JANUARY 12. 1942 fsrocx QUOTA nozvs <1 New York Stock Eécchonge (Canadian Iron) mm W?" Tel Tel 126 fisconda 27 ldwin ggndix AV ' 37 Beth Steel 63 5-8 ches Ohio l5 l4 chrysier 47 con 34115011 i8 1-2 Elsa Alli/O L116 22 1-3 Gen Elec 27 1-5 Gen Motors 81 3-4 Gt No: Pfd 83 3-8 Kennecott ,, S5 1-2 Mont Ward 36 3-4 N Y Central 9 3-8 Nor Am Co 10 Penn RR 21 5-11 run Pet Co 3B l-l Std Oil NJ 33 7-3 w“; corp 88 1-4 United Air 34 5-8 U S Rubber 16 1-2 U S Si. C0 53 1-11 Vanadium Om‘) 19 1-4 west Union 25 l-4 west Eiec ‘i8 1-2 wooiwo — Montreal Curb (Canadian Press) mocks Close Ahitibi Pid 6 1-2 Beauhamols 9 5-8 Bathurst A 14 l-B Ford A 15 1-1 Home 011i 258 nnp Oil 8 5-8 Int. Pete Price Com 10 Price Pfd - (Candaiun Press) "h TORONTO. Jan. 11- flock! Close Amtfield l Bear Ex 6 1-2 Bobo 5 1-3 Braiorne 9011 Broulan 59 Buff Ank 265 Calmont 17 Cdn Malartie 4'1 Chester 142 Cochcnour 55 Con Smelt 38 3-4 Denison 4 Dome O11 16 1-4 Duquesne 9 East Malartifl 214 Eldorado 49 Falcon 30 Gods Lake 18 1-2 Goldale 9 3-4 Gold Gate 3 1-4 Hnicrow 3 Hard Roch 150 Hoilinger 10 1-4 Homestead 4 i-i Howey 18 Int Nickel 34 1-2 Int Pete 13 Kerr Add 895 Kirk Hud 26 Kirk Lake 56 Lake Shore 11 Leitch 41 MaclflQd 155 Maiartio 218 McIntyre 44 Moore 43 5-4 Nornndn 4B 1-4 Nor-metal 85 0Brien 90 Okaits 36 Psmour 85 Perrcn Gold 130 Preston 310 Reno Gold 13 l-8 San Ant 192 Senator 15 Sherritt. 911 siscoc 45 Slave Lake 4 7-3 Straw Luke 1 1-2 Sud Basin 142 Sullivan a0 Sylvanitg 19g ‘Peck Hush 21o Texas Corp 15o Toburn 105 Uchi 4 Uchi Bond: 4o Ventuml 305 Vermiiats 1o Waite Amu 450 Wrt Her; 260 Mllllfd’! kill; pain. i Montreal Stock Exchange ~iCnnndisn Press) lioohl Bell ‘IE1 Brazilian Clil CH‘ Fbilnd Cm Pacific Cone Smelt. Dist Song Dom Bridge Pounds Co o i :s:s.:ssus.ss,E ES I112 tau- u a QM Norsndn Quebec Power Shawinigsn Si; Law Corn St Lmw Pfd St 0f Cln 53 St of Cln P14 ._ Banks (Cnnldiln Press) Stocks Canada _ Montreal Commerce _ Royal Nova Bcotin Grain WIJNNEEG. Jan. l1-(CP)— Grain futures quotations: Wheat: May 79B; July 80 1-8B. giiiéyliliftfiii i“? i“??? 0ct.501-2. ‘my 0' ‘ Cash prices: Wheat: 1 hard '16 1-8: 1 noi- 7e 1-8; 2 nor 72 7-8: 8nor '10 1-2; 4 m" 70; 5 wheat ca; 6 wheat 66; 511911 Wheat 63; l amber durum 79. :2OW505-8;ex3CW50 Produce Prices MON'IREAL. Jan. 11-(CP)—- Oanadian Commodity mchange Saturday: Spot: butter, Que (92 score) 33 7-8-34 1-8. E385. eastern A-large 34 1-2A: A-rnedium 3D 1-2A; A-puilets 2o 1-2A; E-B 27A; E-G 241A. MONTREAL. Jan. 11-(091- Produce Market here Satur- day as reported y the Dom . Department o! Agriculture follow: Butter: first grade creamerv prints, Jobbing rice, 1-4- 1-2; first gra e lfllids, jmbing price, 34 3-4-35; w no 1 pasteurized storage 34-34 1-8; no 2 storage 33 1-4-83 3-8. Cheeses current receipt western whites and colored 23 FOB. f-sc- tory shipping point. Wholesale, western and Que whites and coior~ eci 30-24 1-2 nom. Eggs: ded shi t 11in 1_u~c€Fu==1_d2h.§1i aollzapullete 20-117; O guide 23- Potstoes: Que whites no 1 1.35- IAO: no 2 1.10-1.25: NB mountain no i 1.45-1.50; PEI green moun- tain 1.55-1.60; whites 1.45-1.50. COMING AND GOING During the Russian Revolution som€ geiansgrere catptuged and {xe- cap ur . "Mrs y cppos Reds and [Vii a FOR SALE Boneless cod and boneless fish trimmings 1n thirty 1h. boxes, also lrench, cod and hnke. These fish were caught after Nov. 1st. PETERS It GALLANT North Bnstico va-nm-e . L-370-1-6-4i. ‘ldvcrtising Rates-Payable in Advance Minimum Churn for Any Ad". regal; Western and Intern loom leper word; Condolence ‘l o oer inch; and l0 cents for ever Agni-collation, 70o per 6 cents per inch. Address nnd application. menu 25 Cont: ltvente lo Mr word ll ed 3 rd~ I M N tiou - Floral and "Shilling dnehayamdiirhlr. :10» bofldgrmr mantel-J!“ o name; tters oi e ding engagements 40 words for 11.00 additional 3 wor s. ch or 4c word. Notices of Thnnhs tinns on ll Ill-Inn ‘L00. Other RIM IIIII Wanted Winn» - NEW ooosn 11in Duck mothers not mixed. free of tail feathers. Henry wigg and _ rllme. _ Boarders Wanted BCIABDEBS ACOOMMODATED- x100 littin room th nre 1 . S. ‘nrdinn. h-lbfi-l-Qflfil. ETUDENTS ACCOMMODATID.‘ Heated rooms, near College. 86 _ Quniberisnd. L-m-l-lo-di. Sulesmen Wanted SPECIALTY SALESMEN WITH car. It will bc to your advantage m gain our successful sales crgen- iza ion soiling an 1 d‘ , . ble article to merchants. High com- mission. Write giving tuii particu- lars. Box A Guardian. rnnv MovEn r-Asr ‘Baron, the iamlirnrme of three amour _ Cnrihrgenicnt gen rah, "ltflnt lightning. l-10-3l. '_ Man Wanted F03 000D WATKINS ROUTE. = Bio customers. ult be honest means oi 1 or exper- ihe J. R . Z-ClA Montreal N-B-li _ Machinery for Sale A NUMBER 0i" 000D AUTO- matic oiosiny machines (Seamers) for ltnndar- round sanitary fruit and gctehe cane-capacity forty can: per minute. mil gnrticuirrs on application to Box " . Guard- il-h. L-i-lfl-iii. Female Help Waniel‘ WANTElh-MAID. GM-a. MRS. n. m. 1..4s4-1-i9-_2_1 Lost tear -- tantra SWEATER m city. Saturday night. Reward. Apply A Guardian. L481. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN "Brave Men shall not Die because j faltered ” on s. hundred frontiers, over thousands of miles of bloody battle-fronts, on s11 of the treacherous oceans of the world and in the sullen skies over every continent, brave men battle the enemy in your behalf. They, too, love and are loved. Their future is just as precious to them as yours is to you. If it were not for them, where would you be today? Do you put every ounce of your energy into your job so that they may have the tools they need before — not after-the hour of need? Or Tbi: Menage is isrued by the Department n] hlr/nitian! and Supply/or Canadq do you just do what you have to do to get by? Do you tackle any work that presents itself, whether you like it or: not, so long as it helps the good cause along? Are you devoting your time and your talents, your strength and your very life to the produc- tion of the thousand and one things so urgently needed to carry this desperate struggle to a successful conclusion? During these critical hours, can you look your fighting comrades straight in the eye and say -—"Brave nren s/aall not die because I faltcred. Y.’ lac...ca;... Moving to ease ‘Squeeze’ effect OTTAWA, Jan. 9 —(CP) -—\\‘:1r- time prices and trade board uti- ministrators are making clear to some litres of business that rntnil- crs must be supplied with goods at a cost price which gives recogni- tion to the retail selling level un- der the price ceiling, it was icsrn- cd tonight. Board officials mid progress had been made in many industries in reaching agrcemer/s for adjust- ment of tlze "squeeze" caused by imposition of the price ceiling of Dec. 1. Ceiling prices were based on rates charged between Sept. l5 and Oct. i1 and some retailers faced n lose. Such losses developed in cases where the cost of merchandise 101' future delivery had risen faster by Oct. ll than the selling mic.- of merchandise being handled oy the retailer. In some cases the retail- er had goods on his sllclvés at. Dec. 1. which he had bought at rates higher than those existing during the basic period. The board ruled that adjuszmcni to divide the burden of "11s "squeeze" should be made ‘an a- long the line" by the parties con- cerned. 41 Canadian Commandos train- For invasion (By Ross Munro, Canadian Press War Correspondent) SOMEWHERE IN SCOTLAND. Jan, 9_1cp1-A group of 41 young Canadian officers have completed a month's training iu Commando work which has left them harden- ed and prepared for any tough assignment. At a special training centre in the highlands, these officers. from every Canadian infantry regiment overseas. learned in n four-week course the basic principles drilled into Commando troops, the van- guard of Britain's invasion army. The Canucks learned to make ennult landings from naval craft. to storm cliffs and beaches, to fight at close quarters with gren- ades, small arms and cold steel and to live off the land in rugged country. They went through mimic nt- tacks under fire of grenades, small arms and machine-guns and on hardening manoeuvres ate jerked meat, squirrel, birds and herbs as they practised Woodcraft along highland glens that in centuries past were the haunts of Scottish clansmen. Probably the outstanding Oom- -' student was Lieut. Eric Forgravc of St. Johns. Que. Other officezs included Licuts. Frank Hiltz and F. W. Oxlcy of Halifax ands H. M. MacLcod of Bydney, N. . In the course the element of realism was emphasized and on manoeuvres every detail of Com- mnndo raids was followed. The course started off with lectures and chalk talks on combined operations bet-ween thc army and naval for- ces invclvrd in coastal attacks. Then the officers were sent scrambling over obstacle courses for several dyas, hardening them for big practice raids. They triowed through water with their kit and ivrapons, plunged through knee- deep quagmircs, climbed 20.foot barriers and route-marched over rough country until they swore at everyone who ever thought o! Commandos. Easing grudunliy into real work, they were taught 1o handle gren- ades rapidly and accurately as a weapon to bring sudden death in the night to Germans. They mas- tered the trick of using the fight- ing kuifc, n. vicious, thin-bladed stiletto which ls part of Commando cquipmc nt. Close combat was practised for hours as thc officers crept up sil- ently on sontries and outposts and iircoretictly kniicd thcm and shot up the place. Unarmed combat was taught 1w" L-wu fmmer Shanghai poiicciucil. (it g- I1 Tin cuuutiians found out how ‘.0 pick their way carefully through mincfields and to hunt and destroy tanks. ‘Woodcraft, ‘mountain craft, map reading and ivcapon drill were all incudcd in the syllabus that thc “toughest m-Eu in the world" take before making secret sorties against the enemy. The traininc was climaxed by an exercise in which s iandin was made from the sea. The oficers attacked 500 feet up the steep sidc of n mountain with live grenades iaursliug bciriud 111cm and on thc flank and machine-gun slugs whipping over their steel helmets. Dedicate iiiuh Tc service of Merchant Seaman HALIFAX, Jan. 9 —(CP) _Navy Minister Macdonald today official- iv tiwlivaied the allied merchant seamens club here to the service o1 thc "forgotten man of this War," thc cit iun sailor, while notables rubiwctl shoulders with the roughly- clnd men for whom the hostel was built. "Is there," the Navy Minister asked, "among all those engaged 1n the task of winning this war. any uihfr group which has a morc vn- lid and more sure claim upon our admiration and our interest than the men oi’ the mercantile marine? "Recognizing the vaiour of our airmen, our soldiers and our men of the combatant navies and giv- ing rightful plaice 1o the heroism of our civilian population. may we not sny that these men of the mer- chnnt marine, for whose use this building is intended, have a. par- ticular claim on our esteem?" "The other services." he continu- ed, "the fighting services, are in- vested with the ginmour and the attraction of n, uniform; their feats and their adventures are given due reeopnition, not to say pubiicitym. but the merchant mariner, plying his difficult task over dangerous waters beccmss n11 too often. I fear, the forgotten man of this war." GROUSE ALL OVER Some variety of grouse is found in almost evcrv wooded area. of the United Sta s and Osnads. ,1 M61’... smsnto WITH rms REUEF rot PIMPLES - 11110111111118 - nnsuts So helpful are CulicurnASoap and Ointment in clenrin u skin blemishes that the nuskm will re un your mpnc if you are not Intisflcd niter two weeks tnal so uticurl Soup end Ointment regularly. Blade n Canada. SOAP and JAPAN --- -? 1n the foreground of our thinking Verdict Returned in Base of iihiid Looms the spectre of our times: Haunting through each waking mo- ment Are the bloody, brooding crimes Of a mixed-blood German leader- Showing not a trace oi worth In his character, his actions, In his ancestry or birth. Yet he heads a mighty people: Heads a. people whom we thought Had advanced beyond the culture Of the savage and untaught; And the question still unanswered, Are the German race as bad To so toieratc the sadist, The degenerate and cad? dict of (lea th from na Through the annals of the con- fiict Comes to light the ugi truth, They are liars, last an foremost, 1'9 Vulgar, bestial and uncouth: 1"" Wheée each promise of their mak- u; Have they broken and defamed. -- Broken yet while in the shaping By their leaders un-ashamed. And the Roman ignoramu; Vi/‘lth the stupid Japanese Render honour to the tactics Of the lowest dregs and lees: Lowest drcgs by any measure Left to mankind to apply To a leadership now risen From the ancient German sty: But of all earth's foolish rabble Living on in human form. Shedding every trace of prestige, Sinking lower than the worm: Japanese, whose "Son of Heaven" Joins the vile and loathsome crew That from European gutters On to sunken thrones would spew. mind 1 Common and method, Common hope and common light In equality combining Japanese and lowest white: To declare the sorry measure Of n misfit, backward thought That with trash of other peoples such o. unity hath wrought 60111111011 Where, oh where amongst. the na- on ti s Is there place for such Japan, For such people, for such Etmpire, For such thought as counter ran To the way of Truth 11nd Honour- Lying, stabbing in the dark- Tili ev‘n friends with foes despise her Al they tum her fate to mark? Eome may mourn the dark depar- c. When her backward march begins; But Japan through her betrayers Locos now whoever wins; Joining those whose proven Pllflfl” Were to use her while the plan O1’ their world wide domination Holds n0 place for blind Japan: And though Kari-Kari cowards Fly from life to save their shame, can such suicide of cowards Win her back her place or lame? Could a mizacie of cnuram- come to turn her from her fate, From within her, cre the illLiilB Marks against her name ‘Too late"! Duh the present, duh the future, Darker for Japan unless Well defeated are the outcasts She has joined in ruthlessness; Who visiorious would rend her, Tramp her to the ground in scorn As theywe trampled other nations Of their power snd prestige shorn. Yet_ though trampled other tions. shall they rise to life again: But who loses all her honour, , 'i'hen. an outcast shall remain. - l‘, And we ask with other peoples In the Empire of Japan ls there courage left to save her! Is theze left an honest man? lil- The British Imperial nrmics in n st: 1c of J. M. Macbean. 102 Crown B‘dg.' Vancouver, B. C. Amtmnsrfufsfsuu. B-A ver- ction of the our and blood poison- Thrce of the four children nelopfi- , ) __ , , e ed by Mr. and ivus. Wocd mu pilss- "iv-culling my 111 ~21 _ _ _ , I . - r Commandos’ (Wlnleashedz On Japs ed away in the last 1B months, ac- cording to evidence submitted at the mquest. _ ivlrs, Wood in her testimony said that she had iJ-tilii $25 for the trans- portation to Amherst oi the last two ihe Eastern Guardian. P111! riilllnm 1~ rl-nvru-rl for vliflv-‘l m d-l-uunm “Om me ideal Mutts-nu’- luvui inn-rent. hm inherit-inn- m n “Clue at Che“ _ nanny nature mny be inst-Hui u! 1i The jury. under Firm-m J_ Elmo“ tenin n word. Itrirtiy pn)li||ln in niirnnee. n5 foreman, in stating that death of the infant child was due to natural antlers, i'UCOll1i1l(’l.[1t‘(i that (‘OiLiL- ions at the Ideal Maternity Home be imcsugutcd. 'l'esthnony" “'11s given at the in- quest by Dr, Drury M155 Ann Mc- Nicol, V. O. N.. nurse, and Rev. J. H. Silently. 1t. was brought out that ..'TliE ANNUAL Business Meet- ing of St. Andrews Prcsisytrritm (lhurch. Montague, will be livid n; the church on Wednesday c1 111m; January 14th at 8 o'clock P. M. Al. contributors are asked wlun;i1i' send lIi their contributions to ".111 1111111 (31111595 Mrs. Wood had adopted two 81111- "fir-usurer. The books will 113111541 urtu from (he itiruzmlty Home in open up to and incluchnc y." o" 1m", 1920, that one 11.141 £11.11 m uiu-‘ing. By Order, ‘ or ..o\':lnbc1' nut; the 1.111131‘ in i. Aiatmgcrs. 1 71-1-12-11 that she had ndopied two n. 1.11:‘ 111st tall and that one of the infants had passed away Dec. 12 , ,.;,,,,,i, QLTIEJNE armorial-thc .‘ 1 _ A.- Hum an n The drug quinine is extracted frcm the b-azk 0f several are: e5 oi South American trees. INDESTRIAL SPAIN Barcrionn is the lrcs‘. known man- u. .___, Commandos. “hose exploit; in Xorway and France have kept the Nazi occupation IPITOI‘, have hem unH-uslmi against the Japs. A raiding force from the British armies in Malaya slrutk behind thc Jnp lines, smash x l fllllvoy of trucks with hand grenndrs and iom- my guns. latest in ndnpi. picture as they practise 1nvnsion draught, speedy invasion barge, peeked tightly, but ready for instant action when the born lands. (‘nmmanfls tact-cs are the Royal Marines of ihe Iilritish navy. shnwn in ihir exrrchcs on the British cnasi. They rre seen here in n shallow- r