PAGE FOUR a TIIE OIIIIILOTTETUWII Gulllllll Morning Dally (Founded In IBM) Iruldeut: Lleut. Col. W. Chute: S. MoLIu Vice-President: J. ll. Burnett, F. J. I. Secretary: Lluut, C01. D. A. MuoKInnon, 19.5.0. Idltor and Managing Director: J. ll. Burnett, l‘.l.l. Associate Editors: Frank Walker and Lleut. hu A. Burnett, R.C.N.V.R. (On Active Service) “The Strongest Memory is Weaker This! the Weakest Ink.‘ TUESDAY. Novuiunm i. 1m The U. S. Election whflgiet flcsults of the United States election “i a ¢5_Pl"=l<?° lodil)’ will be awaited with the keeiiest interest throughout the world The presidential contest is regarded as likely to prove the closest for many years. Most pre- election polls have given President Roosevelt a iqllgllf advantage over his chief opponent, the epubhcaii candidate Governor Dewey. But these sample polls are not a precise barometer 0f the political atmosphere. In addition to the inevitable margin of error they are at least two weeks behind the interviews on which they an; based. fllloreovcr, while recording the semi. ment o t e voters. they do not indicate wheth- er that scntinicin is strung enough to take them lll lllc polls. Sticccss or failure at the polls for both candidates is expected to hinge on the 566101111 vote from the EJ510111 States, particu- larly; New .\or’k_ which has 47 seats in the elec. fora bcollege. llie (-l(\~[t)1‘11l college numbers 531 n.em ers,_enc1i Suite being :issigtied a number fllllill to its Lnngrcssionzil representation. '10 most Canadians, President Roosevel; flPPFRYS 11S 011C of lllc greatest. Presidents of the Ltiitetl Slates, and his incomparable war lead- ership is something for which to be devotit. by thanpkftil. We are not concerned with the domestic issues, but it is evident that domestic 1551165 played a large part in the campaign, which was ivagctl with a considerable (lEtq-ge of bitterness b_v the l‘i-e,~5<l¢,,t‘5 Oppqna-lts '1 here was, lllflfiCtl, some pretty heavy "slugg- ing on both sides. The point with which we are concerned, as Sic commentator ‘LHIHIILISIZCLI, is that "whether OWcy wins or I\0USL‘\'Cl[ theres nothing in it for the Axis. . . . U. S. war and foreign pol- icics won't change." If today's voting is as close as many antici- pate, the final result may not be known until early December because of the varying 5mm laws delaying the period in which overseas votes may be received and counted. _____________ The Problem Unsolved The trouble with General Uclvringhtorfls first speech as Defense Minister, in which he announced that he favoured continuance of the voluntary system of enlistment in Canada, is thatIit doesn't inzike sense. We have no “volun- tary ‘system of enlistment in Canada; we have, conscription, not only for home defense but for service in Alaska, Ncivfotindland, United States, Bermuda and British Guiana. Only to Cumpulsory military service overseas -—- where the men are must needed-docs General Mc- haughtons reference apply. And his state- ment does not g0 far iri explaining how rein- fcrcements are to be maintained. Here is the llllllllml, a5 Sllmmfll up by The Canadian Press: A large number of the men called for coni- pulsory military service and now on duty with- in Canada have been trained as infantrynien and are skilled in the use of infantry weapons -—the rifle, bayonet, grenade and light machine gun. This is exactly the type of reinforce- ment the Arniy expects to need most as the battle of Iiurope merges into the; battle of Ger- many and the issue is settled by soldiers fight- ing each other among the ruins of cities and towns after the bombers and the artillery have done their part. The Cabinet crisis which resulted after Col. Ralston returned from a. tour of the battle fronts to report on reinforcements in the light of present and future operations gave rise to speculation that thc 1st Canadian Corps on the Adriatic might be transferred to the western front. It was argued they could be used either to bolster the Canadian Army or to case the rc- placement problem if necessity arose. In military circles, however, such a niove is not considered feasible. It would take nlouths to wifhdraiv the iiicii and their equip- ment from the line and transport thein to Hol- land. Stiff fighting still lit-s .'ihcad iii Italy and it would not be milit.'ii'_v strategy t0 shift them to the western front when battle-tried forces are needed in mountainous Italian ter- ruin. If they cottltl be moved. they would have to be- replacctl by troops ciihci" in Ilritain or by ivithdrawing forces front the western front. Such a more would keep upwards of 60,000 men idle during a period when they might be urgently needed at the front. That is a \il.'1l part of the problem to be solved. (icucral .\lc.\'atighttin may have the answer, but if so he was careful not to reveal it in his speech iti Ontario over the WBCk-Cfld. Colfllalstonk Warning Just before his resignation as Minister of National Defense Colonel Ralston, speaking in support of the 7th Victory Loan cam- paign, said: “One vicw of the wountletl in the field hos- pitals would lilast the compliment attitude that if il all over but the shouting." Co], Ralstoti knows ivliat he is talking about. He .lias seen the bitter fighting in Holland, where powerful (ierinmi armies are led skilfully and fight fanatically, and where the casualty lists mount diiily; and he has sccn the fighting iii-Italy, where Canadian troops, with their Allies, for more than a year have been fight- ing without rcst'or let-tip, facing conditions almost unparnlleled in modern ivarfarc. Col. Ralston knows, u these troops know, that talk about “victory by Christmas", with insane plans for peace celebrations, is a bitter irony. The war isn't over-isn't yet won. Germany may collapse -— we can't measure morale; but what the stark military situation tells is that the fighting (as Mr. Churchill says) may go on until early Summer, with heavy, tragic losses ahead of us, and pain and sorrow for countless homes, and call for the utmost possible within the strength of all of us. Even then, with Germany broken, there will be Japan — another year or more of war, with this country a part of it, before the earth is cleansed of evil. It behooves all of us at this time to have a mind for that; to try to know what it means. Let us put away and discourage all this foolish, smug, complacent talk about “everything being over", and most of all the even smugger mood which plans for early victory celebrations. EDITORIAL NUI [:3 All is aver in the Presidential election, bar the shouting. O l0 Let us not weary of well-doing and we will g0 over the top in our Victory Bond campaign all right. O l! l! lll i General McNaughton does not claim that his predecessor is wrong in seeking to put con- scription on an equal footing for all, only he says, give volunteering another chance, forget- ting, as a General oughtift, that delays are sometimes dangerops. * it The Ulster litieu industry has been facing a wartime flax shortage. It is now manufactur- ing new fabrics from synthetic long-staple ray- on. An exhibition of the new fabrics has been opened in Belfast. The materials were all wov- en on existing itiachines in Ulster linen inills. The Prime bilinister of Northern Ireland, open- ing the exhibition, emphasized that the new type of textile is not in competition with the linen industry but rather an adjunct to it. l! It 4 t Sunday School training bears fruit. In the wake of Prime Minister \\"inston Churchill's visit to Moscow, an incident from another fam- ed visit bobbed up last week. All one night U. S. Chamber of Commerce President Eric Johnston and \Vriter William L. White listened to their Moscow hosts sing Russian songs. Then the Russians politely asked their guests to sing an American song. Johnston and White rc- sponded with the only song they could think 01:10.51“ Want: Me For A 511111100111. 1 i lOl U Li Hung Chang, noted Chinese statesman, died this date 1901; was the first soldier and diplomat in his country who saw the necessity for developing western Christian ideals of civ- ilization for the future success of his people; for this reason he associated himself with Gcn~ eral (“Chinese") Gordon in stippressing the Taiping rebellion due to the declaration of the opium traffic to be illegal; later Li became Governor of Kiaiig-su; next viccroy 0i Hukwang 1867 and Chi-h in 1870; while hold- ing these various high positions, he also con- ducted Chinese foreign affairs for many years. F i Hon. Dr. Cyrus hlachlillan has no son vi his own to follow in his own footsteps in defence 3f his country in the time of need, but he must be proud of the fact that all of his four _nep- hews, sons of the late Mr. j. A. MacMlllafl. and Mrs. hlacMillan, 10st no time in offering their services at the sacrifice of their civil pros- pects. Pilot Officer Alan Machlillan, who on Friday‘ obtained his wings, has been in the administrative department of the Deparimfll! oi Defence for Air fpr £0111: three years. w Another old land mark in Island‘ history has been removed by the death at a ripe Old age of Hr. George Washington Gardiner, forni- . - if l‘ er editor and proprietor of The Islander , the one-time popular Charlottetown weekly. Ill‘- Ciardiiier was a scrapper from the word go. A died-in-the-ivool Grit 0f the old school, and. for nun), yew-s King's Printer, he fought with friend and foe alike for what he considered the Island's fights and privileges. l-Ie was always readydo wield his pen on behalf of our Confederation claims, and even after he had retire? froiiitacttiye journalism_ was a ff¢qll°lll °°““"F“:i°‘ 1° d; Guardian in discussions on our e era r tions. He has not long survived the death of 1\{,-5_ Gardiner’. whose passing was _a sad blow to him Sympathy goes t0 his family who an: now scattered in Canada and the U. S. .\. Q A G i .\ “Tiler in The Nineteenth Century And Afr”- dgflllflg with British jiost-Wfll‘ Ploblegflsl- concludes as follows: “HOW lfiW 9°01)“ "fl l7‘ either the importance of our export trade 01’ the difficulties of restofllll! it- Bslvr? “l; ‘S’; we imPm-led QPPTOXIMMCI)’ $100 worti o _ and raw materials per head of the llfllllllallllll- The same tiuatitity is likely to c0stdat$lcg5l wig after the war. W! Olll)’ exlmrte 7 ‘w, and paid for the remainder largely by the ll"- tei-est on our overseas investments. These have now disappeared. Somehow or other’, l" Md‘ er to maintain even our pro-war standard of living, we have virtually to dotible our pro-will‘ exports in a world that has become increasingly self-sufficient. We are in fact the most viilner- able economic unit of the world. We musdt always import a large part of our food dan almost all the raw materials needed for-mo ertl industry. We are wholly or partly deficientbm 0gp cuppa. tin, rubber, cotton, wool, tim er and other essential raw materials.~ In fact we onlv possess three assets. The first is our coal. which we must now surely cease to waste; the second is our soil, luckily the most productive in the world. Our third asset is our national character; those priceless qualities of courage, self-control, toleration and good humour, which breed true iii the British people generation after generation. But there are also the qualities of initiative, adventure and self-reliance which made us a great people and which alone can keen us such. Let us beware of political theorists who fry to tamper with them, for upon these qualities will rest not only our own survival but also the peace of the world." THE , C ETOWN GUARDIAN flutes By Tlio lay ___ sllflldng a! epitaph, m"? slltlzested by Elmer Detrolt News: "Here lies Or. anyhow, 119 always dIdP-Ot. We like the Adams in Goebbels. . to phould the whiter-i ctiiil, S: e1 Tom do 1t.—Saturday night, In Dutch New Guinea the na- tives have been intrigued by the lBE-lrons worn by the slgnalers in glmbm "995, 18110115 Thomas Tlcll Henry In the Toronl/o belegram. They are all hot and other-ed about eecurln these and prlze them greatly. sin", 0i the leg-irons seems g1] the more unusual since the natives 3m climb trees bare-footed with the Bfleed and ease 0f a. monkey. The German people are promised the usual flood of new, suave and devastating weapons; they are reminded of how Frederick the Great. won 1n the end and of how Prussia rose agalnst Napoleon 1n 1813. These are poor fancies and ccnuhordly distract a single mind from the hard news that comes 1n all the time. And yet there re- mains one unknown quantity .'__ the morale of Nazi-ism 1n defeat and how much it can do to insplre l last defence of Germany's soil. —Munc1iester Guardian. The theory that because a Inan 1s born Into the world without hls express consent he ever afterward 1s s0me sort of a ward of society, which is held to owe 111m a living, a home, a. wife, and perhaps his turn at the races, has never been proved. If the lesser animals had held that idea they would have been extinct long ago. Mari, how- ever. was given the supreme ad- vantage of ii thinking mind, and, perhaps. he should tise 1t. His presence on earth implies that he owes society quite 11S much as 1t ever can owe him. and that, part.- riershfp 1s. or should be, mutual. __ Victoria Colonist. For what It's worth to you, your chances of b01111: murdered are inst; about half ivliat they were rt de- cade ago. Metropolitan Llfe Iii- surance company figures show the death rate from this cause fell from 9.7 per 100.000 deaths 1n 1933 to 5.8 1n 1912., The figure 1s still declining, with the possibility chat this year's rift-e may be the lowest 1n history. The drop seems less a wartime phenomenon than a re- sult of tighter restrictions on sale of firearms, more efficient polle- fug, and to some extent improved social conditions and ivldcr edu- cation. --F‘rom the Minrienpclis Star-Journal. Whlle the paper controller urges Canadians to salvage waste paper and to economize 1n the initial use of 1t, some brokerage flrms con- tinue to flood the irirills - which rilso are nowadays heavily b1l1‘d"!1- ed-with bulkv envelopes of “lit- eraturc" extolling the virtues of obscure mining stocks. Apparent- ly this propaznnda continues 1n full spate. while necessary organs cf public information are restrict- ed to rt modicum of‘ paper for their needs. Thousands of tans of paper must. be use?‘ up In the distribu- tlcn of these pamphlets find broc- hures. addressed to People who have never evinced any Interest 1n them. The Vancouver Daily Pro- vlhce has received complaints that its readers are mastered with these things, week after week. - V311" couver Prov1nce.— For the person who can be rea- sonably temperate about 1t, read- Ing in bed is 11 pleasure beneficial to health. There 1s no relaxation more complete, perhaps, except. slew itself. says the New York Tlmes. It ls assumed that no 1-f- fort. will be made to "improve" the mind by the reading done In bed. There should be no purpose other than pleasure, surely. and other Incidental effects may be accepted as by-products. Some people coni- plaln that they cannot rend cle- tectlve stories-one of the most en- joyable bedtime choices — because they are over-stimulating iiricl pre- vent sleep afterward. The remedy for this 1s simple. decide 1n ad- vance exactly what hour you w1l1 attempt to go to sleep, and fifteen minutes before that time lay down your detective story mid pick up any book of poetry. No matter what. your opinion of poetry, 1t. will make you forget murder witn- in fifteen minutes and soothe you into something like slumber. And 1t. Ls. besides. a rather good way to spend fifteen minutes a day. A lrlcnd has supplied a new 0X- plnnation of the recent increase 1n the density of the crowds on the [T111115 and on the shopping streets of Ottawa. According to this stu- dent of capital folkways, the con- gestion 1s caused by local mothers 1n the search for trousers for their Ween-age sons. says the Ot- tawa Citizen. The school term 1s now well under way and the DOYB are getting down to serious autumn business. This means that they are playlng football 1n every spare moment. No trousers produced 1n wartime Canada can take this punishment. A week Is ti 1on2 life for the artlcles now nvallnble. In tho good old dnvs when mothers were faced with this annual prob- lem they went to the local haber- dasher and bought l1 Dal!‘ "l Clilflll‘ roys or a cast-Iron serge lilllll ¢°lll<l be expected to lust. out the season. But the materials now In stock crack with the first strain and melt ln the first. rain. What they are made of no one but. their mak- ers seems to know. when the question 1s nut to the retailer he finds himself 1n much the 511mb position us the butcher who was naked what 1s In ll hassls- ‘llls reply wag that he preferred not. to commit himself but to let sleev- ing dogs lie.) Asthma Mucus logseneilflrslllay ...'..'..:.:1'".'.-..-.::'".".1.:""'*"- ""'"'"' and u your vital trlel u er: fro ur if g I t nd 315° nd iidi-rigvlex lfiilct: rtrurifl I rob you of ale M no en Al hlfll a ks, y u simply return empty prickly: end get n11 your money beck. ‘lcu have everything to cin-nothln to lose. 6a don't sulfur iinot er day wit t uk1n| you: IIIIIIII-II for Meadows rob bl d . _ flaw: Citizen”? He Human Lives Com First " (Globe and Mall) em is no better authority or ‘porter on the war than Mr. Wltti the knowledge he t. of Inform- l-ie said to the C . has. and scion at 111s British House day: s11 ore the end IZ or even before we early sunmier" Mr. Churchill's statement means 10BX81‘. more bitter flilhflnil than was expected earlier. heavier casualttm and the new for men and more men for land war- fare. It means that of war 1.111s ve 5112111. and that Clinid In action for a long t Italy. Con flitht. but are shor mints. In W the Canadian _ ate need of aid. At; home there are 8Q. home defense us many my: vears of trainuia. dolxiiz noth- In Ottawa. the Cabinet 1s dLs- cusslnz whether or not the Order- ln-Counell will be sinned which w1l1 send those draftees overseas. 1n nc- cord with the nation's demand, ex- Dressed 1n the plebiscite taken 1:1 April, 19412. It must. not be a mattxr of ‘D011- ttcal gain here, of loss there. It 1a a question o! the lives of young Canadians who went overseas to 112111, the enemy. of our survival. and our freedom. ‘ On Sept. 18 M11101‘ Conn Smythe returned wounded from Filuiw: and issued a statement showing that; there was a dire shortiize of proper reinforcements. A 1‘ that date Defense Minister Ralston went: oiirseas and saw for himself. He has been back in Canada for two weeks. Yet. there is not; a \vord from 111m, the responsible Minis- ter. in zinswer tn the charges. Citizens whose sons were killed after being t-ranstcrred from one branch of the armv to another and sent into action without. sufficient training know Llie facts. The people of Canada are not cnnoerized ivitli the iiiirtisaii crisis 1n the Cabinet. They are not 1n- very much ltke to relate this story tvercstcd in bulnneiniz one izrouio of which l; typical of cnnndlan unity. mfg: Iéliglltllczir ggflttléifhgmgé 12:3’ I was asking a Canadian soldier A , . . _ which means reinforcements for o! the Qlwens Olm Rifles DI can tnose 1n CICLXKIIV brittle with B. still- D'J\t'\‘1‘l11l loe. Juggling for Quebec votes brings no comfort to the moilixr whose son 1s fighting in n uiilt lacking urouer support. There 1s ' uonsibilit-y on the Cabinet. and there ISVDUl. one 1111112 that. Cnbliiet can do in honor and decency. That is to send, aid from tli: source ivlivrn it._ is elcariv zivailabla. the hctiie defense draftees. Human lives must come first. Re- sortint: to political trickery at this hour ivhen lads‘ lives are 1n tiarizcr IS beneath contempt. Canada waits for the Cabinzt to do its duiv. Dare 1t forget. that. manoeuvring for votes in Quebec is political knav- erv when l1.1_l1l)S nnd ltvcs of Canad- ians are beuiiz placed in ieonardy? “With The Canadians Ini Franc-e” (Bv Flight Licut. Gilles Duliiimel roadcnst 1n the BBC short wave service) II luvs Wood blank 10 A- m, $.00 p. m. It means udlan boys didn't- Ivory-law lh Tho“ fir" any; were very lll-l-BY, buster a; the weather The story of the battle Q1 llle Bill’ i5 51.111 fresh 1n everyone: mind of how the Air Force and the Army united to brim; defeat “P011 Hll-lels Panzer Dlviston and drove them Into retreat. . roiis of fighters and riskier-bom- bers then were almost Wholly Can- adian and we officer; Were kept the move trying to cover their ac- tivities for press and radio» In our travels we were often 1n cou- tact with men of the armv 11ml along f 11ers how pleasure we Qladlv Dllfifd their good wishes to the Over and over we were told the troops forgot danger from their path. O O I cannot; tell every example of unity and good fellowship They were too munerous. But 1 would taken plllbg North of c.1011 The soldier told [Hg some 1110111118 81-01165 and then said: "But 11' YOll Wlllll the French-Canadians. They fought magnificently." Later when I was speaking to the French- Canadians they said to me; "If you want. stories of ecuruil"! Q0 mid talk to the men of the Queen's Own Rifles." a terrible res- Amerlciin, were happy to the Jerrv out. of the way, 1 know they hated to think of tin. devas- tatlon thev had to cause to Franco 1n order to achieve victory As said 1n my opening remarks, most of us feel an extra kinship wit-h France rind possibly thLs 1s ‘rue in an extra large measure with Canadians. To us, the fvoelnu of France was a ertiszitlc- to us invasion, just had to be on . Qacaches of France This was D111‘- OVEYSBHS tlcularlv true for those of us from" French Canada In Franco, we FTCflClt-Gpefllilhg Canadians had n flrent advantage and 1n familv gathering Where ser-i vice men were invited. we took, plesure 1n acting as interpreters When the situation demanded 1t, our English speaking compnnlnns liad, recourse to their High School. French and, 1n return, tn.» Franc-hi made efforts to remember n few» English words, explaining: ivlth gPS-l tures when words failed them. In Lhlg way, a makeshift language was‘ evolved. n. sort of basic English, or rather I. parrot Engllsh which brfszhfmed mnnv moment; o! this It Ls an oId saying that every man 11115 two countries, his own and France. I run inclined to think that this saying 1s just as true to- day. You see. I have just. come back- from France after spending two inont-lis there as a French-speak. lng Public Relations Officer with the Royal Canadltm Air Force It wrs my concern to travel ull over the Place. and to Wrlte Jp my 1m- pressfons " For more than two years, 031mg. 12m Ilyers have been on operation- al sortles over Normimdle and sad war. much of France that today is in v s v Allied hands Tlieyhnve been sec- I remember one day, 1n a llztle 111E 1t with new eves. from the village "cafe," seeing a young ground. And, I can speak here British Tommy - with an army,‘ with personal experience, it ls tn- booklet something like “How :0; deed a friendly land. desptfe the lenm French 1n ten easy lessons“ dleitructlon of whole towns and -stud1ous1v and laboriously chas- ylvs by Allied bombs and guns. 1m: up the proper phrns'.'s ivlilcli I'll? Flellcll People 111W; accented would enable him to change ii int? n11 this as a military necessity. and cf flve franc notes for these n1: ll; l5 llfll llfollflgflndti, this news higher denomination The Frtlllfflll l-llfli the 11901111- 01‘ France are wel- people tried their hardest to help lfqlllzllllllf the men of the United 111m along In kindly fashion, ivhr-nf the ons. It 1s the same. whether he dechhmd my offer of help. but] dfv Me Americans. Elli-Ell. Can- Im nfrald the writers of the DOOR-l ll 11118 01‘ any one of the national let had never flsztiren on t1 mruvsi "p"? that make up cur Bround 11nd abllitv to shoot dice. grnolfies Pllslllllg SWRt-‘llly forward Many times I found myself. tc-_‘ “N. erln-i lmther with British. American and‘ was‘ gmgemizlrppaggagtrilalthigiouig; crmiydianf stapler?‘ iingtabiprmen the, Rites. o . . nc llwt make up the armies o1’ llber- ' m’ ° m h atlon get along and cooperate one hundred per cent. with each other. Time after 11m. I saw evidence of the friendly feeling that exists a- mong the men of one service, one army for another. We Canadians, and t-hla was particularly true of the air crews. were especially proud of the care and the lengths to which the British Army m. Rlneei-s would no 1n building those landing strips that first served the Royal Alr and Royal can- sultan Afr Force after D-Day. They W011ld stay around for days after it field was apparently finish. 0d Just. to make sure everything W38 P181111, and don't. think our Can- fiimilles To show this typically, French welcome, let me quote ihBSI‘ words of n. civil srrvrint. fllI' Creullv: "You w1l1 not. find a French household which has succeeded 1n hldlng a bottli- of wine to offer the soldiers of the} ann_v_ _qf_ liberation." It was THE VERY LAST I dreamt. I saw two souls sot. forth Through life and bearfnu loads: Thev both were bent on heaven's ascent. But followed different. roads. The one chanced on a well-worn ac . Where saints hnd trod hefor And, runnlruz sgaliht. soon a ed the a Of rest for evermore. The other-God knows whv he found No pal-n so samtmod. .. Want hlunderfm on from dawn 1111 dawn. T111 all the world 11nd died. ibi- manv a temntlne turn he took To be betrayed by sin: How oft. he Ml he web to tell. Yet dared to hope to n. So. when the tired world's toils were o'er. Ami all the seasons nest. Sad. slick A1111 earn he reached God's r. Anti cr$t 111-48115!- and last. And an}: stood bv who wondered W .V The Muster spoke no blame. ‘Thev had not heard His tender 8i reach- word: “t know the wav you cAme." -a. .i. 2.11.. . Arid th became much. day‘ W, ey improved. l Many of the squad- ‘ Public Relations, constantly on, you can Imagine 1t was with real} 11s they j stood up In their trenches 811d TDX- 110195 to cheer the airmen 1n the~ skies above, blasting the Germans . adn about: the fighting which had ,'l‘ l an example of bravery, go and see" on, ‘ ivhlle the fliers. whetlierd. thev WGTQ Canadian or Brltisr. sf - smash I ' l l NOVA acorn-rune: lnvunn uuim FERRY SERVICE vu noon roman. r. l. L-csnnou, u. l. KY. PRINCE NOVA (DAILY-SUNDAYS INCLUDED) DUIING NOVIMBIII Will tun Cal-howl 12.00 noon and L00 3. Ii. LUNCHBS SERVED NOIIIIUMIIIBLAND FERRIES LIHITID CIIARLOTTETOWN. P. E. I. - 5mm will be lbooufluuod alter November 10th. Attention Truss Woarairs i T» new outset, l.00 P. $530 0n Way iPiu I“, aiisnvuious-iuro TICKET! W?“ To those o! you who no unfoi-tunlte enough to have to‘ wear u truss we questlnn with the one vou are wenrlnz? Does It flt comiurtablv or In It an iuitluuatcd and out-of- dzite style-outgrown Its. ulc- so causing untold agony, than why continui- suiferlnz "h!!! We can alleviate the eat-Ye b! offering vou 1\ bet-feet 0' modem and un-tn not: one the just reerlved gtvleg at prices to rult eivery- fulnels from body. Gassy Stomachs Relieved Every iit-rsnn who l: liruuh- ' led ivltli gas 1n the K101118611 and bowels should get u bot- tle of "Dr nlixttire and see how unlckly it will relieve all illstriisslng symptoms Evans ture taken at meal timed, no only prevents all had effects frnm gas, but it promoter. the functional stomach. assists Jizcstlon will < Dr improves TllE 149 Greet Georze Si!!!" ‘Raw Fur Season BUYING NOW MINK, RED FOX, etc. W. Chester S. MGLIII‘? Charlottetown Epossiiiie w believe that. 85 cents nor bottle Mall Orders xlven Drona!" attention k the Are ‘vou a holed to sneak, thus ting. iissorl Iuent large shew and Eva its" Stomach m I- Mix- iictlvity of‘ thl‘ the aimetlte. Price 2 MAGS 1944-1945 MUSKRAT, people, who had suffered s) much 1n the bombln and shelilml of f their land, coud stlll feel so k1nt1-| 1y towards us. But, they would- explain, the Boclle killed without‘ reason nnd though most of them had escaped had heard other part. of France of the horrors he committed buck 1n thev had not. forgot-fen. When I WflS‘Vl5'l.bI1‘IK 1n an Amer!- can sector Livry 0f 111s R..A.F I heard many pathetic stories. lage we talked to a young woman of E who was standing before her ruined home. She liiid been caught, between two beams when the bcmb exploded and her babv was suffocated to_ __endu.1'_e _ bo inmost 4m _ (Continued ,f'1 ,1 . tho tits blnge. meyl from their friends 1n I940 and with Squadron Leader In a smull v11- 18 months old "It was hard ng " ah 1T Paine __a)'_ - 11.11. Iloaiieefio. l 0H1“ Slllte 420. Frederic A. Largo Cameron Block - 11.1‘. McPhee B.A. 141:6.‘ {BLLL __ - _ PALMER E! HASLAM Phone 85 P- o ruoive sic-mi miiiiiiirttiiiiii AIRWAYS but For Foot Ailments consum- ll. J. A. BROWN, l)_p Orthopedic lllllilltllffilllfl CIIARLOTTIITOWN. i>.i;,|_ ——:zi A Professional Cards McLeod 8 Bentley W. E. BENTLEY. K. C. J. A. BENTLEY. K C. Barristers unil Attorneys-u. Luv 1M Prince Street Chartered Accountant: Bl Grulton Street. Charlottetown PIWIQ 1H0 BOX M7 Bllllvlllh W Mlnllhl- 0 A- Iorrellsna Ooiiiiiaii l1. F. AIIUIilBAI-ll Chartered Accountant! Intern Trust BuIIdIII Charlottetown K lRichard B. Johnston Attorney At Law Conmhllouor for Deeds. E1c.f0l Prince Edward blond. (Successor to Richard E. Johnston) 31 Milk Strut Bolton. Muss 1.2m BAIRISTII. ITC. 144 Richmond Street Chlrlottetown, P. E I. BELL €f MATHIESN MONEY T0 LOAN Charloltetofl NOTARY be. BABRISTER SOLICITOI ulldln Charlottctoél A. J. IIABLAM, B.A., LLB- BAIIIISTII, ETC. Ink of Nova South Chunk" ChlrlottelnIll- P. l- l- MONEY T0 1.0m Box ll Charles R. McQuald n A. lure‘ ‘ , Solicitor. Notary, en Bllcy Building, Churlottetuwll Phone III l EYES exiiiiiiiirn, GLASSESNDEITTED J. s. mirror! OPTOMETRIST I“ cang;lllfnanlgtlll:gllbqlnlg?, | l, A pummel" lven nanny“ p,“