111x01: rout: 111E L3 TT ETIIWN Glllllllflllll IIFI-llll Puilv wounded In I88‘! "".”§".£i> f I ‘l-F‘ 1L1. 13' l‘ r uh . . l.li~ul,-(‘til W (‘healer S. Mela!" \111~ Pi-i-si-Ient. J R. BurnrL, l1..I.l. si-I-i-rttarv l. ut. (‘til f). A. lat-KInnoi-t. 0.8.0. rlilih-r and .\ 11.113111 llirrt-lfll‘ J R. BIIPIIOH». FJ-l. i‘ sot-fate Editor Frank Walker. Sl'fI.~‘.l'll'P'l‘l(lN RATES M130 pm tear 1m advance! ellver ' k Clh $1.11 “Pr min l arlvancet math-d to I’ E Island t...» |~1~~ \t1:|r ‘m advance] mulled m (‘nnuln and US Alrmlii-r-t \||1lil Run-an of (‘lrrulntlanl ‘The Strungnns-t Memory is Weaker than the flea/res! lynlr.” l .".-\Tl'If!).\\'. ,=.___. .. I'\\'c “ARCH 2. 1940. Told You Sol" Tllili the .\li1~'l ‘tiitii ricii Ill’. tit h t tn- .~.i_‘.i tie liing Government have ir support of the wtir both ~ii..~c- ‘ilitics began goes without ._. ,'t.-..i-.l pfiflk‘: it. .\'ow' an Uttawu. c1-i"i~.~p~ii.l.iit ltl\il\'_s into print to tell its that the \\'.ir Uufniffllltlll is working overtime to n1.il.r :niii~n.l.~~"iiu matter who forms the new ad- 11i§iii~tizi . llc zil~o promises that the Blac- itt-nrze hm; tloii-iiiiiit-iii will put restrictions nn ti“. uq- of giistiliiic, but here is the story itself from Linn llonirciil Gazette which entered the election contest to bless Mr. King, and con- tiii- ii to blast lii1ii: ‘ ‘min slfillvfidfp in the war organiza- ..it- p...~il>lt- naming of a separate itiiti- .1:.1i 1i minister of supplies are being i... as in l"1ll isicr oi given c.‘ mion in Government circles, and prcsctif l<>ll> are that steps to make even tltorc eff ".\‘c the sizitioiis war effort will be tzilti-ii 11' t- hnlliiiiiig at the end of March, ii i ' .1.) flll'lll_~ the nctv zidininistratioii. hi» '.»\ ‘If the work of the War Supply Ilozird \' i that of the \\'artime Prices 8nd 'l‘r.‘iilt- l has been tirgcd for sonic time. and evcii i . the lain-r was Uflglflllll)’ establish- ed :1 1I\‘l_\ 11-1‘ ‘it"_‘lfli'.larf'_\' duties its work has gone beyuiiil the pulciiig oi supplies and, in one or two instances, the temporary fixation of prices. On more than one occasion, it is explained, the stipplv- board has consulted with the prices board regarding ccr::iin supplies, notably wool for mil- itarv lItilll\'~C.*. “\\ lit-ii the Lliiiiiiiiiiiiicalth Air Training Plan gels uuilrr way iii zibiiut two IIIIJIIIIIS there will he l.i _;c 1'1. l'\'§l*L‘ iii the supply of gasoline re- l|llil\'tl for fffllll.ll_\' tiurposcs. Tlic tliouszititls of training lllilc‘lfllll‘~ to lfC fl>0ll throughout the D0- riiiiifiii will he hc;iv_v constimers of gasoline and oil, and it is hintctl that within a short time sortie s_v.~tt~ii1 of ccintriil over supplies and prices of gasoline will be C~lill)ll>'llk‘fl to eitstire a steady and ililvtllliliC supply‘ for the flying schools" liirmers Need Cheaper Feed For il..- lll1l~i pirt of the _v1~:ii' the farmer is t...» ltf‘~_\' to inc-ct others of his kind and discuss with iliciii the niaiiy problems affecting his mode 11f life. .\ fcw ilziys each spring is about all i In‘ c:iii nfiiiril. Jlllll lfl t|i:it tiinc he says etiough i-i iiiiiil. ziboiii lift‘ ri-si fit" the yctir. .\s a rule ‘ictii-ii i~ éhiw to follow on zii1_v sitggcstions made bcczui~e they are nimble. to maintain a system of follow up that wpnld effect their desires. chief "thorn iii the flesh" this year is caus- ed liv lll1'lf' (lvlhlllllflllllfffl tn do all they Catt f0 supply ilii-ii" >l|ltf'c“ 11f IINIKI to iiiaintaiti adequate supplies for tiuiselvtis and our ztllics. The gov- emitiqni, pf boil. l_il'L'.'II lfrittiin and Canada have cziilctl for gri-zucr tiriiditctiou of bacon hogs I ziiid our flIl'IIl<‘l'~ lIIl\(‘ rcplicd by raising thc grr-zitwi iiiuiibi-r iii our history. Unfortunately I the returns I'L';Iil/.1'tl are 1111f sufficient to warrant a coiitiiin:itioii iif this policy unless the cost of 1 production is liiwercil. Price control boards set tip h_\-' the liil\‘i'l'fflll('lll are holding down the cost of the fiiibhi-il product with the object of pre- venting |'I'1till<‘\'f'lllf_‘. This is quite tigrcctilfle as lung as tlic >~|ucc/.<~ is not put on at the other cud. i The lllCl'('1f~(‘\l production means that large f . qttantifics of iced must be purchased as what we . grow (illl'~ll\'\'\ i~ insufficient for the purpose. It is sii<_i;1-_'i~l th.it lllf‘ lioieriiiiii-iit takc notice of I. the fztrnit-iz? fIl'1'1ll\"-'\lII(‘IIl and obtain some sort of l j C0fICP~~i1iii l4! lii-lp out the producer. Lower f i freight f‘.'1lt'\ 1'11 grziin from the wcst would be l ' an R‘II~_\‘ wliiiioii and could be adopted as a war 1iic:i~iir--. ll1il\'1'\'\‘l‘_ |’rcmi<-r Liaiiipbcll says thcrt- is 111i hope in that direction, and where there i~ ll‘! will evcu Ferdinand couldn't fight. .\1intlicr .».'i:i~f.itiiiii'y' solution \\'ot1ld be to have grain t'lt'\.'lliil\ built iii Charliiltetovvit and Sum- nicr~iilr bri 11g \\."~l(‘l’fl grain (luring the sea- son it Is V -:ipi-~t h_v hunt and reselling t0 the fziriiiiii". :11 rii~t as f|('1'1l€fl. ll is IItllllillIWl ihzit tbcrc are a number of farm- ers making a (Iifffftiflifltlf? profit with conditions ll they are. btit they alone could not attempt to siipplv llft’ ii1.t1'l.1I. s1» wi- must depend tipoii the :1\1-' _‘_'t‘ ilirni- I‘ who is l1!1l£l_\' just on lllC linc be- twt-i-ii piinii Jtflll lo“. ,\i1 I'll-tutor in f'li;it'liilfi'fo\vtl and another ill glfllllflwfsltl.‘ would cinibli» u. tn do a good job in fhi- l'.ii1p_iri' \t'l'\l\"1‘. llui \\fll the l1*1\(’l'|lffI1'lIl. do the iiccilful? 'l'h.'1t is tlic rub. lunuuculnfcly “Clean Hands" The li-ial ~t:uiip wf .'ipproval has ltccii placed upoti what iii i_v h’ ti-ruicil lIIXlfllll‘ travel by thc action of .\lr. _lu~1it~<- .\. li. .\rsenault in malt- ing the xffllelflllllllfl _|I1il‘c:il visit tn (icorgctnwil for the writer sitting of the Supreme Court by 1111mm '! :iii ~, c iiifurt. tinl safety rontribtitetl tn ll! 1' l'ffl-"f' iiicaiiis of travel by this lllll\\lll! (hurt of Justice. ii llts llotuitir was prcscnltctl ' I :1 1.11 til \\.liit' gl-iics indicating that thcrc ‘III 11.11 <.<\-.-. III hc tricd. llis Lord- ' l‘1'l iiit- significance of coming into v.11 b: id~." l-‘ur ill!‘ past nine- .\l\!||.'fllll has lit-cu holding 1 ‘I. \‘ 1'1‘ l1 t. f‘ - I1v1.\‘|| a-id 111i curb occasion lie- has N! l1 n .. fl .1 - :11 lar gift. \\'e 1m Prince lidvvaril 8T ‘ l~‘. I ‘i 1.1 si r1111 ‘Ilitill on the North .\n1erican q; l twin; n: n. .1 p;irt‘ciil:1rl_v law abiding people. 'l and as lath _\1.'ir adds its record 0f absence Of serious crime, we may well feel otir indebted- ness to the circtimstaitces which place 11s away front motiey-graliliitig, potvcr-sccltiiig, lit-iter- skcltcr ntcfliods uf living, and surrotttitls 11s with quiet simplicity, church society, and frieudlv comiutinity- liappiiicss_ Mr. justice :\1's'C111Iflll spolte weighty words on the attitude of Cnnzulizuis to the war. He said: “Laiiada is tit w:it' bci1ii1>i~ our lint; is at war. And when our King is at war, then it is the bounden duty of every loyal subject to go to the assistance iif the lvittt; and ilcfcntl hint. If is 1111f for the ~flltll‘t‘l I11 hcgiit III cinpiire wlic- Ilicl‘ llic King >ll~llfltl liaic <lc1"l.it1"il \\.1r or 1111f. It sltttttltl IX‘ sflfflcirfll for a pJu-infic suhjccf ti) know that the King is at ivar and that llic Ltoivit is iii datiger, because if the war is lost, tlicu the Crown may he forfeited. Ilicrcfore, it IIUIIUUYCS every’ stibjcct of the King when the Crown is in danger, to enlist in the services of the lxiitig and defend him.” This short quotation from His Lordship's re- marks contains not all we know, but all we need to know, and is applicable to any whose coit- scicttce is troubled by “over thinking". 'l‘he judge has two sous, both of whom are serving with His Majesty's Forces, therefore he has im- maculately “clean hands" in enriunciatitig these views. It should be added that the Hon. J. A. Mathieson has only one son and he is “over there” doing his bit. EDITORIAL NOTES — Many young uniformed men left this week for the mainland. l 1F Politicians and others have only three Sundays before Easter election. 1F $1 O U >11 ‘It Will March go otit in a political storm or calm? That will depend upon the “Ides". n- iv n- 4- John \\'esley died this date, I791. “Passion and tirejttdice govern the world; only under the itamc of reason.” m m ‘What is genius? It is," wrote M. Barrie, “the power to be a boy again at will." That's the stttff Scoutmasters are made of. V i O1 I Conscription by any other name smells as odorous 1n the nostrils of the honest tniemploy- ed_as 1t does in those of the rich consciciicelcss UbjCClUf. =11 v1 i‘ 1k According to our esteemed coiit<:1iipor1ii"_v, the ntctition of “'1 he Charlottetown Guardian" by Dr. Grant at the Murray River meeting “brought forth lotid applause." >l1 >I< * In I916 Lloyd Bell of Gonzales Cotinfy, 'l‘c.\'tis, brought seventy-two white legliorii hens with him when he returned from a trip and thus start- ed a new trend in agriculture there. Now the small comnntnity of Sinilov, wlicrc Ill-ll lived, markets 4,000,000 cliiclti-iis :1 ‘vcnr. at =11 According to an airplane official Prince lid- ward Island is the most air niiiiiltiil proviiicr: cast of Ontario. The city (If Afunti-twil. of c0111.», is pretty well sophisticated bttt with that exccp~ titm this Island holds the record i11 lizistcrn Lfziii- ada, thanks to the Laiiada ;\ir Lilies. 1'1 ll‘ 1K 4' ‘ Considerable ttioretiicnt is guilty; Ill] in t-..,,,,(»t-_ lion with local troops, not :1 word 11f which is given to the Press. .llll\V different iii .\'cwi Brunswick where the Ticlcgraphxlourtizil czirrit-s a column regulailv "\\'ith the New llritnsivirlc .\r1i1c<l Forces", where even llll‘ tiziitics of sol. dicr's zidmitfctl to llusplllll arc ll>l\'1l. \\'hy the taboo hcrc? #4110141 _ January exports of Canadian bzicoit and hams t0 the United Kingdom were cunsitlcrablv more than dotihle iliusc of a year zigii, tho [(11:11 bettig 356,204. cwt. valuci] at $11,117,145 Cull]- pzired ‘\\‘fll1 157,385 at $_',ti_;3,b'g.:. ‘twelve other countries took a total of S72 cwt. in January. titaking up the balance of the export. The value of all meats exported in-jantiziry iviis $6,t)95.3i(> compared with $5.40<_).5.t4 iti December and $3, 118,182 in January", 11130. TlIC Vfflllc of the ex- port t0 the Utiitcd liiiigtlom was $0,So(i,ti_t1. 41 >1< >11 1k IIere are odious contparisons from Saint John TClPgYZlpll~J0fll‘f12llZ A man rims at the ratc of 1.114 miles per hour. A niztn can cycle at the rate ot 34 1-3 tniles per hour. A man can row a boat at the rate of 8 4-5 miles per hour. A horse trots 31 miles per liotir and runs 37 9-10 miles per hour. But, the C.l\l.R. service from Saint john tn Halifax averages 25 ntlles per hour and front Halifax to Saint john 16 1-2 miles per hour. What speed 'l‘igtiish and Souris to Charlotte- town? v 1r The statement that the New Zeiiltuiil Govern- ment believed in the voluntary system of en- listment, and that it must be made to succeed, was fllZldC by the Minister of Education, the llun. P. Fraser, who recently returned from a visit In Britain and lfFIflfCC. The Prime l\lin— istcr, Mr. Savage, said: ‘The Govcriiitient has not brought forward compulsory service and there is no reason why it should be brought forward, because it believes in the superior tucrifs of the voltmltiry’ system.” I\Ir_ Sitvagc expressed llic view that it should be uifilcces- sary t0 compel f!f(‘lf to fight fur the principles upon which the present war was being fought. o Farmers’ Week has passed, and the Central Farmers Institute are to be congratulated m1 having had an oppurttiiiilyi to confer one with tututhcr and to hear tiddrcsscs on various sub- jccts from tiien skillet] and (lrilletl iii tlicir sub- jects. After all the main object of a “ptirlitt- int-tit", which this annual gathering is tuiofficitil- ly termed, is to (IISCIISS questions, elicit fIffUffIffI- lion, and to proceed to legislate on tuztffers of vital interests. In this respect the liisfititle can only pass on the suggrstcil li-gidzilion to "au- otber chamber", bitt its that chamber is com- Ilt 41 l1 I 1U posed uf 26 rural ffli'lllll(‘f'i In four tirbatt meni- hers. a nod of tlicir lit-ads should b.- srituefhiitg better than a wink to a blind horse. ls it, under the present regime? C_II_A_I§L()'I"I'E'_I:()WN Gl.'ARl)lA_l\_l_ _ __ NOTES BY TllE um ll. is difficult to procure adequate JII~I)])AIIQ to can-fie 1.11. 11'i-111>p.1'f 01 nuetrabti‘: wheat export stupius or even SUIIIC-itfll shppng Icr tale quantities when Britant 1s able to amorb. 1t Lranspzies that. 1f stup- paig had been available. much larger A11 4131111111 safes “unfit l1..\'-: been UUSJIIJIQ etiubmig fliitam LJ buy leis trcui Cuff-aria, ivficse dqffuf‘ exchange ntakes purchases rnucn moxie costly’ than 111 the case of Australian gran. This has been one 0f the problems t1t;'p.'1'tnfsl 111 Mr. Casey ‘s (Inc us ~.OfI$, for wiurft reason fic cxixomtl bite i ospotft of tlsiiig Nlft‘ Atitericuii i ipipiiig. 111 spit-e of dlfltcttltcts presented by the exua cost. it 1s still believed pC5>llJl€ to uuLze American bottoms. The demand for Australian woof not only by dritnm, but especially by France, besides neutral States, 1s such that it tias become embarrassing, - Australian Press Union. Canadian censorship seems re- luctant to allow Canadzans to know all the news that 1s kncwn ‘m xteuttral centuries. O‘: at. mast 1t wishes to hold m its fiand the power to release for publication in Canada. wrtam types o! new: that already has been published In other countries and so are known or are available to enemy agents. It is very hard to see the point o1 such censorship. All 1t does is to prevent Canadians from know- ing what, probably. the rest of one world already knows. Canadians and Canadian publications acoevpt OQDSOTShLP cheerfully when It 1s d1- rected to preventing the enemy from securing mtomiatton that might be of any possible value. But when informatzon already has been published 1n other countries, lt. Is certain that Germany has been 1n- formed tf the mat-fer Is of the slightest. interest to the Nazis. So that censorship of such material results only 1n keeping the infor- munon from Canadians. not. from the enemy. — Edmonton Journal. The Prime Mlnlsler o! Canada wucfied a hgh point 1n eloquence on October 2B. a month and a halt after the Dominion had declared war. "The time has ccme when," he su1d,"w save our Christ an civilization, we must be prepared to lav down our Lives for its preser- vation It Ia the preservation, for our own and future genera- tions. of freedom and begotten of tmrsecwt-Ioii, martyrdom s and centuries cf strugg e. Sx I1lO“lllS before, on March 30. Mr. Knit; spake somewhat. differently’: ‘I cannot accept the view wh ch is being urged in some quarters t0- tfrtv. that. regardless o1‘ what gov- ermuent. or part-y tnay be In of ee. regardless of what lL-S policy may be, regardless of what. the issue 1t- celf may came to be this country should say here and now that Canada ls prepared to suipport whatcver may be prrpcted by the Government. at Westmmister Assuming, it 1s urged, tnrt Cun- adiaxis fzke 0.11121‘ people will put their bwn Int/crests first. what on our Interests demand, what amount of knzght-erruntry abroad (o our resource permit?" Frcm what Mr. K112 In"; nazd recently it. can only be as timed t-fiat the tcnrr of t-‘ie tart-er quotation ‘was one with the policy 0t‘ niuintainnr: Czwadzrs ".ndepenaence“ 1n deciding its course cf acrcn. It has further btcn elaborated by hm more -crn the IITCS o." Its ICIEZI of Haimfton K rigs at. ‘ the un. v. S-peetafctl‘. We read with some itilerest the - '1 of a meettiig of a Wo- 1n titnte where that Ine l of the family Iaunzry and one speaker s been marred 21f years and Iiave yet. to iron a stiff shirt. My fittsband and the three bays all wrar soft rhrrts wlili ecl- nirs attached ” Then there was sum-e dlcnsuoti about. haw much starch to put in collars and so on. It was not. like that on the 10th Ccneoson. (lraitdtatficr had some stiff rfizrts. but. Incre often he 1n- otztirtf toward the dieky wh ch the (It ionziry dos ibss as “ire sham boom of a shirt." ‘That's W118i the dicky was: Jfll. a silt frcnt, with a collar baud at the top and a couple of tapes that wteut. around and l-l0tl at the back to kesp the tlriig mocr-crf on the (Ir-ad centre. When grantfiathcris (flakes were 1l'Cflt'(l they were stiff. and m the hot days of summer the irons had to be Iieated on the KflCllPfl ratigs. T1101’ were as stiff 11s the barn d:or and as shiny as the mate's flank on the lllLYfllIlLI of 1a.r any. Then Vvlltfll they were laid away In the bottom drawer tips-fairs Snnciay could ccme as quickly as it plowed. If, uccf to lake quite a little time gcttnig graiidtattiei- harnessed fcr church. Generally he wore a grey flannel shirt, and that dzcky had w transform ft. 1111.0 some sam- ‘bfzince of a white one which It did. His collars were lugn. straight. mitt rig.d and he seemed to Ike the feeling of being held ‘together by starch. There was also quite a bit. of machinery attached to the cuffs which went with the ottt-flit. The cuffs we're of rubber or some such substance, and they could be cleaned by using a wet rag and a rub. Circular they wsre and the buttons were rather pen- dcrons 1n sire, but the machinery ulrch held Lfirm exactly In place was a trifle complicated. There was a lftt‘e affair on the and o] an elastic which gripped the shirt ciscve br-lcnv Ih-ei elbow. and the other end found mcormg on Lhe tc-p of the cuff. It. was rather a delfcate operation as the cuff had to extend one-half Inch below the coat sleeve and that ruling was as unnltcrable as thoe of the iMeries and Persians. From the Peter- oorcugh Examiner. The Hamburg wireless ls 1n- parentfy not cont-rut. with coctur- Ing news o! current, events; l1, now assumes the right w revise ouir ac- cented English history. The Other evening a somewhat heavy/going fable was tacktd on to the story that "St. Augustme." passmg through the sitive market at Home remarked that a group of Etttzft-sn bcys w-rre “not. Angle‘, but stinger." But every English schoolboy has been told that. 1t was a young pr.est named Gregory who sa'd those words and when he became Pope, d-rspatctied a mink, August ne on a mks-fen to evnngerze Engfnnrl. Hnmbiirgls capacity for faking the facts Is notorious, but It. might at least. leave our legends alone. Mianche tcr Guardian, Included In the trnlnlng now going on In our c*mps is that. 0f passing a message "along tthe 11m." W arlllze Ei.g1.sh tBy Graham Miller) Lo1id.".i.~1';r Inc last §Ax yicas Dr. Bani (ice-bans. Ccr-nan nit-us- Icr o1 p1't.,.ttg.1.1ut1, 1121s 111..o.~ AGulS o1 me isrufsu. I-‘ct- sux years In every European language B-IG 50111.1 seected Easiein tongues the British nave been port. ayed as fools, knavcs and coward... _ . - v Particularly outwards. ‘llial. 110b- ulous quality-physical courage- Iiacl vanished trom England, said Dr. Goebbels; there was even some doubt as to whether If. had ever been n11 attribute of the British. l<lrc._v young Nazi knew. mid n grout. many proule Iii other conti- tries were beginning to ktiow, that the Britksfi, fat, complacent and purse-proud, could buy their way out of troubc. fie their way out. of trouble. but. never fight. And the Nazi youth, and even some few of the more lmpesston- able youth of other countries, 11> gun to laugh in p, most lmmoder- ate fashion whenever the British as flghtfn men were mentioned. Now all Ihfa caffow laughter from the Nazi youth, while ft. was pleas- lng and proper to the ears of Dr. Goebbels, began Io have a bad ef- fect on British prestige throughout Europe. It, Is possible to feel affection (or a. fool, ft 1s also ble to have an honest admiration or the fmave, but a. coward 1s everywhere despised. The ingenious Dr. Goebbels foster- ed this theory o! the British as an unwarlfke and weak-kneed nation to the best of his considerable abil- uy' noon I cam remember sitting In a, cafe in Amsterdam on the day after the introduction of compmsory military service 1n England. An 01d German waiter brought me a Ger- man newspaper to read. It was the Westdeutcner Beobachter, I re- member, and across the front. age was the hfidflpe-Engaand lays the Strong an ~ There was mockery In that head- lfne. ,, “What. do you think of It? I asked the German waiter. He eyed me carefully, must have decided that. I was Dutch, and re- plied slowly: . “They were strong 81101181‘) when I met them on the Somme 1n 1916, but. 1 think they have aezenewwd- They are fat and have too easy lives. I do not think thflf W111 W" fight. again. They w111 get. other people to do It for them, perhaps, but they will not fight themselves. so here was yet another con- scientious 66.111311 finally convinced by endless and cleverly repeated fies. The story underneath the mock- Ing headline was itself mocking. All that the Nazis ever wrote about. this break with centuries of En!- fish tradition was food for the fc-fisfi iiingiitei- of ymms New» and others. O O O O The cravem youth of England. bloating like sctiiedsheep, were to be dragged Into military service. Dr. Goebbels offered them conso- lation by pDlllllfl_g_O_flb that the - Joining was not. a. i , for many years it had been used only as a gaudy trimming to state occasions. I re- membe. seeing comparative pictures of a Guards officer In full (Less unifoitn-aitd very dauidifted he lGCkCd~flDd a carefully posed por- trait of a Nazi infttntrymati In mine k1". .‘i'.l'.l turned to catch the siiudlo Inning, "stirtmg" Nordic face solo“; stormy into nothing- ness. _ On the early morning 0f n March day in 1938, stctiizfmg on the roof of a car just Inside the Austrian froihicr, I saw th-e Grrman army much In, grim, tezrlble and ap- tipizar-entfy endless rn the dawn lizlit. I can remember Rudf Huber. an Austrian colleague of mine, be- CCfllIIlg lyrical at this SHOW 0! “Wehrmacht? p _ magnificent disciplined strength." he shouted, “a nation of Siegfrieds, a fighting itatloti! But I can remember what boys this army scented to b_e composed of ivheti I saw them tn t-fte full light of day. I can still see them rn their gawky pride walking down flli‘. streets of Kufstein. "Is con- quest. then so easy," they seemed to say. O O O O Later I sfeod by another road- "v in what was Czechoslovakia and saw the German armv march n. AMIn I was told. this vme bv a wfiIte-sfoeklnged Henlsfnlst: "I don‘t. suppose you can feel the ~-.1\irv n1‘ all these marchlnst men. The Btiflsh are not. a fighting I made no answer then. but now 1 say: " ‘st a moment. Mr. Hen- <"t)r)f‘rl0f‘ and reader of Dr. Goebbels-Tet me tell you that the 3--“’slt are n ffzlitlng race!" f hens vou mav ‘read these words of mine: I wlsf-i that vou could read thrm also. Rudl Huber; you who stood by the side of the road wltlh m". watrhed your country violated and made fun of Eniglfsh fighting men. But you developed doubts. Rudf. clld you 1w‘. small and anx- ‘nus doubts. and they sent. you to FOB. AN OLD MAN I wish I fiad listened then. When i be ‘Ilioseliioiiig tifhnswrfes, I was bwed (I n _ Outdogfis tloapfay; or older, tactfully rew The Halli away to light. Immediate tings, And an me while your SQXWTBUOB lav Behind your baffled eye; and wist- fut speech Groping Wwmrd mine: and I can never reach If. now. The things you did not. sly Are buried wftn you, and the brlght. thin Illfe Of OOSMCB broken. For I closed l oor And let you go away. your stories All un I wish I had flstened more. —Ofnrk McLaren In “The Dafhoutfe " _, Review. A11 ex-sofdlers will remember the exercse, and 111v me original message got, changed n6 1f. was wnlz-ixred by one man to anal/her. It. 1s even mom difficult when wearuig gas masks. Reaentfy a cer- tain battaLon was lying Ln Wen order and from the extreme left. an offuer -ent the me sage: ‘Send reinforcements. We are (only w advance. Sfcwly the message went. front one gas mask to the other. The officer _at, the far end of the tne was evenuallv tcld: "Se-"d mree and fourpznce. We are g3- mtl to a. dance!” -- Kentfah Mer- Buchenvrafd. In s"f.e of all that Dr. has said, the British an‘. a _ race. A mast. obstnate, tronb-Q- sanie. deteim ned Blld ski lsd figm- In; .829. In the years between 1800 and 1013 British soldiers fcutht. 147 engagements of sufficient Im-| portanoe for their nauies to be fn- scrfbed on n fmentaf flags as but.- tfe honours. at Is an overuse "I rather more than one battle a yew‘ for a hundred voters. For oven t1 ltutidrcd years tie [British ‘aunt has always had some of Its umts p11 active aeivfoe In some part. of ti! world. No army In Europe can make n similar cfafm. No army In Eur-f ope has had so much experlepoe 0 comes than one who has only led or followed on a Wrath 8101b"!- Collects Haircuts fir“. 1 ts .i§él...““““lfl h y. o co ec h“ ha, w‘ at feut a thousand times. lnfi l" never misses tvn 0911011115131’ °l '- iimcut um win rive 111m I 11f" ex rlenee. “My most. 9X99!“ 1'9 ha ut was one I had recently ln London," hie told listeners "1 Wankel ed to see how much n. haircut coul cost. It was accompanied b! l i!" massage. slnge. shave, friction Ina-s- ‘"° m“ ‘ “...‘1lé“ll.‘§.‘...‘¥l“°¥ 11?? n“ féilgifftt: Mlflblleshflslyéolaig some PM“ falling out, ab, and 36s. 3d. fess In tptrcul. 1 lttzhud wu one In Moscow. t, was e city's best, saloon. but. the condi- tions were unpleasant and the op}:- tlng bad. The price was 6s. at I8 then rate of exchan¥°~ 111111 1*- l-hbllgh tips are snpfmml w l” abolished. o. hand nvpemd w "- eelve a further 1r. 6d. The wlrefeu boomed the whole time. and I was tot-ad to lraze 11W“ u‘! 19-5" f’ Lenin, Marx and Stalin 905i“! d ' rectlv In front of the. chair. "Ill , I think, In the real para- dise hi’ bar-hers. Every third shop seems to ‘be to halrouttln and shaves. for even the poores Italian likes to be shaved profes- slonaflv. "I remember one very Interest- ing haircut 1 once 11m In the bar- nC r ke mllAiiiotfther expensive 7T 97.31/17 9y I\ ' OME- puoplo don't carry lulomobilo collision Iiuuunu humus they agi-siiisitimwuvu'_ collision, ll won't b0 Uni fault, and Ihofll eollod from lho other fallow. E (U, E ‘ll’: I he! that only 15% an able lo collect danuqu in ease of eollirion with other can. And, don't forgot, you can’! collect from a mo er I atom VIII if you happen lo llid and uvo ln the side o! your car. No sir, ny u: is Onion we o! by flu nqnnt o! the National Five Insurance Company of Harllwd. l’! II lirofldh Ilk- "IQ chasm.‘ W. K. ROGERS AGENCIES LTD CHARLOTTETOWN A O ooaeoooooooooaoo vow», How Are Your Eyes‘? If you are having symptoms n! ntnln-heldnehu, more eyel or dlnlneu — consult I lbw" llIsL At vour service wllh years n! experience and n thnroulh refrncllng service, c111 In ma atwussvonr d1!- ‘Itillllllll. G. F. llutelteson G. ll‘. IIUTCIIESUN I‘. G. IIUTCHESON. . 0000»: -~4 voovo-oooooowooo-o~oooo-o-o4 O o l .11.”. mfifis AMIMIIIIATEII anotuziinu. 1 comm Illlll This preparation I; ‘an u. migrant and ledltlva for t Irritation, Cou tu and Cold: fully nmn . Prfoo ‘ ner bot o _ _ _. _. _ ._ DR. EVAN ‘S Stomach Mixture ........"' £212.‘! ...'.'°,‘.‘;'.2"1:“" If“ II GI‘- lnl from Ilfillllng dim-en after utlnflmhqmbqm u“ sch. , and nur u mlalullpelphfle fluent stomach It’: Evans. £034? tscqs-gfhfm, Monev Saving SPECIALS "Mlfl- Kldno-v fill: - - 39p "rncehen Ball! '-“'"| Trlnl 5hr Free - — Pa» ‘""'"-- Baby Food — — 48o "1 fi-‘lten "Ml: (Waffle noon - - m- ‘nrler’: Llllle Llvar Pllln It‘: ‘will Elnnlllon - 58c and file "cinema cream 15o 49o. m (Reviewed by l\lr. "T111; c-firuiiiclc of advertising ultr- lng 111c- iasi llfl)’ tears In batiana has b.1211 acne so thoroughly by the ‘authors that, It 1s more than a IIILKG history of atlverusziig-It. is a com- prehensive .o_cfaf ftfstoryt of the per- iod, we are informed, for Instance, wfiv patent mctttcmcs were I11 su. quiiluieu giociors were 10w and tar between and are shown now the ad- vertising of the great. pharmaceuti- cal firms has come to co-cperate wllti the medical proleasloir today. A11- otfier chapter of special interest ts fltlhffng: a soldier who has n rend): , v _ I m n c d- ied‘ or followed successmutl, uniiiifii- ilmfiimivfiiili ‘tftouilve ailiglulf-‘ail “Tc- l! l‘ bell" “m” w m geographic zones of the Dominion are outlined and an lllumfnat analyst; ls lven of the Influence o racial stoc ‘Ofl these zones. A wealth or lllnstriitfotts adds value and Interest, to the book. The aa- ll of fivt (IVIIIIIIIG In I>10-1(‘1'\' ofillflmnli W11"? MARCH 2, 1940 (tffpfxtgfjfj The Story of Advertising in Canada John Murray Gibbon) wertisemetits re 1' d - . ‘ than anything peloseulfeiia “ll-‘Qlwlflflm’ atfon that. has been effected fulfil‘ ‘costumes of Cam 1m men Eiffel 3423:: illwlhtftellslilllilluéum- . movement not only 1n n the 11"‘ an f I v 11 flfinhfl ialed “Inc tialriiigmtifitlsafibiiariiffmi es=entiaf to lfahkmd of book m“ l‘ -~ e business executive, gnzfalplibtlifready Indicated, i, is “N, 0 8011MB of Information p, the student of social history and progress. The lllllldlflrs, t-r E, Step1]- f.“‘%2..‘“2Ifi2l.‘.t‘“.l‘°‘Zt:‘=“" "r w piece o work." ex“ m“ bet": chair at the stranpe medfae- val town of Modfca In s cffy. There was apparently no minimum age for banbers, and I was fascinated to see children on boxes wielding razors on customers who evidently put, great faith In youth. I decided to have my halt‘ cut. and entered one of the shops where I was at,- tended by a most. attractive six- year-old child. He did remarkably well, and when I asked hfm, “Htvw much?” I could see he felt, what It was like to be a potential million- aire, for foreigners 1n Modfca are all supposed to be rich. The chlld thought seriously for a. minute o! the largest sum he ooulcl Imagine, and then said. ‘Ten lire.’ That: Is about k. When I pasped, ‘What? he unmedfately realzed diplomat- ically he had made an economic mlscalcufatfori, and came down to half the original flgure. He asked ‘Five llrek-twhfch was Just, five $2 What the average stun“ O O O O “The only place where been offered beer with my halt-cu; was In Tokyo white the cost wit; 211-. and a pretty little Japanese serving girl brought. beer. Not so pleasant. was a haircut I had in Bangkok In Slam din-Inga revolution some years ago. Not more than two people were allowed 1n the saloon at the some tttn so that L119" =1w111d be no P10131112. and l! soldier wast prefignpmpirmed with his r1111; stttln In a dzallnfhat strgdilfedvifii: Equa r, and I have had my hali- cut by a man who claimed he 11m trimmed the locks of Mr. 1.10m George and Mr. Winston chllrghllL Either he was an empty boast“ o,» there was no fmnsmksslun of great- gifuyhtfirough the laying on o; I have ever Goods-Animal Big Fire Sale _ Starting Thursday Morning A large part of stock damaged by Fire and Wafer will be sold at. Greatly Reduced Prices. This includes Patient. MQdICIIIGk-TDIIO‘ Water-Perfumes-Soaps — Combs - Smoker; _ _ Remedfes- Penslar Prepara- tions-Hzur Brushes-Drugglsts Sundries-Tal- cum Powders-Ivory Goods - Trusses — Tolet Paper-Cedar Bags-Candies-etc, etc, Call early as this stock will soon move- Excellent Bargains. E. ll. FllslilFllcntral Drugstore "In ' '1 :.._._.s - v "M1011: 10o many guarantees; nisfied without ohllgaflqn. llYllllMAll & Offices: Charlottetown, 5 Vitalit F0 A BIRD MANUFA IIIGKEY 8i cury. _ _, Mgnomtxf .~~ _ .~ I TllE ,2 MAGS,“ ~ r ‘vepgiwp-fgtia - w: w»: A Striking Tribute A striking tribute to flfe IIISIIIBIIOQ l; pg“ 1n ; “an; “yum "semen Published by I prominent Canadian Trim company, w "Plain why It ls such a wholehearled supporter of’ 11h Innu- nnce. The auvrrtlsemcnt lays;- often found too much of everything; m, much g‘, u, 5mg. m; "nlmllfllvfid; 10o many lnsecurq "Mk5; ton many helrs for the amount nvnllablo (up lhqn-but never Ioo much In fife Insurance." The GrenLWc-st Life l; the Chlmphm o} 11m“ “d m, Kllflfdlfln 0f thousands of Canadian Homes. Full particular! fur- Provlnclll Manage" ‘A TIP FROM A. KNOWS HICKEGY’S BLACK TWIST CHEWING 10c per Fig IOBACCO CO LTD CHARLOTTETOWI“ Ill!“ ‘of “Jnluvo loo much real estate, particularly bonds; too many lpocuhtlvo 00., 1111111211 ummerslde Ind Montague. l] dlWdlJS 1H9 BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEA WHO Wise people know thai frequent changing of oil makes all the differ- .-nce In the wear and tear on a car. And wise people know that it is flavor that makes all the difference CTURED IY IIIGIIULSUN