\. . \- r“ 1:1 f’ gill N u 3i, "i a» in 7,!’ ' a t‘ " t: V-rll y it in ‘ ti; t; ‘ a‘ r ‘if’ ,. ’ p, hi3 v. I .1. I t U 65f‘ l It’ I a 13.11“. i, 4W“ ) Si}? _ inani- wq‘ u-‘nflrr-p a m-d7 lqotony, But that did not ensure its safety. x1‘, l<'( lUR NTHELQ! ARIAZIIETQEGEQRPIAN TllE BIIARLO TTETGWN GUARDIAN blunting Dally (Founded Ill "m" Prusidcirl; trout. cu. w. cirester 5- Mill-We Vice President: J. It. Bnmnen, i..l.l. _ Secretary Licut. (Jul. ‘D A rltactunnon, g-Birliij. Editur and rlltllLglllg Uiructur. J. nu. Burne , n-ei‘ Associate Editors; [trunk walker nflAlfB A-_'l"____ gbttsClilFflUN ruvrr-zs By Mail in I'.l~;.l., 5mm per if"; 52-50 l" 5 mun“ 51.25 tor 3 nturtllti; 50c for one nwlllh (Jlty IPUHVIT) ziiuii pvt you; 5-5-11" V" l’ ‘Yrmlm $1.25 tor J mun-Inn: M"! "L? Pr‘? $123: s" "a, By Mail In tllltfl l’ru\'nrre-_ ulltl 35- - r Saturday “rukls: sLtlU prf vunr; >l.l.l\| for I! monthl- 5Ur lor l; muullll rliuttututirt (luau-slain Innis‘ 3:” "lggslcgmt! t n‘ .\-\ Am u: ""t~’= I - ' gludastiiiiih’ Kvlrsalgvllli‘) turner Milk ants Walhlllllfln Bustun. Alvllulllrllulll News Al-ifmcy- ‘~43 Peck’: illuturc-r, J I-'.ir. Jul Bap Sly l_"_"°“,"“' Nfwldsssb: Chateau l..;llflt‘l‘. (tttaua; “nltes NEW! Si!" bury UrrL: lluu Iuliarvu stroll. 310K139" N- 5' "TheiStrortqcsf fricmor-v IS Weaker lhdll "IQ Weakest Ink." ruin-tr. xovrnrrnzrt '21, 1942 (em Sen TradiliOn \_'._ _ , i Ii-ir-r; Tu-l-l niitlcr the spon- _ t p, lmilQllt‘ Ul Canada is not a “r11 1- - w, ill pre-tvar years It, ,,~,».,u~i~ the interest which it l vur ~llll‘\ its inception tlrc Navy lléllll!" ' I]ll‘-\' if I I ldkljilt‘ . i Iithl ll'i~ ll"lll its etiorts to cn- (],»_,\.~ ;\r- inn-rest in Canada ill ll(‘t'll lll a .\'ztv_v' and the - .\"i.\. lii addition, it spon- \ii'l\~ throughout the Doin- l Q0! a certain amount of ~ \\.'l_\.< of the sea. , \i--i~ birvs have come many nit-i, torlzty. are going to nuirrlri t . I p _ 5U, “u. , _ _ . ,,g 1gp l\'i'_\'.'ll Canadian .\avy or (if ;_. .‘ Xillj .\':ivv, 'l'hcir early train- ing v ,.. .i;; {u uni-d >l(’<'t(l and in their >t'\L‘l‘Zll who have earned -- wi- a: sea. i prc-\\'ar 5m Cadet Of- .‘ zne many naval officers to ilris iviir. 'l‘lic_v, too, have ‘rr ziu- nation, (lcspite the fuel {is Cl that nr cit . i llv!‘ lit'-i~llL‘l'il\’ has depended upon “a boy; QuIlllllrlKcQ nevertheless, this war has proven her Stills’ have inherited the mari- timrg ira on air-l ll‘. the maintenance of this tradition aiv Lczrgire of prc-ivar years might in‘ “tic played no small part. is no: confined to the men of l the coasts, ens: nail west, From far inland, front i Alberta, lirwan, Manitoba. and Ontario, , men in their tlrvutisztntls have left their farms and l offices, factories and shops to go to sea and i have proven themselves to be fine Sefimcfl- lt is to inert like these that the Navy League Wk paying tribute. fr.‘ Theft Of 200 Million i Q11 Feb. 22, r940, when Belgium feared a Ger- ? ‘nan invagiari, the National Bank 0f Belgium . trmefierred $200,000,000 of gold to the Bank of l Pram“ for safc-ltceping. \Vhcn France was l falling, four months later, the Bank of France gem the‘ gold to Dakar in a French \\'est Africzlau n Ykcembcr of the same year, Marshal Petain, . n thg demand of the Germans, ordered the Bank n France to transfer the $200,000,000 of Belgian 1.10m to the German Rcichsbank, and it did so. ) That huge theft by the Nazis is now the sub- ‘, Oct of a. law suit in the U. S. Supreme Court, which the National Bank of Belgium leeks i so recover from the Bank of France to the ex- ‘ pm that it has assets in the U.S. The defence l, do by the Bank of France in that its obliga- ' m; to return the old to Belgium wsl entirely l removed by the orrfer of the Vichy government, which wan legally made. In reply to which the l Notional Bank of Belgium mite: that the Bank [of Fnnco was responsible for lending the gold l to Dakar when Belgium wanted it lent to Lon- f“ Wbotnm the U. I. Supreme 0mm my do- ,‘ flde, the fact l: that the Nazis were nlloiwed to i liul that very large cum through the weak aub- i ince of the Vichy government, during the l nt rlod in which Pierre Laval was a mem- i To uiubla the aged Petain to salve his con- } nionce, the flimsy srgirment was doubtless given ,! Hm that llricc Belgium was under German oc- ,gupution, Germany was entitled to Belgian u- ’, It'll that had been sent into France. But it ls g glaring axamplc of how, overt then, tho Vichy ‘ljovmunent was weakly playing tlte~Nul game. ,. Democracy In China i ‘A. lntcflstiirg wartime experimentln prac- tical democracy l: being tried out in China. It l; known ls the People's Political Council and lo far-according to Confurzporary China -l1as worked remarkably well. The first Council came into being in july, r938, the second in March 194i, and the iliird—the latest-in Octo- ber r942. In addition to the national People's Political Council, there have lvPCll established provincial llld mirnicipzil ircsiplt-Ys political councils in all the provinces and inunIcirwalitics excepting those in hlaircliuria, and cuiurty people's’ political councils in llll>>l Ill tl.c counties not under Jap- anese (lCCllltltlltlll. The People's l"iiiiic:ti (‘uuncil has been vari- ously cliarricii-riztrl as. "a dcntocratic forum of public opiniinr" Jlllll as "a wartiiric national par- liament." Xciili: l‘ i. riu, lli|\\'('\'(‘l‘, is quite ac- citrate. It ivill lu- l'('(‘.'lll<'(l that in the fall of r937 (jlrirta wtis in llJl\'<' a Implllflr election of the National Cu|igr<'\<. wliicli ivas tr) produce the ITivc-Pnwci- tkriistrtuiirinzilsljtivcrnmciit as en- visaged by Sun Yat-Ssn, Fritlicr‘ of the Cliiircsr Rcptrblic. Tlu- uiulircak of the war made H1- vrtiorral clcctiorr irrrpossilrli- and [rusltifillfd the >rnitil inztrruiirwuiriir of ilic "(fnnstitirtin-nal wind." ln Harch i938. the Kumrrinlang Na- tl irll\l'llllllll rr-sulvcrl that "at this junc- tr|' llfllltlllfll i'iri~|';,'~rri'_\' a People's Political w-nncil l-t- lltlr‘ it'll" lZl order tn consolidate all ii..iniii.'il iluw. . wl m LfiHIFIlllllT! frec- ilisctission, {if and full ilul l- anti-in on national policies. Ac- into being. _ The P€OPl€'s Puliticzrl Council is therefore 3 parliament but more than a foruul- It Wlllflllumll advisory and stipcrvisor_t' (irgzin in the Llnncse body politic, ticnding tlic formal vlvrtwtl 0f I-le National Congress, , Specifically, functions of the Coirncil are as follows; to receive and review the reports of the Government; tn iulvlltfllillc ‘he "lcmlxl5 of the Crovcrnrnciit; u» ilclilicrzitc on measures proposed by the Liovcrrnnciit: to lllllhfi proposals to the (ioicrnrncnt: to ilclibcratc on vital do- rticstic and foreign policies which the Govern- ment, (pH-rug the pgriorl of war, shall sitlmiit to the Council before putting them into effect; and m pass resolutions which, after the ap- proval of lllC Supreme National Dcicrisc Council, shall be formulated into laws or statutes The first Council, cuinposctl of 20o nrenibcrs of high intellectual calibre and zidrniriistrutrve experience, was a body of experts ratherthan of popular political leaders. The courposltton of the second Cotincil was slightly dlflfifefll; of 24o councillors 90 were “c-lcctcCs" of the pro- vincial and nuinicipzil people's political councils In the present iliird Llitincil r04 members out of a total of 24o were elected directly by the provincial and municipal people's political coun- cils, which served as electoral colleges. This rc-prcsctitcd ftrrtlici- ilcinocratizatioii of tlze Council. As time goes on the Council may be- come an entirely elected body. The experience in practical dcriiocrzicy, thttsgziiticil, is ltiglrly encouraging. .-\s soon as the war is over, the Council itself may bccoure the supreme legisla- tive body, 0r a new Congress nut)" be urgatirzctl. ln any case tlicre will be a lvgi>lati\"e body in China [hm i5 popularly clectctl. — EDITORIAL NU [ES- Fanny Keniblc, one of the brightest stars of the linglish stage, lllfilllltfl‘ of a great llltfllfltitl family, born lltis date. 13in). 1F $4 >l< 1 Mr. H. N. Hatfield, hl.l’., llurtlriiid. N. li. ntZly rightly claim to bc-tlu- l'l3lll'(‘~\‘lllilll\'tf of Bill. potato growers iii Parliaiiit-ril. llc is ctr-r- lflnllllgl)‘ vigilant in their intcriz-t. ilic ruwv price ceiling schedule being a case in point. Y0K ll‘ =l< \\'ell on the road to recovery aft<r a recent operation for removal of his tonsils, .-\ir .\lin" ca" C. (i. Power has left the Ross Memorial l'r'l\'lll1lll of Royal Victoria llospitzil and is expected to be "back on the job" iii a week u]- It‘) tlil_\'$. "He's just gone to the country with sortie friends tit get a few da_vs' rest," a relative said, "and Slltllllfl be back on the job in a wccl; or to ll.'l_\ s. dc- pentlirrg on what ilic doctor's >11)‘. He's doing fine, though, and this rcsi should d.» liiui a world of good." U i Ill i‘ Historic \\’estminster Abbey was handed over to the American troops in London for cclcbra~ tion of Thanksgiving Day. The .'\lll(‘l'lClll‘i scr- vices was nonsectariatr and led by Chaplain janics L. Blalcency, assisted by Catholic and jcwish chaplains. In offering the cliurcli to tlic Ameri- Ciins f0!” the Service. the Rt. I\‘cv. l’:iirl Iiulcraird Delacour cle Labillicrc, dcaii of \\"esttniirstcr, said: "This is not an abandonment of our age- old position, it merely is a deviation tuidcr- an exceptional circumstance." a =0: at u It is unfortunate, says the Montreal Gazette, overhanging medical examinations in his mili- tary district—No. 5 in Quebec City-is dispell- . He is in charge of that district, and ivith war matters now ranked much higher than dip- lomatic exchanges it would seem that doings in that military district would be more important to Canada. than another addition to the official population in London. His record in the last war WM high. and he rendered valuable Service after that war. There are people ivho think that then days he could better serve his country at home than abroad. ‘Iii Mr. Jackson Doddl, who ha: just retired as gureral manager of the Bank of Montreal, en- llltld in ilk fl!!! 10G!’ Of the great conflict g5 u private soldier and served till the long strug- gle was over. Ho was then a Lieutenant-Col- onel, had been four time; mentioned in dc:- pltchel, and in 1919 he was accorded that very n" h°"°1'- the freedom of the city of London. The character of his war service may be gath- ered from the fact that he holds the Mons Star ‘and the General Service and Victo medals. {The King’: jubilee Medal and the oronation ‘Medal _(r935 and r937) were both conferred upon him and he it u. member of the Order of the British Empire. Rclinquishin m office which he has held jointly with r. George Red Crou, the Boy Scouts, hi: church and edu- Spirmey, Mr_ Dodds will still be activg. The cational interests, these will continue to have the benefit of his counsel and direction, as they have had in the pant. , u n a u Rev. G. H. Levesque, director of the School of Popular Science at Laval University at Que- bec, told a gathering of the Union of Catholic Farmers that the Catholic Church "is not oppos- ed to the possession of material prosperity by its followers." Father Levesque, addressing the gathering on the occasion of the animal agricul- tural reunion of members of the union, said that “no matter what those who coirsirler the French no matter if they believe that in the province of Quebec the clergy keep the people iir ignor- ance, the Catholic Church is nut opposed m the possession of material prosperity by its fnllmv- crs. "'l'hc Church is not opposed to material progress. What the Church s-Efiklllg of material wealth the Church cannot consent to. The Church wishes this prosperity to contribute to the trplifi. l": 0f 01"‘ illlf-‘lleflltfll level and to assure the crnirfort of each and cvcry one. TlllS is why tlrc Church encourages co-npcratiou bccatisc hv w, Hpcrlllirtll. lht- nation is also irrslrucltvl, lit-inn- rracv can exist," lfiiilii-i‘ l.l‘\'l‘~t|ll'.' ("“l\'lll<l\'rl, "fully if tlit: pt-ripli- '1' lf'lll'lll‘ll_ ‘ln-iwiihc llii-y ari- the UllCS who govci ' for its Own sake. This cordingly in July 1933 the fir“ (Ziinicil came. that Brigadier Vanier should go before the cloud -‘ torts av rm: WAY l l wartime semi-legislative assembly, less llliul i ' Actlon has been taken In the can cf a cunzpign mam-tr h! the i OULICIIIORI. by-elsctlon wno bragged ,that. he had received his call for rnllltary service and had ignored, lit. The fact, that the man ‘ls re- wealed to have been medically ex- hmined and found to be unlit for service does not. 1:1 effect, mitigate, this offence. which might have the, result of encouraging others tot ,dodge the draft when called. But ‘it does show that hls alleged de-, |firince of the authorities was ln- tended as pure bluff. a bluff, how- ever, whlchi has reacted agalnst else. shows that he was not gettlnz of the Cllll to service. It reveals him in hls true light, and destroys whatever reputation as a were of the same mind as him- self. _- Saint John Telegraph Journal. ii While walling In court at the Mansion House today to give evf- dence against income tax defaulters, one of the collectors received a document passed to him by "some person unknown " Upon this ap- treat-ed: "Take my gold and let it be consecrated all to thee, Take my cont, my shirt. my vest, You know how to use them best. "Take my good, take every chattel. Baby's pram and baby's rattle, If by then you haven't enough, Take the old woman and treat her rough " The collector then went Into the witness-box to prove hls eases. but l was unable to trace the author of this verse-London Evening Stand- a We seldom think of Adolf HIC- ler, in respect of hls conduct of the vvar. withctrt rccalllrrz a storv fol-d‘ of rm old Calvnnlstic ClElTmfllL, whose klndlv nature never per- mitted lrlm to speak a. word against rmv hurrtan being One m’ his par- ishioners once said to him. "I be- lieve that you would speak a 200d word evcn of the Devll," to which thr old cninistei- replied, “Well, I wish flirt mv parisionen had lils. uersrstrnci‘ " _ San Frn n cI sc o Argonaut Facing: an audience carefully $t)\\'ll with lxawslilc elsments, and 1n that pcrtirzi of Outrcmcnt riding which min than any other ls the , stronghold cf La Ligue de la De- fense du Curtain. Major Gerrcrar the Hon Leo R LZIFlTClIE held hls first pubu: moo" r: of the fly-cler- tion cntnpaign. The meeting was a succrss His attdience was noi the ctrstnlnrtrv gal rig of tried and trite supporters, trained to cheer at every patrse: lt tvrs a cool rather suspicious autllercr. wtllllng to be conviction Yet there was applause when he sat clown General La- Ficrhe broke the noltfical taboo avrl mentioned the word “ccnscriptiorrf iirtcvpretlirg it as 1t should have been interpreted the=e ttvenfv-flve years: "Th; preiension that we are on the point of emptvIn-r the co ‘n- trv of lts vcuth t0 send. them over- seas ls totaliy faise " That pre- terrslon, like so mrrnv other state- ments currrzit and accuatcd. orlaln- ated In the camp of the antican- scrlptloulsts But Gcncrcl LaFle he .' Cimflda to bog eflvh wa= firm and fcrthrlalit on the TJOSlliVe rife: "Cf‘l'l."tl:r must furn- ish lrei- share nf solders. arid we. have not. the right tn refuse tn be,‘ at the sWt of our" vallmt aFit-s on ; the field cf bat.t‘e other we rhcnld lvsr- all irtrht to derr- trs- ‘ tfce In the future - Montreal Gazette H's to be hnnrfl RnmmeYs travel book routes out ln tltrte frr Christ- mas. "‘M"ln Dt-‘rampf " —T1'r:ntn Ffvenlng Tclcgrrm We can remember when zasrfllm was snmethlrrz WlllClll vcu used to rzct ihg grease snot: off your vest Quc-‘r-ec Chronicle-Telegraph There are thousands of war work- ers who go to the plants each day, get on a production lln-e and strive! so hard they return home too ex-r hausted to care about eating and think only of the sleep that wfll bring them strength for the follow- ing day Those men and women we say that they are doing their part in their way Just as surely as the Navy Fliers ‘out there between the spaceless aes and sky." But there are thousands of other work- ers who fi to these same plants, stall, was time and string out tasks so that the golden a le they have set 1n thelr hearts —t e and a halt and double time -wI11 fall tnto their laps. It Is not. entirely their fault as management e-l times provides two and even t e men for every Jolb against the day that the draft or more lucrative Wlth plant after plant expand d Its wildest dreams It 1a as undlrig that men have known to crawl sway In not been pay envelopes at the end of the vreek. chlselers ‘have been found on tho three Plants where the have never turned In tit-m y o: them. before him ll report of the Manpower Commission whkh tnlns fourteen points designed correct some of the evils outlined In the above but commissions and rules and rng-ulatlons will never do the trlck: I it zoes deeper than that to war work, be they nizt-ment. absorbs the snlrlt and takes the same nrlde whn flles It, or nrsemble! n gunt with the seme sRlll wtd fervor rigl Canadians as a conquered race think or say or’ fights against is the’ llT-r‘ man who points It at the vmv -_An'tr~rlcn. as we know and lOVP to will not be on the march, l Although we have not thrown all our weight Into the war. we navel already proved one thing -t.hot. the generals In this war don't all dle In bed Tfme wns when no one] expected high-ranking mlllt or naval men w be ln the tht of line flght, but this war In differ- ent Rear Admirals Daniel J. Cal- larzhm and Non-nan Scott died heroically as they let-l thulr Inferior forces to victory against the Jap- nncw In the Solomons. The same notion cost the llfe of Capt Cassln . Youfle. At Gundwlcirnal and North‘ Afrra l-ilrzfw-mnklrg officers share lll." hardships nnd the dnnzers of ' ‘nit-k vrrlvati‘. -"* as the col- cttv": an" tho tfncfflls slmrctl them i\\i"“‘~_| (VI "a awn. D-"cer p .~ "Brfmklyn Eagle ~ lfdiffllrfl‘ of rank. llheroil y convinced but c-‘:vioirs'y far fromi led and that Positions will take their labor sway ith I nlI. 19¢ In ed iwoemrgwi‘: division 1mm: enwah I com t’. of sleep the entire sum and £2532‘. ‘mayegdlagaxafmfi b1ood,b00t swim boot. Is not astounding thatlbem little sense In mnklmg 01m; ‘nu-tan gu-rg wen;- ghoeu that dtdnt- weekly payrolls o! two and evenlsuii, them; ‘money hhat will be lost at who auc- hours work at any tion will be more $11M! in President Roosevelt has improved service the 81!‘ Will War ‘when happily shod- ¢m_ to nbumrm a bad posltlon In only ood we have ‘tgthat lies behind the Dlifflgffllphr, ‘likely be ill 0d bad: I Uni“ rtlhre Inference to be drawn. Wt We every man and woman en ed I lCanadIan glrfs have demonstra In! n him,- m- man- |n1elr power and Inrfluence- , Ammo,“ ‘to put one over them and theait PUBLIC FORUM ‘Illa out?! In on‘: l: flgglgllg. oonoo o qulflnlu II llhnlt Ila dinrhthoon Gnu-Illa: loan no! ulna In opinion DR- GRANT WRITES FIN]! sin-so, 1n our leadlng Edlwr- tal of the 24th instant you have come to the assistance of dear old Mr. Hanson, but had you 1110""! fylfm“ ‘l’ $8n§°lll“lfé‘§ti£°“33 ar amen a - would not have cited Mr. Pmrlot lilm. Hts arrest, If It does nothing ; and M“ Raymond u example; o . Cl 1h away with hls pretended Ignorlngfnembers who ‘peak ‘Nquen y Parllament ln support of their Owl! ‘ constituencies. True b0"! If" to ridicule, whlle Mr. mond has sent leader o! a MW Pl"! Quebec am concerned. I am, Slr. etc" mos. v. omnvr . M. P. for King s, , Montague. P.E_I-. Nov. 25. 1942. In claiming we are mostly wrong. ' we shall be delighted to hear from him again-Ed. G.) JUDGE SAUNDERS’ ADDRESS Sun-Citizens of the Province arc expressing their unqualified sat- isfaction with the courageou‘ statement made by Judge Saunder- in ins address to the Grand Jnr: at the opening of the November sittings of the Supreme Court in Summerstde on Tuesday. Hts bord- ships flat, assertion; regarding the non-enforcement of our liquor Ian's have the ' ' prestige of behind them, and should give powerful impetus to the growing movement toward having the present Intolerable conditions cleaned up promptly. The Grand Jury‘s report stands out in amazing contrast. with tlrc Judge's forthright recommenda- ltlons. Indeed, people are wonder- why. The Grand Jury was vague to ll painful degree, where His ‘Lordship was specific. The address comes to the people just now as a rallying cry. nor will It lack v.11- dhusiastlc pcptiltir support. The hour has struck fcv action. We are, Slr, etc, l Pnass LUJdMlTTEE P. E. Island Temperance Fed- eratioir. STREET LIGHTING Sun-With every power produc- lng uult in Canada trying, on in- structions from Ottawa, to re- duce the output for civilian use so i as to ccnserve fuel and make avail- |able for war industries as much as possible of their output: and whlle ll7l€ll at. Government expense are daily using the radio systems of , and all to conserve fuel, why is It that we find our clric government Sitting up_ a good part of the night -le- visrng a plan to expend more money for lights? And that on streets that are already well light- have satisfied the public during the years when no shortage of fuel existed and when the coirntry was not at. war. I am, Sir, etc., . CHARLOTTETOWN The-Battle or Boots (Ottawa Journal) Our nomination as Man or the Week ls the hardy soul who had enough courage to decide lhfll me heavy black brogue; worn by the women of the R. A. F‘. are not. suitabie foot/vireo: for the women of tthe R. C. A. F- Appaa-ently 8,061 Pairs are B01118 On the auction block at the end of this month, the R.C. A. F‘. havtn abandoned them on the advice foot Hpedallsts and the wall o1 the Qanardlan 11:1; who have en wearing them. mu Ia a decision which might open all kinds of I118"- ments and indeed probably already u has. wui migushwomen wv Cm- adlan girls are slssles who are H! hcmg only In shoes with s lke {well and open toes? Will 2118011115 say that Etlilllh K111! h!" W M" shoes to cover tihelr big 160W rgriret Halsey once laid a for- t, phat, no Armierlcan WOXMH wind tell whetrher an miih Egg: was going frontrwards or btw W11 - But. the nnru-woi-tdm “We” °f And .. lllllkl counter-um ‘MRJFM etiertonwr; Ceftalnlly more would halve and the iarmount of t we ‘Ithe doc! on sense-but 5181111113311“ The ltngllmiwomen may not like ted In bullrllnc a plane as the avlatorlmgnsh nk often especially Mr. Poullot. but h ls tdemollsh- he might have had to those who i fifgefilllynllggglxherxe lgmresurmctlng Viscount, Bennett and noldtns him UP ‘ himself out of in. LlberalrParI/y and u at "wry; Now, Sir. as you are in the hlblll of’ having the last word whether you are right. or wrong, and you are mostly wrong. and espwlln! unfair In all your references to . m“ you mgy ggaln have the lust word. as this note means flnls 1n the present discussion, as far u I good Doctor Is unfair In alleging we are unfair. and wrong i ‘ll ~\, ll‘, l\\,\\§ i l‘ t i) 11100 Bein when you buy l ‘nos something I0 you, doesn't if, when the flag goes by? What you auultln’! d0 for your country, just about lhenl Well, you can tlo a lo! by feeling that way when you buy. In Ilia! rritl-while-antl-lrlue moot] you’ll buy only when you must; and what you must buy will be the longest-lasting product you can find. That is one sure way Io help your counlry’s war eflorl. For the longer-lasting things you buy won't need Io be replaced so soon, releasing material, machinery antl labour needed Io help win llie war. And, when you buy longer-lasting products you gel better value. Make sure that your present battery is worn out before you buy a new one. Consult the Exitle Dealer in your district. He i has been carefully dlosen for his ability l0 give honest battery service. lle will help you Io gel from your present battery all the service iI is capable of giving. EXIDE BATTERIES OF CANADA, LIMITED roiiouro o CANADA HS Fitting and Supplying Glnuen II. .1. EllIABDII ‘ Kc“ How Are z Your Eycs are lravlng svmnmmt iii At AN AnMoNmom-ro nrzrscv °PT°METMST ___ , If ynu (1917) Bhutan" P E L n! slraln — Ireadnvhes. v-irr Rymember’ on your knees, om“ "on"; m to lg n, M eyes or dllzlncss - cunsrlll The men who guard your slumbe:s-- 3 "1 l‘ P M- . Holidays elm. tn tlllllfilflflllv" Al your servIr-e with near: i And guard a house in a stlll street OI drlttttng leaves and drifting fee . A deep blue window where below of experience and a lhornnflt " retraclln: servlce. Cull I d dl dlfficultlzla. an “us. m.’ 6. f. llulcheson I DRUGSTORI ir. . snrclnllsl. es moonlight on the roofs like snow, A clotck that still the quarters e To the dove that roosts beneath tho bell’: Grave cano y of silent bras; Round whch. the little night ~ winds pass i? N Yet stir It not In the grey steeple; McLEOD 8, BENTLEY ~&- Office Connected wlth Professional Bards F- G. ‘IIUTCIIESON G- F. BUTCIIEEON "no", - 'k__l_,$./ y? gllifiglea“ “m” “d “m” w. t» owl-Ev. n. v- Whom outlast dusk doth dlsattlre l. A. BENTLEY K. C. ' Undreasln b the ’ In 1m nag-pg‘; num“b‘é',i"y n" Barrister: nnfl Atwrneya-nl- on th slde of’ the sess- L" - Runember, on your knees, MONEY To [DAN e n" m"! W110 Sllnrd your slumbert. I“ "m" um‘ -—--- p} jgry effective mrnI of —-Helen Parry Eden .. r .I from dlsnrrl- I Ha‘ I?! the dlgr-sllvr nrlflll: w c r t- ,., mmwawwxwv-vusmn- h,,,d,,,.,',‘,'.f “,f§‘,‘,';{,f,‘,'n,_" ,,’Y,.f, and a nrnse of prrrstrrp u inn the hrnrt. Rcrommrmltvl frr lllfllkcstlon. Ilvsrwrsln Pr" Stomach and nlI stomach troubles. Price 85 cents I" bottle. llorrelland Company ll. F. ABBIIIBALII Chartered Aceounlnnlu Intern Trust Bultdlng SNIPS put tneirbggpt down-but not In an chnkmu," _____.____...____. _, IDNDON —-(CP——- W011i 00 em from NnzI-run Norway that ulllslf ‘ A Bflurkw” ‘lll"r'?§,°‘..i’.li.’.'°§2l .sis.i.irti M- Aigpugirvt-t .,..:"._::.:.... '°“5““"°“" . pnnjttrsrgn.‘ spuuliols c_,,,,_,,,,, h o mama". . ‘Jlhmlnnlandb YHI WAITINI FIICII AND TRIDI KARO-OTTAWA MONEY 1~ Complete and tfllrlenl. Cameron Block o (Jlfngillvuttotown FXNPIIII and Internal Put!- p, mm; ‘Triple effect. I - Snot os- t — Luhrlcntes. 3 — Atmml’ . e frlfff.‘ "fr". “" “Es v on. nlALln row AM - - ~ - BARRISTEII. E'I( A "MAKE Bani of Nnra Scalll (‘lwmbcn M run noonn on now YD uv: con. MONEY T0 LOAN ALiX W. MATHESON flAIlRIUlIlL soucrruu. no Money lo Lou: Collfltllull _°.m..°.°_=_'.'_@_'!!!_9_°2l'l!_.§"°°'~ BELL 8i MATHIESON and MACS PILE OINTMENT GIVES QUICK RELIEF! For many forms nf (‘hmlnltolnwn l’ If I. MONEY 1'0 LOAN $5 I. 0. B08 l Mall Orders Given Prom!" Attention.