PAI IF. FOUR TNE 8 llAR LOTTETU WN 6 llAllll IAN Morning Unify Wounded In 1581) Presldcnl: Lleut. Col. W. Chester S. McLun \‘iee President: J. R. Burnett. FJJ. Hccretury; Lieu! Col. I) A. IHRICKIIIIIIIII. 0.5.0. Editor and Munzglllg Director J IL Burnett. FJ-I. Assowaln Editors: Frank Walker and Ian A. Brunet! suissbrtnrriun BATES ‘l; Mall In I‘.I-;.l., $11.00 per year; $2.50 for l month: $1.25 for 3 months; 50c for on» month City Delivery $5.00 per your; $3.00 for t! month: $I.75 fol 3 month! By Mail in Cunudu and U.S.A. $5.00 per "it éatuiuuy Weekly: 3.5.00 per year; $1.00 m; 5 mum,“ 50c for 3 month! ‘Itiu ChiirIutu-tuun tinurdiuu may In ohtnlnod n Running‘; Quin .»\|.'nn1-), ‘f-tueu Square. New bulk; Old sontn be“, Again‘), (unit-r Milk uud “luhlngtun, Boston; Metropolitan Scum Agrnvy, I24! I'm] 53., Uunlrenl; .1. Allll‘ J5! liu,» an, ‘roruurn; hows Ul|\r|1|_ Iilmlenu Luurn-r, uttiioa; ttutio‘: Nevin Brand, tludhury. 0m; Huh lull-Irv" sin-p. ilouvtun N. 8.. The SBronges-t Jlenzory is Weaker than the lieu/rest Ink." NOVEMBER s, 1941. Tl! 11151)} Y, - Agricultural Hall last l-»-- 1o the Province. The 1ii1:c‘i viluztlilc government TTIQ (lCQIYIIQ i iii-iii‘. i.- :1 -\ llllilt Ctlllllilll‘ iwciliiic- it provided f0!‘ iiwiiiiiii‘; 11ml other courses, zinzl for oi. illlVjllt-tg will lie lizirtl I0 lllitl el-i I'm.» will til-o be a consider- ziiile li.-- . ‘ which were stored i\\'llll.\'lillllllllg the sal- ' ‘.‘.'tiI'l\'t'I‘.~. The Fire work in preventing thc nilii iiiiiig buildings. It wis .1; ~.;iri that the hall itself was froiii 11 eiItleut diioiiicrl. The ilil i111" Y Illl/lt‘ a spectacular bonfire. i'- stop: ' - ping llIt‘ ivzills crcct iyhilc lilt‘ wii= ‘Iiil’ \‘.i~ it liliziiig mass. \\"itl1 it li i§ p.i- . 'tIl~ . ~~r iiottilile landmark". (Miter r1 >11‘. . '.i I'-\'7lll thc fainiotis hockey gziiiitw jll.t\lll Ill V, \\i‘.¢‘ll it ivzis known as the Al'll§lliI‘,'i\ lf-iilt. .\ l'l‘\‘i' (I_'_{I‘lc‘lIllllI‘£Il and techni- czil h.'i§l IIYJ,_\' :i..' I‘ on il- ashes. liiit its sporting lfililllllill- i. -'.~ iii-vie. li i- ii=ii11i"iiiiii;e ibnt the firc should occur when Iiiii ' min-rial i- at a pre-iiitmi owing ti» \\'.'ti' :1.‘ . ll1I\\'\‘\'\‘l', wc are not over- l)lll‘tl('l]'.‘ll Proviiict- wiih war contracts, and tliei. ~.".‘.l1l be no great difficulty in ob- taining the labor iiwccssar_\' for reconstruction. First Class Publicity Canada rcccivts truly magnificent publicity ‘in ‘the "Litiiiziiltztii Xuiioiitil lixhibition Number 111,1" l>~LIL Ill “"riiixk", a high-class monthly niaqzizinc piilh-Iivil by International Business .\l2ICllillL'\ tfiirportiiioii. Xciv York, with which Iiiterntitioual liii-iiie-s .\l.'lL‘illlIC5 Company, Lid, of Llziizi/lzi i- :i>>oci;itt'tl. In this issue of 10o btuttiiifiilly" ilhi-irzited pzigcs is featured txct-rpi- lilWilll spw-cliw- ilcliveretl at the Cana- dian Xiitioiizil ‘ii-iii on International Day, as well us" brief lII'llt'lt‘> on thc history and de- velopment of (JIIIIIUlZI, culturally, industrially and otlicrui-r. by iiiiiwzintliiig authorities. Eni- phasi- is j1l1lt't'=l iltl t‘.i.- “iiiidcixtziiitliiig, kiii- ship and coopt~1"iii~ii' wisiiiig between this country tiril tin’ id States. The publication will reach [llYIClA 11y every’ big business firm and newspztpci- in the United Statcs. Among the llllhllfililiills i- rt fine picture 0f Charlotte- town. which i- ail-o _!{I\’t'II jiroiiiiiicncc in a dcscrijiiiiw zw‘ no on "(liiizitlizin Cities." \\'c arc duly ere aid with being the birthplace of Confcrlrrziiioii itllil with possessing one of the fincst lI.'lI'l|<1l'.< on the North i\merican con- tiiieiit. lii IIIlHilIVI‘ article thc “mellow charm" of our l.-l.-.iid Province is extolled The Peril Of Unreality Two EIlIii!"IlliI1l\(,‘ voices lizivc been raised re- cently to \‘..'II'II t dilllllli of the danger of self- complzicenty Spesiiting on Tuesday at Hamil- ti-ii, l\'t. ll-iii. llzilci-Im MacDonald, British lligb (11iii:iii~'iiiri-, Slllfl ilizit “unless we as- s11": tiiii-i-lv - ;ir iii-ire strongly" than we ltave Iiuhcriii doiw, \\t' ~llv'lll not LlufCZIt Nazi Germany.” ’I‘li<,re i<_ l.» added. “no single element in thc siiiitiiiiiii wliv ibi: sli/mlrl make any of our friciiils iii liiiri-pv or .\iiit~ric:iii fcCl complacent." .\ nii-rs diiwct \\ iriiiiig was conveyed a few days ago l\_v .\lr. llerbt-ri Lash, Director of thc Bureau oi Public Information at Ottawa, who “Minted that llritiiiii ztnil her Allies are not yet winning this struggle z 11p 1o the present they have barely I'~\"Ij\i'il lo-iiiu i1. "lhless we mend our \\'.'l_)'>' mid niciiil iliwiii <oon," ,\li'. Lash said;“un- less we >ltljl iiwiiiiiig for the oilrr fclloiv to make the first more. i1nlt--- we sharpen our consciences to ilie Ijlliflsllkss‘ of our tongues and do it without d;~l:|_v. we ziri- iii tllTflllllll ilzingcr of losing this war." .\lr. lril‘ll tlt‘pl1i|'(:1l the ap.'i1liy and the slicer lllll'(‘illll_\' with which too mrtuv Canadians view this Slfiigfllt‘. a mite of mind which almost de- fies aiizilv-i- iii lll" face of what is happening in the world_ llt» i< rifrziid that Canadians, in, the nuiss, ltavc grovsn mciilnlly and spiritually flabby from. their _\'<‘:t"s of comfortable living. else why should they talk so glibly of "sacri- fice" when they ire risked merely to give up a few luxuries and frivolous wants. but none of their essential needs? lle urged them not to de- lifde themselves, a.- the people of most of “fest- crn liurop: did with regard to the Maginot Lin». 3",] maid. a “,\l;\r1ii1nt Line" of the English Channel. The terrible prospect is that Germany m, diwlii i; jireiiaring to have the final clash with Firdand, .'Ill'l invade the llritish lslcs. Tlml challenge croft-nuts not only the Motherland. lint the whole Fnipire, a fact which Canada must ,faee. Mr. Lash paid tribute to the thousands of loyal twirl-n; and vmnlfiytrs ivho are Ioilii"! llllhflilly in the plants to produce Ire tool! 0f drivers scent to think so. circumspect speed with all due consideration for the rights and safety of others. signs ltave been erected at ccrtain streets running North and South docs not im- ply that vehicular traffic cau maltc a SpCC(l\\'II_\' of strccts running E115! and \\'cst. Let thc Police Committee take thc nccessaryt action Io sce thc- police do their duty in this respect. conflict, the former with long hours and without strikes, the latter for low profits. There are many others who are giving of their best. Btu, in the large, the Canadian-people are not doing their ftill part. \Vhile llitlcr marches on toward world conquest, too many Canadians are barri- catding themselves behind the straw ramparts of ivishful thinking, protesting at the invasion of their rights, squabbling over trifling issues, giv- ing pltty to their petty prejudices and feeding the fires of racialisni and scctionalism. All this, too, while some noble Canadian youth in the skies of Europe is fighting —-and often dying-for Brit- ish civilization, for our security, our homes, our livcs. - EDITORIAL NOTES — A letter from thc Wartime Prices and Trade Board tabled at the Toronto Police Commission rulcd illegal proposed increase of taxi fares in that city. The by-law would have sanctioned a 10 per cent increase in basic taxi rates. it: i: x 4- Tlic sad talc of a beauty parade that failed to materialize. A pair of satin knickers was being raffled by the W. R. N. S. at a naval town in England, for a war fund. To promote ticket sales it was announced that the winner of tho “knicks" would parade in tlicm. A sailor won, so the parade was off. w- u it- n1 Princess Charlotte, only child of George IV, died this date, I317. ClIZIrltillCIOWlI was uzuiieil after Iicr. She contrztcictl a mzirrizige with \\'il- litini of Orange, but at the lust moment withdrew from the contract and married Leopold of Saxe Coburg instead. She lied after 1 year of wedded happiness. greatly deplored. leaving no child to inherit bcr prcsuntptive right t.) the Lirit- ish throne. _ u w a v Speeding in the city streets must be put a stop to. Cars and trucks are driven along through streets at a terrific rate. giving pedestrians at crossings not the ghost of a chance should they be the least hit hesitant or nervous. Autos have not the undisputed right of way though their they must go at a Because stop corners of 1r a n a The celltirs of the National University Club of London, although immeasurably contracted. have not gone dry, and some rare old Usqucbaugh was brought up from them thc other day to do honor to the first counselor of Eires High ' Com- mission ever appointed to London, .\lr. john U. Bolton. i\lr. Belton made a speech in rhetorical, eloquent Ersc -—\vhich was not understood, by some who later rcmonstrated with him. Then 11-: said in English: "The tnore shame to you." Since thc days of President Cosgrave .\lr. Bel- ton has bctn in the (liplomatic service: he loves Irish literature and is said to write j)tIClI'_y-—O!l the sly. in v i1 a Only actual Overseas men liithtirto have been privileged to wcar the word “CtinadtW on their shoulder, but now, “to hclp recruiting," volun- teers for overseas. whether they lczivc our shores or not, will lit: entitled to the distinction. “.\n immediate result of the new dress regulation." says a statement from Dcfcncc headquarters, "is cxpcctctl to be manifested in recruiting centres, as the wearing of thc badge was previously rcstrictezl to soldiers about to embark." This is another way of saying that mcn will volunteer for over- seas service to escape the invidiotis distinction carried by the badge. “This btidgc will not b; worn,” says the official release. “by officers and other ranks who have not voluntarily dc- clared their willingness to serve in and beyond Canada in the military forces of Canada." i: a in i: One of the most striking effects of the wzir on the British nation has been that of thc health of the people —“it was never better," declared Lord Woolton, Minister of Food, the other day when he opened a food production €XlIll)lll0t‘l at Woolton, near London. He said that in the latt year the mortality of London, normally the most healthy city in the world in spite of its fogs, had dropped 2 per cent and that of the nation 1 1-2, exclusive, of course, of war casualties. This situ- ation was due to “rational rationing and scien- tific food S0lCCllOI‘l"—llltIS coinmuifcablc diseases had been reduced to the lowest minimum known in the history of the nation. There was plenty of the most wholesome food, he concluded, not\vith- standing the fact that instead of most of it com- ing from the Continent it had to travel up to 13,- 000 miles to reach the British consumer. Its equitable distribution and conservation, he added. still formed something of a problem, but that was being effectively solved. n1 u a a Charlottetown will be favoured this week-cud by a visit from Major Ncy, London, who will be the guest of LicuL-Coloncl and i\lrs. Keith Rogcrs_ llis visit has been arranged by Dr. ll. ll. Shaw, through “The National Council of Education of Canada." and under the auspices of The Charlottetown Branch of Tlll‘ Queen Mary Needlework Guild. According to the ad- vertisemcnt he will speak in the Prince Erlwarzl Theatre, Sunday evening after cburcli, a silver collection being taken for the benefit of the .\linc Sweepers, which worthy object should appml m all. Major Ney's subject will be “Britain On Guard" illustrated by moving PlCIIITCS inchuling Convoys, Evacuation of Dunkirk, blobilization in the Mediterranean before the fall of France, Coastal Defence, etc. Apart from Ilir interest in llIC-flfltlfcfl the public will appreciate the oppor- tunity of bearing such a noted spezilu-r. 'l"lie address will be given under the disiinguislieil PPIIFNI-‘lflc "f llis llonour Lieutenant Governor imtl Mrs. lk-Page. llis Worship the hlayor ant] Mrs, lloliiian and officers of the Navy, the Army, and thc Air Fol-cc, L. NOTE!‘ BY TNE WAY The "Dlnlons of professors flll a 10L 0f SPHCe In the newspapers these days. We would Just Ilke to add another. and peiliaps final ex. hibit. recently unearthed by the magazine Coronet. In I908 Pr“. X85801‘ William H. Pickering of Har- fffifd Cvl-ege Observatory said this: The popular mind often piztures Elsantic flying machines speeding across the Atlantic carrying pas- sengers In a way analogous to our modern steamshlps. It seems safe l0 SKY that. such Ideas must be QHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN WORDS OF CHALLENGE A THOUGHT A DAY FOB A PEOPLE AT WA]! "This Is a mtal wu- and nothing less than the total energies of our mlnda and bodies will be needed In '15 wagingfih-Lord Halifax, Brlt- ish Ambassador to the Uufted States. WhOUY VlfiiWB-fy- Another popular 131186)’ Is to expect enormous speed to be obtained. Still another popu- lar fallacy is to suppose that the flying machine could be used to 1WD dynamite on an enemy In time of war." Thanks for the In. formation, Professor. —tvancouver Steel At The Crossroads (Moncton Transcript) when a Japanese spokesman and not long ago that his nation stood "Reception of I-Ier Majesty's IOCXIXth Ragl- merit of Poor, an theirarrlval in Montreal from the Crimea, on the 28th June, I856, passing under the Triumphal Arch u the Flue d‘Armu and Bunk of Monrml" flip-adh- a wmliibllv m» a Ion. No- un mum 1m- si-ni Sun.) The bargemen working an Eng. land's network of canals, who com- Plain about the difficulty. or rather impossibility, of getting enough to eat on their journeys and sir: that a meal of bread and margarine 15 insufficient for people who work from daylight to dark or far into the night, have a strong case, It i5 not only the barsemen who suffer but their wives and the children who still lire on the barges and who still lack propcr facilkis [or education. Many of it e barge; 1m- veiling perhaps tirelve in a line. take four days to deliver their car- goes, and when they pull up for the night cannot buy food bicause they are not registered cuslomcrs. The dwellers on hundreds 0f barges areconcorncd In the present coin- Dlfillll. It would be a good lhintz If this trouble were to make the public realize also how manV chIl-Iren live on the canals and the Imnbrtancg of finding some way to educate them. especially the girls, ‘j-ir em- ployment. ashore. Most of ire boys. It is said. usually carry on with their fathers’ jobs-Manchester Guardian. Their latest dividend from the war which, so Mussolini promised them, would be the Italian bonanza. of all time, ha: just been delivered to the people of Italy. It consists, In the main, of a reduction of the daily bread ration to six and one- half ounces and new and llltllél‘ taxes to hclp save the country from bankruptcy. Somehow, the other rewards. ivhieh II Diice so elo- quently depicted at the Palazzo Vcnezia one bi-ight but melancholy day in June. have never appeavd. The colonies secretly coveted. Ire rich stores of raw materials. the breaking of “the 1| tins that suffo- cate us in the ltfwlitcrrancztn.“ all those golden dreams Iiavc gone a- Bllmmerinz. Instead, the barren de- sert and fllnty rock that once was Italy's cmilire is noiv largclvt Eng- land's prize of war. The proud fleet is humbled; the men-d-wiir lie sunken "in the green hells of ‘he sea." and the chains that confine Italy in the Meditcrraneati are as silken thonrzs c-imnarcd to the new- forgcd links frat bind her, a beat- en, coative nllv. to the wheels of the Naxi chariot of Will‘. What a fleecue, the people of Italy got from‘ that smll-binrling confidence man, Beriitol-St. Louis Post-Dis- patch. Though we are not likely to see Stepbenscnls Rzekit returning to duty on the Iron Road. all the Your great railway companies are now engaged In "reconditioning" some of the older locomotives that had Iiezn withdrawn from service. No new locomotives are being built; therefore some of ire older ones must be brought Into use, and since some remark ble speeds were ac- hieved on Br ' 1 railwrivs as much as fcrly years ago there Is no rcriscn Io sunpcse that engines which weire placed on the retired IIst far more recently than Lint will not izlve good service. The point that, after less than two vcars of vrar, we find It necessary to fall b*ck on former IlICd"ls throws indirect Ilght on Germany's rail problems. It is notorous that; for several _vears before ‘i e out-' break of this \v"r the Nazis had been starving their railways of new equipment in the paramount. inter- est of the war machine. Sbice the war actually bvsvan that process has been IntensIPccI by necessity, and the many R. A. PX, raids on those "marshalfng yards" have in no way eased the situation. If vre, who dld not. starve our railways, return to older models, how much more embarrassed must be Ger- manys plight) —Manc heater Guardian. Acceleration In the Canadian war effort, and the application of res- traints on continued manufacture of goods for civilian use (especially where such goods require the use of materials needed for war pur- poses) is bound to have an adverse and even serious effect, on the volume of advertlsing In Canadian newspapers and other publications. Yet we venture to say that If Can- adian business men were endowed with as much foresight and vlslon as leadership requires. there would be no diminution of the use of the at the crossroads, he appears to have described its sftuatlon with the greatest accuracy. Japan still Ia at the crossroads and still uncertain which road m trike. Frcm day to day the Inclina- tisns 0f lls leaders appear to shift. One day they appear to be ready to march down the road toward the E0211 of expansion. which would inevitably lead them into war with the free nations which are de- tennfned that there shall be no more encroaemments In the south. The next. day. peace feelers are sent, out On another day tihere will be ft gesture In the direction of the road to Siberia, and war with Russia. Then there will be more protestations of a desire for peace and agieement with the United States and Britain. Hc-w much of this seeming uncertainty Ls real and how much is dictated by policy only the leaders i_n Tokyo know. Japan may be trying to confuse those ivhoin It fears while working out plans for further aggression, or it may be in a pasztfon which makes a decision on the choice of roads impossible, Strong forces are at work pulling lllle fiat-ion In various directions. HItIer, entirely unconcerned about the losses that would be entailed. has been exerting pressure t0 force Japan to widen its wai- for the purptse of creating a divers- lon In the Far Fast to IIzl-iten his own task. The military clique now l!‘- Dbiver seems detremined t-o pro- cred with its plans for expansion, Ilflllfll] would be In IIne with Htler’; desires but which would arouse the armed opncsltfon of Britain and" the United States. The op- portunty to strike at the tradl. Win81 enemy. Russia, appears In- viting while Russia is engaged In a desperate War In Etirope, There are mnriy influences inclining the lflfldcrs tfwvard war. On the o'l.‘.er hind. were are strong masons why JvDan should seek to avoid war with any other nation or nntlcns. The “Clfna Incuent." h-s drained the nation of Wood and treasure. An enormous force Is required In China to mpke even a pretense of controlling, he invaded areas find the supply o’ men and moving-us Is not irexh“ tibia threats of 62g ‘ n led to econ- cmrc embargoei; vihi~h are m~klng its econcn-uc stuatlon stIII more critical. W"r wrh the wed/en owers would" be suicidal, and there s m guarantee that war with Russa would Ise less disastrous. Agreement with Britain and hhe United States can be obtained Only by refraining frrm further B‘!8_l’€&5lCl1 and ivithdrawhg fr:m Chum ThPt- would Involve a loss 0f "face" which the Japanese can- not contemplate. To stand still Is equally ruincius. There appears to be no way out which the Ieade.s We ivillins t0 take. s» they stand at, the crossroads, licking down frst one road and then another, wondering vmat course to take, There is danger that. desperat on will drive them to move, and‘ des- psranon is not Ikely to drive t-hem to Iiumblc them elves by rim-flitting the wrongs they Iiave acne and the failures the_v_ experienced. and to printed word and tho purchase of advertising space. when the war l5 over, the companies who have remembered and practiced con- tinuity of advertfslng wIII reap the benefit. It is likely that such com- patties will be the larger companies In each field. The smaller com- panies, with relatively the same resources and opportunities, pro- bably will have "rlived" money on advertising In the war period, and. when peace Is restored, wI1I won- der why the large companies have grown larger and the small com- panies smaller In relation to post- war volume. ‘I1 e companies wnzch today are hard at work providing the needs for war. to the neglect: of their peace trade. will do well to persist In advertising, so that. when peace comes, the consumers of the land will know them. Advertising throughout the war period will. in fact, help take up the Inevftable slack when at long Inst, whether soon or late, victory Ia won-clue Printed Word) This entry of limb troops Into the domlnlons of We Shah may have recalled to some old readers of The Mall the visits which one of His Majesty's predecessor» 1n the Land of the Lion and the Sun paid to our city some fIflY Warn ago. 0n each occasion the potentnte i was a law unto h’mself; he dId what he pleased regardless of the official program. when he ant/cred @116 Council House, where an ellborim scirk to rcgin tease and prosper- SONNEI.‘ When I tiave seen by Time's tell Iiand defaced The rich prcuu cost of outwoin age when sometimes lofty bower; 1 see down-razed And brass eternal slave to mortal rage, When I nave seen the hungry ocean gain Advantage on the kingdom of ‘he ore, And the tlrm soil wln of the watery a. . Increasing store wIth loss and loss wIth store; virnen f iiuve seen such Interchange of sta . Or state itself confounded to decay; Ruin hath taught. me thus to rum- Inate, ‘mat Time will come and take my love away. This thought is as a death, whfrih cannot choose But weep to have that which It fears to lose. —Shakespeare. bered, th mayor suggested to the prime minister that the Shah should be awakened. "No", sald ‘he pi-Ime minister, with horror, "that Is‘ as much as my life is worth": but the town clerk. nothing 10th. marched Into the Shah's room and boldly shook hIm out of his slum- ber. The troubles with Royal Persia were not. ended. however, for on entering the luncheon room the shah caught sight. of the most novel ornament on the le-n fine salmon standing on It; head In a block of Ice. His Majesty would not sit clown until It had been re- moved. for he thought an attiemp’ was being made to bewltch him! ‘iwiiiiii flour“ All! Wtllllllil B" r uela f; i y, uh uoimtl clay, unable to do llluurork luncheon hmd been unpaved. nil prime mINJt/Sr a nounced that his Ptrslan Mate-iv proposed to 111w! fci- rm hour. Here was a nice I015 to the program! When half an hour had elapsed and Mobil»! |tIII dum- rid-m Budd's Kidney Pills a, with Canada. all adversity. Ity by accepting the slcler. Losses And Gains (Hamlltnn Spectator) Russia, It is evident, Is far from being out of the fight, as Hitler would like the world to believe. But, even If the military situation were as bad for the Soviet Republic as the Fuebrer pretends It. Is, Nazi claims of having won the war are ‘ obviously attempts to buoy uo the spirits of the Germans true, at the same time, discouraging opin- ion In the countries opposing them. The fact ls that Hitler's vIct-iries have been achieved at ruinous cost In men and material. To aus- taIn the tenlflc effort Is to sap the strength of attackers and de- fenders alike. endurance, and the Red nrmlrs have amply demonstrated shying powers In the face of every form of frlghtfulness that the devilish Ingenuity of their adver- saries has been able to bring agalnst them. Should the worst be realized, the Nazi boast of victory stIll remains a hollow one. It Is only necessarv to R0 back to the days before Hitler. For just one year rhorr of a cenrury-nnd-a-qunrter -124 dnmntic, dynrmic, historic years-the Bank of Montreal In: lived, worked and watched The Bnnl: has seen Ivar come and pence go, peace come and war depart; shared Canada's struggle through every night of economic dcpressio since I817; rejoiced to m: Canada always triumph over Founded two years after the Battle of Waterloo, BANK 0P MONTREAL "A BANK IHSRI SMALL ACCOUNT! All III-COMB” MODERN, EXPERIENCED BANKlNG SERVlCE . . . . Ill: Outcome 0f 1Z4 Years: ' only terns wnlch the free nations would con- It is a question of‘ their Nuvtaruéuit ,,_ ,9,“ <1 \ \ .- f '. ‘:35 m‘ i3‘? y d‘ ,1 .1 I b. l 1 gl =1 I ~ I I ~ i‘ i I I ' y] . ‘l? ‘r "‘ v ‘ a .‘ I ' _ " ---- ~-_¢a Living Historic Times With Canada the Bank witnessed the Crimean Wu, the Indian Mutiny, and, with other loyal Cnnadians, enlisted for the dumion in the South African War and World Wu I, and now marches with the Dominion Ind the Empire in World Wu II. Always, Canada has come through stronger, better, triumphant. May she so come through the present fiery trial. To this end we work and dedicate the institution's service, just as our 6000 loyal employees had attacked his partner with such ,‘ sudden vlcfousncss to reaalfze tha‘ the altered situation. from in.‘ Allies’ point, of view, Is no worse, but. corrlderably better, than it. was. Rich spoils would come to .1 e fce, It Is true, In the event of his LQCCSS, to compensate him for his gievlous losses; but. It Ls no‘. possible to replace the mun-power —the flower of his fIgntIng forces -nor to make up for the whale- sale destruction of the Implemciva. of war In short order. As the New York Times puts It: "This may be ‘Lhe last great. decisive battle of the year,‘ as Hitler announced In his Order of the Day, but. mere are other years, other battles. The last. Iintgllsh ally on the Contlnen‘ . Is only a few months old, and Britain herself has a new all!’ l" the Atlantic." The situation Is far irvore desperate for the Axls pow- ers than for the Democracies. as the former well know. They have overrun much territory, but cannot be said to have conquered It while the spirit of the people remains what It Ia. NICE POTATO RATION IPSWICH. England — (CPI - Enough potatoes were grown In Suffolk this year to provide every- In spite of his non-aggressive pact. one 1n Britain with half a hon. 00-0-0-00000000000 0000 o-o-ooaooooooooocoooooo-ooooovo‘ Say to Your Grocer I Want BRANMIN GRANGE PEKOE TEA You will enjoy its superior ‘ quality _ “v“000000000oooo. are working and dedicating their personal services. ' ' Operation Charlottetown Branch: A. I. B. BELCHER, Manage: l,_____ BABKIIITE TABLETS For The Kidneys A remedy for Backache, Lum- hago, Urinary Troubles. etc. Price i0 centn n box. GASSY STOMACIIS RELIEVED Every person who ls trnunled wIth {as In the stomach mid bowels should gel a iii-tilt I" our. l“ B Evan; stout-It'll Mixture," and see how quirltl! It wIII relieve all dIsti-e-isml uymptoms... A recummrnrlffl remedy for Indigestion, II): popsll, Sour Stomach. llear - urn and all stomach truilblfl- MIACS AMMONIATED BBONCI-IIAI. COMPOUND Iitelleves Acute Bronchitis. Spanmodlo Croup. Bronrlilll Cutarrh, Coughs and COWB- A sclenllflc combination 0| uelecled qunlltlea of Bruit: t: form a nfe expectorant M1 ledutlve coulh preparation. The Two Macs no amt own SIR" Mall Orders Given Prompt Attentlon- necessary. YOU CAN'T ALWAYS TELLi Ortllnarly people like to look over what they are buying. But when they order our Twit It ls not You see, It has always been good and they have no worries about It. HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST cmszvc 10c Per Fig MANUFACTURED BY iiicitsi a iiiciiotsoii Ttllllwfl c». l.ttl. ciiiriimiiwi