2E1?“ ._ TllE GIIARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Morning Dally IFDIIIIIABC ln 1881) President: Lleut. Col. W. Cheater B. McLur: '. Vlco President; J. R. Burnett, FJJ. Noorelury: Lleut. CoL D. A. Maelilnnon. 0.8.0. Illitor and nlanugln; Director J IL Burnett. IJ.L Auomato Editors: Frank Walker and [In A- BIIIIIQ" f SUBSCRIPTION auras By Mall ln P.l-.‘.l., $4.00 per year; $2.50 for 6 month: $1.25 for 3 mouths; 50o for one month City Delivery $5.00 per i981‘; $3.00 for 6 mom-ll $1.75 fur 3 month; By Mall ln Canada 11nd H.525. $5.00 per year Sntuuiay Weekly: $2.00 per year; $1.00 for 6 50o for 3 month: Th; Charlottetown uuurdlnn mu] be ohtulnod ol Botuhnx’: Nou: Agency, 'l'.n1e: uquuro, New lurk; 0M South ha“: Agency, (urnrr lllllln unul Wuuhtugtun Bunion; llotrullulilull x111... Agency, 12411 Pool u. lluutrouli J. l-‘lno. do! Lin; an, ‘Iuruutu; howl Iltuml Clmtunu Loom-r, 011111111; \\ ulle‘: New; lituml, dudbury. Out; 111111 ‘fotnu-ru e111,». 110111-1011 1v. 11.. The Strongest Memory is Weaker than the 111111111152 Ink.” wuvxusosv, xov. 111, 1941. Transportation Claims It was a friculllv gc<ture on the part of the (Ell-um, 111411111! 111 cditoriul prominence 10 the agllllllnll oi 1110 LIl111rlu11c10\\"11 a11d b11111- merside llouids of 'l‘1'11<1c 4 for lmllrumd C911" ncctious llC'_\\'C-.'ll 1i1i> l'1‘1»\‘\11cc and the mam- 1411111. l’ri110c l-'.1l\\.1:'-1 ldruul. 1116 101ml”! Coll‘ Ccllcs, is s-1 ;11l1".1c:.\0 :1 >110‘. for 1011r1s1s that it] c1111 11111l;e c1111 11 gtlvtl g {or improved trans- portation scrvicc, cspcc . ll_v since the sinking 0t the S. S. (11111-11111011111-11. '1 here 1s also, of course, the 51,11 Sll-sllmr 111.1‘ which can be, and has rcpczucdly 111-111 111111.- 1111 1hc lid-is of ‘one im- PUYUIHCQ 1S illl ildldillllllllll cxportlng YOVlllCQ- But so i111‘ 110 sown 11.11 1o l1:1vc made much im- pression on 111a 1'1'1_l0r11l Govcriinicut and Rail- way a11tl1ori1i0s. 'l‘l1c- Ullznvn paper suggests that our M. l’.'s <111111l1l slzltc our Cl2llll15, as a mem- hcr of (Rtililwlv 1111111, 111 lwltcr co11111u1111c11t1o11s. The sumo s11j4;;c.~1.1111 \\.1s 11111110 some time ago by the editor of S'<1111111'11_\- .1\'1'_r]/1l, on the occas- ion when the Conservative House 0f Commons leader, Mr. ll1111son. tmk up the cudgels on our b¢half_;1n1l (31111111 11111 find .1 lmcker among the four Libcrul smhuirls we Scllf 1c. Ottawa ‘.0 represent 11s. Commenting on the Sunimersidc Board of Trade propoml for 11 tuuucl ccnnmunication, the Ottawa Journal .~;1_\s this .~\')llll1(]l"l "seems more remote now 1111111 0101-." No doubt its opinion is derived from rhe rrolcrcuce to the tunnel pro- ject contained in lhc Sirois Report. Without citing any facts or figures in support of their conclusion, the $51111.»- Counuission slated‘. “Be- cause of the 011or111~111s cost of such a project, we cannot 1111111; 1hr11 :1 1111111cl is a practical s0- lution of the island's difficulties of communica- tion, nor do we think that the Island is entitled to demand from the l)1\1ll1ll1Ol‘l this type of con- tinuous conuuuuiczuion." This ipsi dixit purports to have bccn made on the basis of the l1ricf sulunittcd by the Trans- portation Commission of the Maritime Board of Trade. lt 1211111111 11c construed as a final answer. If there is 71 lwucr solution to the proh- lcm, it rests \\i1h the Dominion Government to find it. J Roosevelt's Example Prime hlinister King's satisfaction with the uction of the United Smtcs Congress in amend- ing the Neutralicv Act was expressed in a state- ment in which all Cnnuclians will concur. He designated it “the mo=1 important contribution in the winniilg o1 the war which has been nladc by the United States since the enactment of the lease-lend legislation," and said it will be inter- preted by Hitler as the l1.1r.<l\\'ri1ing on the wall cpelling the doom of the Axis powers. .\lr. King was right. But, asks an exchange, did he recognize the fact that the President of the United States virtually forced this measure through? He didn't shirk the duty of giving lead- ership. It would have been easy for Mr. Roosevelt and his colleagues to say Missouri, Kansas, Illinois or some 011121‘ Slate was opposed to arming merchant ships and scndlng them into belligerent ports. lle could have said the people of the United States were opposed, and, judg- ing by the tight squeeze in the House of Repre- sentatives, would not have been far astray. Bur he didn't do 111111. Ile didn't trump up ex- cuses. He didn't say he had no mandate for acrapping the Neutrality Act. and insist on calling a referendum. lf he had, it is to be doubted ivhether the .\ct would l1.'1\'c been amended or Mr. King could have cxptcssed his pleasure that Hitler would now see the handwriting on the wall. Mr. King, it is suggested, might well study this matter a little f11r1h<r and search his con- science in 1110 ligln r11 \\'h:11 11c discovers. Lct him compare it, for cxznnplc, with his own timid attitude on the SlIhjCCt 11f conscription for over- leas service. 11c l1.-1s 111111011 that such an issu: must go before lllc lwwplC, 111111 hc is not pre- pared to take lllc 1-0,~pr>11sil1ili1_v' of supporting a measure which 11c tl1i11l.s would have unfav- orable political repercussions in some quarters. 'parcd and is now going the rounds of be immobilized for a period of months, while the country is torn to pieces in the disaster of an election struggle." That—0r a referendum—is apparently what l\Ir. King is offering. And he refuses 1o come m8 out and tell the people what he thinks they should gfipaflnl ldo. Under a referendum without leadership. "mfnl T111; cumzcorrcrowu GUARDIAN 11101:: 11v r111: 1111111 l Chutlmm Clty Councll ls enter- a. rather dangerous fie.d ln to appoint a woman whose duty ft wlll be to loldlers‘ wlvea bow to make without guidance or direction from the Goverrr. the most economical and effective mcnt, 110w could a verdict in accord with the nccds and realities of the war situation be ex- pected? If this were the kind of leadership that Churchill is giving in Britain, or Roosevelt in use o! the money they et. for the: subsistence. ‘The st 1n- tenLons probably actuate 111ml step. but there are manifest pit.- fnlls that may be encountered. 'I‘he human right of the lndivld- the United States, it would be a long time indeed "=1 ggllsewlfe b0 mflnflze her Own before Hitler would have any occasion to read ’St,fl:_ "the handwriting on the wall." =- EDITORIAL NOTES - Have you mailed that Christmas overseas? Iii! ls involved. - Wlzidwr The war and _lhe hardshl of llyuig the Atlantic by bzmber ave changed Mr. Hanson. These thing. have changed other men 1n ways the ubllc nu not real zed. 111e, t-rlp no child's play for a man Card for l over 60. But 1n a homespun phrase that flashed into Mr. Hanson's dis- course more as an aside than any- tumz else, he said that the war It is not yet time for any heavy snowfall. lwas going 1o get much worse be- Cilstomarily the first such storm is on or about St. Andrew's Day, clearing 11p then till Christ- mas \Vcck. 11- It is necessary 1o think of next year’s tourist traffic now, as arrangements must be made in ll i U good time by the local and Federal governments’ for the provision of adequate fcrry service at Borden and Wood Islands alike. 111 1v 1: v A thirty-year plan for rebuilding urban centers in England after hostilities cease has been pre- various British governmental bodies. Dr. Luther Gulick, Mr. King might wcll consider whcthcr or not the President of lhc 11111011 Stzitcs has had an oppor- unity to conqrzitulzitc him and his Government for taking a courngcoiis course similar 1o that which has borne fruit :11 \\'ashing1o11. He might ask himself when 11c has worked with committees behind the scenes like President Roosevelt an'l openly urged an uncertain Parliament. to support what mighfprove to be r111 unpopular Act b:- cailsc it was the right and necessary thing to do. Mr. King's strong party supporter, 1h" m tended Cnstile had got along nll right as ."*51\'1’-d “f. Thorson for a statement on Can-l director of the Institute of Public Administra- tion, revealed this. illllt There is still prohibition in at least one town in New York State. Castilc, “dry” since I035 ha; jllSl (lCCKlCd 1n an election by 1895 votes to 1,223 to continue prohibition for another five years during which the sale of liquor in any form or zinner \\'lll be an offence. The “Antis” con- _ they were \\‘11hout liquor storcs and saloons 11nd (lid 1101 see any necessity for a cha11ge_ Jtnvone wanting liquor for home consumption could im- port wuhout restrictions. 1o- 1v The amount of cheques cashed by the branches of Canada s chartered banks was $3.300 million 111 September against $2,571 million in the same month of last year. The increase of 28.4 per cent reflected the influence of the advances in busi- ncss operations and in commodity prices. The lntcst ZlVZlllZlblC data indicate a marked increase 111 the index of the physical volume of business over the standing of 130.1 in September last year. 'lhe gain 1n the index of employment in manufacturing plants lvas from 134.5 to 172.9, ‘t1 1K Only one-third of the normal honey crop was realized in the Proviucelof Quebec in 19.11, due 1,0 drought in the early part of the summer and the cool three weeks of August, Mr. S. M. Dcschcncs, assistant provincial apimist. told the Provincial Association of Apiarists. he said, Quebec's honey crop l5 51,90,000 pounds. In the Dominion as a whole the annual crop is about 25,000,000 pounds. Early in the year it had been anticipated that a crop of 3o,- ooo,ooo pounds would be possible in I941, bu; owing to the reduced crop in Quebec, and :1 smaller decline in Ontario, the I941 yield ap- ' 11101501816131 22.000900 pounds. \Vestern prov. inces had higher yields, Alberta had a bumper crop. v u u Even the "worm" of ihe Government sup- porters 1n the House of Commons is getting sick and tired of the Mackenzie King boastings with- Out producing the goods. "We have heard en- ough bedtime stories, we want to see some of these guns and ammunition we hear so much 317°11'51" Mf- Jean Francois Pouliot (Lib. Temis- sonata) saidin the House of Commons. Continu- mg his criticism of the Department of Munitions and $119131)’. Mr. Pouhot spoke of a case in which he said a loan had been floated for the establish- mept of a drydock and the amount received in assistance from the Government exceeded i 1 'prcb..bly wrong, cur. fore 1t. gem better. 1t ls a heavy task to brlng back such a report and to make ft to the people of‘ Canada. - Winnlpeg Free Press l Tlnunlng ll a. bottleneck. That may seem a harsh Lhlng to say about a town but 1n a moze par-t ticular sense, that bottlenec lsl proving a. quite effective trap fur| crlznlnuls. With only one road ln and out of the district, real crun- lnals hesitate to take a chance 0n coming here. That is one advant- age that the town wlll always hold as long as there is a. single avenue of approach —- or escape — ln and out o1 the district. Some day that bottleneck may be broken by an-X other main higlivlay. -—- Tlmmins Press. l We have heard so much from! Vl-LLOIS overseas about the splen-l dld morale of the British people that to suggest mat there ls a feel-, ing o1 uneasiness over any aspect‘ 0.1 tne war or complaint about s.me of uie restncnolis lmpcsed may sound like rank disloyalty. Tne 1am. remains, however, that, wltn me apploanh of the longer even- lllgs tnere is. as there was ‘last year. a feeling that tne blaCK-Ollb restrlcvzons are unduly sevee. People 1111;; haue this leeLng are at. the mo- men.—part cularly as extensive raldmg 1s not lamng place — 1t 1s c1.ft1eu.t to convince them of the Ilecesslty for plunglng me entire country lnto darkness. 11 would be true to say that must pecple par- tlculaluy women snut up a1. b.me, do not vlew another Winter of black-cut. with any keen antlc1pa-‘ :.0n. For people living 111 Unelr own hcmes the nuisance ls not so greal, out for the m.».11y thousands evacuated or l.r.ed 1.0 live else- where the difficulties axe n1a1;y.- Sussex Daily News. | There was a time, between the years 1920 and 1:133, when more than ten mllion Amcncan annual vsltcrs in Canada would have seemed not at all suiprismg. ln fact, runcmbering how strong was the lure of Canada 1n our own Prchib tron era, Americans might have been asmnlslled at their owzi moceathn. Only one in every ten of our people lsund occasion b0 cicss the unlorllf ed bcr..er to the Ordinarly ‘ north o1 us. Tcdzy we know bet- ter. N9 one LOQay is compelled to drive over 1:110 Csuada fcr a drrnk Yet our tourists .n Canada last year were more than e.e.e11 million and the visiting autcmobles were nearly three and a quuxner milLon. Obviously Canada his o.he. and better attractions for the Ameri- can public than those tempoarlly created by Mr. V-lstead. Our tour- ists ln Canaan are not so very far behind the whole number of visi- tors to all our‘ ozrn nat.onnl parks. —Ne-w York Tunes. 0n many day; it ls now impos- sible to buy a fountain pen 1n Binnlnghaln, for while war has bought about an enormously 1n- creased demand, supplled on 111e, market have dwindled b0 25 per- cent, of peace-lime productloml "'1he fountain pen shortage now more acute than that cqarettes”. l was 001d at a leadlng1 Birmingham stat. cner‘s. “Nor-l umlly we carry‘ erably more t an £1,600 worth of pens. Today we have practically nothing. We cannot Possibly meet the demand, when has more lhanq doubled slnce the war began, 101-1 hundreds the Force and evacuees all over the country need fountam pens tor on all but the lost. point and made NQBQDy the principles their united cause i there could be little doubt of m? 11m Nobody] w)“; a"; you? result. Mr. Herrldge proposes aso a -~~1wd mo? l action. The Church ls not cumbered u stock of eonsld-, Us of thousands o! men lndsm WORDS OF CHALLENGE A THOUGHT A DAY FOB A PEOPLE AT “All "The greater our lnherlt- anoe. the greater the respon- slblllty to defend lt. If we lose the war, all these assets.- these gifts of nature. and the prospects of so great a. future wlll be as nothlng. What mat- ters, therefore, what socrlflce or what effort ls made now, so long as we wln ln the end!"- J. S. Duncan, president of the Massey HarrLs Co., of Tor- PUBLIC FORUM ‘Ihl: column l: 09:; h: ti: Ghoul-Ion by oorrenpondunt: of qnutlon: o! Interest. Tho Clurlottetown Gnu-din an. not uaonurlly undone lb opinion nl “rnlnunrlento. DR. GRANTS ANSWER S1n~In your "Editorial Notes" of tho 8th instant you ask if D1". Grant wlll accept promotion to the Senate and allow Right Honourable Armun Melghen unopposed return. l It. ls true I belong to a very char- ltableprcfesslon but surely there 1s a limit to my generosity and, ln fact, 1 resent the suggestion that °111°- I betray the confidence of m sup-, pcirtéerlsilm thfe Banner Lllpdera ‘Dis-a 1'6 n85. 0T any cons erat on. I If an acclamatlon ls to be given‘ Eégncrsglef! ogzestlhelt tzggd 611,15’? to the resurrected Tory Leader. ltppremier Aberhan had 1'15] will have to be arranged by the thrown ".8 $114266 t m ‘P391’ Liberal Party, but some Member of The 65mm s o?‘ ‘he w“ 011'- the remnant of his own party Ho“ es 5 u e cred“ should supply the necessary vn- u 5t “"291 “Pparen Y1 ‘mm 111' cancy. otherwise the “Grim Reaper" 10195 whilgms 1‘ and 1111591953 0n is your ‘my mp6‘ raiigesd an awfiilierllxfivoriilirlleiiiiere? To think of asklng a Liberal Member 1o provide a seat 1n Par- 11'” 1°11115- P°°P1° W110 BOPPOW ltament for one of y0Lll‘ polltleal 11111111131 11°11"! 111E and" 11011595 Pa)’ slx per cent. The Credit Houses last year had deposits of 80.697502, or which $2,077,741 were turned over to the chartered banks. Thus the Soclal Credit Government. whlcn ls forever denouncing the banks, spends $344,522 a year drumln u business for them. buslnes wiilcfi they would get anyway. The Credit Houses have been one of Aberharfls gaudler failures, but he wlll hardly drop them. They provlde a refuge for g couple of hundred of his followers at large Public expense. That the money so rlotously wasted would go 11 long lshmaelltesls indeed a sad situ- ation for the once great Conserva- tlve Party and press. 1 am, Sir, etc., THOS. V. GRANT M. P. for Kings, P. E. l. Ottawa, Ontario. November 15th, 1941. (Surely the prospective Senator 1s not crying "sour grapes" because a seat l; being provided for Mr. Meiglien in Torontol-Ed. G.) Appeal To The Churches war 111111.111 worm... 11.. 11.01.11. i fighter squadron Ls apparently lost (Globe and Man) completely on Premier Aberhart, who ls now leading a crusgdg 1,0 folst his monetary hallucinations "P0X! 5118 Dominion Government. Freedom’s Free Lancers Hon. W. D- l-lerrldge has been condemned because of 111s political phllosophy, which has seemed more theoretlcal than practical. Ne1er-l rheless he has brought the fervor of‘ the crusader to a practical plane in urging the Church to make the war‘ lts cause and provide the leadership the State fails to glve. The Church. ulhatevei" its subdivisions, ls still the centrifugal force of wihat ls known as the democratic way of llfe_ From l1, radiates 1111 influence which leads men and women to think and act as ca”? 111° 1911915 U- $~ 5- 0H the Individuals. And its existence ls shmlldefs? They m be“! M“ on challenged by the pagan (loch-me of, our streets ln ever-increasing num- might over rlght, as has been made We W! they are 111/ins answers no only too evident wherever the Nazl P119 151118111111151111111-15" 171.11" $1115 W" hordes have gained control and 1111- 15 11° 1111111!‘ 01 i119 111111166 st-Btvs-l posed their contempt; for the Dec- The!’ 1m°w What 1511B 155N155 BPB 11nd 310mm ,what is at stake. So they gave up Major Hemdge points out m,“ their jobs, their college coursesl we are not whining the war. not b2-' 111911‘ 1mm“ 111113 111911" 11111111135 1° cause Hitler ls s0 good. but becausel 11°11‘ "Wmwflrd and Enlist 1n I democracy is so faulty. Palliiczlll M1915“ 1111115’ W 11811!» 191' 1T99d0m- democracv tcnlporlzes with an eye, A 19439111 81111137111119!“ Sufi/e)’ f9- on 1111-. ballot box: the Church. w" “@111” 11"" “E111 P" 9"" °1 111*’- lts conccrirfor all persons, rls‘s< 5111' 91111115 11131119111 0K‘ l-Yfllnlflg 1H above this. Religious freedom is 1101' R- C- A- F- are Americans. and less an attribute of democracy thanl i119" "U"! $119 United States political freedom 11nd both wlll tall M11118 H5 lnstflwml‘ f0!‘ the together ff Hitler wins. Hence the 16111111118 111111-560“! 0f Others are obligation of religious leaders 15 m; ferrylng bombers to B‘ ltaln. Camd- less 111111 111111. of 1101mm lead 1111M Bud Americans a e mess-males Th‘, slam 53,15 Major Herrldgey in the R. A. F.. and he American has failed to lead the nation. 01111-113115“? 51111311111115 011 fly Wlth ada must turn 1o the Church. He I°YmB11EHSITOm the R. 1C- A. F. proposes that the heads of mel N01‘ l5 @1181 811- Alflwst. 10.000 churches call a conference and _l.~l' Amerlcam a" 591N118 ill the Can- down these principles: That Christ- lan democracy faccs the greatrs: a“? 111 1119 Ylfll/lfl and 8V 1 now the peril cf all time; that the pvcpw 1191‘ 1° 1119 139F116!‘ 15 CQX11111111EB- - must. be united on the highest level m | of service and sacrifice; mat this unity would demand the machinery of total war; that this, hi turn would demand. a “total Govern- ment“; that the Church's mission was to achieve unity of the people; and that to speed lts Jilsslon “the Church new declares its decision to unite." Even though the churches agreed (Winnipeg Free Press) How numy people have noticed flip trlm, blue-clad, clear-eyed young 600 ‘$11?- ers. l - Y. ?i1'1;11i$h;£m311gRglnglgasgélténsifigtllgv Then there's s. pair of us-dont c -‘ . togwipe out Hitler. This ls what men lfll alulthoriltly {have bean urging ‘lpy de-l car g a ree na ons mus oou How dreary w be somebody] How ~ feager or the New Démocrac‘ pity To tel your name the llvelong however. has lad clown a plan for te . They'd banish us, you know. day To an admlrlng bog. -Emlly Dldclnson. red tape and hampered by oar-l LUCK 0F Till! ARLISS an myopla. It embraces the great people wlthln lts by majority of the ‘ . d1 l t1 furildaiitiegtaallimgiid ncglauililgmfgiilegtlil 09°13“ 5713b the 11°14"- W"?! 3 strengthen itself through 11 great. sold p11: as n zwd luck cham- 1 spiritual awakening 1n behalf of a war to snve the wo 11d from vaun- Hm yu an 11111110111 rulrrs um Major Her-ridge has offered a plan whlch requires only recognltton of lows ln air force unlfornis who - urlng on "rehabilitation after the war" this South Africa mtnlng clty 15 Dllnfllng new arterial roads. ln- creased power supply and "sub-ec-' onomlc housing for Europeans and non-Europeans." lea ln Japan and almost household has them. ll llll adlan active army. Hun reds mercy; ll Ill l1 ll typo! o lectlon they need . . . locurlty now and N11"? 1! 017 36-15. An : uervloe to you, the o0 wfl] w“? ehec onomfor cinch month i: otlio. llelleve: your, poet-dated. Spuamodlo Cutorrh. Se a u. Ilpnn r 111T.» nae-fl?!“ maornlirizs T: how you eon Iuve the selected 1| ext: rotectlon you _ form : ule ex need or u llttle u ledutlve cough 85 l month. AMERICAN HEAD OFFICE: l I F E 113 Kill 8t. W..'l‘o:onte, On. TABI. Fur The halo. Urlnury Prleo l0 oent| a Monthly premium" run-m “m” O Hem l: : new Idncl ofllfe lmunnco 1pm; u, l h m n: In the 111T» 11010231? $011! other -'-'i'1'1'.°"1.,"'°""' T 1"'"'"">§ the finundnl pro- Mlxture,” Mull Order: Given Promp- Attentlon. NOVEMBER 19, 1941 BABKRITE ETS Kidney A remedy for Blanche, l,“ Troubles, , box. m oust 8711mm; VED Ivor! Pinon who h m, Itomleh ' at : bottle Evun: slum. d It wlll reIIElvAQ ‘fill h“ Tlllllll 111-Elmo : glunnteecl lnoomo ln Inter llfo. 22301119.}. ‘guinea-sunny The pllu worlu Ilka thl: hm“ y 0 n l" l1. lly my poll that nulls youirygefln, but liirhugTnr Tami"; u” lnneul o p: the lint you’: pro- ""111 F§¥"3;-’-3‘.1~.l."'°;1.°.l.‘°“"'....°.“"' *- e on - 05.000 1103i; Proteiition our: m" MIMONIATE» nuoucum. 0011mm, 56!!!! Brunchll Mo. a l, cfllllu ma iiiiiii, A ulentlllo onmhl 1| uulltle: or '31.}: l peclornnt 1n Dfwflrallnn. The Two Macs l0 Great Gentle Street Pleueund mo‘ ‘ ' qbougyw; . elnl 5121... 11’.“§€'iau'.i‘;'.'€’a¢i‘il3“" "l" h‘ “r Namu- ‘ Adriano...“ ,_ ‘n. .1. prtfflllllth a 1. u. 5'11» manna Ulntrlot lllunuler: U0 llluhmond St. LOOKING AHEAD JOHANNESBURG—(CP1 _ F12- TRAPP over lut canon. silvers, mlnk and uluutlon. PLUMS AS PICKLES Plums are generally used u pick- QVGYY J open Buturd L-‘IIB-ll-IB-Gl TRAPPERS ATTENTIU We are buying daily Muskrat, Mink, Red Fox, Coon, etc, at full market prices. We have just receiv- er, Cross, ' ed a large order for Muskrat. and Mink, Silv and Red Fox from a New York Fur House pay a premium to fill this order. Bring or ship your furs to us immediately. Remittance mailed WE PAY SHIPPING CHAJGES Write for New Price List. 111 P. E. 1. FUR TRADERS 182 Queen Street ‘The Best Place to Sell Your Furs" w. , l- - - '~. . 1 ‘ “ $3.0. ' Zi-IZI-Z%I~ZZIIZZH€K§H j ERS Prlce: of ruw Inn have ndvnno My specially muskrats; a Crou Fox. Bed Fox and Rama Forty your: buying experlence gu anteel : proper grading and cone _ J. n. JENKINS, NOTE: For convenience of tr: pen und others my office wlll ly nights from ‘l llll and will daily. 111E 3W9 “P °°T1°5P°nd°n¢° W191‘ nctualltles to brln l1 into practice. needs to such an extent that consideration was 119""- 1! “"1"” W" 1n 11°"' The 30.000 pulpnsgbf this country given to declaring a dividend. Yet we cannot get $31}, 1T5 Qlglllldwhrfi‘ 113i, 50223111? Riven“ n§§",‘;§,§°‘°$,o‘l,l‘,l°‘§,,§°'§§fl the needful to complete our wharf lmprovg- on the spot. - From the Blrmmg- people m the dqplm or men- soul mcntsl mm Pul“ and arouse n flame of real that: ¢ ,1 , ‘ could not fall to extend itself to. omel- lands 11111 free. l‘ Charles I. Km; of Great 1211111.. 111.1 11.111111, born this date _I600;_was a dictator by prgfgy- ktce and a believer 1n “the Divine Right of mgs to do Jolly well what they chose. He dis- pensed with Parliament and ran the kingdom for eleven years "on his own," raising money' 111°8311Y on the then equivalent councel; he also endeavoured to compel Calvin-l Lstlsrto become Episcopalians, which led to re- °_ 1°" "K1539. Charles was p pattern of all the private ylrtues, but 1n public affain he was‘, vascillating, obstinate, and tortuous in his methods ldisregarding considerations of reason, and even of jsnour, when these conflicted ivith his absolulist 1 @Pl§. m 1649 he met his fate with dignity and lmllllldtf. the victim of Cromwelfs victory at Naseby. e a u a Ens extract from_a discussoin in Parliament nee s to ‘be Clflpllaillfifl. at _tl11s_,|unct11re when 1a new d‘r‘1ve for recruiting n1 being inaugurated M11111’! Conservative House leader Hanson pdas ‘potential ‘manpower capacity as disclosed' ‘Y national registration. He asked also for the, number of men of military age, that is. he said’ men from 21 to 45. Mr. Hanson referred back’ to adlteconsecration Week address by Hon. G. Jar mer 1n which the Agriculture Minister was ‘cporwd ‘*5 511W"; Canada could muster an lallgllf P1 110001000 men and still have manpower su frcient to operate industry and primary pro-| Winnipeg Free Press, confesses it is_ not pre- ‘lllflllut- Mr. Hanson ivonclered whether Mr. pared forthwith to agree with either side 10.1111: T110110“ could say whether the figure of 1,000,- discussion as 1o the limits of compulsory service; ' 00° "1011 for the forces was ‘optimistic,’ though but i1 fccls "quite justified in saying. with all he added he believed i; had been made in a" the force it can command. that this is not time forlgood faith. lnyborly in Canada, not even the Prime Mlnlstéfl to like the position that no matter what em-l fact that in his speech 11¢ 11.1.1 133,1 11m l; mm. y arise, no matter how dire the nerd 000 m"! were in the armed <crvice= there would a particular kmd. the Parliament be 7.030.000 persons over 16 ycarg who would the Government of Canada are to be left to carry 1111 outside the armed services." érgencies ma for action of of c.1511. and '1 l‘ s 1111- Gardiner rose to draw attention 10 the I of Qrderg-in-l tlrely untrue, repLed Mr. Shaw, The dlet that keep: Mr. Bernard Show hale and sprgntly n. 85 seems to be 1. topic 0d world- wlde lnterest Tnere recently be- came current 1n tine United States a distressing rumor that he had eaten l. plece of meat, 5o an ardent. shavlan-curn-vegetarlan wrote dl- rect to him to ascertain whether lt had my foundation. It was em. 1n‘ COMPLETE i INSURANCE Another Aberhartisml (Winnipeg Free Press) 1 After landing squarely behind the ,‘ eight-ball 1n its effm- to conjure‘ up 825 per month for everybodynl the Aberhnrt Government ln Al- berta. three years ago established a. number of RAW FllllS WANTED Silver Fox skins, Muskrat and other raw furs _re- quiz-ed. Highest market prices. Trade demanding quantities. See us now. Felting and cleaning done by our experienced men. Plant now ln operation. FOR SALE Used fox wlre, fox houses, cedar posts, lumber and electric motor. G. R. MACQUARRIE Summerlldo THE QUESTION IS 111m 1t 1n my direction eiwevt of people “no deposited the]: cash ln that he had chanxed hla diet provincial Credit B41)! NSDEL. 0r that. l.f he had w Houses. The ldea was to lncreaae 11W 1111 1116 0W1‘ 11611111 11¢ Wmfldlconsumptlun of Alberta goods. and o stricter avoidance of animal pro-H m emu; hm,“ were my"; m“. "1119"- 3°W°V°T1 11° 119cm" ‘lungs ln proportlfin to the amount "Bell-Tm? 9° "l" 13° 11° 11“ of good: they brought. two eaten’. good deal of nnlmal pro- f l 1 w. .- 11. 1... .1 m. m1». »1.l.1.:1.1:=*1..zz111:~1:". 11112111.: n1".1..l1“..t2?'§.1:;‘°..5:m1 55,35"- md w» ~11 1= M» we i=- depenrlent on them, but u : mot-l According to the “mum “W” ter- of fut. h; ha; never excluded me- m- - m- - Mum-- sldr: 1:12:31’: “turret .11: tor Guardian. year. Fbr the year endlng March 31 ‘ "' _ last, the operating cost was 8387,- merllmw‘ (iémnlxus: U33‘ 884, earnings were 843.142, and the net loss of’ the year $344,522. Where dld the money go? Mainly it wmt lnto the pockets of’ the Social Credlten w o were glven jobs ln the Credit ousea. Then‘ ullrlel’ last year totalled $186,300, compar- ed wlt1 8114.266 paid out ln con- sumers’ dlvldenda. In other words, they Pflld Out $1.45 ln nlarle: for W"? 81 taxpayers’ f handed outoln dfvldenda thnfiineli 1000-000004040-04660460 broupht 111w harbor under ner own wer 1| an uncommon end u u wrltu our spe- cl:1 correspondent 1n I. British rt. Thur. l1 what we uw here. he submarine ls the U-boat which about. a month no made history by mnenderlng. ln the Atlmtlc, to I Lcdlheed Hudson ulicraft. of the RAJ". Coastal Oom- mnnd. The RAJ); picturesque conqueot wa: handed over leverll hour: tum to the Nwy. A few days dtenvard: IhG was token over by the prlle crew of 20 who have now hrouglgt her to Brltalm- Rpm III-boot‘ rah ngmgutwlrd guunln mu- tured, but n f: known that ‘h’; was suhmurlne U 670. 8110 l! temper-urn; commended l1! ' tenant Oeome Oolvln, R11. whose prevlou: command we; 8.1L sub- marine Bunflsh. I-‘lla "N 0ne".t: Lieutenant Peter lu- rlott, an v their pup n I U-bout or medium ut 500 to 000 fem 40 icaiftrivilim were cnauntm v/hen she capture WI: d. — 10116011 Tllflflt l Say to Your Grocer I Want BRAllMlll ORANGE PEKOE TEA You will enjoy it; superior quality SERVICE ” W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. P110110 540-541 i " i 2 Z X l if 4 1 i 1 1 l 1 ._ 1.11am elusive r5 ~ .-Yeu, how dld Mickey's 'l‘wlsl outlive so many of it: early competltora. It has been on the market more than flfty years. There ls only one answer-became lt dgllvwfd 111° ponds. 3 Hickey’s Black Twist Chewing 10¢ PerFig MANUlMCTURED av IIIBKEY '81 ll|0ll0L$0ll "o" 1cm m. urn, cnsatorrmrowu