i 1 - »~.._.-.n..-v_—.e. -.1..-.v _--_--,. PAGE FOUR‘ TllE BIIAIILOTTETOWN G ll All!) llllli Morning Dally (Founded In I881) Pncldent. LleuL-CoL W. Chester 8. Helm" Vice-President. J. ll. Burnett. FJ-l- lggrgtgry, LleuL-Col. D. A. MacKlnnon. 0.5.0. Editor and Managing Director. J. B. Burnt“. FJ-l- fluociato Editors. Frank Walker and Ill! A. Blrnctt. SUBSCRIPTION BATES u um m p, 5. i, $4.00 per year. $2.541 for 6 month; ' h _ 5o t o month. City ssiiiilllnbel yvsffgii-‘ilg l" 5 mm!“ $1.75 for 3 months. "5 m“ l" F““’."& ‘m’ "f; ‘sfiohlflt ' s2. r e y a - - ‘nu .1 “at y 50c T083!!!)OUT-bl- ‘Tlu StrongeIsf-Tlgniory- is Weaker than the Weakest Ink." I-‘RIDAIiaUGFST l. 1910 IBM-fill About Those Farm Markets Provincial agricul- awa recently would indicate made in l ‘ , ~ ~ < m many puzzling sent t. . mg“. farmers bewild- "ed inclined to give adv,“ , c-rl wirh better-than- l prO-“lltction of most hi: export mar- ~ ; need; -—and . , ,_,»r-arently' in no d, ouaumties. e. in for hogs finds No one in hurrv to The i . himself 35°“. ‘N41,, either to go ahead or m Triggart, head of the pawn , journal notes, told "n view of the un- the con!» certainty a . < of bacon the Brink}, . l‘ .. require aftcrex- yiratgm, ,{ t‘ .. -~ rue-ht it is diffi- “i, p, ‘ . I -- i t""e advice as to pro- duction t» _ In otlu-r ls are prepared to give the e they need on how -m all the facts and to grow figur»; a will be purchasers for the fir: Pruains the unknown quant- irv, Nat are reluctant to advise fdnncrs to .g. Normally there could be a. huge pork production next ation stock is available in quantity and it . if feed Will be abundant. Out \\'esf, with pr of otherwise unsaleable grains, they could accomplish xvonders. The far- mer has to take a gamble. It appeared from conference reports, adds the exchange. that zhe poultry farmers and milk producers have a more favourable outlook. Brit- lin is taking our eggs in considerable quantity. I80 million more e-Jgs than during the first six months of 1030, an"; inclusion of eggs in the rations of Canada's fighting forces has helped home crinsiiiiip-wii. liczter employment condi- tions will also hcip, as‘ it does the general situa- tion for fruit and veg/rtable growers throughout Eastern Canada ivhere there has been the most marked upswing in employment figures The Maritime apple situation still presents many pro- blems. The impression still prevails that farmers are one class who will benefit, through increased rices and greater demand. as a result of war. he final years of the last war are recalled. Con- ditiom have changed, and changed drastically. France is out of the picture, Britain in living on I planned economy and with scientific rations in prospect. Prices are. and will be, carefully con- trolled. The Canadian farmer can contribute much towards wining this war but his im- mediate outlook is not entirely rosy. Spring as National Registrati; vibe Department of National War Services, 1n ‘order to relieve congestion at the booths during the coming National Registrationsbas announced lmendments to the Act which will enable em- ployers of labor in Canada to conduct registra- tion on their own premises. Large employers of labor will be con ituted entire registration unit, and the cards t fl out and signed before De- puty Registrars ilied by the concerns, and it will not be nt-cc. _ for employees of these larger concerns to leave the plants to complete their registration. In the cast of smaller con- cerns, they \\'lll be furnished with cards, and their employre=, with the cooperation of as- sistant Iicgistrar- who shrill be. appointed by the companies, will fill out the questionnaires. They will not, l1~\\'+'-\'('T. sign until they have appeared lv-fflrc ‘lir- llcputy Registrar at a regular reg? ion booth. . l“.'lll<il'lPS where it will not in- .4 with the. nprrntion of the plant ipcoplc were given a fair chance to supply munitions and war materials in a much larger way, there would be fewer idle people in East- ern Canada, war production would be hastened, and all would be better able to meet the wartime taxes and to make some savings which the gov- ernment could borrow. “Let it not be forgotten that the men and women of these provinces, for the most part, are earnest and efficient workers, among the best in Canada. “Besides awarding war orders, the govern- ment is supplying capital for the creation of war industries in the Central provinces. Instead of placing taxpayers’ money for war produc- tion entirely in the Central areas, one or two thousand miles from Eastern ports, it would be prudent business if the Maritimcs were used." Another Liberal paper, the New Glasgow Chronicle, has been making similar complaints. - EDITORIAL NOTES P! About 3.000 of our young men are now in arms off the Island ——which, at the lo\v spending rate of S5 per head per week, amounts to a pretty tidy sum taken out of our circulation. What are the Government doing to replace this? l I Thomas Gainsborough, one of the thirty original members of the Royal Academy, died ,this dare, I798. He, more than any other artist. should be called the father of English painting. The greatest colourist of the early British School, he was rapid and facile in execution. dignified and graceful in expression, absolutely true to life and nature, and essentially English in sentiment. He painted over 300 canvases, 220 of which were portraits. I l a u u e Our Canadian capital, it is understood. is be- ing considered by the Ilapsburg family as the future home of the fortner Austrian ruling house. If its members decide affirmatively, for- mer Empress Zita, her son, Otto, and the rest of the family will buy or lease a. house there. Princess Juliana of the Netherlands has al- ready leased one with ten acres of grounds in Rockcliffe, affording the seclusion she finds de- sirable, and will soon move into it with her child- ren from Rideau Hall, where they have been the guests of the Earl of Athlone, Governor Gen- eral, and Princess Alice. i l! President Roosevelt has prohibited the export of petroleum products and scrap metal except under license, effective August I. The order, while subject to extension at any time under the Presdicnfs national defence powers restricts the licensing to aviation gasoline, aviation high grade lubricating oil, tetraethyl lead, which is used in the production of high octainc aviation gasoline, and No_ 1 heavy melting iron and steel scrap. All are important to japan and in lesser degree to Germany and Italy. The action was taken for the announced reason that the materials, and especially a native gasoline, should be conserved for the national defence needs of the United States. i l l!!! Leaders of a new cultin that land ofever new religions, California, have just been indicted on charges of using the mails for fraudulent pur- poses. It is called “The I Am Foundation, and those indicted include Mrs. Edna Ballard and young Donald Ballard, widow and son of the movement's founder, Guy Ballard, who called himself St. Germain and contended he was a reincarnation of George Washington. The true bill called Mrs. Ballard "alias Joan of Arc, Jesus and Lotus Ray King." Her son was identi- fied as Edona Eros Billard, his true name and also “LafayetteT Norman Neukom, assistant United States attorney who presented the case to the grand jury, said the “I Am" cultists had collected close to $3,000,000 since the move- ment's inception in r930. I iii An English entomologist has noticed that butterflies are no longer to be found in those localities of the countryside which are used for either target practice or for experimentation with explosives. Three theories have been advanced for the phenomenon: the insects are simply frightened away and seek quieter localities, the constant detonations shatter their delicate nerv- ous system and prevent for a time their pro- pagation; the vibrations of the air caused by the detonations not only do this but ultimatgly destroy them entirely. A writer in The Field of London agrees with the last view but modifies it by the changes in English climate and men- tions several beautiful species which are becom- ing extinct in England. He adds: “bfany people believe the numbers were kept up in the early part of this century by eggs arriving in this country on fruit stocks imported from to require the intlhirlual to take his card to his own regiumrE/ni booth. this method will in fact be in=i~tcd rum". by the Dcpzirrmcnt of National \\'ar Fervict» Liberal Papers Critical \\. The Ilalifax Chronicle (Liberal) complains that in one ri-=;i<-ct at lcnst Canada's war pro- duction prngrzmunc, .1.- nutlincrl in Parliament this wcck, is diqippniiitiiig. While everybody in Canada is eager to scrvc in some capacity, the result of the (YovPriiiiiPiitYs effort is t0 establish war industries in ccntral areas. Everybody is re- quired to pny the nut of the war, but for the most part, only the business interests in Central Canada will yirorlucc and benefit. Our Halifax contemporary rightly says that the “outlying Provinces" are contributing their share of mcn and money to enable Canada to carry on. They give generous support to fund raising campaigns for war purposes; but when munitions and supplies are to be produced, the Central Prbviiii-cs nrc given the contracts. It state-s tlm of the orders amounting to tlrfilomxxxr quoii-il by llrm. Mr. Howe as hav- ng bevn ]rl.".l‘l'll by llu- Government in the first vilf of min, Hilly Sfg/LNX) went to Nova Sco- lia t "The lllarilinu- lhwivincrs." says the Chronicle, "arc (l€lf‘l'llllllf‘ll to support the war effort to the limit. but that is no reason why they should III sliuhted 11v the Administration. If their France. Now we raise our own trees, and our research stations have a flourishing export trade, but modern methods of spraying and pest con- trol do not allow for a repetition of this butter- fly exchange!" n a 1r n A long standing grievance of business men may be remedied" soon should the Mackenzie King Government summon sufficient courage to make civil servants’ salaries subject to gami- shee. A bill for the purpose in Manitoba re- ceived second reading in the Senate when Gov- ernment leader Dandurand explained there were about 1,300 civil servants in Manitoba who re- fused to pay their provincial taxes. Senator john Haig (Con. Manitoba) said they had been sued. The case was carried to the Privy Coun- cil, which ruled the taxes were collectible. But the Province could not collect because it could not garnishee the Crown. Conservative Leader Meighcn asked that third reading be put over. He suggested the Crovernment consider amending the bill to make all civil servants’ salaries sub- ject to garnishee. lrle thought the present law was "class legislation nf the worst sort." Sena- tor A. C. llarrly (Lib. Ontario) agreed with Senator Meighen and said it would be a boon to businessmen in Ottawa if civil servants’ snl- aries were marle stibject to garnishce. Senator Dandurand Said he would draw (he attention of the Minister of Finance to the remarks of the 811511011. T"! . CHAEI-QEETIDWN .. GUAKDFélF NOTES BY TllE WAY The American people know that, their might, when organized, will not. be used for aesrwofl- ‘mer are also assured that the Govern- ment. will not. send men to fight PUBLIC FORUM ‘ill glfll I 090a lot 1:0 Told: Giulia: ‘on “tmu-"Illlll-‘Izl-lam Ila Quinta-s 1n European wars. Under these circumstances mes‘ are unlikely w boogie over the expenmwro of ten bZIIIOXLS, or any other sum needed, to preset-v; the fnsututlons of their country and to make 1t so ntrong that even a madman will IIBSZYBW to attack 1t. Bur, there is one more question. Wlll tlus money be spent wisely? Wall the result-s 1t Ls e to attain be achieved svriftly enough to serve the pur- pose? W111 the proper industrial organization be built. up to func- tion smoothly and eftctently? The ten million defence fund of ne- cessity becomes an issue 1n the comma campaign. It underscores the need for earnest consideration ofnowandbywhomltlatobe administered. —- Philadelphia B111- letlu. If America is to be destroyed it will not be by force but by ideas. 11w great defeat of recent years 1s the defeat silstained by Ger- many. Don't be (IQCQZVQKI bevause Germany can roll her tanks over the broken bcdles of Frenchmen and from her warships 1n the skies destroy libraries where great thoughts of the ages were accum- ulated and beat don-n the anczent chtlrches, prayers 1n stone, where men adored their best ideals these thousand years. I1 Ls Germany that lies in runs for the tzme, be- cause mcn and women are not per- mitted there to live freely and the meaning of life now seems Justified to them by physical victcrzes. - Dr. Dixon R, Fox, Resident of Union College Schenectady as quot- ed 1n N. Y. Tlmea he “France must return to her agri- cultural and 1x41511111 character." These are not Hitler's xvcrds. They are the words of Marshal Henri Plullppe Petaln, addressing the French Parliament. They are shockzng words, almost a; shocking 1 as was the announcement of the fall of Paris. In these words all France scents to fall, and Hitlers theory of a "reintegrated" Europe finds expression 1n the mouth of a. distinguished Frenchman. Herr I-litler's“geoh1stor1c" plan for a new order, 1n which a subondxnate and serflike France will feed an 1n- dustrial Gennany, 1s restated 1n terms of seeming French patrfirtistn. The Marshal goes down the full length of the road. Not Only does he speak Hitler's death sentence for France, but. he clothes 1t, 1n this dress: "France recognizes herself 1n the midst. of an immense broil;- erhood movement." "Brozherhoouf 1s not. the word most Frenchmen will use w describe their forced fasciolzation a’. bayonet-point. -- New York Post. tor be (Re are tlon a re thci There was an interesting point raised by Mr. J. B. Priestley, well known B" sh author, 1n his broadcast uxide. the utle of "Talk on Lhc Vlorld Vvlcltare“ last night. Mr. Prlestleyk remarks dealt wath runerlcan radzo brcadcasters’ com- ments on Brit-aims agreement to close temporarily the Burma Road which has been carrying American war supplies to China. He assured his American listeners that most people 1n Britain are ready to fight to the death for ideals and aspira- lions common to the peoples of Bri- Laln and the UnLt/cd Siazcs, All Amerzcans, he said, could not be expected to see this as clearly as the British. But, he added, "we do implore you to ask your com- mentators to spare you and us some of their ringside seat, nuan- ners and remarks. Pepple who are not prepared yet to fight. for any- chlng anywhere should not. rebuke others because they can not un- dertake to fight for everything every-where.” It, should be noted that, Mr. Prlestleyk remarks were addressed to the commentators whom we have had reason to m- buke on several occasions fcr their unauthorized and misleading state- ments regarding the wur. The Am- erican press. with a fcw notorious exceptions that were only to be ex- 1 pected, has been deeply sympathetic to Britain. It takes a long time, however, to convince some people that everybody broadcasting for fifteen minutes over the radio 1s not heaven scm and not 1n the confidence of the Dictators ber- sonallv. - Montreal star. HIE tial duc “Moat of ua are exceedingly gen- erous wlth the millions we do not possess, and we smugly offer our wk of money as excuse for our lack of generosity." suggeétl Corinne Updegraff Wells, who “Tiles about “Phllanthronhy wzthout Money" 1n the current Rotarian Magazine. "Yet generosity has surprisingly llttle to do with money “Ingenuity and lmnglnatzon of- ten provide gifts which make pm. sents purchased wzth money seem cheap and tawdry by ccmparison." but how? There's that, spare time on your hands that ycu can don- ate to an overburdened neighbor- hood mother, to a charitable or- ganlzatlon, or at. the nearest play park where youngsters long for someone to teach the mysteries of kites and model airplanes. And your car with lbs empty back seat when you take a Bunday afternoon the real was ce H out ban the vfct oldsters from the community home for the aged? And hobbies! Here's a gold mine for sharing Joys, for phllanthrcphy without. money, sug- Bests Author Wells. In troubled tlmes like these It II not surprising that countries kke the United States and Canada are m- examlnlmz their place and their past. And them! more to 1t than a longing for "the good old don" and an escape from an industrial- ized undpgolltlcally disrupted world, asserts msworth Crowder, nu- dent. o: the American scene, writ.- llpg 1n the Rotarian Magazine. hLs reexamination Ls seen 1n fog. tivals. ftestas, fairs, centennial celebrations. and a variety of clvlo. state. and territorial ceremonies delving into the past. "there 11 n groping for continuity, for eer- talnties to hold to. for ideals and character traits that served our forefathers and might serve u: again." he says. "There 1c a healthy resurgence‘ of pride 1n yes- terday's accomplishments. And certainly time 1s a growing ep- prcclatlon of the richness, color. hu- mor. and humanity of New World tlve left hel fclk expressions. There 1a, aft/er all, something w remember. A civilization 1s more than the flat, two m1 present‘ Sun-According from your cit up Saint Monday, Mr. J. W. Boulter, of the P. E_ I. Potato Growers’ Asociatlon, is reported to have said that. the A$0C18l10n intends to press Agn- culture Minister Gurdlner to Vilm- hold the application of the ten per cent import tax or ‘Parlff on fern]- lzer and spraymz material. It appear _ _ Boulter and his assoclatzon are gc- cents per bushel on domestic con- sumption. It won-d 8DP°BT-,h°“‘°"eY- that. Island members. as 1s mostly always the case. preferred w 1M9" politics, and supported U191!‘ Pa?» instead of the farmers and potato - Brunswick feel he was entitled to bv your members from the Islandr time agriculture. The directors of these various ag- encies of political debauchery and sabotage rand women) carefully selected for cases members of the old titled Ilflbllll)’ who have for long been the mos: fanatical adherents of I-htler. Disarmmg _ course, give the “lie" to the alled conviction that the Germans are merely educated savages- Before the war many of these agents are well known. Their en- gaging manners and their affability made them very popular. They were paragons _ only with the purpose of helping to build up a Fatherland cmtributlon to world order would be real and endurin . They dismissed wit dignatlon any suggestion that Ger- many's conversion to the prlnciples of Moral might. be too sudden to be last- Suoh were the scouts and skir- mlshers of the new rrulitary arm. Their job, as already indicated. was to install themselves in the poten- terprlses. divert the suspicious of the prospective vlctltn. Their-ob- jective was not the small fry. the ordinary common or garden c1t1- zen. These efficient agents flew at higher game, and they were thor- oughly at. their ease attending the cocktail parties of the “First Fam- He“ One should not of the peoples and the governments whom the in pre-war days, for this inflltra- tlon. The methods were wholly new, wholly unsuspected. ‘The honest, well-moaning snu ldlty of the dem- ocracies. grown gent, and rapaclous. was quite un- equal to the task of understanding dlctatorshlps. They were too grossed 1n their own selfish little purposes to recognize shape of the thins-i right under their very nose. It would now appear that. many devastating weaknesses their own structure. In that they were fairly successful. But were entirely u. uccessfill 1n con- allng those weakness from Nazis. Jumps ahead of tlu democracies. 1t was their particular job to ferret weaknesses were, to uncover and drive info the country! Why not "-11 11°“ be measured l“ u” ‘mm’ 1111 u: with convalescent-ward patl- be? °Y demmrul" W" Wm“ enita from the nearest hospital, or Pratt-raw form the "H! 11188"- naut has rolled. Had they only mown it, these countries were actually conquered before a shot was fined. The Nazi "Fifth Column" did its job Germ thoroughness. ‘Do put 1t eoloqmsllyj they found within the democracies enough "auckcrbult" 1n the form of potential trltorl. cowards, to enormoual 111 those cannula which had the courage to put w n chow of resis- tance the wort of the "Fifth O01- umn" orood H! 1 airmen. These udlatlc young brutal finished off mama morale was Thus was the cam Thus were thoiifiarta of flute‘ colla- l lngilt r‘: coon-a ppng‘ aeiitlogawzm entlrel broken. ‘rhev gctaluld fight the N WHERE WERE OUR MEMBERS? item ' IOIDGWB g In the John legraph-Journal on s to me as though Mr. to be a little too late. The} m8 have hm ample time since the bur.‘- get was brought down over a month ago lo take some action _ matter. and the wmer wsflhe!‘ “U1 hundreds of potato growers 1n this part of New Brunswick, feel that ll is a most. regrettable thmg thfll- Y0\_11_ Island members 1n Parliament dic not support our firmer representa- Live. m. n. H. name-d when he pressed to have the tax set aside 0n fertilizer and s raymg materials. Westem mem while they were not able w have the tax taken off farm machinery, were offered a compromise in that were given a pIOCeSSIHtZ __ wheat which will mean a: lea-S! 5|.- 000.000 for them this 3'68!‘- ln this 1'5 of Parliament, the Iv‘ tax on It took form, as vou likely know 0f la woilld have been able to save lhe Island farmers at least s200.0001roiu ‘ that tax this year. and 11381.1( 1°? succeeding years. but 1t 1s unfox tun- aze that party politics 1s such a fac- to the detriment of 0111' Mari- I hope 1t may not too late for them to make 501m move ln sum»?! 01' the" lame“ interests before the session closes‘. which may 1121179611 "I18 Week- , tc. am’ s" e (f. a. ANDERSON. The Nazi Bluff A Myth Exploded By_"Runnymedc” l print-ed from ‘The ‘Melon-aw?’ Nat-zonal magazine 0f t-ne Gan-- adian lsegion.) . (Continued) espionage, disuffeczlon, not, of the type beloved by 11c- wrlters. On. the contrary, they genial. personable young men r jobs. The women are 1n many 0f creatures, they, of propriety, inspired whose vlrtuous ln- pious Rearmament enemy's country and, by con- Ling apparently legitimate en- be too crltlcal enemy marked down, lwcld, self-indul- the EXI- enllghtened cunning of the real happening the concern of the democracies to conceal from themselves the; o they the ltler-‘s emlasarlea were too ulany just. what and where. those der to the vanity the greed and veniallty of their prospective lms. How well they succeeded. “UGWT 2. 1940 ~= SAL-E PRICE SALE PRICE generously for the good of the hu- - , '1; the~ were sent to man ‘rzace as each secs besktl. The gill»? Lg roexifresenl. for the next overwhelming traaedy 0f t e past 5 i _ , ten months 15 m5. all that young olliradeaorlir member, M1‘. Hatfield, Germans have been told of the had the support our farmers 1n New SALE PR'CE MEN'S FASHION GERJVIANYS “INVINCIBLE Ml G IIT" It will be rcmcm‘: rod that all 0f those “v1ctorlcs" l1 e bcfll c116 fully proclaimed by the Nazis triumphs oi the "invincible ’ of Germany. Hitler has ' his praises of the lliilillllg sword" and the Prussian accompli- ces of Hitler have taken the flut- tering unction to thou‘ sou‘. that those achievements are a vindica- tion of themselves. The present would scfm to be an appropriate point . u ‘n to rx- amlne this "in " ' Germany. Let u c ii light. of the few 1110 occasions when the brought face to l.l."(? which stood up to begin with the r \\'l.ll ford at l lvecni asserted at any one‘ g ’I‘lic two fleets have lltWc-l‘ into conflict as entire ' cl Royal Navvs su m armament and p n present- ln lllc .. bats in which have engaged. As a mutter of cold fact, the vcrv opposite has been the ru‘ 1n all the navai combats of 1h war it was actually the Nu?! 1cm- solves who in each case 11nd :t mos‘. pronounced superiority. The River Plate? Didn't the Grnf Spec have everything that. any na- val force could dcsire in tho way of heavier guns. lonuvr rnugc and greater specd? Of co - k’ ‘ Yet three little cruiser . ed, out-ranged and out . routed the hulking pocket mt ship, whose lgncrnlnlous 0nd now a matter of history. Al’. both battles of Nnrvlk the Germans had thr- tumor hnurl by tremendous marxiins. ("con “llvll consideration ls glvcn to the fact,‘ that 1n the second <-n1.~.gr-iur-ii1l the British destroyers xvi-re lu~lp<~tl| by H: M. S. Wnrspltc. That rein-l forcement was more than ncufra-i llzled by the fact that 1 enjoyed the suncrlntlvr of fixed artlll shore. Ask the . ners to explain . . t. _ HMS. R-cpulseuvus she encountercd the Scharnhorst and wnt- ‘ crs. Yet the British bn tor‘ into the Nazis and dnuvi crl m.“ Schamhorst so severely that rho has been out of action ever slnc".. and for many weeks she lay nn~ unrcspondlng tarrzct. for the Fleet‘ Alr Arm 1n Trondheim Fjorcii For luck. a submarine of the Royall t: .1- this menus nlov» \l'.".‘ll 211mm mu Z w € Z 3 n. w 3 -. if 5 QT Z Z battleship whcn_t_he__lru1cr_)vns bv ly and with typical weakllngs and facilitate their task V. wan relnf among the c1 llan pornrlotlon.» lgn omnpctcd. l man for man‘: their own and children the spectacle of pleas womenfolk being slaughtered befon their eyes was too much for them. And so. with a mlnlrnum of real fighting, by naked, tmreiletved nv-i ngery and treachery, Hitler and his fellow ga iugatlon o Deonlel whose standards of morality and civilization the comm: have never oven begun lwwob . for: compelled the rub- ' ,___ .. _____ __ -GlDflJ8l0 _ _,__ . uucl ZEB , Shrewrl in his time I srrsss cnazvaa our , HICKEYZS l zvavmz l MEN'S WORSTED sun-rs.‘ SALE PRICE —- —- —— HYDE PARK AND FASHION CRAFT SUITS ARE j MEN'S HYDE PARK SUITS $27.50. HAND TAILORED. MEN'S WEAR“ 111g escorled to Kiel for repairs. British submarines have success- fully, and in broad daylight, pene- trated heavy’ screens of escorting destroyers and sunk larger and more important enemy ships. In short wherever shlps and men of the Royai Navy have met. the evcinv, no matter how heat"; the or in the Nnzzs‘ favour, the Brit- zsl AAQ“? either destroyed the enemy or fcrccd him to run for cover. Germany-is maritime tradition has been sadly clouded by the inepti- tude of the Nazi navy. It has be- crmc a lrritlltion of avoiding battle, nurl of ccuttlinc thcir own ships. ‘Is that the stuff of which world conquczors are made? Docs that sort of business Indicate "invinclbil- i?" The "superman" has been ' llttlc 1n evidence 1n the Nazi ll sphere. qck Mics? scuttllngs and scur- for safJtIy up against such g nus episodes as lhe fight till Itmvrvpinzii. No fleeing ipezuor odds there. No scuttllng » ship to avoid defeat and cap- t c. Whenever the falnthcarted bivathc timorously the Gocbbles ‘oh mus of Nazi "invinclbillty" just " ug back to memory the long. >1 isliczuournble and cowardly record of the Nazi navy and set 1t be- side that lust, nmgnificent challenge of I'm: Rawalpindi. The Rawalpindi splrlt 1: com- 1110102)" alien to the Nazi make-up. It never will become part of the Nuzi nulko-up for the reason that the elczncnls which sustained the livroes of the Rawalpindi are en- tirely lacking in Nazi-dam. But those elements are of the very bone and fibre of the Royal Navy. They arc in the alr our men breathe. in the free, and arduous fives thcy live. 1n the glorious traditions of liberty and heroism with which they and their fathers before them have enrich- ed our inheritance. These heel-clicking. mechanical adventurous‘ _ MEN'S HERRINOBONE TWEED SUITS $22.50. SALE PRICE -- -.—- MEN'S FlNE WORSTEDSUITS,R SALE PRICE — — -- MEN’S HYDE PARK SUITS $25.00- .._,_.‘;, rcboz-scutilers —*supermen?" For- .'. 1 (To be continued) ,» natural color and produce a and sour stomach. _ Greal: August DISCOUNT SALE MEN'S sun's $l3.50~-= Regular $20.00., L $13.50 $16.88 _ i Eg~E~§~°°I i $10.15 __ _ __ _ _ ___$l8.75 ___ _ _ __ _ __*2ll.63 CRAFT SUITE$ZEOO._ _ _ CRAFT SillTi $21.50; __ NOTHING RESERVED EVERY SUIT ON SALE. HENDERSON & CUDMORE '-YE". itiiiiss" SWIM ens Whv not vlslt our store and Inspect our stock of Bathing Caps before making your pur- chase. We have a complete stock of Bil-hill! C8D! the very '_ latest shades and ranging tn _ price from 25c to 75c. See also our large stock or Sun Glasses priced from 15c to $1.00. MACS IIAIB RESTORE}! A delicately perfumed pre- paration which restores, strengthens and bcautifles the hair, It will restore gray hulr to its rich and abundant growth o! hair. Price 60c. Order by Mall Today. DR. EVANS STOMACII MIXTURE We highly recommend this rffillnration for people suffer- nl from Stomach Distress after eating. heartburn, Acid n u u the finest Stomach ‘ Mixture that money can b"! It: Evans. Price 85c per bolllb- TIIE TWO MAGS fiffh w!‘ BUY STAMPS c 5- Mm? w wan SAVINGS E. Tl moss o c0. T. OLD TIMERS AND NEW TIMERS When the “Highchoket” and moustache were all the rage our Tobacco got the okay of Island- ers. That. okay ls still in style today- Oldulerfl and youngsters approve HICKEY’S B L A C K TWIST 10c PER FIG STRAIGHT , Manufactured by mom a, IIIBIIOLSON Tobacco Co. Ltd., Charlottetown, P. E- l-