THE CIMRLKYITETOWN GUARDIAN iietes By The Way l wnuc mm," ———- ‘IIIIDI lnniel_il race roux . TiiE BHARLUITEIUWII lillllllllllll Morning Daily (Founded In i881) President: lllent. CoL W. Chester S. Melitta Vice-President: J. It. Burnett, I‘. J. l. Secretary: Lient. Col. D. A. Maeliinnnn. 0.8.0. ldltor and Managing Director: J. B. Burnett, IJJ. ‘Associate Editors: Frank Walker and Llent. Ian A. Burnett. R.C.N.V.R. iOn Active Servleei "The Strongest Memory is Weaker The! the Weakest Ink.’ icy American post-war aims and aspirations will harmonize with Canada's. _.___.________v_____ EDI IURIAI. NUI tS ' "l"! a bl hi‘ duly "hi, m“ e fellouiuiriscs m “gagififlsiml-Quebec chroni - Tele FOB ' DIPLOMATJ ASIDIBIED ' To the iruard - ~ . " ' watuno u» iihnwtltmflfim _ p m iiiiht o, . 2.21%.?’ "iiiiiiiiilbt. find 010111115‘ Navy League Week. n a n O The political pot is boiling oher at Ottawa -—dissel1tient Liberals adding fuel to the fire- I 1K if I sufficient Jew. u, services to form a. RURAL SCHOOLS vision if they were “"- crred to th , - Sin-I read with considerdhle ih- “Paine to figures Juiset afiiliiiiisliiézd terest in recent Guardian-t two bi’ "is W" Efforts Committee oi-‘lettei-s by Mrs. Frank and f me by m’ Canadian h Congress, ._ MacLure. I am glad se xneone as. The: ttiifi plfosiiilin Ll '5 1' ll Bil H122? I c“ Just why did the Prime Minister ignore the nate when he first had the House of Com- “m” Se MONDAY. NOVEMBER co. m4 m“ ’“m"‘°"°d i" Wfiiflefidfly. and ivby did Canadian Jewish emu" gslilgzhegfhgfltfltilfitlgfi liiifi Iii‘! wvlmzhe “l ‘ii m’ ""“_‘_*“"”*__" '“ he ihc" “ha”? iii5 llliiid? The Chinese garrison of Heng- terment of our rural school. here is the soldier. if we :31; y "Wei n a s a W118 118s been slain almost; to the a, wide gap between the rin a1 and And rested well, m; up?“ Should Be Represented Th . . .. . . . b lest mm. including several‘ gen- cit-y school. The city school has the ‘Milt _ ' e provincial political situation in Que eC ersls. China's valor 1n h advantage of heat, running water Would nave on m o, w. Y u. . t P , t m t is in a ferment, it being believed by many that and light? why, some ‘at; Ipglurt cpflipti- iiiifl- '- _ ' ' ' _ ' ‘ 00S l‘ V I ' m fc" "my c?“ gllerqi .“'!:°“',‘f,°'"°"_“ 2 there is going to be a reconstruction of the Nat- hem,- mmm ma" h“ ever gfilfcflw p,,§e,';;',€;‘,, ,.e,,,py,ns1n_ $111: Miami-n out q m, m. _' “mmoimea i ‘ ‘r fm" g , f“) w‘ e ionale Union and the Bloc Populalre, and per- Known in many years. - Hamll- forested in their children's welfare w‘ m“ i°°i the plre on March 3i lllcaus, iii all likelihood, the ha n the i t. - h H» Wn Spectator. _ o; they should be. would they allow, c“, t closing down of the rlir trrliiiiiig stations in this p5 a o r eccilonslnet it o mg. T ‘T ‘ such mmdltkms and the ‘mnfiuwns I 1i o: gliachwbltfriitboivlliegiilnvifim Province and the ilispcrsal of a good deal of A d- h O , C)‘- -- h H veryilesliilerriiiil?!“ $231,?“ ha" “"91"”! ,M,iii,,,f"f,fil‘ }’,§’",‘§f§,,"‘§§,,,§1’* G d‘ h‘ M, ' “mum” the equipment “Clo-ed establishments" it is i, noicogeilrgg igcgneed [figs/fillet Iggégifii epurggz: "Traps: which seemeh 223:6; l); iiiiuitles the school. is lust a. place e e a e bginipd volmlny. food u ,_ '. ' .' - cos _ . l t . aimolmccdi "i" he “mi f?” storage m 5°m° of asking a vote of confidence in the govern- 1119;, ggtuggclhi? lgdltllglergiliff eacrblsliilteiinfi-gmmiioli iareiiinfl -0h|.rlssHMs.lum. in the u" m "““" “ml '" “m” “N's m“ be "med M“ "ieilfs Policy. as it has been outlined. it is 110i iieeriliiiviijeerrehiltiiis’siiiiifétthiiiiie Ciltll-llgiliflrqxilcitemifl) ggtiiiileiiariiirtlst ii ‘i iiiii When desired, Confederation Life Association acts r ~ "EH-Tiimi: lo tllc iiiI\'\'l'lilllL‘lll \\'llr Assets Corporation for dispnszil." lf lllt- cquipnlcilt is t0 be sold, the people of Prince liiluzirtl Island should have Zlll opportunity" of purchasing what they may require of it. To sllfcguzlrtl our interests ill this matter, as well as thc interests of the taxpayers even bother to send their rih. clrt-n to school regularly. Parents must. if they WiEll their children to grow up to be decent men and Wflmel l. and tllltc- their gilrice lu tile Wwnllflrili! Thomas llflllr ' says. slacks are _,1| ‘ past - war world wihich our pi lescri‘. fight in the right place and oil t gol'el~lilii<~lit i t:lllng_ us about, take Pisilt people. many obsewers m, a real interest in their surrour-lliilgs wondered whether and especially their school life. I being called, either. to endorse a policy of coil- scriptioii. Rather. it is being brought back so that the situation, as it exists at the time that the members are here. may be fully revealed, and discussed. Whatever action is taken \vill as guardian of a policyownei-‘s funds, by paying them to him or to his beneficiaries in the form of a guaranteed monthly income. This protects the Capital Sum preventing it from being lost or dissipated by unwise investment. zen. The Si. Thomas Tlmes-Jnurmll fllids that the “slacks" fashion 1." slackening. While, as ‘he 5L in general, we should have a Prince Edward l>lilllil rcprcsclll:llivc ml the \\'ar Assets Corp- orlliioil. 'l‘hi.> is slaluclllllig which our Provin- czzll (iovcrtlniclll and Fisdcral representatives should gct after lit uilcc. ' Mr. Kings Tactics file Otfululi Journal docs not believe that Priilic Minister King will ask a vote of coil- fidcllcc on tlll- iilZlllll\I\\'Cl‘ issue, but will iri- siczld propose zl lion-party vote of the House, tlllcing off his whips, leaving it to the mem- bers, who cannot possibly know all the facts in this rciilfnrcirlllcilt position, tn tell him what tn do. lu other words. all .\lr. King ivould face _ ill this cllsc would be, lll the parlance of the prize ring, u llvul-tille bout, his championship “not on the line." Heads or tails, he woifld be secure—in office. If the House, in a. free-for- all. voted ziglinst sending the draftees, Mr. King could ' "This is precisely what l wanted; I have been upheld." If the House voted to selid the draftees, he could say: “This is the sovereignty of Parliament." Ur. King, in days past, has often ivzixed eloquent on Par- liament's sovereignty. Also, Mr. King, with this frcc-for-all, with this abdication of his re- spollsibility to govern, to collie to Parliament aiid stand or fzlll there with Government policy, would avoid dailgcr of more Cabinet deflections. "We can, unfortunately, but wait and see," says the Journal,” “wait, while reinforcement need is desperate, llpOll party luanoeuvrings and party lzlctics:——upou a playing of politics as un- scrupulous as this country has seen. The one best hope lies in Parliament voting to send the draficcs, this regardless of whether it meails the Gmcrilllleilfs fall or not. For if reinforce- ments are ‘vital, and all of us know they are vital, it uialtters not a curse whether Mr. King is made to send them or they are sent by some- body else. "In the lucailtiliic we can but trust that the House, whatever its decision, acts promptly. There is no time to be lost; and any prolonged debate, useless and dangerous, would be little short of criminal. If the worst is to be the de- cision, with .\lr. King upheld, then let us know it quickly. The further recourse of this coun- try's will could then go into action." §\I Future Trade Policies 4 is anticipated in some quarters that President Roosevelt's re-election will be help- ful to Prime Minister King in bolstering his domestic tariff and external trade policies. Mr. King has for luzlny years past leaned strong- ly to the expansion of trade with the United States, and, through the Pan-American Union, with the South and Central American mem- bers of that union. At the same time he has been decidedly cool in his attitude towards the expansion of inter-imperial trade through the nleditinl of the British limpire preferential tar- iff regulations. ills plan is to advance Can- ada to the position of second place to the United States in llle Pan-American Union, and de- vclop trade within this sphere. It was, there- fore, of suprclllc importance to him that Mr. Roosevelt be rc-elcctetl before a general elec- tiou was precipitated in Canada, or this new li'li(l(' policy submitted to Parliament and the public. 'l'licre is an inherent weakness ill this new policy of .\Ir. King's, however, which Hon. H. H. Stevens discusses in an interesting article in the VGIYCUIITFY Province. World trade moves cllst and wcsi, in the main, and ally attelupt to found Canada's policy on tlic expansion of trade to South America \\'0lil(l be faced with all al- most impossible transportation problem. South American export —— other than that going to the Unitcil Slates -— now moves to Great Brit- ain and liuvnylcziu points, aild returning ships czirry lill-lgc quantities of manufactured goods al low rzllcs. Argentine, tllc largest exporter, deals in bccl, corn zulil \\'llt‘.'l[ and thus is competitor with (‘lluzlilli in exports, so our purchases from them could not be large. .~\s for Brazil, the second largest, her exports are coffee, hard lumber and other raw materials in which we are interested only in a minor degree. On the nthcr Iland, Canada has in Great Britain 1i. wonderfully fine customer and our ‘hold on that market rests vcry largely on the continuance of the British preferential tariff provisions of nur customs lzlws. The United States, which comes under our general tariff schedule. has lniig wished for the abandmilncilt by Canada of the British prefer- ential. ls that lo bl- the price for Canada's entry into the l'nii-.\liicric:lii Union? \Vhile the people of (Ianada for the mos: ‘lart have taken llr. ROIISCYC“ to their hearts. It is not so certain tlilit iii matters of fiscal pol- be in the light of these discussions." j j l I The buying public will depend heavily oil credit in the post-ivar period, a coillrollers’ coll- ference of the National Retail Dry Goods Assn. was told recently. Most people will want tn hold on to their war bonds and savings accounts _agaiilst all uncertain future, and pay for many purchases out of ilicoine as did pl"c-\var faili- ilies. Retailers were urged to avoid univisc competition for charge accounts by agreeing on uniform practices regarding iilerchzllldisc re- turns, sales on approval, conditional sales (lllfl similar devices. ll ‘i i! Anton Rubinstein, Russian piano virtuoso and composer, died this date i804; was rival of Liszt; foiuider and director of the Russian Coli- servatoire; played with extraordinary technique and emotion, his style influenced by Schubert and Mendelssohn; his operas include The Dreum, The Children of the Heal/l; these um lunch heard nowadays, is best remembered by his Ocean and Dranlatic symphonies, while his songs are also highly esteemed: “The only let- ter which Eilglishlneil write in capitals is I. This I thilik is the most pointed comment on their llational character." I if! In i935, Dr. Carrel, the Nobel Prize \viii— ner, recently deceased, and Lindbergh announc- ed the development of a lilecllailical heart, in which the heart, kidney or glands from an Zilli- mal could be kept alive for study in glass cham- bers, supplied by circulation of artificial blood. An artificial lung supplied a mixture of oxy- i the garmt-u have not been m1 a _ _ ford Expositor. Sn melt Bran .____ . l“ vcrl’ Millie 93g; with ' raises a Whisker in llronloal laughter 1mm games of Britain has gl-ggtgd 03rd of Trades recent mviit that there is iio fear Siiofiflse of chlldrens 511199 fioillcs rationing chiidieiis iiiinss have always short. Now they s; an acute degree shortage the the stato- of a clothing. began the dc rll‘ are 55H tment 301011 til this coun g e parent f trY- — London s 0 Dally Mull. The more we ferlng of those end the more We contcm ‘ELY rfnl possibility of gorse revenge weapons" mm- Beiiltilig» Searing and blotting cut m!‘ ~li_ 11801910 and British humus, _e glentcl‘ becomes our lnclinr“ tlon to agree that the time has coiile to fight the devil with his own weapons-or effective >111)- sltltutes‘therefor-rather than let E16 ilefllf. oi the Elnplre be drain. of blood and life by inhuman learn of the suf- vastiy l gen, carbon dioxide and nitrogen. \\’iili Lind- bergh, Dr. Carrel wrote T/lc (Jill/lire of Oiyllils ——in I938. He won the Nobel Prize in medic- ine in I912 for his discovery of a technique for suturing blood vessels, a method that made transfusions commonplace, aild for his sticcess in transplantation of organs. Iii the stlnle year he dissected a fragment of chiclccn heart, and kept it alive alld growing for yctlrs. I-le return- ed to Paris from New York in i938. Mr. j. M. Boucller, director of the cabinet for the prefect of police, Paris, (lcclarcd the Carrel Foundation was established with Vichy govern- ment funds in 194i. From I906 to 1939, Dr. Carrel was a staff member of the Roclcefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York. I I 4 I A statement was made on 6th November by General Dempsey's spokesman on the achieve- nlents of the British aild Canadian drive to Maas. This statement emphasizes the extent of the German disintegration resulting from the Allied operation in the West. The spokesman said that since 22nd October Models’ 15th German Army has been cut to less than half strength; prisoners being estimated at 25.000 and the killed and wounded unofficially at 40.- 000. The Dutch territory which has been liber- ated covers 1,200 square miles with a. popula- tion of 570,000. From Allied operations in the West since 6th June the latest reported prisoner total was 637,544 (on 3lst October). The lat- est figure for Germans killed and wounded was Mr. Churchill's 400,000 on 29th September. It is estimated that the Germans lire losing 4,000 men daily in the West (the “'1‘iliic.r", 7th No- vember). It may therefore be reckoned that the total losses to date are some 1,100,000, this is the equivalent of 85 full divisions hilt, as German divisions are mostly half strength, this may be described as equalling 17o present Ger- man divisions. I Quebec government experts are deeply iin- mersed at the present time in the study of llmeiidmeilts to the Quebec electoral lzlw, follow"- iiig the decision of Premier Maurice L. Dup- lessis that one try-out of the revised Act of I942 had shown it was not suitable from a dual viewpoint of guaranteeing, as far as possible, the honesty of elections, and Of‘L‘i.llllll}_' down i i the percentage of error. Attention at the pres- robots conceived and launched in inslilie hate by lin cncmv iltterlv cilig in ltl ; ‘ty-J -_ ' Bcaccrhneralddiil iiil l Stntfurd was part of the Women of Paris a er. What th have failed 0f the chic Struggle cf ilic gflinst the invad- e maie correspondents to note is that many gowns they saw were made often of indifferent material or of dresses rc-made more tlmn once. A well-dressed Parlslczine Wes l1 proof to the Germans that the French never accepted defeat, and Wfls a great aid to the morale of the French themselvs. Many a brlzht sown was worn over a heart dark with sadness. longing for the return cf ll loved one. - From News From France. Wiihln the leographlcal known as Great Britain, which does not include Southern Ireland, there are 33,100,000 persons between the ages of 14 und 84. Of these iiellrly .00 don the appropriate hablliments ‘of their occcpntloli, with days revellle. and go to work unit think clean. bright. niry olassl ooms when“; b;- one way of teachlru; l . what about French? We hear "qcr nfillllil’: about this lImEUBEP- En‘ 9 gllsh and French are Canada‘; i1 child such necessary habits _of l=~ iiliness lid neatness. A c hild’s ‘ - ~= ‘lms are the ones '_i,il‘ilCl‘i with him throng‘ h life. ll'l§ or this sup) asedly (l country, such things onnliness n: e un-i like ' ‘PflCllOflS be!) The nliiluzl vlslts of the ybubllc health nurse are also passed over. liliztly. The nurse ext: mines‘ child, and sends out .n re- norl {lint Johnny needs some test-h.’ filled or Mary must have c] isses, Art- these lusiru-rliolis cniTlcd out? p,-¢.'_;_;l;1_v in n {ow cases. Nurse‘ itom- 05 around nest ycnr and fl-ctls the ‘ lily worse; . . THEY note the origin of some of our English wordis. ‘little {W0 chief languages. llow can We ex- pect to have notional unity? HOW many English people 0M1 French? Anti how many psonlc can spcrlk French mo“ lriv? ,Sill1 we llcrvr Latin. Latin. L. ltin. brave Londoners, lifwlh‘? F!‘ plate lllClfl-ll 5,, l zlvinfz pirnyfvytcp will) (‘lciv Wrench Ac: than neighbors to some degree‘ | peak Fr EHCll cncll taxis usrd were l rorc . and ulrwo stress nlacz d on rct, Grade tell pupils‘ 151m" school \','.lill(l be able i0 J l) I nm, Sir, ctc.. GRACE ‘VARREN Howlliu, R R NOV. l7 ‘Shocked’ And ‘Delighted’ (Ottawa Journal) On Friday illol-nlng The Can sd- lnli Press curried from Floss Munro, war correspondent with the Canadian Army in 14011 end- "i151 U"Ovcr field xvirelcss on this (Kild and foggy Scheldt front oflrsers rind men of the lst Canadian .l trmy tonight heard the news that their old chief, General McNaugl llton, llfld become Crlilndtrs Del once Minister in succession to Col. ftnlstcn. _ “Tile first reaction of the tr oops was astonishment, and the): de- light that "the general", ns he lavas klioivn to thousands of -Can- adlan fighting men. had rctv med to actlvc participation in the war. . . Thcy loci they nlwliys g at :1 square tlclil from him, and they were sorrowful when lie left. they ftgllitcd-tht .t is t Nnw llrc dell the only word for On Saturday morning the Bell Syndicati- (its dcspotclles use i by a number of Canadian '1 iews- pnpcrsl carried from Lionel Sila- ab an appointed hour for a long days labor in the fight for nat- ional survival. Each man and wo- man. each boy 11nd girl. belongs to one of two armies; the uniform- ed fighting service or the no 1355 biiiissrent army of the gainfully employed. Since May, 1940, wiicu a wizard named Churchill beck- oned. the great British race has submitted to reglmentation, shelv- ed its independence and accepted Ciiflcrililly n program of "blood mid sweat and tcarsf-FLTLA. in Van- couver Province. MlllorTTvTfo wrote. ” e who only stand Welt. But those who thus it was "They also serv ilncl serve piro, also a war corresprs ‘talent with the Canadian Army in Hol- this: land. "What has shocked Cant udlan troops . . . is that General Mc- Naughton, beloved of all tar.) rs in the Army, appears rit least from this distance. to have thrown; his popularity and influence to the side of the anti-conscription lists." we have it. on the one hnnd that General McNnugi lion's displacement of C01. Rlllston has "riclrihicd" the Canadian itlrmy. on the other hand that it has "shocked" the Canadian Ari! w. It all seems to mean that Ross Munro and Lionel Shapiro have Thus d0 319i REt their names in the crs nor attillri public recognition. Alld the ivnitiiig is the lizircler part. The wives and mothers (some are widowed) of soldiers. sailors and airmen who stay at home and keep the family together While their men are away undergo which filly Would never fccl their men were not librolid. ‘they Ju§t stay at homo land wait for the return of the men or women, or painfully enough. for the telegram that says there will be no home. 60mins. Just long. lonely years of hcflrtnche and burdens. Thousands 0f good women are doing hcrolc Jobs in lonely homes. washing. (lust- ing. sweeping iind doing, as wcll as writing cheerful letters to far pap- clit time is being given to study of the actual system of vote registration. Success in this dir- ection would still leave the problem of electoral lists to be dealt with, but it would mean a de- cided step forward if the system of actual vot- ing at the polls could be improved. In this latter connection study is being given to the system in vogue in parts of the United States, notably in New York State. This is installation of voting machines, which came into being in the United States 40 years ago, and which has a record of success behind it, it is claimed there, and check- ing by local experts support this claim of suc- cess. Installation of the machines would do away altogether with paper ballots, and by that token with the possibilities of using counterfeit ballot papers, which it is charged has happened at limes, and-this is specially importtint-iviili the hazards ivhich accompany illc usc of {taper ballots, and which lla ards do not show signs of betterment. v HWIIY places. They are deserving of some of the medals and honors “on by their men. Theirs is also a. hard part in the war, just walt- lng-Briindon Sun. Another sie toward a brl liter wartime Britanin is romiseclgthis Winter. Dances, w ch for the sst five years have had to e efore midnight, will probably con- tinue into the early hours _ with the approval of the majority of the police chiefs licenclng magistrates, London Dally Mall. chiefs wel- come the opportunity of allowing a little more gaiety to come brie‘; into the lives of millions of people dancing was the prin- pelicetime pleasure. The first move was made by Darwrn ibancllshire) magistrates. who granted an extension for a works dance until 2 ii.m. This ls the first time in the war that the young people of this cotton town. with a population of 37.000, have been able to go 0n dancing after mid- night. I lwhllt even one-tenth of one written despatclics that no re- sponsible Journalist should v vrlte. There wils no ilicans by which they could know that which they t iere writing was true. The Canadian Army front line troops overseas consists of [tome 70,000 men in Italy, probably ore than thnt in Belgium and ol- mnd. How could Ross Munn a or Lionel Shapiro know or dim lover 17L” cent nf tlrcm were thinking a lmui. the change from Ralston to Mc- Naughton? Such nn achieve! sent, as anybody must realize who ti links about it for a moment, woulil be physically impossible; if vi lther one of these correspondents e uuid talk to a dozen or twenty of the troops, that would be the utn lost. thriller profound people trend of the Fuehrer is incapacitated Propaganda Minister has set all the wheels of machine turning to convl many and the world at but ls in " Still the Nazi chic from h months The bomb attempt on his life y 20. The next. day some- y represeritiri went on the o plot liacl tulle been a great the Fuehrer. ant that his working overtl es-nnd la ter hasn't a should th w bod HEAD g patch will not vice versa; that many here troubling to consider how foollshlm are such despatches, may get completely false and distorted idea of the Canadian Army's reaction. The Hitler Mystery (By Dewitt MacKenzle Associated Press War Analyst) Yfilefé of Hitler's hwhercw P Y t s oi’ one fffslffilitiiizys etirimelrelwried i" p" and it's likely to have iilH" lgflueiice on the German- a.n consequently on if n develops m“ slab-and a stro The m bouts is ra ortlon the he dictator us Jul his dictate decade. His plete th to thl of thl d has had ii ll/li Yet here we have one of them 1 ure- sumlng to tell us that the "t7 hn- acilan Army" is "shocked." i It is true tilnt one desplitch -can~ , eels out the other. The traubi e is that many who will rend one; dps- use ' than? Around 40 our energy lessens. t, ea- perisnceliuisiuhiuriuileoilworhwiil: Iese eflori. years shsali should yield the peeled accomplishments, lhs most en rlsni arid happiness. They mi, loo, ii vs m: l the hidney and bladder disorders such ech- aelte, Headache, Rheumatic Palm, Ls ede, lost of Sleep sml Ensuy which to often of inch astound 40. For om facility Dodd’: Kidney Pills have been hel Inen and women lo keep kidneys and bu. r ill mod order. ll you are nearing l0, or |II i it, the ulie ol your health and e pier ftllliilfl Dsild Kiihey ' Montages ’i Pulls iedsyl u; f ‘s gnjhe young genorati BEFORE YOU INSURE CONSULT~ Confederation Li Association OFFICE Hank of No W. G. with the lit hom war of the super lar isn't ill dl g himself a d. Since then silence on the rship for lnore control has been at all Germany has come nit of government in terms s one man. His personality has omlnatcd the whole country. und particularly In such i‘?! Canada's hucing min read the other, and lllil ' consequence Goebbels his great nce Ger- . mad or dead EXCBUEIIE. vigorous health." fact. remains that people haven't hoard rectiy in about four lr to say that and it seems signific- captulns have been me to provide excus- me ones—why the mus. ppeared personally. Why ey be so anxious to i1 secret of an affair that w yrezgted openly in any normnl f)’ I think th ough. ' Hitler e answer is clear en- has been absolute in on which e setting l", KIGIICII fe TORONTO Branch Office va Scoila Bldg» Charlottetown HOGG, Manager J s been reared to fanaticism on lithe pap ho provided. The people have stuck with the an who tore up the Treaty of Ver- a _saille and all but conquer - rope—bilt my observations in Ger- many lend me to believe they wouldn't follow anyone else while their world ls crashing about their cars. without Hitler the govern- ment would be close to helpless in .tlie present crisis. It's difficult for anyone who hasn't actually seen it to realize how completely the eviiandinmany whys hypnotic Hitlerian personal- ity has dominated Germany. I've, vlous columns thati ler's hold on his people has political. Many of ed him as a Mes- ng politico - relig- ious leadership is hard to beat. Thus it isn't strange that Hitler's aides should try to conceal the un- doubted fact that, for some reason or other, he has been incapacitated. He may have been merely ill. and will reappear. Hitler's leadership now is doubly essential because the armies which have been fighting so frantically believe they are supportin him personally. Don't forget that the attempt on his life in Jilly marked the defection of n large section of Prussian warlords who recognized that Germany Wns bound to lose the war. so personal loyalty has much to do with the ‘ ‘ _ the troops in line for him. e, not l 1'0- ceu more than ma, them have regard ' FHCEI ile that the s Hlllcr tho there's part of HUTTINGHAM. Ebiglarld — (GP) -l=‘oot and mouth disease has been discovered amour: the cattle in this Yorkshire “like district. uld be coun- g__.._i____. kl‘ bl“°i"“iiio'sil'l-diilioilii'elori than a so ccm- Ctcar up ugly blemishes with scic powerful gene‘; iilllgtfllguqfll of some hi! back _ risk; regions and . m, en tel-prise, “i! "lfY-ol dlfid Wlill the ludum-y facilities spirit of Q,“ d Beak has cl sd ten’ 64nd. jinn! Md in“, Charlottetown Bnnnnerslde NOVA S (IOTIA Branches from Cecilio Coast nnimcilss IN rniucs snwaim ISLAND l $5.00 I RESERVATIONS-INFORDIATION. TICKE SAIWT JOHN.,_ tv. cnsittorrrerown ' -“” 7,00 A. M. 11.30 A. M. 6.00 P-M. (‘Moncton Only) ,ro NEW GLASGOW I.0O P. M. One Way trins‘ Teri PHONE 540-2061 MARITIME F“ NT l AIRWAYSILiltiL Professional l McLeod 6' Bentley W. B. BENTLEY. K. C. J. A. BENTLEY. it c. Barristers and Attorneys-st- Lnw I54 Prince Street Chartered Accountants 58 Grafton Street. Charlottetown Phone zoso Ber 247 Randolph W Mnnninl- c-L morreli and Gompilli li. F. Aiiiiidiilil Chartered ' Aeconntante Eastern Trust Bniidins Charlottetown _ M. ALBAN FARMER BA» LLB. l“ Canadian Bunk of Commerce ll Y 1n N MONE BARBISTER. SOLICITOIILEY" Attention Swine Breeders Now is the time in t-"lfd against p“; . WORM i the most eleeii" 57-253- the market. MACS PIG-WORM TON IC POWDER It will thoroulhlv chum all traces of warms and I m" the health of will’ l’ l" 0e 35 cents Mr lli. MACS AMMONIATED BRONC H IAL COM POUND levee t Bronchiiil u] Ci-iiuii. Bfiimlai: h. Cousins and 6° ' Pelee l0 cents a bottle. mos m: ommlf: A safe and efficient rem " for internal and Qiifsf: OI. II ll malls only 0mm nut quality Inflflm. remarkable I ntln e for this blglfewfltl", t carries out its n ellest in three "Y! m‘; noothse i, It iuiiritil. m” It i, utnnmit- 6' today. Prim 60 cent!- TIIE 2 MAGS m Great Georre 81"" Ksnsington Albany Morel! 0’Lenry Victoria , oi -e l'""“’i Mail Ordilelkmdn-n