5 l l 33cc rout: HIE CIIAHUTTETOWN GUARDIAN iu-iiiiing Dally tlwunded u: mm rn-sunnt; Llllll. cal W (‘healer l1 McLIN he President: J It Burnett, FJJ- Secretary: Lieut Um l). A. illaelflnnun- 0.8-0- Li in anti HZPILIKIIIQ Uireclur- J B. Burnett», FJA A Summit Elllllllb. Hunk Walker 1nd Ian A. Darnell SLBSCRIFPIUN BATES By Man Ill P t. 1., v4.00 pei yen. $2.50 to: I mulb- ilifi fer 3 months; 60c fur on! month City nenvi-iy. 3.1.00 pct year; $3.0» l0: h mental $1.75 tar .4 monlm u; Mail ln Canaan and u.s..-\. $5.00 pa! your Sat-slimy net-my; :4.00 per year; $1.00 for 8 monuu. 50c for 3 manual. The Chulolusluwn Guardian any bu nhulnod d llulunui‘: Aqua Agency, Tluien UIJIHIIO. New hurl; (IIO Buuili Aiavrl Ageiivy. Curuur Mill: nml lhnnlnnun. Dalton; ueii-uu-itfiun Auwn Alellr]. um; rut us. Illllllill] .| Fin». 8-H lhu an. fllnmlu; Nuvn Slunll, chum-u mine-u, Ottawa; “ullv-‘n ha“: zmuiu, auilbury. Ont; llub rfllpjfmg 51w». moi-emu. n. 11.. Ellen unborn-iii, Alnherlt, n. 1 fThe Strongest Memory as Weaker than Ill Weakest Ink." SATYRDAY. AUGUST 23, 1941 Costly Bungling At Ottawa The past few weeks have seen a series of ma- jor ticups in wzir production plzints in Canada, owing to izibor troubles which the Dominion kiU\'t‘l'1llll€l1i seems quite incapable of dealing with. Several weeks ago, a mere handful 9f workmen zit the ziluiiiitiuni plant at Arvida, Que- bec, the second lzirgest mi the continent. tied up production for three whole week's. In the Cape Breton CUIll fields, iiud in the National Steel plant at Hamilton, there have been similar cost- ly ltoldtips. Now further trouble has broken out at the Tireuton steel pllllll’, involving 2,700 men and tieing iip not only the munitions making in- dustry but three cozil mines as well. Fifteen strikers Llffi sziid to have forced 1,200 men into idleness at Stellrirtoti. Who is responsible? This is a situation that should not be tolerated in wartime. The llitig (iovernmcnt has now practically unlimited powers over both employers and employees in adjusting labor disputes. \Vhy does it no: exercise them? The fact is that it seems to have no consign“ policy. .\t .\l:ilton aircraft plant, for example, the Govcrmucnfs conciliation board set a rate of wages which the union refused to accept and threatened a strike within 48 hours_ Uunitions Blinister Ilowc stepped in and raised the wages above the prevailing lcvel in the industry. Al. Arviila .\lr. Ilowe tool: the opposite course, charging some of the strikers with “sabotage" and promising that “arrests definitely will be nmde." This amioitncemctit should have come from the Dcllllllllltlllf of Justice, which so far has lllilklC no arrests that have been publicly re- ported. Again, iii the steel works dispute at Hamilton, .\lr. Irlowe on a few hours notice. put a controller in the plant while the company was in the midst of itegotiutiotts with the Depart- nistu of l.:ilioi' to end the strike; and last week, afzi-r the l'l'ln|c blinisier is sziid to have person- ally llllL‘l'\‘\'ll(‘<l. there mts a further “settlement" at the ssiuie phint. This backing and filling is going on zit (lllilWll at the expense of our armed forces who :ire offering their very lives and are absciluicly (li-peiiilent for their vital equipment on our war industries. Why should it be allow- ed to continue? This little Province would gladly welcome the opporlttnlly of getting \\‘{l1' industries, but we seem to be out of the picture altogether. Our axprtyers, however, are footing the bill for the strikes and holdups that are being permitted to go on in other provinces. Our Island soldiers, sailors and airtneit are suffering in consequence. .\lr. King has pfOClllltllffd an all-out war pro- gramme for Canada. It was on that assurance that the Victory Loan campaign went over the top———l"ritice Edward Island being the first Province to reach and pass its objective That prr-grzinuiie met with full approval from one end of Canada to the other. All classes, all creeds, stibscribed to it. \Vhy then is it not being enforced? .\lr. King is now in Fitglatid. He will find that there hzis been little lzibor trouble there be- cause thc people and the Government are work- ing wholeheartedly together. The workers, like other classes, hzive their own trusted represen- lntivcs iii the ziilministrzition. Partyism has been forgotten. ".\ppeasemcnt” policies have been discarded. .\ll are determined that nothing shall interfere with their battle against Hitler. Why cruinot we have the same condition in Canada? I'mlouhtrill_v we could have it, if we had the Vlgoffitts liwidi-rsliiy) to inspire and instire it. Changes In The West "Farmers seem to have lost respect for wheat." In these words rt writer in the Winnipeg Fret: Press epitomizes the change that has come about in western fllflll areas. From east to west across northern Saskzitcheivmi men are cutting WlICElf with the mower to feed to cattle. The crops are stunti-il and the mower will get 25 per cent more of tlirm than the hinder that does not shave the ground as closely, but there is some good wheat in flit-m. South of Edmonton a farmer remarked quite chci-rftilly tlint whczit was worth 9o cents (l bushel to him as hog feed. Once it was szicri-il Ils lIllllFlIl food. quite different from the lowly course giviiits. According to the Sanford ITNHHS sitrvey of the 10.10 crop \'('.'ll', the misli fnrm income of the Prairie l‘ro\~iiiei-< came: front ivheat, 55 per “m; from course grains. 5' per cent: from live- stock, 1o pi-r ei-iit. null from other products (CH-mm .~--_-., bet-ts. fur, horses, wool. etc.) 14 per cent. This u" "s wliezit will give about two- lhirds of ln-t year's- ticre yield on little more than three-quarters of last year's acreage. The sale- ahp. flmnum “f n”! wheat mtiy be no more than half that of VHO. lllrinitobn is s1irl to lir- the most fortunate of the three prairie provincrs in IQ-ll- I! h?" l°°k“l more tn livesfork and coarse grains. and the stoek i; doing well with ample feed ahead. ln Al- berta also tlic gain on livestock may more than ’.\Ir. offset a drop in wheat revenue. Saskatchewan, under Mr. (iardinefs Prairie Farm Assistance Act, is considered to l1Zl\'€ a crop fziilur when 171 townships hiive an average yield under five bushels. .-\ inzip published by the Saskatchewan: Govcrnnint on August It shows 41 municipali- ties (about 369 townships) under that figure_ Payments will be coming in to western farm- ers who iticrezised their acreage of summcrfallou‘ itistezid of seeding a wheat crop on stubble. While the transition from wheat to livestock production is thus being facilitated in the West, our Maritime breeders are still handicapped by reason of high freight costs on feed grains, which the \\'est has in overabundance. The situation, as noted many times, doesn't make sense. - EDIIURIAL NUIES -. \\'hat will the answer be for the wcek-end— wet or dry? iv m w in The Ilillsborotigh River henceforth will carry its own load of electric light, heat and power. v at Though Oil and \Vat_er do not mix, Electricity and Gass seem to make a happy combination. 1k a- 1 v Parsons who chose this month for vacation are lucky, as they managed to crowd five Sun- days into it. n u v n An Upper Canada Editor has been here seek- ing to find out why we have some very success- ful tillers of the soil, while others are "in the red." Hope he is told the uiivzirriished truth. t w m at \\'e are fast passing itito the sere and yellow leaf stage of the year, and zis yet there is no iii- dication of the “great Federal government work" we were to get to keep the home fires burning. Politicial propaganda-bah! x w x n: Tourists "love the Island” they sny becziusc it is so free from hustle and bustle. “Nobody seems to work here," said one lady, "just glides, glides leisurely along.” She must have met our many government officials and other politicians. n: 1i * n- Sir Astley Panton Cooper, English Surgeon. born this date I768. Performed the famous operation of tying the abdominal aorta for arieurism in 1817; practised with great success in London; was professor of comparative anatomy in the Royal College of Surgeons, and subsequently President. i: 4i u u It looks as though Bermuda is going to be Americanized to the extent of ndtttitting motor cars for general use. The tnilitary having been granted the necessary permission, the civil popu- lation will not be long in demanding a similar privilege. I‘ i‘ I“ i‘ The New South \\'.'iles grwcriimeiit hris ini- tiated an inquiry itito the treatment of habitual drunkards. The Under Secretary for justice, Mr. M- C. Nott stated “It may be better to alter the law so habitual drunkards may’ be committed to a medical 0r psychological institution itisteztd of being fined or imprisoned. That might effect a cure.“ Mr. Nott pointed out that llfllJ-lllléll drunk- ards are often sentenced seven or eight times 11 year, but imprisonment seems quite useless. =r v v =l< Perhaps the best thing, Prime kflnistcr King has said so far in London was in reply to an Australian newspaper man. Asked if there was any truth in the saying the dominions were merely rubber stamps for London. Mr. King replied with a smile: "Just ask my political op- ponents whether I'm a rubber stamp. I never in- tend to be." The point of the joke is that Mr. King is known as “Laissez Faire," which is even more derogatory than “a rubber stamp." in n- : 1v Last week 224 British peers and members of Parliament asked their Government to: 1) pro- vide schools with religion instructors, 2) make religion an optional subject in teachers’ colleges, 3) begin daily services in schools, 4) arrange for textbooks on religion, 5) appoint Govcrntnent inspectors of religion. Said these signatories: “The present struggle is clearly one between a regime embracing a crude and reactionary pagan- ism, finding expression in material force and destroying truth, freedom and justice wherever its impact is felt, and ottrselves and those who have the declared purpose of establishment these more firmly in the common life of the world as the foundation of that new and better social order. Rightly understood, these are the clement- al principles of the Christian philosophy of life and it would seem therefore that the future citi- zen should be so molded in character by Christian education that his citizenship shall become the expression of these principles in action." m i: it Mr. Peter Fraser, Prime bfiiiister of New Zealarid, who is to sit in with Prime Minister King at the Imperial Cabinet in London, was in- troduccd to politics as a boy in his father's slioc- making shop in Scotland. Almost every evening when the day's work was done it was the habit of the older men of the T703111 district of Ross- shire to gather in the shot-maker's shop in the vil- lage. Sitting among them very often was the shoemrikefs keen-eyed son. lle WZIS happier there listening to heated arguments between Liberals and Tories on the political (juestions of the day than with running with his [ilzivuiatcs in the streets. That mis more than forty-five years ago To-dny the people of Fcarn are proud to think that the shncmzikers son is New Zcalzuitls man of (lcstitty in the crisis of wnr. The men to whom Fraser used to listen in his father's sltnc- making shop litid a very high struulziril nf self- ClllllvlllCfl intelligence. .~\t school he slioivt-il more than ordinary iutellgcuce. Later ivheu Mr. Fraser went on visits to Fcaru from New Zea- land he always visited his nld school and showed a great interest in teaching methods. This inter- est from a man who occupied at one time the post of Minister of Ed1"'tinn for New Zcaland was a tribute to Scottish education.” THE QUARDIAN notes av m: win l A watch carried ln four wars ls 1n the pcssosion cf a woman in Wales. 1t. bcgan its career in the ipscket. of a solder in the Crimean W81‘; was bit. by l Boer bullet. 1f. .11;- l mm °1 $116 060N111’; Wu earned 1n France 1n 1914-1B—and sufferer! a casualty the other day when lis crystal was splintered in a. bcmbtng rald. A real service record! —Buf- falo Currier-Express. Commander Stephen King-Hulk: MP, started a recent DF-SGOBSI to NOFIIDAIIIGFICQ with an apocrypbal‘ story illustrating a peculiarly Brit-j lsh type of humor, The scene was, an observattan post on the south. coast of England, and 1t was man- ned by an officer and a telephon st. The officer was searching the horizon with his binoculars when suddenly he exclaimed: “Take thls message and give it Priority 1A: {Large enemy formattzn approach- ing stop heavy and tight naval units are escorting numerous barges under cover of aerial protection stop position of enemy force approxl- mately twelve miles 183 degrees from Bull Point. stop visiblty extreme, wind southwest. force five. Metsage etids‘. Have you gzt that 0K3?" "Yes, slrl" “Transmit 1t at once to the report. centre. I‘m going cn the roof". The telephoritsta poked up his transmitter and spoke: “Is that; you, Alf? The balloons gsne up! ‘Itler. Gcerlng and the rest. of the perlsbers are 'ere."—Lcndon L sten- I‘. Mrs. Pruskifs cow at Bellls ale too much grain last. week, slapped breathing and lay down 1n the yard to die, Mrs. Prusku got scared and ran for Dr. Bugink. He salcl the cow had choked herself. However, be put a brcoinstick about. three feet. down her throat and broke the handle short. The dcctor was not to be fcoled, so he went. to the blacksmith and got. a two-foot. pair of pliers or tongcs and pulled out the stick, and‘ damlt the cow s arted to breathe after a couple of hours, and Mrs. Ptuska actually kissed her cow many times tn the piesence of the doctor and nearly n11 the village settlers. A banquet should be tn order fcr Buglak, -— St. Paul (A1- berta) Journal. "Crazy 2s a coiil” is an expression heard more perhaps in America than here, but. 1t. has a firm basis ln fact. 0n a hot, June eventn I was startled by a great conunot-on ln the reeds of a pond. After a mo- ment out came a pair of coot. like t-wo birds is a Disney film, they floundered at, great. speed towards me centre of the pond. There they stopped, reversed and turned up their white and black fan-tails to each other, They then retreated slightly, manoeuvred for position, and all of a sudden flew at each other backwards, with tails fiercely outsipread. They repeated the at- tack several times. Between each attack there was a crazy interval of manoeuvre, tn which they brave- ly waltzed round and round each other with a kind of sinister cau- tion. like a pair of Apache dancers. Then suddenly they would fly at each other again and fight their extraordinary rear-guard action, cackling madly, banging their tails at each other, at once very comic and very serious. when the per- fomianoe was over they left the ring with rather dignified grace, and re- tired to the reeds again, where they pppeared to be on the mcst chiirm- mg terms with each other. —Lon- don Spectator. The words of Marshal Pelrln l0 the French people yesterday read like those c-f a man spraking fr.m the grave. Hopeless and baffled, starved and‘ persecuted, he weakly abandoned all resistance to the Httlerfan forces. He stated succinct- ly that. he has g.ven up all hope of creating a unified, stolcal France. His plea for American understand- ing was wreathed ln dspair. No American will c.nsl:'er this sur- render an addition to Hitler's pow- er. It. only means that, France has plumbed the depths of disgrace. Gleaming 1n the far, far distance, catching perhaps a refulgcnce of the past, 1s the hope that humilia- tion and the wlilps c-f tyranny will harden the flesh and awake the Gallic fire which once. llved 1n the ltgeagu at the Grand Armyr-mston cs . The klnd of logic by which mem- bers of the Ametucan First Com- mittee scek no give tlie-msefves 001K889. Ln their losing fight, against. the national policy, can be illustrat- ed thus: All dogs have halls. A cal has a tall. Therefore a cat. 1s a dog. The way America Flnlers put 1t ls this. Eighty percent of the people are opposed to war. America First ls opposed to war. Theiefcre Amer- ica. First represents eighty percent of the people. _,T1ie truth Ls, as shown by the polls, that while eighty percent of the people are otp- posed to going to war unless ft ls necessary. nearly eighty percent are supporting the administration's foreign policy, obVLsusly on the ground that. the administration will not, let us get Into wur unnecessar- lly. — Chicago Daily News. Japan has shown her hand| more clesiriy than she had some weeks ago, nricl 1t ls the nand of an enemy. Frcm nsiw on 1t is the treatment. of an enemy that. she 1s to receive. No mare courtesy and etiquette. No more attempts t0 placate. Only the nern measures suited to an enemy who gives every indication of Imminent. belllgerency. — vanccuver Province. Maxlm Lllvlnov has come out of obscurity, It seems cnly right. that. he should. For Joseph Stalin 1s now engaged 1n putting things right. with Britain, and the only one of his front-ranking conferes who has any real siatidtxig in Brl- lain ts this same chubby and be- spectacled dlplcmat. An "Old Bcshe- vlk" who wss lcng known as a champion of disarmament and c01- lectlve security. A Bolshcvlk who staggered Mo cow on the occasion of Mr. Anthon Eden's vlslt Lo that. city by propoa m; a toast to Hts Majesty King George of Enghmdz-l mglna. Lender Pest, | Dr. Weller Funk, "economic brnln of the Reich, appcais to business-l men thrsughbut the warld ln ant |offort to assure Lhcm that all Ger-l imany wanw ls pro rerfty for a1!,I l and that. dealing with the economic ' ‘ colossus she Ls trying to set. up w ll l ‘be pleasmt and prof tab.e for the lreslof the world. Excessive nut-l . lonallsm, extrema anarchy. border‘ trade barriers, says Dr. Funk, were art. of the caue of economic col- ’ bpse befzre the war. The real atml ‘of German psltcy, he declares, ls, long-range co-operatbri of equal partners to elfnrnut/e deprcsdrn, iind make everybody 1n Elle WflYld happy. What "co-operatfon"? What, "rruvl c"r'v~er""’ Tl“ k nd 0f ‘co-cvperatton" that. France and‘ Itwfy ard BUll§8"ll and Hungary 1nd Rllmflnll are now llvfnc Ger- WORDS 0F CHALLENGE‘ A THOUGHT A DAY FOR A PEOPLE AT WAR "Free Canadians should be worth more Lbs: Nazl slaves" Hon. Ernest Liponte. Mint:- tter of Justice. __-- PUBLIC FORUM ‘Ihh column In ops; In Inc illuuulon by unrralpondenn of qaentlnnn of lnleraut. The Charlottetown Guardian dun no! necennrlly emiorn tho opinion: o! norrelpnnilentn A GUEST READERS EFFORT Sin-Correction please. On Wed- nesday, honorable editor sticking venerable neck away out. Humble servant are now begging to differ. "Jock Rabbit." starts do wustlng gasoline, oh decidedly. Most oblig- lns mechante say-little book that comes with car also confirm- (quotcl rapid acceleration injects raw gasoline tnto cylinders (un- quote). Precious gns are belng part burned profitably, also alas goodly percentage leaving by exhaust. 0h yes, so sorry. But Okl are en- joying vacation nevertheless on so beiiutlful Island. Very pretty. much rain, delightful people. Are hnvlng only one difficulty arriving on 5]- leged garden provlncez- extreme- ly difficult task to swimming strait of Northumberland. Please, what are happening to palatial ferryboat advertised 0H so colorful travel folders? Oh so respectfully, 0K1 DOKI Montreal, bodZLQ NIGHTINGALES OF SURREY The nlghtlngales of Surrey Sing under moon and star; The small gray birds of England Are unaware of war. They welcome in the season 0f summer 1n the woods, And sing among the branches Of Surreyb solltudes. Skilled 1n no dark manoeuvres Of strategy and death They save for lover's singing Their little store of breath. They wage a mlmlc warfare For mate and nesting-plane, But, leave to man the battles That. scar the planet's face. The nlghtingales of Surrey Are singing as of old, When there was peace 1n England And summer in the wold. _Agncs Kendrick Gray in_tlie ew Y rk Times many at the gun-point? The kind of “equal partners“ that Mussolini and Hlrohlto and Qulsltng and Darlan and France and wcbul and Boris and Pu Y1 and Wang are to Hitler? - Victoria. Times. Your Eyes‘? n you are having symvlflml strain — headachcn, gun eyes or dizziness — whit!!! I cpeclallut. A: your service with vein 0| experience and a lhoroulh retracting service. Unll In mu discuss 11"" dllllcllltlfl. G. F. llutcheson F. G. HUTUHESUN G. F. UUIUHESUN Gassy Stomachs Relieved ! Every persnn whn ls lrouh- led wlth n: nalns, sour stum- ach and heartburn should try a bottle of "Dr. Evans Sloni- nch Mixture" and lee no! quickly ll will relieve all du- lresslng symptoms. Dr. Evans Stomach Mlklurc taken at meal limes. not on]! revcnl-g bad effect: from gun. but It promotes the function- l the policy of Canada towards V1631)’ ‘without further ndo. Time For Action (Halifax Chronicle) Canadians have long been impl- Ugm, with an; continued ,. 1n Clflldl of lfl accredits: .nvoY | o! m vwny Nlllm- Th" Pmm“ ' or l representative of Japan is ""- other source of annoyfln" ""5 ‘m’ easlness. Any cordlallty bet-WM! Canada and either of these cour- ti-le; t; purely formal and artlfl‘ Both countries m allsflfid “ -' our enemies and are therefore s s put, 1t L; a sorry stain of affn ri that representatives of these 0v n trles should be Wfmmcd to time tlon and enjoy erplomntlc pry“- eze: ln Canada at so Irv/Q I P“ 0° of our affairs. A ‘rhere has been reason 61101:!" P! along. to put an end t0 this lllfifllib factory situation, but the reason .- the more pressing fn the llgbt 1 recent. events. Japan's position Y the Fu- East has become s0 PW- vocattve that Great Brltaln and the United States luv: lmfmkd $9M‘ economic restrictions a! a wfb l0 Japanese military ambitions. As 1o;- vtgny, ire recent public llckltw. of Nazi boots by flu miserable men of that sordid regime should settle The men of Vichy have told the world that they intend to collabor- ste with Germany. They have de- finitely aligned themselves with Herr Hitler's "New Order." That - places them squarely on the side of our enemies. The continued presence of a. Vichy representative at, Ottawa l: fnlmleal to Canada's safety and 6 threat to the general war effort. Them have been suggestions. dur- ing the past week, that the Canad- lan government was about to act. It Ls high flme. “Christian Education” (Hamilton Spflilllfil’) A few days ago a large grout! 0f ‘ British Parliamentarians, members of both the Lords and Commons. flppélled to the Government to rea- torg religious instruction to the curricula. of the schools and col- leges. To tench religion there must be a body of sincere and ndequenllv framed professors as well asaufhor- l chases. ‘ Phones 105-1308 L‘- llatlve textbooks. It was suggest- ed that religion be made an op- tional subject tn the teachers‘ col- leges and that daffy services tn the schools be arranged, with inspector: specially appointed by the Govern- ment. T111 war bu 16d to a K1091? searching of hearts. How has such s terrible recrudesqerue of barbar- lsm been possible ln this uuppouu highly clvlllzed age? Is It. not 1m- peratlve that a more serious effort be made to fight modern paganism with the spiritual weapon of faith and "the elemental nrlnclples of the Christian phllmorhy of life"? It; would seem, any the petitioners. "that the future clllten should be so moulded ln character by Chris- tian education that. his cltlrlensfili shall become the expression o". these principles ln action." Feeling of disillusionment are universal. Materialism, so-called ln- tetfectualtsm and false conceptions of self-sufficiency have brought the YIHY ON ‘EARTH ‘DO THEY 90 IT ? ...l|siir| Illfllllll lln Ill tllnnlvls Naturally you want to be insured ugolmllhocosloldomagoloolhei people's properly and persons But who‘: going to pay yew damage If you smack u tree or stone wall? Without collisior Insuroncefll’: lust loo bud If you gel the small and of the slick flouzl: ll you vvlnllo hoop from holllngtlio bag youmll, cull on us. Wfvo Q00 lho III- I ‘l-Il] or “Hm, own lo that one. PHI NFmP . , ’ v - 'i:ii iu. ,-_ ’ nun-iii- ' gvi Agencies Ltd. , ll ncllvllv of the stomach. u- q ulna dlgesllon and Improve! the nppetllo. Prlce 85c Der bottle. l-IOLLYWOOIYS TRU - COLOR LIPSTICK l AMAZING FEATURES 1. Llfelllte red of Your um 2. Non-drying but indelible. 3. Safe for iénalllve llps. d. Elernlnalu “llnallck lino‘ Price 75o and I135 We um n complete Ami of Max Factor Dmulv Brenn- allons. Call and see them. BORE BACK 7 If no we have one of the BACK - BITE TABLETS Esneclully effecllve for lum- lin o. relation. neurllliu, mm- cn nr and other form: at rheumatism which ordinary treatments fall lo reach. 0m‘ 50 cent-n uer box. THE TWO MAGS 149 Great George Street ' Mall Orders Given Prompt Alton on. best remedlen to offer. nnmv ' I Canning and Preserving Supplies VICTOR CANNING MACHINES CANS AND COVERS CANNING RACKS FOR PRESERVING Preserve Kettles in Ivory 8: R8d—Enamelware, Preserve Kettles in Ivory 8: Green-Enamel. ware Scotch Gray & Pear] in different sizes. Perfect Seal Preserve Bottles, pints, quarts, half gallons. . Rubber Jar Rings, Fruit Funnels, Fruit Steam. ‘, ers, Parawax, Measures, Wooden Spoons, En. amel & Tin Dippers. Profit sharing coupons entitling you to valu- 7 > able premiums given free with all retail pup. = m Rogers Hardware 0o. Ltd. AU§U§T 23. m1 Free City Delivery world to o. pass. our of the dflflf-hs humanity looks up for guid- ance, eiieuuragement and help u; forces higher than its own p00!‘ limitations. Experiments tn scepti- cism having failed so dtsastrously there ls an insistent cry for n. change, a yearning for positive be- lief. The time ts ripe for a great Sfllrftual rebirth, and earnest think- ers, with the welfare of the whole human race at heart, are pulling, the clalnu of religion 1n the fore; front of their pout-war programs. FOR LUNCIIEON Try this wasted sandwich on the children one day soon for luncheon. Grate cheese. add chopped stuffed toficnts, olfvea and m1: with enough to make ll spread nicely. s i; on fresh] made buttered tonal" |11 add a. cr p lettuce lea: and i nil slfoe of tomato. A cup or clear, 1m soup will xmke a nice first ovum the toasted sandwich, then fnfilkt. and cookie: for dessert, m . NORTHWEST MINING Mines 1n the Northwest 'f‘errl lorles produced 6,879 ounces ol gold 1n April this year compmu wlth 3.971 1n April, 1940. LEGAL TENDER silver coin Ls legal tender llDl $10. the nickel five-cent niece up! $5. and "the one-cent bronze win I11 e protect us financially. IIYNDMAN 8i Charlottetown, , DANGER - _ 0_n the sea, on land, peril of fire, lightning, fall- ing aircraft, of automobiles, of accident of sickness. In our modern life we are surrounded by perlls, and that ls why we employ the system of insurance to We are in a position to provide a complete insur- ance service, and welcome your inquiries for advice and information. No obligation. B0. 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