Alurniiig sully il-uuuutu m loolt Lit-ill LoL h (‘healer S. MOLIIII ielsl; J IL l-llflllfli. lnJ-l. Unl U A. itstscrtlnnull. U..\i.U. i; nutcior- J ft. Burnett. FJJ ‘lillllt nnlker and lilcll. lieu a till. iUn ilellve Sorvlnal President. l iuc- Pres-i Secremry- Ls Edlloi isnu Mali Afinelisle lzullors: Burnt-LL ILL» “The Strongest illeniory w Weaker Tbssa the Weakest llk.’ TUESDAY. Sinister Resemblance There is a warning for the Canadian people in an incident which allegedly took place at a public meeting of the C. C. F. in Lctlibridge, Alberta. When a heckler flatly calls a speaker a liar, he usually invites ejection from a hall; but there are proper ways of effecting his re- moval. He can be asked to leave, and when his remark-s have caused offence, he is under an obligation to do so. If he refuses to de- part, a police officer should be called in to per- form the task-and seldom is more than a nod of authority needed in such circumstances. But the C. C. F. offisals employed no suds traditional methods. They reportedly resorted to sheer plug-ugly tactics, worthy of a water- front brawl. Fotir men piimmelled the lone heckler, drew blood, and carried him out bod- ily. It was a disereditzible scene, thoroughly un-Canadiau and marked by a Gestapo com- plex that is disturbing. AH that was lacking were the loallr bolts, the leggings and the h-unchsoas. If this display of intolerance and bullyism is a hint of how theC. C. F. would enforce its will upon the country, should it ever get in the Federal saddle, than the people of Canada ought ta take the lesson to heart and do some serious thinking about it. Not Enough Butler I l l if l another caveat for a 3 COUPOBI, d obtained 0n instead of two. on July t were . June is one month iu app rl‘ ‘r ‘l; la? iii léllll fo-otstcp might signify his call to (lentil. Th: Government, in keeping ill; state of uncertainty regarding their future, is likewise guilty of an unnecessary and cruel pro- cedure, and men of high-strung or nervous characteristics will be physical wrecks even he- fore they reach a port of embarkation for serv- ice overseas.” roiloiwst Noits _ St. James Day. U i I Now the young vets are returning, surely some public recognition or welcome should be given them. We give them cigarettes going, let us give them at least the glad hand returning bearing the wounds of battle. a n- a a To aid Dean Cyrus Macmillan, M. P., in the administration of the affairs of the faculty of arts and science, Professor W. H. Hatchcr has been appointed assistant dean of the faculty in McGill. Dean Macmillan is now an assist- ant minister of Defence for Air, an office which requires much of his attention. s u s Mussolini resigned and the King of Italy assumed supreme control in Italy this date 19-13; lie appointed Marshal Badoglio, Prime Minister, who called a meeting of the Fascist Grand Council, which, after hearing a state- ment by Mussolini, passed by i9 to 7 a resolu- tion inviting the King to assume command of land, sea and air forces. Since then Mussolini has "retired" to Germany, the King has “re- signed" in favour of his son, and Badoglio has given place ta Boaomi. u a a a The Dairy Products Board, Ottawa, will “freely approve for the present" application to authorize the inter-provincial movement of cheddar cheese made prior to June 25. Stocks of cheese available for domestic consumption as at July 1 were sufficient to provide domestic requirements for about to months, said the board. Last month all cheddar cheese produc- tloa was ordered made available for export to the United Kingdom to meat contract require- manta. a a a is Due to failure in examinations or to stand- ing in the lower half of their classes this year, inors than 400 trials students of McGill Uni- varsity have been made liable to call-up for military services. In announcing this, Dr. F Zombies in a< TF "(time 0y "l6 WI] There ls sml there cannot he nny Ell}!!! WIDE as a new oraer. No mat- ter Xl.)_W elaborate and tneoretical- l)’ Pfilejct tne plan may be for the orfifillllllll! of human beings into a socialist Hyitcm. It can never re- main permanent, and It Ls sure to result In a reaction to u condition or swlew worse than the first. -,- Brsndon sun. Woman now can vote In Bu. mlldfl. 811d motor vehicles are per- mltted. Certainly the war has brought great changes to that lit. tle srollp of pleasant Islands. — Ottawa Journal. . -_.__ Although the nations of the Commonwealth have neither the wish nor the power to create sole- systeni of mutual defence, they are Well fitted to take an Initiative ln Pll-lmlng the system of collective 990W"! which the United Nations set up Ia their goal at Tcharan. They can claim a , ful experience In the organization of peace among peoples of llke as- plratlons but unconnected by any ooel-clvs bond-Landon Times. Relative infrequently o! crlsas In Great Britain can be laid to the fact that criminals are kept un- der constant surveillance; people are not permitted to tots about firearms; the gangster element has never been permitted to galn a foothold; grafters are given short shrlft. and those who commit. mirr- dor are lust as promptly executed. ere are no long drawn-out trials and unnecmsary delays. In short, the authorities In Britain do not put up with any nonsense. Criminals are dealt with firmly. and an given what they justly deserve. -Chathau Dally News. It h a good thing for both par- ties to remember. as they write [heir platforms, that about ten million young Americans are going to read those platforms somewhere In fox- holes or on the high seas. We say this to the politicos of both parties because we want them m remember that sentiments that go awfully well In a Chicago conven- tlcn hall may sound awfully blah In that boy In the foxhole or to hls father, a little business man. paper In the itvtng room. Thou that are very real in the minds of the back home and their friends and kln overseas- They'll be looking to the platform for im- swers. A nation at war and anxi- ous never to repeat the experience wants to know about foreign policy lens for post-war International colla ration. Both parties will '“ ' 4i ‘i’ ' .OTTETU\VI\I ll’ 101' themfifilves a self-contained to y 51100885- fa in the th too 0f er All the to of 0n fat satlsrgcflorxl‘ or contrlbutlng to absence of ductlon tools still water. elec farm h wlthoutogniiisiit could be be“ and Improvement. Women have a Very Special problem live on farms. makers water and housework, the fiirm “lomen do, Havfn must se I, but even such a simple statement ls fiict that the farmer ls both a pro- ducer and a c of the farmer are supposed to be opposed are In truth dependent upon hls etr employment, other hand, the farmer cannot go cessions without running the rlsk plating his Income. m "Mal" ‘l“““°“' iiimiiirasiiiil iiiiid regulating the flow Until a study ls completed. we cannot though getting enough eating the right things. There Is little doubt. that would mean substantial GUARDIAN v-ei ' Farm Prohliims In Canada (ROYII Bank 0f Canada News Letter) (Continued fr 1 t, d i Guaridlxdnles er By. Isl-m Improvement alyrlltehltiarmhallfe ls n _ . qlllllpcd witlis mogreli/n mm; eflted, eXpense. by devoting occasional diiy to spruclng up ivhon they They nre home- engaged productive the ivarld running anti-r“ siiripllflers ' of Marketing produced. the farmer complicated by the Many of interests OIISUIDEX‘. people to whom the prosperity to maintain while, on the far In demanding price con- reduclng his market and de- Every farm- must address himself first of to producing commodities of A You ought lo know the secret! Y ES . . . by now you really should know the chief secret of making good coffee. Thousands found it out when they had b make a little coffee go a very long way: To lie sure of full sulirfiiclion in every cup you must use really good cafes.‘ And to he sure of “really good coffee" insist on Maxwell House . . . a particularly fine coffee blend with a delicious, full-bodied flavor. You’ll he wise to make Maxwell House your regular cofloo because : ‘I, It's blended from rare, extra-flavor coflccs, each with its own special quality of flavor, body or fragrance. 2, Roasted by evenly all through. lllnxwell House is "1 v-‘J C) Jf/lf/H rum: rw M sramssn ZXWO ‘visor . pals nus Grind and at less cost lo you. ll House Coffee quality most acceptable to con- place where they are accommodate those markets. main ls pre tell whether Canadians, to eat, are g. cases the attainment turns nutritional level a satisfactory Increases gnmbl In! ls not problem of the farmer, which clsely that of any clty dwel- : Improvement of standard This bolls down In both to obtaining high gross re- relatlve to expenses. Farm- the conservative, non- lng business ls often “$1118. and so Dll—€l'll.8l‘ Into the special process that roam every robe boars packed in a Wartime Bu; in an All Purpose A Product o! Osnsml Fcsdr National Efficiency a In the battle against Fear and Want, ade- quate Life, Accident and Health Insurance is a ever pro-war levels in the aggre- gate consumption of milk, eggs, frult, vegetables nnd meat. neces- sitating changes In the pattern of agricultural economy. and entail- lng an Increase In the cash In- come of the well-placed farmer. It Is worth remarking that divers!- fication of farming is not in Itself thought: every crop and head of live stock ls playing for, "s: - farmeri; cannot’ offsefnthe effectbecsi mum‘ factor‘ droug t, bl I d, r1 . . . mg ,,,,,,,,,,‘;_‘”“.Bg;' sage - Thrift is vital to the war effort. proved, during the depression. thati much can be accomplished by if sssoaods ,_ ion, but beard Monstrous ol building up stocks all! probably write glrnllar planks with the usual vague calls for "collabora- tion" and for “peace machinery." In this field, perhaps. the decisions will be made not so much by the platforms as by the dissimilar re- cords of the parties and by '11s dissimilar atmosphere that pre- vails at their conventions. — New Cyril James, principal and vice-chancellor of the university, said that a list of the names of these -r " registered in the faculties of arts, science and law, had been sent to local National Selective Services as required under wartime regulations. He added that the large l’ die butter produced, Premium savings add to the mighty army required substantial im- paid ti» inanase wartime and tinned milk, and to main- sapply of fluid milk at its volume, a shortage of l ill l majority of McGill students placed on the Na- tional Selective Service list had not been clas- sed- as failures by the university. s- a a c have been inevitable without a the Government pays a butterfat h the put year totalled $15.- r f l i i iii, was made recently of a bop in the ooat-of-living index it was, ascrib- ed to lower prices for certain food items, in- allldi . But the indct takes no account cost of living is being kept down. And the $15,- 000,000 isn't getting us enough butter, for the rltion was out in June and is to be cut again next month. Although consumption might be ucpootad to remain about stationary, under ra- tioning of consumers and quota distribution to commercial users, it is reported up I6 per cent so far this year. Evidently many families, equip- ped with s ration book for each member, are using more butter than before. Old Soldier's View An Army officer, writing in the Globe and Mail, says: "sod created man, hut our War Govern- ment, with its iniquitous policy of attempting to wage war on a voluntary basis, has created the An English evacuee girl on return home, gave The Associated Press her views on what she had learned in the four years she had spent in Washington, D. C., with her mother and brother. She was enthusiastic in her praise of the hospitality and geniality of the Americans, of their up-to-dateness, of their time and lab- our saving devices, of the freedom of associ- ation between boys and girls of schvol 32¢- but when it came to education, this was her verdict: “After four years of American school- ing, from I2 to I5. l ffilllfld 0H Cllmlnll back that English boarding-school life seemed re- stricted and isolated from the world. My old classmates had left me behind in my stu- dies by one year and I found the work much stiffer. I am deeply grateful for my American schooling, but I am genuinely glad to back in England, for I want to link up with old friends of my o\vn age." a a c n- Not many hitherto have laid to the politi- cal charge of Prime Illinister King's that hc was too Imperialistic. Yet that is the ‘gist of the complaint now being laid against him and Premier Godbout by the Bloc P01911131" call‘ didates in Quebec. Over the week-end therc was a deluge of oratory, centring round the political failings of the two governments, PTO"- incial and Federal. Mr. Raphael Baudette, can- Zombie, who is_a peculiar individual, as he is neither a soldier nor a civilian. Zombies arc not ordinary soldiers, although trained as such because, Ilwlfifrllllg to Col. Ralston, they are not to be used Ih‘ fighting men until our volun- teer svstcni has broken down, and the cream of our Canadian youth as volunteers has been killed off or permanently disabled by wounds; and they zirc not (‘l‘.'lllllil$, as the Government llZlS refused to permit lll(‘ill tn return lo civil life and cairn their own living. Tilicse lolllbici 8Y6 clothed, fed nnd housed at a cost 0f millifills l yczir and of no value to themselves or tlie coun- try at war in their iifrsciit QHPIICILY- w“ Z1145 d0 not driiire or dine with lil(‘lll,'“(1.S- person- nel Object h, Ming ,-,<.oci:itcil with them uridcr any ClfCIlllhlIlllCCS, and they are now regarded by the public as a group of cowards. ".'\s an i-lil soldier" who has handled thous- ands of men in pi- nnd wzir, l zim absolutely conviiicctl llirit lilvw nnliirs are not l‘0\\'¥1l'<l5 "l" “m, lacking; in ~;'/lii.'ii'_v coiiinigc, hut M0 I101”- didate for st. Mary constituency. Montreal- attagkgd ML Godbout with bitterness, claiming that the premier, “the leader of French Can- ada-of three millions of French-Canadians"— had betrayed his compatriots to the imperialism of Mr. Mackenzie King. “But," he continued, “this election docs not hinge on a'question of economics as Mr. Goclbout would have us be- lessis wants us to think; it is entirely and simply a question of the destiny of the French-Can- adian.” He denounced conscription, by which Mr. Godbout had betrayed the French Can- adian, his own people, he said, and was cynical about the value of so-called “war of liberation" overseas. “We of the Bloc Populaire are fight- ing a war of liberation" he maintained, "and we shall march to victory under the French Can- adian flag." ‘ i ‘ ‘l Says a Time Science note: U. S. wolves may find their prey wearing sheep's clothing mal lll(ll\‘lllllill- flint the Govcriiiilfllll. l" lliilY‘ ing -, gqt_qiyil'llllllr~t' game under the Mobiliza- tion .\ct, ha. 431.1111)‘ \'l(‘ll into the humiliating position when: they" are now riipirlly lnsiilf-I HWY self-respect and the esteem of the public. and ‘vhere they will unrlrillliltilly lJCCOIIIC a Sllliiy or mutinoiis mob which the Ciovcrnment or the military authorities cannot handle. Ii all melt arc treated Zlllifl! in ii niilir-iial emergency llflilfl conipulsorv service lIl\\'.\‘ for both soldiers illlll civilians and no preferential treatment is Pct- mitied on flfoliiids of race fit‘ T611210". KYOIlPS M- m." (m1, 1c our 70,000 Zombies and Othcf unjustly meiiiplcil llltllYlllllill$ would cease t0 exist and all cruises of friction. Cflllklsm. 11"‘ fezisoirilil~ lnillviii" "mil Y-‘IW-lllll-l “mild he a)" Ilished automatically. Ifndci- old l‘l'CllCll law a . . _ ' - ~ ' rni- Cfllfllllill coiitlcnincrl to ilcritlt “as tint info I gd of the hour or Illllf‘ of lll5 execution, and the period spent hrnvcrii his sciitcncc anti (lflilll next winter. A chemical process which makes sheep pelts look like expensive fur was an- nounced last week. By this process an imita- tion beaver coat retailing at about $l5o—less than one-fourth the cost of genuine beaver- can be made from shorri sheep pelts. Unshorn skins can be converted into long-haired "furs" such as fox, complete with silvery sheen. The manufacturers even talk of imitating mink. The synthetic furs arenioredurable than the genu- ine article. The process was developed by a St. Paul inventor named Jose Baraquiel Calva, onetime Mexican government engineer. By treating fibers with several chemicals, includ- ing cresol, alcohol, benzol and hydrochloric acid. he converts them into a resinous plastic. The fibers can then he stiffened or softened, straight- ened 0r curled. made mothproof, shrinkproof, even waterproof. The entire present output 0f Ilicse imitation furs (1,500 skins a day) is g0- wa, one qf “Mntlluig torture zmd uncertainty, as dflring every hour of llie d1)’ 0f "Ill" llli‘ "P"? licensee-tweaks.-tlmslidii-ianw- ._ ing into military flyers' suits. But the inanu- fzicturcrs hope to begin production for civil- JJMQ-l-aaflii- York Post. Nothing could be more certain than that, If We wish to avoid a third Great War Germany, after the present one. must be effectual- ly and permanently demilitarlzed, not only professionally but indus- trially. Hitler once boasted of Rus- lieve, nor on a question of politics, as .\'Ir. Dup- 1c sla having been laid low for one thousand years to come. It Is lust something llke that which should be the portion of Germany. - St. Catharlnes Standard. What mat-lens now ls the future- The public sChOOI system of Can- ada Is basically a good one. All that It has needed In the past ‘was the infusion of a good deal more money, a little more attention, and perhaps more of the can-do a1:- tltude that has distinguished Can- adians In other fields. There will be balance In this land when our education blll outruns our drink Ill, and when the young pro- gressively are taught to think for themselves. Monkeys may be taught tricks. Man should be talglit to think and to act as a free, God- glven Individual-each with his own special contribution for ‘he world. Let us. at least. remember when we speak of "our schools" that they are ours-that we are responsible for them and for all that. 806s on in them. That would be a gain. —- Victoria Colonist. Marshal Petnlu has achloved the last ' ' y of his position as the captlve of Hitler. He has broadcast to the French people a warning not to revolt, and actually has appeal- ed to them to be “loyal" to the Cler- man airny of occupation. He de- scribes Hitler's armies as "defend- ing mirope from Bolshevlsm.’ He says that the calls to revolt come from “those fai- away who do not participate In the risks they ask you to run may would llke to drag France Into disaster." What- ever tortuous defence of Petalrfs course has been devised. or can be. It can not by any honest man be stretched to cover this last coward- e. The shameful epitaph of the hero of Verdun has been pro- nounced out of his own mouth.- Btratfom Beacon-Herald. In New York. a formal "plant election" was ordered to dot/cr- mine whether or not a single bulld- lng maintenance employee wanted a unlon to represent hlm in collec- tlve bargaining. As the man had already Joined the unlon and stat- ed his wish to have It represent film, the result of the vote was taken foi- granted. But suppose he spptged the bellow-Montreal Ga- se . Expgfl at, refrigerator of the future to be as different from cur- rent mechanical lceboxas as the present-day auto is from the ori- ginal liorscless can-Ia e, says News- week. Early mechan cal refrigera- tors followed traditional Icebox de- the wp to pennlt the cold to flow downward. But the present open- front deslgn permits sold alr- to cascade out w enevcr- the door Is ogened: It allows no range In re- fr geratlon temperatures: Models now being designed would be of table height with top-o In; oom- artments. Each sec Ion would ave a temperature rsrlro l0!‘ vsrlod duty as a freealng com- partment, for- preservlns meat, vegetables, or for other uses. It Is a changing world that sees a United States colonel glvlng or- ders about clvlc affalrs to the Mayor Prlncia-Torcnto Globe and Mall. Danzlr ls beln one of the nrlnc pal Gcnnan bases for shipbuilding and naval train- lnlt- The All'ed bombers will deal with It In ilue course-lroskvlllo IMIOIIIDH. m». est 72 all Some against the regulations governing export goods. but years of expert- ence have shown that the bother nnd cost of grading are more than offset by widened markets greater acceptability. It is esti- mated. for instance. that the live grading system. educational work, has made hog producers In the past several to $12 mllllon a year. In addition. grading has the effect of Improv- ing as well us selecting. From 1930 to 1939 the percentage ranked “select from l5 lle the pounds of beef graded red and blue Increased by l3’! per cent. wh to converted Into Will The waters lIIQiYlll-III to The thunder and surge of the sea. Qf“""‘-“.’s i. a guarantee of success, but only such dlvcrslflcatlo production of paying crops ceptnble to consumers. With farmers producing a greet deal more than the domestic mar- ket can absorb. prosperity of agriculture can be attained only through the great- During the pre- was exported, 65 per cent of the wheat. 44 and 28 per milk. The need for such external sales will not be lessened In post-war reason that Canada's population ls not llkel the point where It could absorb All of the foregoing — cultiva- tion. economics, Isenhowanfllhmlia. France. what of u» nlaht! I watch I hear deep calling to deep. I under th I hear the My h I wor I know But the end of tho night. ls near. Norway, what of the nlsht? I wa slgn—tlie freezing unit went into 1 Freedom, what of the My glory will daaale of Home, who, Incidentally, I; a The night n as leads Into ac- sldera expansion and development of export fields. war years 1925-39, he cheese produced per cent of t cause per cent of the apples. cent of the concentrated tlon farm feet t th must. ycnrs, for the simple y to Increase rapidly to Canadzrs surplus farm produce. farmers have Invclghed merce “l.‘l“~ and 5 p' what - with for Canada during years from $10 combined flcult regula of hogs bacon" increased per cent to 30 per cent, I Farm Income management, mar- a ‘fir... 81 SONG BFOII SUNRISE (Alter Algernon Oharlea Sw nburne) all friends of freedom Icmltsrinnow-Gersorslhmuf" andldonotsleflp. e ocean drowned. storm In the height; will come froén the sea. undergroun . I mall rise and be fraa. yhisad tcn b tine ocean wall. isndono, your us?“ floods l ‘inch Mi n burst. rom their bounds and ee meet Nwltatl- can-é - kegplng ddowp l on Y 800 . b l right seed. aifntiila s y us ng e owner of the produce , assume the responsibility for storing and selling It. Th ernor of the Bank of Canada sold recently to the? e control tate what shall he grown enterprlsers, are tenacious of Independence as to ma ' or we are led to sonei-s when taken are a mustache llke Hitler and comb- Itslvb populstltrirri. p31: seeds “llmbfl costs. by raising the by careful con- k ts tlon of mar e . Some ask why the farmer who‘ does his own ivork ls not. as mucli' entitled the labour-e to a minimum return as of production. the and the shift- Scme gov- bY guaranteeing prices for products, which means In ef- hat the government become; an e Gov- ankfng and Com- Commlt e: "- - - price continued long enough lead to government owner- The next step Is to dlc- and In of all their ke it dif- accept such quantity. and farmers. for them to tlon. (To be continued) ..________ PUBLIC ‘FORUM shuttle-n I 090a lat Ila asllalasll; Ilene is OOIIOIQOQIQI I I llklifl. ‘ID O IQIIOI widens THE BAR- OF JUSTICE 8lr.—In these daiva we read from pom of noted wrltera on the fronts how s are o - believe they Germany riy days: G g6 of Gor- lnslda erman e says are ici- Hitler's dvoath. or tells us how German prl- growing llke hkn while others some others are holidlng in "V" silage ‘like away frolvfqermeny. m tlsall true. true h gfilillljdflllb trueol; an a anus . and for gassing In (lief- I-lftlsra a .we mp trumI-Zleviimnivfullto and tart . true tee“ Ger- oved bv so cirlled Is sdtih us now e the knife Into our e comes as they ce. I have before me as his a copy of s. picture tak- ‘s Cathedra r In 9d llk to [gear their ledger 2T2???’ a Island none ere and mother! r is. but the truth is. that the regulation of farm prices i Is exceptlitigally porppllcatgd be. e var at on l the method of n “magi bounty of the soil. Ing market condition. ernments have attempted n solu- , death of fighting dollars war. that is helping to win the It is a privilege of the Life Underwriter to help make Provincial l Offices: l I -t.ured Gsriinan war birds Ionics Whflullliellgb-lifid at hlm t 1313118 0n 001W '0 . 5 YIN- gllng In oily waters and left behlnd to sullfer the last agony alone before would come. i They are the some tribe that shot our airmen a. short time ago and to- iday keep many of of our own sons suffering In filthy, lousy. rotten lso ' and =whlp and m. iliouir that comes Just Fdawn has arrived and we who tcofi ,al0ne wit-h our we ‘tru we must not falter darkest ‘ before s . e Canadians or fall In t-hla nulsit never rtod a f cry. and mockery so well d played by those we have trapper. No we must remain flrm In that resolve that promise we have giv- enourallfortogoontothevery and the end of Gemianv the aid of Italy the end of that yellow race Japan. Hltlub days and the days of hls hangmen may be nllnbered here but n eternity they will go on and on. There he will sec the faces on MAX FAOTOB HOLLYWOOD BEAIITY AIDS Max Factor l-‘sca Powder - — - - - 15c and 81.8! Max lactos- Psnuoh Make- ,_.___.._...._;1,75 MaxFaolarLlmlsk lofllll _._.__.-_ ‘||‘.|M MaxIaosor Bows Bangs. Mo! Factor Coll Orson -—----msiissi.ss Max liictor Powder Foun- dation Orsarn - 75o and If.“ Max Factor as Max l‘ lor Iflslndallonu- ‘lls and imsi Max Factor ism]. ‘and ".85 or lI-lquld) — ‘I50 Sun Tan Lotions grin - i _ .'__ ___ _ m, oxsrrsa Gilly _ P 21.18"‘; a 90PM)‘: Bus: Tsn-ls-itlon LIQUID STOCKING MADI UP Nll-"OI - ... n" A I It‘ s _ ‘T, '_'_' Brasilia; Log _ “o TIIE 2 MAGS Ill Grass Gurus llreot .- —_-_—_—_—.:.. .-.. , who know full well that those osp- peoples future more secure. Consult the Great-WestLife man for a suitable plan to meet your special requirements. Ilynilman & 60., Limited. Managers ._—-————-.____._._ -;—-__—- . .. all sides of thousands he had but- own way there before the eternal Judge of all mankind. and we and chlizlren and children; children will curse lils name for centuries to come. So I my that We have out our hand to the plough. let us not look back or stop in the furrow but g0 on and on to that promise of Un- conditional Surrendor and lpsilns peace for mankind. am Sir. etc. Vl ALTER. A. O'BRIEN 58 Bayflelc t; Chariot-eta PRE-WABHDWGTON Nine msn could legally have ign- We president be m 0d thcmsel Washington wan,- presidents Congress. of the Contlriengl Professional Oarils ll-R- Duane & Ooinpany CIIAITQIID ACCOUNTANT! ll Grafton ltreol. Charlottetown McLeod 6f Bentley I. I» IQTIII. I. O- I. A. IINTLIY. l. 0 II. F. AIIOIIIBILII QIHIIIIOOOIIIIII _“‘ Tffilflllfl asnssssun a ‘! BELL d. MAIHIESUN noun to moan Oallsa sins Charlotlolofl H. F. Mcllhoe ILA. K-C- NOTARY In. . IAIIIIT OLIUITOI Illa; IIIIIIIIII-u I Clllrletlslofl PAIMER & HASLAM A. . Al ~ -. LI- ....':Fr-.."‘iir..‘.‘=.ii..... Charlottetown I li§l