen young men were ordained in the Sackville United Church today at a servic" held in conjunction ivllh the annual meet- Jng of thv Maritime conference o1’ .th<~ United Church. ‘British Unions Objections 1T0 Bonuses Weakening ..'.T Iy James MoOook 1.09690 . June 15 —(CP) — Crafls are beginlning to appear in the opposition of many trade unions to the use of bonuses and other incentives for higher pro- duction from British wankers. This development is a coon/fort to the Government which has ap- proached this subject warily. Cab- inet mflmlben have set. forth the necessity of increased production in home industries such as house- building as well as in all export ln- dustries. At the same time. the Goveruiirnent was hurried by Unions that bonuses for increased oiltput and similar plans to accelerate the worker's pace would be opposed especially if the work was being done for national or local govern- mania. Health Minister Bevaln. in the face of grinnbling that private builders were getting more work done by using special pay plans. said Cdlltlolhh’ that. If private builders co/uld get more work by using imesitives, such methods imlglfli. med-it. consideration by other builders. The Llabor Party conference last month neon-l ivamings from labor that inccntlvu would be opposed. Spokeamen for, building workeri WEN CSDQCiHJ-iy firm on this point. But a deputation of 20 shop stewards of the National Federa» iion of‘ Bucildmg Trade Operatives since has promised Bevan that it Wmlm Support him in any plan to introduce incentives on priority jobs. ‘The highest priority is for low-rental housing. The shop stoivarcis suggested that! the ivorkcrs on the job Ohncsc thd lncccziivee to be used and work tlhrolsgh Union officials. This is an important break for those labor elements ivhich agree ivitlh the Government that the time has passed for thinking .1 j." b dcnl quickly means iincmplovnlcnt soon- or. If the building workers take the lead irr accepting incentives gene» ally. then spread o.‘ incriiiivea lg other industries is piobabic. In- diistriolists agree that bolillirs i other incentives will be pm’ . . 1y if output ls increased. fileiui- dency has been for hours in €‘~YlI‘ down and wages to go llj‘. wliua production has been imchaiigwd. lVlAGYAR FLAG i The ordinancis were Thom“ _Stuart Bellis. John Thomas Stew- art. Colin Douglas Nlckcrson, Wil- itm Bell. lilimi Archibald Gurvnal Neil Stuart lilrcDnnald and Arthur ment troops. administering ii-rsl aid to the wounded with a mobile dressing and X-Ray Unit. for whlcih he later received a. "citatiom from the Chinese Government. Aficr that followed a period of servici- Frederick Wh‘:lon. ‘ in the “interlor" almong Chinese; The conference Dfesidimi- 3"’- countlry folk during vrhloli “he |W.A. MacQuarrie. Sourls. P E I .; learned to appreciate the stirling wonducted the service. He visas IB—| qualities of the Chinese people.“ slated by the conference secritaryw Then caime a period nrf years of Rev. A G. Pcntz. Halifax; Rev. administrative work until Pearl JS Nicki-son. St. Andrews East. Harbour. after wil-iii-lh they haci to Quin: pfinciildi C M. Nicholsm o! hand over affairs to the Chinese Yeine Hill Divinity l-iall. Halifax. Admluilotrrative Officers of the Sal- and Rev. L E G. Davies. Sack- vation Anny. In March 1943. Maj- or Evenden. his wife and four children were interned in a Japan- eee internment camp for two and a half years. where. he states "con- ditions were very bad and Primit- ive." Although the Japanese don't. g0 out of their way to illtreat iliern. they were very brutal if provoked. and that the camp suffered a ville. j The final service of the 23rd Conference was held tonight with Rev. H G. Tuttle, secretary of the United Church Pension Fund. speaking on the subject. "The Church In A Time Like This." i l The male flycatcher is one of ‘the few birds that assists its mate in making I-he nest. For Solo Moons. nusnlvlvn u," I5. room dough; "name," send five accredited delegates. '°,,°,1°{'§°Q" house, Nos. 40 and 42 Valley g RQY HQLMAN, — Street. Immediate possession of pfuidenh _ ' | g‘... eight looms. Burn and addi- . firmfiélrfh‘: tionol lot H0 tr. x so fr. 0- l- MCQUAID. '°'"I'°""°*"'WIY- Apply on premises evenings, 5015M"?- l 6 to 0:30 PM. azroup vihioh fought. for reasonable men-mostly m a of the older -—-- The Hungarian flnz is r ‘ and green with the natio {in the centre. job security. fair pay and better; work hours during the depression- Funeral Notice Alt members of the Benevolent Irish Society ore requested to meet at the Whalen Holt, Tuesday morn- ing at 5:20 AM. to attend the funeral of our late Bro. James H. McKenna. Secretory, I. W. HOGAN: Progreadlve Conservative Convention SECOND DISTRICT OF KING'S A Convention of the Second District of King's will be held on MONDAY, JUNE 30th, AT 8 PM. in MORELL HALL, for the purpose of nominating two candidates to contest the forthcoming Provincial Election. Each poll is requested to “m. rs