ma» use!‘ nrrm ._-... Ans-k “w tan-uni vrr rrrr qr!’ l!“ 9'15‘ 1H»- Inv- nun-on’ PAGE FOUR TllE llllAlllITTETlIVlll GUARDIAN Iornlnl mil: (Io-Md ll ll") Pruldcnll Main, Col, W. Uhulu l, IOLIIQ Hoe Premium J. L lurnlt IJJ- “usury: Lint. Col. D- l- Infill". Elfi- Idhor ud lull! I Dlruowl. J- 5- ‘IIWNL lJ-l- Auoulno mum-m nub wnlhw. H! Hui. Ill l- Jgr-qn, LOJJIJL, (l): All!" Ionic!) BUBBUILPTIOH IATK I; lull In P. l. l. “Ml par your; ISM for I Infill [LR for I monflui I00 hr din ll 5y lull lo other Province: nail lJJ-A. ltfl Ill I'll lain-m Weekly: 02.00 rm nut 01.00 l" I I'll-II- 500 for I Ialthu The Charlottetown Guardian may la obtained at Buuullni’! lieu: Alonth ‘II-m luv-N- R" Yvrlu 01¢ loulh New: Annoy, Corner lllll and Wlllllllllll Bflllfll) Metropolitan bun Aienuy, B08 Pool It. Iontrenli J. Illa IM Boy 8t, Toronto; Nun llluil Chateau Lnnrlolr 0mm, Wolfe‘: in" mud I-idrmm 011M l“! Iohneco Shop, llouutnn, l. B. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker. TM" the Weakest Ink." WEDNESEAY, JULY u, 194i a The Future Physicians qwwugy, 1hr- Sllliftflgc of jihysiciatis and the gniisediiciii hcztviei- work required of doctors 51,11 h, civilian practice itiake serious problems ical fl'.'llCl'llll_\', at least one problml for the inc 11f mclli . schooling is also grave. l! Illa)’ not scent t.» be ;i~ urgent 11S suiiie titlifii- Yet Al“: Hpppu ,,,' A ,..|,,ii,»ii itow- will cause trouble with- .\ clear statement of the 11060 0f njcdikjll .- lt- i1»,- liigli-grzule teachers was in- cluded, 1h x-fbrc, iii the "declafitioti of iticdical iiiiliqiciulyiicc" i-suctl last wcck by the Commit- tee of Physicians for the lllllil'()\‘t‘l‘llclllf of “Cili- cal Care iii the lfnitctl Slates. Un the commit- tee are iiiciiilwrs of the faculties of sortie of the Lin“. furciiiiist Lllll\'(‘l'$llll'$. _ Thc steady drain on thc personnel 0f "ledlfill 5;l1oul faculties was atoll-Wig Conslde-"lble ‘W’ easiiiess before the cud of 135E Ycar“ Dcim. ‘V11- lard C. lvappleyt: 0f the School of Medicine of Columbia l'iiiversity' in his annual report, 1550- cd la-Y ll-brtiary", cited the relatively large H1101‘ ber of members of his tcaclting staff who ‘hail gone into Illllllllfy’ service. lle wrote that tnc proportion of iticn drawn from the teaching m‘ siitutionl is considerably higher than from fl"? gcncra] prulacbioii." The medical schools have had to adjust their curricula to a rigid Sdlfffilllle of military needs. The declaration froiti the committee of physicians criticizes changes made in medical education by military authorities and calls for a supervising body independent of such authorities to protect the standards of educa- tion by yykh the physicians of tomorrow will be trained. _ The same problem, of course, faces Canadian medical schools. There is no qucitlofl H5 ‘l0 the vital iinpbriiiiice in both countries of maintain- iiig the vcry- highest standards of medical edu- (Zlllllll. iii a tlccailc. Public Gain llic {Olllllllflrfill which lion. _l. L- llfilfil’ g2"?- Parhamviit bctwccn the rise in the cost of living iii Lztitzidzi from Xovcittber I, 19411 i0 Ma)’ l» ]1)“l‘ mp1 11w rise in the Cnitcd States in the 5mm 15 “Mnhc, and also the rise in Canada in the L‘0l'!'L'~l)UllLllll<,[ period of the i115! W81’, >l10llld ciitviiice evcry Lkiiiadiziit of the benefit of the Mel-bill ceiling policy: lit the last war we had a 2: 1-2 per cent increase in living costs iii that period and stage of the conflict. In the Luited blitzes iii this \\'-'ll‘, with sortie attentpt at control, thc increase ivas 12 per cent. but in Canada, the cost of living rose only I 1'2 Per Cent _ The stabilization of prices was an outstanding achievement of the Wartime Prices and Trade llwirtl. the lfiniuicc .\lllll>'i(‘f stated. ll [W095 bad l'l~f‘ll lzt~t year as they did itt I917, l"! 53bi- thzit would have cost Canadians $350»OO°i0O°' _\iid if lll(‘\' had lccpt on rising this year as they did 1n 191$, we should have had to pay the huge 2(l(lll'(1lllll sum of $85O.000-900- To keel) Prlccs algmly‘ and ;il~u to maintain thc supply of good-i. was a lll0~l difficult job, requiring a WY)‘ 13ft!“ Immense staff and a llL'?l\ v expenditure on subsidies tn 1,,-,»,,l,,L-it,~, and in accepting losses on imports. lint ii tras all uurili while. In the I3 111011105- ili- siib-idu» and lllspCs on llllPUYlS totalled $8.- oivruoii, and they‘ are estimated at $120,000,000 fur tllc‘ pitseiit fiscal year, but the saviiigto the pllldlc‘ l: >4! much greater as to abundantly justify that priiay; Farmers and the C. C. F. .\.:‘tlll(lIl\ Xiqltt of Toronto, speculating upon 11,,» \',/\‘ 11f ilti- Cid". vote in thc forthcoming 111.1. t. tltltziun, >il_\'~I j. 1p, iixiggcrulil i1 lo ~,'1v that 111K111)‘ 11011- i-is, litlll l.ibcr:il and kiltilfi<‘i'\'élii\'¢t all extremely‘ Upl1i‘l‘ll('tl$l\'C; but there are also man) who predict tl1:1t the CLYF. will be found t0 hzivc llll'l1\\ll away a large part of its agricul- mml jjfimllUCis when ii decided to bring the la- bnr unit-us iinu its lll(’llll)('l‘Slllp and into its iutitl-rztiuiig ~_\~l('lll. 'l‘h.'ii (anada is destined to have a fairl_v strong Labor party in its future plilllicill life seems assured, and it is greatly t0 be fl('\lt‘(‘(l that that party shall be intelligently led. \\'hciher it can at the same time be also a Farm party is another question. If the C.C.F. is going to have to make up its mind in the near future whether it will he the one or the other, it has probably already" committed itself as to which." Tihat is lo say it has alrcatlv decided to be a Labor party when it has to make a choice, as it will have to with no further delay. If the recent Manitoba provincial by-elcction in Killarney is an index, C.C.F. influence 0n farm voles is on the wane. Killarncy is largely a rural riding and the electors decided by an emphatic majority to stay with the coalition gnveriiinciit set up by Premier Bracken several years ago, ('.(".l", leaders were confident nf vic- fl1l\' and bruuiglit sortie of their big viocal guns fw n1 ihrii- duties in the House of Commons to stump the riding. (‘ontmenting on this contest, thc (':il\_3:try' llcrald sayxst "Practical farmers sllfilllfl have no great dif- ficulty iii visualizing what a C.C.F. administra- i l tion would do if it carried out the party policies. They would be controlled by government boards who would establish prices and impose regula- tions on their activities. Consumers, too, can easily foresee the consequences of an economy in which all the present ivartittie controls would be expanded ad lib. For the C.C.l“, proposes to take over complete control of all marketing of farm products." —EDITDRIAL NOTES- Bastille Day-France's national holiday. it u w r Coastal Command of the R.A.F.——\vhose ac- tivitics no longer are coastal but occan-iviide — is seeking a neyv name and suggestions advanced include Ocean Command, Trans-Ocean Coni- mand, Offshore Conitriand and Air-Sea Coni- mand. u w i: u \Vhile it is credibly reported that the King Administration has become frightened by the number of boards set up in the capital and has almost made up its mind to create no more of them there creeps into print occasionally a hint that some new task is to be assumed and that nothing less tliait a. new cirgaiiizziiioit can do the job—just bureaucracy expztiidiitg itsclf. >l< x =1 -:= Stcpbanus Johannes Pziulus Kruger, four times president of the Transvaal, died this date, I904; his r00t6d hostility to Ulllflllfkfs" (i, e., South Africans not born in that country) jirc- cipitated the South African \\'ar 1899-1902; he fled to Europe in the midst of ltostilities, first settling in llollztntl, and lastly at Klenloiic; he was an ardent Dutch-Africatider and a “sliii1" diplouiatist who co-operatcd with Kaiser \\'il- helm from whom he obtained all the war sup- plies he wanted conveyed through Portuguese liast Africa; kiioyvii as (Join Paul he ivzis ini- bticd with a strong puritanical spirit which led him to take part in the Lit-eat lrrlfi Of 1330. ll‘ i‘ 1i Pl‘ The citizen of tomorrow will he trading in his house evcry- three or four yvztrs like the citi- zen of yesierdayi did liis aiutoiiiolyile, Dr. llzirvey N. Davis, president of Stcvciis Institute of 'l'ecl1- nology, predicted at a conference 011 adult edu- cation at New York, last week. Giving his im- agination free play, he spoke of all-paper houses. “After a house has scrvcd ils 1iiirpr>st~ iii three or four )‘(‘Zll‘5 you can l\'ll(lCl\' it down and get a new one delivered iti packages on a truck,” Dr. Davis said. In addition to housing, he foresaw tremendous developments in civilian use of avia- tion, of ultra-high frcqucnc_v radio transmission and of plastics and light nictals, Light metals may revolutionize domestic transportation, he said. w w n: at The Legion is pressing tlic (kiverititieiit 0n post-irar preparedness and preference for tticii discharged from the armed forces in all citi- ploymeitt, whether under private enterprise or tinder federal, provincial or llllllllCllllll author- ities, was urged in a lengthy brief stibinittetl to thc llouse of Coiiiittoiis Reconstruction aitd Re- establishiticnt Committee. Prcscntctl by Mr. Alex \\"rilkcr, tlte Lemon's Doitiiiiion President, the brief said “any plans of reconstruction that do not provide for prcferciitizil treatment of the fighting mcn will be regardcrl as unjust and will bring bitter reaction." Tltc Legion said that "on the whole" it agreed that measures already taken by tlte GOYCYHIIIQHK “should assist materi- ally in recstablishing cx-scrvice iiicn in the iiii- mctliate post-discharge period," but ailded that improvements and modifications would bc tin- doubtedly‘ necessary. * i! i * lt is argued that North America can't have too tiiiicli wheat bccttiisc this coiitiitent will have to fccd starving l-Iuriiipe. 'l‘lierc is, however, a joint harm Production P-uard which considers that the need of a more varicd fariit production is more urgcitt now than the acciimtilatioti of an unmanageable pile of wheat. A close integration of the farin programs of Canada and thc United States has been acliievctl, but chiefly 011 a long- tcrm basis and for the feeding 0f other coun- tries. .\Iore give and take between them, how~ ever, should vastly improve thc lllllllCfllillfi situa- tion as it must affect thc niucli-rzttioiicrl people of this continent, (Qaiizulittiis recognize that thc ljtiitetl States came into the war late. that it has had niucli less time iii which to organize its treittendotis program, that great speed has been neccssaryi, and that with this speed were bound lfl CUlllC Zl CCTlFllll Zllllllllllf (If Cflllfllhllill, ("If Cllll" flictiiig authorities. liut (Ianadiztiis. with the utmost friendliness, believe there can be closer massing of the two jirtigraiiis that itiusi increase the mutual advantage, both nuw and in pnst-yvar day's. i K 1k I .\lr. l1]. llliilip, the (lisliiigiiislicrl fflltawa correspondent of the few York Tiiines and pre- viously thc Paris correspondcitt, has been speak- ing 0n national characteristics and loyalties, He said: "\\'c in Scotland like to tliiiili that we lic- gan the British Iiinpire by our union with Eng- land." lie mentioned the struggle and fears eit- tcrtainetl by the two countries sayhig "we were afraid of losing our iiiilividii;iliiy"' and “antoiig other things our dcnioncmlic form of worship. We had sometimes to fight for tliciit and \ve fought bitterly. But in the end, how tremendous for good has been that first act of iinlon." He then paid tribute to “Westminster ivhich found a \va_v of reconciling our jiridcs, our passions, and our prejudices and ])l‘l'll1lll(‘fl the grass tn grow green on the graves of jacnbitcs and Covenanters.” Rcminditig his audience that in spite of differences which Canada, Australia, New Zcaland and South Africa may have had with the mother country, they remained "loyal partners" in the lrilish Commonwealth assur- ing themselves and to others thereby "that frec- dom and sovercignity which we could none of its alone sticcessftilly defend." "On this Dom- inion llayg" he crmlitiiieil, “you and we have reason for rejoicing for i1 is fll(‘>C three things, itati0nal~ unity and indepetiileiice, international unity and ititerilepvdcitce and li'1_\Tllf_\' to ivhat Mr. Churchill called last yvecl: “the cinbrriciiig golden circle of thc Crowif tyliich have kept us , - t. all frcc nations. i“, THE CH ARLOTPETOWN GUARDIAN llotos By The Way A California ' ‘ r " making reixilni atop a pole overlook- ing the Pacific, paused long enough to note a Jap submarine lust off snore, says Coronet. Magazine. Snap- pm: tiie clips a1’ his portable tle- Phone m the wires. he flashed the news to arirw head nurture. watch- bolnbers arrive an destroy the 8011111108 menace and then contin- ued with his interrupted duties. Soviet Rush’: chlldren, organized 1n groups known as Pioneer-s, are performing outstanding work 1:n tid- ing the war effort, Moscow reports. The children of one area are rats- mg 60.000 chickens for the Red Army. A truckload o! clothing for soldiers was collected from another section, While 10.000 parcels for troops on the Amur River sector were prepared by another group of Pioneers. Over 80 years ago Bob Edwards’ Elye Opener predict/ed that ff utmost vigilance was not exercised by game guardians and police, there would scon be no game in Banff National Park. A few ragged remnants of “did game were roaming the mount- ains. Stoney Indians were making l] pretty good cleanup of everything ln sight. and them was no law to cover their case. Astounding as 1t may be. it was a fact. that anyone during open mason could klll 500 head of mountain goat and sheep, ewes and lambs: but he was pro- hibited from selling any of it, not, even a slice-(Blalrmore Batter- prise). Licul Louis Ru pel, United States Marine Corns. w o used m be one o our countless bosses, notifies us that. lii the training camp where we hope he ls now undergoing severe hardships, there are quite a num- ber of veterans of World Wrir I, says Colliers Weekly. The elderly leathernecks Wlll not be called u/p- 011 to do the proverbial landing and getting the sit-uallon well in hand. They will flll home-front. jobs that 0T0 110i S0 hard on the legs. What we “rant to tell you, however, is that. Lieutenant R/urppel reports that these carry-overs are known to the votinzer marines its retreads, The floppy friendliness, comfort and undoubted utility of the beret assured its future in the British Arm)‘ once the soldier got hold of it. The announcement that a khaki beret ls eventually to replace the forage cap will, I am SUN, be very popular with the men. The beret was probably already the favorite headdress of the Army" and the Tank men long ago showed in the streets of Britain that, its informal- lly need not, detract from solidierlyr sinartness. Indeed. there Ls an zit- trrictive hint. of swagger in its tilt yvhich possibly the men-and cer- tainly many of the g1rls—flnd ir- resistible. Some dashing effect-s can, of course, be obtained with forage C8118 tilted at angles which leave one Wcilderlflg how on earth they keep their perch on the head. But a ber- et is much more firmly moored, even over a shock of sprmgy hair. A5 long ago as during the last, war the British Army showed signs o; of hcadweaza-Leeds Yorshli-e Post, If the war has taught the war-Id that no nation can now escape dan- 801‘ from it threat to others, no less clear ls the lesson 01' the unstabie years between the Wars and of the wiir itself that no nation can maln- taln an isolated ivi-ogperllyq An" the surrender of the enemy the A1. lies will have to provide large quan_ titles of food and raw materials for We Peoples of the occupied and pi}- lacedcountrles. It ls not a matter of philanthropyr but of common in. wrest. The sooner Europe is on the WHY to recovery, the sooner the Al- lies will recover themselves, Mr, Morrison made a rittht diagnosis of the World's troubles when he siifd "l"? they were only to be cured by a" lncrease 0f Production. He must expect to hear some scoffmz rem- iniscences of the period between the Wars and the dreary results of “the °9Y1°m1°5 0f 8111!." Neverthelers higher production ls the one means to freedom from want. In turn to raise the standard of llvlng 111i‘ the world over would make profit- able the utmost increase of produc- tion that can be contrived- Daily ggxlfigraph and Mornlni: Post flan- Portugal is. havln; 3 "rughlfl of prospectors for Wolfram, essential element iii hardening of steel for he"? 81105. likened to the gold nish 1° K100011110. Says The Chicago Tri- bune. Axis and Allied agents are competing furlouslv at Lisbon for supplies 0f the metal. and are bld- ding it. utD to fabulous heights. Pric- 05 RD to almost $30,000 a. ton have Tamil!‘ been paid for big ship- ments. ‘The Wolfram fever has Sprefvfl imlil people 1n Portuiziil inv- tnlkmz cf little else. Farmers with arid holdings which produced the scrantfest of crops have become “Pallhv overnlahit by selling their land to the Wolfram huiiberg and from all over the tyunfry pegtple m1- bflllglnfr blLs of ore found on their lflnd to Lisbon to be assayed. A case 11s tinder ltearlng 1n the Pflfluggge courts ln which one British flnn ls 5111118 an unscrupulous Wolfram gang who sold it a huge consignment of 5111101011.: metal. Wolfram ls control- led at Just under 85.000 a. ton. plus Cxmrt duty of rieiirlv $2,000 a ton, but. despite all this there Ls 1m ex- tensive “black market" in the metal Which the Government desplfg 9,11 its efforts. finds it hard to matures: NIVY men have been chortllng over what they call the "last shot of the Spanish-American War," says Newsweek. It seems that among scrap ltrrm condemned m; month to a blast furnace doing naval 0rd. Ill-nee work was a Dewey-vintage cannon which probably came from the Spanish Admiral Cervera’! flag- ship Maria ‘Iieiesa. It was carted from a courthouse green hi a truck full of bedpostg bat-limbs aged rad- lawns and other unexamid salvage, and charged uneei-ernonlomly lnto the furnace. ‘Phat should have been the end of It but, ft wasn't. No noon- er had the cannon readied the flames than ft let out a last pro- testing roar. hurling an unsuspected cannon ball lnto the opposite found. r_v Wall. Workers ducked as plaster and brick showered nver them. but no pm» wax hurt. Since the powder nhvmislv wmild have lost its mwer ln the four decades since the min was loaded spectators took to won- rierlng how lt- could have happened. The most. scleptlflc theory was that Wfllfll" had waned lntn the bore be- tween rvroieetlle mid the rusted breech lock. ‘the flash explosion of lhfl steam then sent. the rannon will on its final and ineffective Emvitfliiflg towards the softer type lt PUBLIC FORUM Ill! OUIIII I IDS 1 1 gauntlet: qt l l yzbecrm a... MOIEI 1L CREAMEEY BUITIB Sh‘,- In reference to m 1.111010 appearing in The Guudlan of July 9 1e butter shipped by the MONII cooperative Creamery I W11 to make the following correction: A carload of butter was MW!‘ shipped to the mainland, nor was there any butter ever returned to Morell Cieitmeryi Manager. (Our Bristol correspondent. who supplied us with the information has hitherto always DrOVen most reli- able in the news he has forwarded us. On interviewing him since 1'0" celving the above letter, he advises that he received hi5 information from one of we stockholders of the company 1n Whom he also had the fullest confidence, We regret. that: he was misinformed-Ed. G.) wiasfiznu FARM pears Sin-Mr. Jack Sutherland, o! Hanna, Alberta. who ls VWPPW" sident of the United Farmers of Alberta, has written to a number of newspapers on the alleged need of Western formers for protection “against. those to whom they owe debts. Unfortunately. Mr Suther- liinds letter seeks to arouse pre- judice rather than appeal to rea- son and does little to clarify the debt situation of the western farm- ers which has been so exaggerated for political purposes. Proposals being made by Western interests for amendments to the Act itvhlch now a plies only tOA-l- bcrta and Saskatc iewen) and ex- tension of the Act lo Mnnlf-Obfl would jeopardize the security of western fiiriti mortgages. 1n which almost every life insurance policy- holder lias an indirect stake, and would seriously damage the credit- of many hottest imd industrious fanners in western Canada- Iti brief, the F.C.A.A 1f am- ended to meet demands of western groups, would empower non-Jud- icial tribunals to write down the tirincipiil, reduce the rate of inter- est and change the terms 0f D03’- menvon farm debts, no _mater when incurred, and the tribunals could revise their own decisions front time to time. Creditors would have no right of ap-pleal and co-uld tco easily be victimized by dis- honest OI‘ inefficient debtors. The farm debt situation in west- ern Canada was never so acute as to justify such one-sided legislat- ion and there is certainly no justif- lcatioit at. this time, when western farm income is at the highest point since i929, and westem farm- ers are reducing their debts with- out pressure fiwn creditors- If the Farmers‘ Creditors Ar- rangement Act 1s amended in sucn a tvity that 1t. will discriminate a- gainst those who have lent capital to western farmers no useful nat- ional purpose will be served and great national damage will be done. should be fair to all parties. I am. Sir, etc W. A. SMART. (Fighting French Information Service) The great. found meaning, as allied full on German-occupied soil of liberation of the lsni and Vichy treachery. with new hope and undaunted spirit, the Marscillaise ,or battle song of the French Republic. The trlcolorcd flag will be hoisted whcreci‘ the 51in sets French people. 1n France, the the freedom-frenzied Frenc symbol of tyranny. courted their displeasure. The fall of the fortress, with its tow- ers and ditch, and white handkerchief, was hoist- ed. the future national holiday was born as the symbol of new freedom and ii united democratic France. The Fete of the Federation was observed with there ln the presence of the King and ro a1 family, courtlera an philosophers and poets. New France r was there 1n the presence of a peo- a ple who crime from cities, towns and villages, frantic with oy llllllgthiél’ and tears, embraces 1m fl e y. Pnrls, the cltv of Polish, had been chosen for the ent, rendez-vous. In the centre the Champ de Mars, in the shape of a rry the "Altar of the Country," was raised, and tn front. of this, l. vast open-air amphitheatre, the pavil- lon dra d ln blue and 1d. OnIy a fortn phi; had been slowed to prepare or the fete. and workers swelled to 150.000 people, as the very start required the scooping up of 300,000 square feet of ground. But, everyone 1n Paris it seemed, from points near and fnr, loaned a hand. Monks and nuns, painters and dpoets. butchers and bakers hair PCSSCTS and tailors, seized picks and spades as they dug the dirt and wheeled barrows filled with lumber- There must be n clr- cus, too, for the people, Sq they went to their tasks, with hearts light and gay. JUNE 1940 since that gain event. the people of France have danced and sung every July 14th, for over one hund- red and fifty vears. on the streets of Paris, the mnsnnts in the market squares, to celebrate lhelr T lze H E I R APPARENT men rue new. APPARENT to the thrilling new world of to- morrow . . . the world he will help to build. Already he's learning to stand on his own feet, a young man with ideas; self-reliant, courageous, ready to carve out a future by his own personal efforts. Many of these young men of to- morrow —— future leaders — already have accounts of their own at the Royal Bank. They have spare-time jobs, work hard and save some of their money for the day when op- portunity Will beckon. Theirs is the spirit that has made this country great. It is the spirit that will build a Canada worthy of her future. THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA What is PRIVATE ENTERPRISE! l: is the natQal desire to make your own wry, n: far as your ability will take you; 1n instinct that has brought to this continent the highest standard of life enjoyed by any people on earth. It is the spirit of democracy on the march . . . Debt legislation ls not. different and year, a new upstart Bastille front any other sound leglslatlon- wok shape in France, as an arm- lstice which was 8. sin crushed the lamest known cliff dwelllns in the people of France under the heel of world, numbering 200 Germany and Vichy treachery. But, me spirit o1 France W115 not to be crushed. 1t was to rLse again on June 18. 1940, when an unknown ' General. Charles de Gaulle, became _ _ “ I Basuue Day-July 14 igenmy; gg gong’; PM gwfi; title-waiter (tflgl, brlmsriiftyirifi y! patty“? ttproadcfset. as p“ - Seholtz, a German lin mee, said he 0st. s. a e . . mammal holiday o! m, yo“ me war," echoed 1n the There had been political trouble French independence, dawns this homeland as he urged free French- and dmnkemlfis i" We camp - he year with new significance and pro- 111611 B11 Over m8 W011i‘! l0 Hilly End “m the mun bombs fight for the liberation of fiance. ‘Then did the spirits of the people France, and the hour of invasion 0f FY8906 T158. 11nd the mantle of has struck, s0 dawns the hour of sorrow fall from tier shoulders, as French people we ue uauiilsb resistance move- froiti the tyranny of Nazi despot- "Wm W35 10111186. and at the peril of their lives, the peocple took up Over land and sea, in the alr and 7-8-51“ 01 585M886 8n on the battlefields, the Free French Bwflitins the day of mvuton and people all over the world will sing llbflrflftlon- Three years have passed in on free Win“. 81MB the of the New Drder. Murseillalse will France, in aptte of past history, be huxnmed in the hearts, in cities, ever fvwed upon the new 1e wen towns and villages» In prisons, mo. bub factories and farms, though the male member o! a French falnllv voice remains silent as the Gestapo is draws neat‘. The people wiit com- tire members or his family are mentor-ate that. day, July 1789, one when by the Germans as hostage. hundred and fifty years ago, when 450,000 fiench workers are Ger- ii 111355- man hostages. _ es stunned the Bastille, to them the plants have been moved to Ger- many. 1.300.000 French soldiers imd Inside its musty, towered walls, officers are , the kiitgs of France deposited at ninety per cent. of French child- their fancy, political prisoners who 1g)? dare underfed and unclemour- e . But the spirit of the le of twenty-five feet fiance refuses to be . wide, (ill which the invading masi- all over the world, on July 14, 1943, es piled straw to cross) became the they will lrlt symbol of the fall of despotism 1n tiiedayof French independence, 8-! Frnnce. As the while flag,-a stick tllte day of French independence, as c use. found guilty of sabotage, the en- RESURRECTION OF FRANCE For the ucond time in the hi8‘ toi-y of has been a reverse direction of The Fete of the Federation, the novement to build first imnlversarv o! the fall of the Bnptre. Bastille and birth of French unity, pivot rear. 5916210101‘ riots rom cities, towns, villages on July 14th, 1790- 0d France was and across the seas. All these Wand ciirdlnn s, ambassadors and artists, of a new French lr way to Africa, tncludln ea- chm"... Bl k, . capees from nanceémtg theendptrta _ l Ill-Ill? P321?!‘ llgziildlqlllllfAglfid resent France until her lfber- §,‘,1’,'{l,_"‘"'"* ml“ "m" 85° Clurloltelovvn I 0h. amidst their shouts and shrfe . The div w“ cold with itin- but nothing could dnunt their splrltz liberty, freedom and fraternity, Journey. (‘Iva-onto Star.) uqtll . . . June 1040.11; that. month | y ORIGINAL APARTMENTS Gllff Palace tn Colorado Ls the T001115. TROUBLE AMONG INTERNEES "France has _,, but France has had seen some fnt rnees drunk. ta [NSURAN C 'i SERVIC ” W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Phone 540-541 -" .~ 1- m» t fitting and Supplying Glam-m Bu. ll. J. MABOII OPTOMIZTBIST Montague. P. l. I. Office flours: l0 to 12 n. M. I to l I. M. resistance JULY 1|, 1M8 upstart Bastille No kings 0f Holiday: etc. by appointment Offlca Connected with DRUGSTORI Professional Gard: imam; of today. W en any Entire industrial ln German prisons McLeod f! Bentley W. E. BENTLEY. K. C. J. A. BENTLEY. K. C. ems e and Blrrlltern and Attorneys-at.- Luv commemorate in 8P MONEY T0 LOAN 1M Prince Street MMYS HAIR RESTORER A d ll f I f parltllsn" cghfi? umiiilstiii: llorrelland Company; n I F. n I alfal-‘qgllltlpcn; and brautllles Restores Gr f d d hall to it; orlglnalqllfsrdefl wchctlier . the French republic, there up the French ‘ No lon er is Paris the lnt of de egatlons and pat- NOTICE 'Al the present time, about. 29 men are needed to put the Army Service Corp up to ltrength. Snmnlhlnp not: cnl llnq-Afrupmna lo living you pointy and col llupplmu. It is expected that training for this unit uuiviwim will start during the present week. As l y-otecllon sunburn rue: s1m-- ----5°° Demy‘: "I Secrets" 5" Tan oit — - - so» and Petal Tone Sun TIII __.__._- and Tnn|el—-——-—— TllE TWO MAGS 149 Great qmra 5'1"‘ Mall Orders GI"!!! PM". Attention agzilnll Interested recruits, who are eligible for this unit, klndly communicate with, J. POPE CLARKE, Acting Captain 0R Telephone No. 1487-1719 J. F. McLEOD, Lieutenant, Telephone No. 422