l l 1 1 - "pa... PAGE FOUR TIIE ONARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Blaming Daily tl-‘ounded in I331) President: Lleul. (Jul W Cheater l Mill-Ill’! vwJrIfhIdBlYI-Z J. It. Burnett, FJJ. Secretary: Lleut. Col l). A. buclflnnom 0.8.0- [Llfiny a...‘ “gouging Director" .|. a Bumetl» F-Jl Asian-late Editors: Frank Walker and Inn A. Burnett SUBSCRIPTION BATES By luau ln r. z. 1.. sl-W 1m yr"; $24" "I ° “"5 $1.25 ll-r 3 lllollllll; 50c for one month City Delivery; $5.00 per year; “All, lot 6 nlnlllhl $1.75 fur s months By Mall In (lair-Ida and U.>‘.A. $5.00 per year Saturday lu-vku; 52.00 per year; 51-00 l“ 5 "I'll"!!! 50o lot 3 montlu. In} (‘Illlrlullt-lotvn fillllftnllll may he ohtnlned u llutll-ul. so... Agency, flmru Hquuro. haw iorltt 01a blmm Ar»: apt-liq, {turner alllll untl lhuhlnkton. Bunion llrlfnpnlllllll Av“: Alena-y, 1x414 Peel ‘Na lluntroalt J. l-‘lne, as: INA.’ p1,, ‘Pllrunlu; News uluml, Chateau Laurie!- Ultuwu; thrill-w. Aime aluml. lsmluury. Onlt Huh Touhoee pimp, Alllllrluil. Anatuvut. N. Q N. IL; Ella-n Iluhl-rlltln. “The Strongest Memory IS Weaker than the Weakest Ink." rllrltsii.n'._.li‘|.v 24, 1941. The \Viuler Service \\‘ith llztiillztud Assured." ttotpolntry". The basis of its llott. .\lr. llclntyre, ou his _ ltbtztincd anv assurance w, 1.. glu- Priurc lftlztiard "l ut-xt wiutvr. but that “at lltls would be within ..{ lhvtluti and Tortueittiire services are S.'t_\s npriutisut T.’ '1 1i‘ at .1»- .‘.-._ g ttnttt-t" if their found ttt.\'~~.. \\ ha: d t. 1 tilt-rill? “lf their services are fotri-l 1t<~~- ~.t;t" Er will probxtblv he during the wt-r-t u. s-ztunl. lftidcr favorable wt-tttltvr ‘Qt-ll its. u.» doubt the Illmtlcalnl could rtxrl. u~ to ttwltv: bolus from Sydney, or l/'.:.>l..l,-, <11‘ lJll/l‘ t.r.'_v front Quebec, Illt‘ .V. It’. wht~rt> tilt-y ' ‘ ti-uztlly loczttvd; bttt what good ' it's‘ mid wvzttltcr cottditiolts were t l'ttd~r l't‘.lli_\’ stwcre Conditions- \\ll.'ll w.- ittttst contentplalc—tltese which :11": stcztnu-rs would rcrptirc to be m the Northum- bcriartd tut before they could be of much ass. b~llckl to us, 'l'h:u is the crux of the whole Sltttflli-itt. llr. llrliuy-rv. we trust, has made this fully cl< :11‘ to the authorities at Ottawa. he tuattrr is m» important to be soft-pedalled. Pending titc building of a new ice breaker, every effort should iit- mztdc to sectire the best avail- able sulwtvtttc. .\ud to be available that substi- tute should ho ltcre when required-not up in the St. Lawrcnrc or clsewltcre, withirl a day's “rcach" as the crow flics, or as the imagination 0f some llltatvlt official suggests. The Poison Gas Bogey A Soviet news agency reports the capture on the Russian front of secret documents and chcitiiczll ctptiptitcnt. indicating that the Nazis are platmiug to use IJLIiSOII gas. The documents coittrtititvl cztrvfttlly elaborated instructions 0n gas tcchrtitgttc zutrl tactics, including forlns of zlppliczttioti of chvttiicztl ammunition for trench ntortars and utittvs. .-\ll this, however, is “old stuff". If the iicrutztus again resort to gas, it is because tht-ir blitrlrrit-g against the Red Army has failed. (its is tut ltnccrtain weapon at best. It provr-tl titisticccssfttl even when used for the first time ngzliust the Cztnatliatrs at the Second Battle of ‘(pres iu 1015. There is little likeli- hood of l,‘ Iii} army being caught unprepared, especially with tlnc iufonnzitioit they now claim to have of the Nazi plans in this regard. Thcre is. of course, the possibility that the Germans have dt'\'<‘l(1p(’(l a new and more dead- ly gas 'l'h~s stiliicct is (lisctlssed in the current issue of Th: ].t'_//io1|t1r_v, whose conclusions are reassuring. ll-"fure the otttbrcak of the present war, says Y/lu lryysblzary, the public were rcgalcrl tuonrltlv — or even weekly —- with tales of a usw mid cxtrvutely deadly supergas just discover-rd bv some (ibscttrc research worker in the Clt(‘llllt‘.'ll \\.lt'f.’li'6 laboratories of a foreign p0\\1’r——a 1b Imct- so deatllyr that. to quote Pro- fessor l\'<‘tt ":1 drop of it placed on the tongue of :1 dog trill '11 .1 horse" 1Xpart from these sen- sational rumouuct-iticuts of the discovery of new grtscs, we ltnvc writvrs like Mr. ll- (i. lvells — who should ltnotv better-—and the ultrapacifists, \\‘llO‘l"l1\'C givcxt us gloomy and horrific pro- phcctcs of the devastation that could be wreaked upon our cities by .1 remarkably small number of bombers ca: vfug a 1't'1i1Zll‘l<E1l1l_V small amount of mustard-g; = or lvtvkilr- dropped as a “dew of dcrttlt" upon our ltcnds. ‘ ‘\\lnt is lltc- actual pfi<llim1 with regard to the (ltscovcrv of lv-w gnaw? llow real is the danger ‘if 21s bring i:<r-l:1r:1ii1=t us, and what can we ex- pct‘? as :1 rt-<ttlt of it< Ilse? ., it must bt- rr-Itlizcd that the term "poison gas" is a loow one and crln mean either a toxic solid. liquid. or gas. 'l'hu<. at ordinary tempera- lulu-s. Adm-db- i~ rt solid, mustard "gas" is a li- quid. zuid fdttv-Qvilt’ i< a gas. To be useful in fllfVlPFll v." a rlu-uticltl agent must combine in as high a tmgrvt- .ts powilile the following pro- pcrtics; it mu~t be highly toxic (poisonous); it must be rhwtp lllltl cn-ily ntanufacttrred; it must be stable nvt-r a i1luilt‘l'.'ll(‘ range of temperature and not rt-mlilt" llv‘<'t1l1lpl1<<‘(l in contact with air 01‘ \\'1'Il(‘l' "F lll‘ lill (‘I)llf3Illlf‘l'S. During lbw l.'t=t war and the interwar, period a grcrll runny suhslnttccs wcrt- examined on both sides for ‘lu-ll‘ <uitnbilitv in chemical warfare: of the lhousrtrub f‘\'.'lllll_lll‘ll, only some thirty ful- filled the Allow‘ cvutditions to h stifficicut degree to make ill"!!! lll'.'l(‘lll‘.'ll llropositions. and only about a d vrn of thcse are liltcly to appear in this war. if cht-nticnl warfare is employed at all. Furthcrmorr. systt-mntic research has shown us the lypcs of grouping that must he present in a substance if it is to b0 effective. Now, the con- dition of cnsc of nmnufactttre ——and a very im- portant coosidr-rntiott this is under war-time con- (‘litifilts —prcrlutl<~= tltc use of anything but fairly gimvilv cmuurtttlt'ls. and <ince almost rJl the simple comhiuntiotts of lmoxvit effcctive groupings lmve Ilt‘('l1 prvvwre-ll zuvd rvrtminctl ——ntost 0f them nritmllt" ll-ifittf’ tlu- last war-the likelihood 0f tlrr- ilF<~<~\-.~:~_\~ of a new and practicable super-gas is Rlllulg "~11" ru_r_ QHARLOTTETOWN ounnnum _ EDITORIAL NUIES - NOTES BY TNE WAY “The Germans", uld Clemenceau, “cannst be trusted. ‘They are always me same. and always will be. Tney Will always have scmeone at Lueir head who will lead them astray, for they must be led. That. is their nat- ure. Ten years ago it was the Kai- ser; ten years frtm now it. Wlll be someboay else. Even if as a race tnty are all IIBILL, winch l an not believe, then thered. of the wor.d must unite in saving them tram the men they select. as leacers. "The Versailles Treaty is endeayoring to Opposition to Nazi policy is taken as an in- dication of fceblc-mindcduess or even lunacy so ma; under the Heredity, (Prevention of Diseases Offspring) Act a man who votes the wrong wav is liable to sterilization. m m e \\'orld shipments of wheat during the week ending July 12 amounted to 3.143.000 bu- C0"!- pared with 8,698,000 in the‘ previous week and 7,512,000 m the corresponding week last year- During the forty-nine weeks ending July l2 world shipments aggregated 3Q7.351,000 bushels p‘; tipeuoltlt tgofairlgésolxtgswtlé up; a5 Comllared wlth 531503900 m the correspond‘ l wlls onot. severe enouEh. in‘ else the ing period of the previous crop year rest or the world wlll relax and * ‘K * l’ not continue to impose its obliga- ttzns. l Em too old lolsse tiée ful; _ Lord Halifax, British Ambassadogbriefly re- fgllllglvlvslilll» ylglullaynipgplpltleigdoé wohazyol viewed Httlers record, lliS treaties mthlPoland, am swing Wm acme w pass]. __By Russia, Holland. Denmark", Belgium, I115 guar- $- JA. WooLf‘. the illustrator-author. - - - - _~ 1n his book Here l am . antees and his invasions, before a San Francisco ___ Commonwealth Club. and declared :-_ . Avila xknleed theneegrlestletgodwgg “Indeed. for sheer efficiency as a liar, HITICY‘ $335: alz-mgem be mlrlme mm stands alone tn history. On every occasion m the with two or three. The cause of past he has used the lie as a deliberate weapon and as a cloak for action. That weapon, at any rate, we are determined he shall not use against the British Commonwealth of Nations.” a e e a Sulfanilamide, used in combattiitg infection, is being put in United States :\r|u_v kits in a pack- age designed for self-ztdministratiott with one ought to be m; w.) difficult, because hand. The package is itttettded to‘ provide lucans l glligieolpotfi?grierglgségrlggeéhtz galleria; of self-nledtcatlon for a soldier if he was I mo, the feushes of the day be“... wounded and separated from his tutit. A simple yesterday. In readmg numerous tape opens the dirtfittd-wcatltcr-protectcd pack- age. As the box cover is moved back, a single tablet drops forward and can be placed iu the mouth without spilling the remainder of the cou- tents. Wide use of sulfanilantide during the war has been reported by British physicians. y * + =0- ' tyis. We cannot. do without a men- tal and spiritual aristocracy. W110 l! necessary will die like gentlemen ln a better cause than the almost. tavorthleis lTeuch aristocracy in the Terror. This last sacrthce, we may hope, will not. be demanded in tits age is required, The refusal to ofter incense t; the idols of the tribe the present world-crisis. I_have been impressed by the neglect in a1- mcst, all them of the En8ll5h"$~l>@al<- lng countries and all that they stand fzr . It is assumed that: de- mocracy, liberalism, ecmomism, tn- terita-tionallsm pacfsm belong only to the nineteenth century and are now as dead as Queen Anne. I do trot think that. they are dead. but it should be possible for us_ to rc- spect. the-m “on this side of idolatry". _ Dean Inge in The Fortnightly (London). Quebec has gone the whole ltog for the check and prevention of sexual coutztgiotts diseases. The lztw passed at last session is now in 0pc!‘- ation, compelling all doctors to report cases com- ing under their observation under a maximum penalty of $500 or a term of imprisouluent. Ou the other hand patients who fail to carry out the doctor's treatment, or neglect to report periodi- cally are liable to a penalty of $25 for each of- fence, or alternatively a term of imprisonment. To provide a nteasure of secrecy the patients are to be referred to by numbers in the doctor's reports to the Provincial Dept. of Public I-lealtlt. =01 1F There Is strong evidence to sup- port a suspicion whch ha; elcstecl In this country fcr some tune that the Germans are deliberately bimb- ing civilians in owupied territory so as to give the impressnn that the RAJ-K are the culprits. By this means, they hope, ‘no doubt. to create bad feelings against Great Britain. and so make the defeated countries-and particularly France -mcre willing to co-Lperate with their German masters. Actual proct is naturally most difficult to obtain. but. there is such a chain 0f cu‘- cumrtantiat evidence by this time as to seem conclusive. A resident of Brest, on his arrival in Lisbon, from France, stated that it had often been noticed that. air raids which began on the port. were renewed, after an interval of about half an hour, on the residential areas of the town itself. whereas the firs-l raid damaged only the pert and ship- ping, the second caused cznlder- able damage to houses and heavy casualties among the clvlian pop- ulation. splinters picked up in zhe town on the mornings after the raids were found to be 0f German manufacture. - Birmingham Mall. I i The great Earl of Balfour (Arthur James Balfour) born this date 1843. lildest sou of James Maitland Balfour of “lhittittgcltauie. Haddingtonshire, and Lady Blanche Cecil, daughter of the 2nd Marquess of Salisbury. Formed one of the famous Fourth Party, fortu- ed to inject “giltgcr” into the-Conservative Party when his uncle Lord Salisbury was Prime Min- ister. Later he became Leader of the Party and was famous for his sang froid under the most trying circumstances \\'ltile a keen and success- ful politician and statesman, above all hc was a philosopher and psychologist. and chose his course and framed his policy always with a view to ultimately doing good to the greatest number, not necessarily for the present but for the fu- ture. He joined Mr- Asqutlfs coalition, and when Mr. Asquitlfs “wait and sec" policy fail- ed, he gave his support to Mr. Lloyd George, and became Foreign Secretary. It was his diplo- macy brought the U. S. into the war, and he wrote ‘most of the correspondence to enemy countries at the time of the Peace Conference, though strongly opposed to President Wilson's then peace-at-any price policy- u u e e The Quebec Premier, the Hon. Adelard Gzdbout, in his radio broadcast, after thanking his coin- patricts for their splendkl support to the Victory Loan, put the issue of recruiting squarely before the youth of the province. The coun- try ls calling for 32 000 volunteers for Canadrfs act-Ive army, but. the campaign which is being drected to bring these men ta the ctlors is lagging. Mr Godboufs fighting speech, therefore, is timely. and his arguments are so compelling that his plea should immediately be effective. stressing the need to "save the peace of the world, the integrity of our hcmes. the permanence of our institutions, our liberty of conacence", he urged the youth of the prov- ince, and Canadians of all origins, to answer their country's call and volunteer to share the task at th‘s moment of danger when the Dominion: destiny is at. stake. Already by tlrusands. the Premier added. "cur own people have answered the call". but. thou- sands more are needed to atop the march of barbarians and save Christian civilization. Confidence is justified that Mr Godbouvs ringing appeal. seconding that of Cardinal Villeneuve w‘11 bring a big response and give the recruit- ing campaign results which here- tofore have been slow to come. - Montreal Gazette. , In his recently published Berlin Diary, Mr. William Shirer gives three reasons for the Ger- man morale thus far. First, the political unifica- tion of the Germans, which Frederick, Bismarck and Wilhelm had failed to achieve but Hitler had succeeded in, had given the people a sense of strength. “For most Germans this is an end in itself, for to be strong in their scheme of life is to be all.~" Second, they felt they had avenged the terrible defeat of 1918 and at last secured their place in the sun. Success in establishing the New Order was going to mean more of the tnilk and honey of the world to them. That this would of necessity be obtained at the expense of other peoples did not bother them in the least. Third, they support a war for which they never had any enthusiasm because of a growing fear of the consequences of defeat. “Slowly but sure- 1y the)’ are beginning to realize the frightful rfgrlllil llrlethlgzglgérgglnxg lzuntg When Germany so kindly, l0 genercusly shared Poland with Russia she was handing out whet, magnitude of the seeds of wrath which their i usually rake this 10m,’ as Rummm llpghbooted troops and Gestapo have sown m lggg lgfflblfyt- 031v. iln thy lgttcr cafe ‘ '2 ' l l O USSR O ESSQFH PmPefl} ' ‘ Tlgse PLOPlF ‘Ylll g0 loflll» long now seems to be considered in ti: (pay l: lshwar. nly a dawning realization some llghttof at telgplllraéy loan. But, a t at t 't w .- ~ revel-lug o oan, h sn‘t the assyurances Sfatcig item; cotlllplcc: “llth fAllled I munlflcent present of heal! Poland _ g_ p 1e s rugge will not been partly responsible for the d1. mean their deltructlon, Will make them falter." "culls" belwee“ mllselles and a b. a. i Russia, thatietgryi time we an- IIDUIIC€ OUT II nton U! h A total of 6, 86 ersons were under care in batik Polish 5011 t0 its uwnziis ii: . l’ . . the fifty-nine mental institutions during the year . f,{,§.§§},f,§,kl§§ vblelfi Ralggsiggt rlglllttgel I939. This number represents a 1-8 per ccnt in- Germans. But nOW that. war has crease over the corresponding number under care brgkfin °“l' between ‘he Gem?" in the previous year_ Of the total under care, 31,- I aangdzqrduislirie lttowoialiffnnsgltlare-N 32! were males and 25,546 were fQn1a]e5_ A]. definite understanding on this though there was a net increase of 683 in the f,“,‘“,‘,,°,§',§§f,‘,f,, eixfflclzltlzlolisl magi)‘ numbep of residenfl patients at the end of the glfce on mpg overh Poliahy coll? year, t ere was a ailing off in the number of “me ° l“ “Y” “mad? first admissions as compared with the r ' ' begun w wonder wheuwr n might - _» _ p €Vl0lla not be opportune to come to rm year. During the three-year period 1936-39, “$129233; Wglhtbctp Gen. Slkorsltt there was a decrease of 701 first admissions incl, We, as “we ‘sléahealégg; from the number atlmitterl in 1036, a decrease of Poland shall be returned to the 8.4 p. c. The number of palimts discharged as ggfbfgrxloggzmaglilrrlatlrymlnch will recovered was 1,844, a (lccrcase of 6.8 p. c. from concentrate the Poll-bi penplg yo,» the number of recoveries reported in 1938. gag!‘ "If laollgegflw villi", Rmfilljl‘ There was a decrease of 13.6 per cent in the v prwqrb, tiie ‘Polish coriitdtii‘ liarilll number of recoveries of males and 2.4 p. c. m- PTY-‘ffibll’ l it“? Of territory tutti crease in the number of recoveries of females as filfwfi‘ §;°,,“§,,‘§°“p,,f§§“lf,m§,‘;§‘,f, compared with the itumbcr reported in the previ- I After up i111] days acne by this lltndl sits Yeas. The percentage of total recoveries to ‘ XE; oifiyusgridrgillgngasgléfgfigtn lrect a missions fl-ll from 18.0 m 1038 to 17.5 l rule. rim- the nuke of harmony and in 193g, Ovgfq-Qwl’ f“ t’ ' (1 l better understanding it mlzht be institutions and coiisiritiitisl Pleifffllilijl?! ‘iirlliiiiialflile I will-Ilium aiiiittiglaiilo bzcaiiiigarwiinygiii‘ 1 provinces are (‘Ilfllffilly endeavouring tn solve. nstmd, take over a large Gcnnanl The boarding of mentally ill or mentally rlefgc. ZTEIIOTI’ the‘ Ialvc coastline. 'I'.~.el - . . _ _ _ m l; nc prewnted before twe patients ywth sclcctrf-rl faunlu-c l5 now hpmm- I {henconcllaustlgn p’! the’ Wfla bu: sure‘; "l! an imnor ant part o the problem for the carc' v. M’ e l” m “is “ “l of mentally ill ,‘,’,,“{,‘§ lgjfiiw“; Q,';,;‘"g;'g"g‘;'; I truth demands prophets and mar- - he has which by country, but even here scme cour- table. a Wlld hCiDe of himself books by Continental thmkers about which A British View 0f Ont The Rim Of Asia Hess (London Weekly) Whether Hes has lost his lea-son. or only remained it: whether he was a fanatical idealist. with a omoniac sense of a. breakdown, a refuge tn feu- of aes- a-ssinatitm m‘ a Doltroon save his own skin in a fear of dia- mev still be possible choose which they ilk. But the slimlflcanoe of Hess’ deed. as a moral revelation about. Nazldom. la fixed believe in it. lieve it. is a cult that. will s not qulte so certain. but almost pgycholggjcg] Qgrmjnty Qgmsidgflng and Palestine but. also in the com- what. kind of a man this l: and the ing struggle for Central Asia, o. length B-nd d°V°ll°Yl °l m’ dlmple‘ contest which will involve‘ Japan ship. He could not. have I/Dfllldtfflfie and India as We“ u Russ“, and Hltlelr or lest. faith in him unti saw and knew that the meme, had Chine. for sheer scale and mass lost faith in his own destiny. In such will surpass the biggest battles of ‘ the first. to Europe. s. relation. he would be lmow it. with the intuition that is not deceivable. and the shock of uch realization is as neat. as the form and order inth world Lr ex- posed to him as a, pretender who can only brlnz things to chaos and dis- tmcble to bear thoughts of such as a man with a. mission to save civilization. And to realize it he flies to the one mav be a fanatist. but is not a. fool - He knows that Britain is the only hope of the peace and neconsiruc- “'9 Issue be tion of the Continent. College Education (Stratford Beacon-Herald) $18,000 for each of those years. The finding‘ was bnlved m; by a imr-ressed by military success. But questionnaire sent w a lB-TIZB nllm- Natlonol Socialist philosophy is as b" °f men "hi? had llmduflled m)"; much an offense and challenge to their way of llfe as it is to that. of 60. and men who had gone 1d the western world‘ This anmhgsls. universities and had reached rule of , work after leaviniz hlirh school at were the some B86. or so were on on overture '1 more than those who had not no the advantalles of preparing them- selves for a profession ln that way. - There are. of course. innumer- able instances of rmn-tlnlversity men rlslnz to hietl Dositlonfi. wweclally m business-men who eam a meat dflil more than professional men. In fact. business men have often greater opportunities than profes- slonal men. and manly men W110 had onlv a comparatively meagre educa- tion made large fortunes, Much de- bentds also. onthe individual. The corollarv of this survey would be one shotvlnz how mamv univer- slty men were. financially speakinlt.‘ failures in life. The unlversiticsl would not care to advertise that. However. it. would prove valuable if . it. revealed how and where they falledgggmake Rood. ~ face a ccmmon foe. And lf all goes well and Poland canes into her own again, Hitler's Germany can swal- 10w a leaf out of her Adolfs book, and receive back into the Reich all; German nationals now inhabiting, what must. be the Poland of the‘ future the land must. be swept. free or minorities‘ and people of German blood. No cc-mplatnt must be allowed to come from the Ger- man people. — By G. E. Edwards. Professional Cards MORRELI. 8i CO. l]. F. ARCNIBALII Chartered Aeeounten Eutem Trust Bnlldin Charlottetown Mcl. EOD 8| BENTLEY W. B. BENTLEY. K. C. J. A. BENTLEY. K. U. C. F. BENTLEY. LLB. Barrister: anal. Attorneyu-n- 1v MONEY T0 LOAN 154 Prince Street H. F. McPHEE B. A. K. C. NOTARY. &6. BARRISTEB. BOLICITOB , Riley Bulldulg Charlottetown MocGUlGAN 8t TRAINOR MARK R. MecGUlGAN. ILC. C. ST. CLAIR TIAINOR. K. 0. Barristrl, Solicitors. Etc. MONEY T0 LOAN Office: Over Provincial Bent. Richmond Strut. Charlottetown. BELL 8| MATHIESON MONEY T0 LOAN Cameron Block. Charlottetown P. l. mend. moment overshadowed by the tite- megal- nit: Battle of Russia, has actually °"- lmllfyusumed e new significance be- otic with a. novel klnd o! nervous 3 cw“ o, Hm“! an“ m‘. u my, drive penetrates deep into soviet territory and reaches one of its aster-between all these opinion; it main objectives. the oil wells of the f0! B90910 to Caucasus. the German armies will be at the back door of Iraq and Iran. Even now Berlin is said to and nnlu. The high priest and EDIT- be vrflsrlna the Turks for a im- ltunl leader or that idolatry does not sage across He d°efi n“ We" b6- Baku and Batum. This emphasizes ' "the strategic importance of Syria And l0 that were is coronary I not. only in the defence of EBYW has passed out. of the control of rluman snlrit ctm endure. 1t: means Vichy and a friendly Governmerfl is hat (the master upon whom he re- established led as l" KVEWY l4) creme A "9" are in a stronger position vis-a-vls the Arab world than they have been since the end of the last war aster; already over most of Europe The anti-European feeling that de- been the architect: of a ruin veloped among the Arabs because him l5 “llfll? lrmmcd‘ of tire rival interests and broken Probablv the disillusioned disciple, glgllmlgsesinofagtpreavftipgopgn Figyiggi lcuilt and horror. tried to defend his British frictions. As a result of the soul against. them bv entcrtalnlnlz French defeat in Syria, and elimination of Italy as e threat in Tunisia and Egypt, the tension is country of Europe m which or from sreatlv relaxed- The Arabs have a the hope of European salva- clearer choice today than they have tion can be entertained. In tlhat he had {or a generatiofL 1g 15 m; by chance that. as the conflict evolves, for those stilt on the margins o! the fighting. ‘The Arabs are no longer confused by French, Italian o rest: of the world, they are forced Accordini to a survey male by to brush aside subsidiary preter- fiplltllflbla gniigfill-Y £1? follfmlflgii ences and decide between the Bri- a a era ua. spen n a. - sitv are worth $72,000 to him; or us“ and Germans‘ It. was found plus the fact that. Syria. the most. m!“ l-he 8811111185 01' me "Juverslly advanced of the Arab states, is men dull"! m“ lmervenln“ 40 yells passing out of a. fiercely resented d subjection to the French, plus the. Sydney Polt- Record '11:: Arab question. while for the Turkish territory to Now that the Syrian Mandate in Iraq. the Brltlsn me comes more slmPllfied r even Zionist claims. Like the The Arabs admire force. The)’ are a: WHY HAVE P son: : uh § r P i‘ ‘w; veer? "T THE’ ntzwu" ART of MAKE-UP! Created by Max Factor, Holly- wood's lVIake-up zenlue._wha for years has been chief c01- mellclun Io the screen and stage profession. Max Factor preparation; an In e largo way responsible for o . .11.! . . o, u" celebrities of the screen. Max Factor Face Powder -- -— - - — — 75c and $1.35 Max Factor Foundation Cream — -- — 15c and $1.35 Max Factor Cleansing Cream - — — — - - 15c and $1 ‘.15 Max Factor Pancake M$l1k€~ up — — — — — — - Max _Foctor Upstlcks — - — — - 75o and $1.35 Max Faclor Rouge — — — - - - 15c and 81.35 Max Factor Astringent -—— ———75o nndils!» Max Factor Dry Skin Cream 75c and $1.35 Max Flt-tor Skin Freshener --- - — - - 15c and $1.3! 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Z. - (up) PLEASANT -Pa.trick Lucas Hamilton, 1m n who lives here. recenltv bets. v. mi braised his mm birthda NEED CONSENT!‘ Girls under 18 must have theb namnlts’ consent serve W. A. A. F. ‘They also must be are: 17%. Irish: lnllt WOOO lSLANOS-CARIBOO CAR FERRY SERVICE Daily sailings of Ferry "PRINCE NOVA" are, including Sundays, from Wood Islands at 7 A.M., Il A.M. and 3 PM. and from Caribou at 9 A.M., I PM. and 5 PM. Atlantic Stand- qrd Time. LATE TRIPS ON FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUN- DAY ARE NOW IN EFFECT. The Ferry will leave Wood ls- londs as soon after 6.30 PM. as possible and from Caribou as soon after 8 P.M. as possible, this change is mode necessary . to avoid night sailings from Caribou. NORTNIIMBERLANO FERRIES LTD. wmlrrn 2000 USED TIRES for your old ones. A full stock of DUNLOP tires always on hand. WHITLOCK TIRE SERVICE PHONE 909 Trade In ymlr Tires NOW. 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