-_>~ vUIfi-vrv-vw-ww-a-ww-ur-osv-wukvdf-"f ' vnrimao ma: f. _ . . _ . a w“ p» n- .» u-o -"-'-‘LFI-'k"-'QHQHn'J\uI-HJI.".JI.ILI_QJJ,-p - a -... . n - .~ r-rev- r- .- nwn-vs-rr 'h%\"-' fZ-I 11¢‘ i.f-'-'.' .r.~n-.-.-.~.~.-i.':-'-.-.-.-.".-.-..-.-.:.L'.'-'..-..~ I »r p. l I I P.‘ -I I 126151023 TIE . GIIAILITTITIIII, GIAIIIIAII err wit-bout additional salary, and by graduate workers on small stipends. from the Research Council. IIIIII] Dolly (Iblllll Ill III?) Pruld t Hut. Gel. W. Chester S. Ilbln Vlea-‘Proddul: l. l. Ilnufl. IJ-l. ieorntlryi Holt. 00L l). L mil-Lunati- Iruk Waller and Ill Burnett. lU-NNJI- (On Active lenient ‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker I'll! the Weakest Ink.’ Malays!!! .=1_- P“. Cause And Effect Behind the success of the CCF in Saskatche- wan are a number of factors. Not the least of them, recalls the Globe and Mail, is what hap- pened in South York on Feb. 9, 194.’. Before that the Socialist Party had no support on a na- tional scale. It had some strength in Saskatche- wan, some in British Columbia, but it had not reached the proportions of a major party. It] was in the South York by-election that the Cold-- well party gained its big momentum, leading eventually to zi large number of scatslin _the Ontario Legislature and to a landslide 1n Sas- katclicivan. _ 1Tb; $011111 York Ivy-election, which gave the CCF Sttizilists their greatest impetus. co\'ers al gturv of trickery and political chiczuiery. In that riding l\'t. ‘lion. .\rthur .\Ieighei1 was a Candidate‘ in favor of complete, compulsory, national SOIJCIIHJ service. l‘rimc Nlinistei‘ King did not r1111 a catididate against him. The TOCIHI- ists; ivith no expectation of winning. entered Mr. Xoseworthy. 'I‘hen things began to hap- pen. The surface pledge not to rtin a candi- date against .\lr. Rlciglien was adhered to by the Liberal party. Ilut. in order t0 defeat him. all the weight of the Liberal party was throivn in behind the Sitcialist candidate. Party organ- izers. party Iielp on the radio, door-to-door can- vasscrs who were Liberal party workers cam- paigned f» r the Socialist candidate. In every ivnv lllt-silltl? t‘\'(‘l‘_\'Illlll_{.\\'ZlS done to defeat .\lr. Altlqlltdl. .\lr_ King's I'(‘ll~'1\1l§ for this manoeuvre were several. tliie of theni was that he did not want n fair. ‘lClllHffllllC, effective manpower policy for the forces, the farms and the factories. .\Ir. Kleigheifs election would have forced Mr. King to depart from tlte policy’ that has messed up manpower and brought disunity. But another and greater reason was behind Mr. King’s ac- tion. That was his personal hatred for Mr. ‘Meighen. Ile ivas willing to have his party sup- port a Socialist, any one, to keep Mr. Mcighen out of the Ilouse of Commons. He succeeded in having Mr. Meighen defeated and the Social- ist elected. Froni South York on. the CCF Party, hav- ing gained nation-wide attention, began to grow quickly. Thanks to his vindictiveness, Mr. King gave a tremendous lift to the party that was to help wipe out the Liberals in Ontario, and nou to send the Patterson Administration in Sax kritclimvayt down in the irvake of the Nixon Gov- erninent. So Mr. King. to spite his face, has cut off his nose. Hy his tactics and personal vendetta he helped build a machine which is now de- vouritig him. Prairie Farm Assistance The (‘CIT sweep in Saskatchewan certainly cannot be interpreted as a protest against nig- gardly trezitnieiit from Ottawa. In the last few months wheat growers of Saskatchewan receiv- ed millions of dollars from the Dominion treas- ury through the political manoeuvring of Hon. J. t}. fifliTllllCf, Dominion Minister of Agriculture —the same minister, as the Saint john Tele- graph-jciiiriizil notes. who refused to do any- thing for the potato growers of Prince Ed- ward Island and New Brunswick. .\ccortling to an tifficial stiminary, a total of $13p_7r>|,ti1ir> was [laid to prairie farmers by the Dominiv-ii in the various forms of assistance from 1939 to March 31, 1944. For whczit acreage reduction. $82,000.00) “"115 tiaitl in the _\'(‘.'1rs 19.11, 1942 and 19.13. Thnt bonus l1.'\..-; now been. dropped. Prairie farni Jissisttince was paid in crop failure areas to the extent of $38,809,000. It was not paid in 1942, the year of the great bumper crop. nor was the prairie farm income alloivziiicc- which iviis paid only in 1941, to a total of .\'ll\',1\‘l)i‘f_(7()t). Iii Rlniiitrtlizi, the total of payments for all forms of . . 111cc in the four years was S16.- 697.ooo. (if iimrli more than $12,000,000 was for who. vicrtviqt- 1'(‘(l1tt'li1n1. iieivtm. the total assistance was of wlifcli $45,ooo.ooo was for wheat acreage reduction, and $40,000,000 for payments in crop failure districts. .\lbert:i farmers received a total of $37,- 613.000. Cheiniiciailmbz/‘arfare Many of 1h: ticlicvcnictits of wartime research cannot be pllllllsllftl till the war has been won. but D1". fltto .\l:i.'iss. director" o" chemical war- fare for the Department of Notional Defence, told the Canadian Chemical Conference some- thing of what has been accomplished in that line. 'I'he results have been outstanding, he said. One of the problems brought back by Dr. Maass from a conference in Britain in 1940 "gave rise to developments, as a result of work in Canadian universities, which have made pos- sible the unipteeii thousand ton per month pro- duction" in North America of the bIock-biist- ing explosive. R.l)..‘(_ An entirely new explosive, having character- istics which make it important for certain spe- cial purposes, has also been discoverer], he said. "Another relatively minor investigation at a Canadian tiniversity saved $500,000 on an order placed by the hlinistry of Supply." (‘heiiiicnl research ltas been carried on in fif- teen Canadian universities and research institu- tions, under the National Research Council, at llnlhnn. 0.8M Director: J. I. Burnett. IJ-l. that. Inn A set-up in the post-war period. t chemistry. efiiroiuisi uores _ Institutes. a u a a to Montreal recently. , u a s a One consolation parents and other relatives 10f those reported missing have, is that, sooner or later, they will be found to be among those taken prisoners by the enemy. That ins the experience of Mr. Grattan O'Lcary, of the Ot- tawa Journal. whose son Sergt. Brian was post- ed as missing sometime ago. If! i i Bishop's College School since 1931. l‘ Ill l! 1K CDUFSC. i i! i 8 types of civilian footwear is still prohibited. i 1K W‘ Al‘ of the Assembly the members appeared to be orariuni to the chairman or secretarycf the Foundation Fund. Instead they appointed .1 Committee, of ivhich Rev. Mr. Webster is chairman, to co-operate with the present c0ii1- mittee with a view to putting more life into the Movement. IR Ill If‘ i Where politicians differ, the electors must decide. In Halifax, Mr. R. A. Bell, national director of the Progressive Conservatives, claim- ed that they would win at least three of the four seats in this province; whereas, Premier Jones. also in Halifax, declared that Prime Minister King is more popular than ever and his chance of returning to power is strong. He was suf- ficiently cautious to make no prediction for the Island constituencies. at 1k i! Ill Though so far June has not acted up‘ to Vex- pectations as regards warmth there is still time for it to make up leeway. At 8.03 a.ni. today the Northern hemisphere will pass through the Summer Solstice, thereby bringing another of the benign seasons when nature and mankind are at peace. Scientifically and ordinarily, though not this year, the heat received from the sun during June far exceeds the loss through radiation by night, a condition which will again be equalizer] in july or August and which con- tributes to many a dug day. i‘ 1F It‘ I Scapa Iilow, this date 1919; 011 the day after their arrival in the Firth of Forth, the interned (iCflllilll fleet proceeded to Scapa Flow, which had been the main British base of the Grand Fleet throughout the ivar; by order of the Ger- man Rear Admiral, the ships were scuttled and abandoned; the British squadrons at the time having put to sea for torpedo practice; on Ad- miral Freemantlds return he paraded the Ger- man officers, who had taken to boats, on the deck of ILMS. Revenge andgtolrl them: "It is not the first occasion on which the Germans have violated all the decent laivs and rules of the sea": to which Admiral Von Renter replied: "l ivizs perfectly justified in doing it, and I feel sure in similar circumstances every Irlnglish sailor would have ‘(lOllc the fame." Here is a synopsis of Quebec political opin- ion as given by the Press Information Bureau as at June 15: The politicians are swelling with of the Bloc Populaire leaders who have decid- ed to run a candidate in IJAssmnption against .\lr. Paul Gouin himself. The latter has just demanded the formation of a super-government or a "government of public safety" as has been done in England. Mr. Gouin's chief worries remain revolution and immigration, in his op- inion imtnetliate dangers for Quebec province, and he has begged the electors to send to the Legislative Assembly “the best men we have so that their voices may be heard above the storm." In political circles, the view is that Opposition leader Duplessis‘s Union National: has lost the ground it gained during the iviiiter months. Today, it is being said, the fight is one between the Liberal party and the Bloc, which divided though it is, still holds a senti- mental attraction for those of nationalist lean- ings. To the left, the Labor-Progressive party, folloiving the party line drawn 11p at the re- cent Toronto convention, is preparing to give smite mild support to Liberal candidates. Im- patiently waiting. the CCI" has ils eyes on Sas- katchewan, asserting that if the party there relatively low cost than in other countries. Dr. wins the same success as it did in the Ontario Maass stated. Much chemical ivork has been elections, the Ifrench-(‘zinatlian proletariat will done by imiversrty professors and research work- be influenced towards the left. c, w I l!” THF. cniiiznoirrajfowiv ‘qviuznriiy . He suggested that there would be great bene- .fit to the country from maintaining and ex- 'L"','$"n, pauding the present wartime chemical research " Dr. Maass, at this conference in Toronto, was awarded the medal of the Society of Chemi- cal Industry for outstanding achievement in Welcome to the members of the Women's There has been quite an exodus of Islanders Col. C. G. M. Grier, I\I.A., E.D., who has been director of Cadet Services, Canadian Army, since October 1, 1942, will return to civil life early in the coming autumn. He will be suc- ceeded by Lt-Col. K. M. Holloway OBE. of Toronto. Col. Grier is the 5011 of Sir \\'yly Grier of Toronto. He has been headmaster of Professor R. _l. Scott of Saskatoon in a dis- cussion 0f post-ivar trends of education stated that after the war 40,000 men from the armed forces will seek admission to Canadian uiii- versities. He added that a recent survey’ among 40,000 men in the air force and navy shoiverl that none had any interest in a theological‘ The Prices Board announces that effective immediately shoe repairers may use f11ll leather soles for repairing children's footwear 11p to size three and loggers’ and cowboys boots. The Board said experience has shown that footwear of these types cannot be efficiently repaired without the use of full leather soles. The use of full leather soles in the repair of other Knox Church, Toronto, has been again chosen as the meeting place next _\‘CZII' of the Presby- terian Church in Canada. In the closing iltiys in an economic mood as they refused any hoii- importance as is well exemplified in the case PUBLIC FORUM “So . , fdi-frevBored With War” Ben fmmoneottm OLD HOME “TEX that Q1135’ 01d Home Week in August . . torizet. the vaudeville." Our Home Week has been advertise people in Nova Ecotizi and esneela route 118s been established. In speakini: to two men whom “We will be seeing you Old I-Iom Week." "Not ntter the exnerienc we had at Caribou last year." an then the storiv started. Ancl such story. “flue lines of ears ' only three trips each \ conveniences when ivaitiiiz. Anotlic reason we went. by Caribou was th than ever. We nueiit two days net E m 6" i: q n. and here it is: "For t of H Olri om-e Week make a twenty for that week, and vcu Wlll ut lesa have tried to help I15 C-lll." if s-iictivin cur tlifii". wh U m Cl E. 5,7 ,- 5 L; a if of the cotmestlon 11f, this fcrrv, Mr that he exhibited at c mes-ti two men are correct. I am. Sir. etc. ONE INTERESTED. I Notes By The Way The other night a man ivalklng floor of a ‘Iorcimo hotel and ivas killed. So much, uiitiaiipili". iur the popular theory that somnambulists xver tzet hurm-Branttord Exriosi- r. We felt sure there Win some amid reason-besides sun bathing-for those flat roots on the modernism homes o1 the past tew yetzrs. ‘They're Ideal for helicopter land- ings. Individual hcllccioters. that Ls. If transportation ccnwanies ou- ei-ate tielleoiitei‘ buses after the war out of 1,000 American cities and towns landing on and taking: from bus-stations roofs why can't the man who used to plow through traffic with his mbtor car _ use a persona! lieiconier 101- coni- mutlniz? This should be one ivav oi" avoiding t-Iie bicycle lativn-moivcr, and rake that Junior seems to be forever letivini: on the drive-um)‘.- Ohristlim Science Monitor. On his recent. visit. [u the Home Fleet the K1111: c-ooke to a tall fair- haircd seamzin who ivns nii officer candidate. "M szrent-nrntidniother used to see n of. o1‘ your great- giran-dtatticr." said the Kine. "ivteet- lmr you here Ls tiistory, and I won- der what thev would think of ' " he young seamnn was Ersk William Gladstone, izrenv cram.- son of the celebrated Victorian stntesimiati. It was 111i incident 1.11:1’. discloses t-he continuity of Enuiisn llle and of its ideals oi servlce.- Montreal Gazette. Gen. Smuts has said tint unless the war ends soon civilization may crack up. Civilization has; been on the verge c» a crackwi for a Ion: time. in fact ever tmcc it. became an influence fll.';—\' men, but mehow it seems to keen on 1:01.112. and the chances are it could stand quite a lop, more war. which Ls not, o! course. saying that it. 1s all that it should be. The ivar itself is proof that. lt; isn't. It still needs a lot of mending and improvement. “Port Arthur News-Chronicle. All ranks o! the three armed scr- despatches ivili roan be \\'9Zlt'll‘.i1 a small bronze rink lent. s ‘the Legionary. After the last ivzir. those who were "mentioned" ivsie u palm Medal ribbon. In this war. since n leaf ts worn beside, not on. the eer- vtce bbon. about effectively depriving Ger- manv an Japan of the means o1 renewlnvz the alauailiter. Actlmz on the Archbishop o! York durlur: his recent visit. to Toronto. to lenve the pence maklnt: to tltcsc who are qualified for it bv trrilnlntt and ex- perience. it 1s to be honed that this time the professors. the economic expem and the theorists generally will keen their flnrzers out of the ole, and will leave to the politicians and the military. who tinve had the Job of dtrectlnn the war. the muk- lniz o! a pence that will be. work- able and that will b1» lasting-Or- llla Packet and Times. I v '\(n1\L"'f|f um 111W‘ i‘ It‘ a “n l! ‘J! , "la vno" about sixty days away and that V391,,“ preparations are well under ivav. I mink m“ you mwhrmmem" ' ‘ o it?» "iiiren cifiiiiiillil tttolilcrs’ nlila A a not wiu kn i t the . » . _ e0 1w: tin ra y n one. owo war. sates-t: tail-w ~ o» Mm Wm- u-e m» will show rou something. not t; 5° 5m"! B" “m! W110 the war madam? Bug ave you had any NM 0119 WOUH Illlfld. llbffhfl‘ bird for several years, and the public y“ t w look forward to 1t. naLtIcuIzirIv ‘:31? figs nclizntennayspficgatyltzu:rfigpélmggiggt AM 59mg’ dlfwrslem when me l_v since the Wood. 1st nds-Cari u war. that: bores you. ' m“ on me day I spoke o, a moment Would scarcely know t we were I 880. I Stood with my back to the ' met. last week, 1 casually reanarked. wind near the end o!’ the run- e way helm; used that day, and S watched the Fbrtressen from the a time they were swarms of tiny pgglcks ilndthftzf distance, until they 1 2 o gnmpeine °,,,*"},‘},;“f,‘,§’f,‘ ‘lgfufilfjg pmii a medical order-y away wnn own and ccme to a. stop near C . savlnu or zasoline mid tires, and Eben’ I “us slandlng- The? had - " . t, 1 t y t veil a Ions way-ail] the way to the if: yealsv-risqjéked Zgiderre: 62:: gidblciiiilioifireaof urifiebizfglf]: Xlhrl-Eggfi steam-one was hit ln the shoulder n‘ acm" ' " a l heavy anti-aircraft: tire, and mush Wm‘ a 2° millimeter “m” shell“ . of it under constant attack from n” m“ lying very qmafly- The “her S (‘ll of the farm- leiif superunposed on the Victory‘ silver maple teat ls already issued to denote service overseas. the oak ambulance had hurried over but there was no need. Two more lads had trouble inside the ship-there was a burden to be untangled There must be no squemnilshness “cm ‘he {Hung 1n more Finally l surngmflgg (5%? o; me w; mpdeamtgaazmfiteawupoztmzg: There gill,“ came soft rains and the 8X81’! D186 1'8 63 6 e1" 6 note donatfiiie $51111 Wlmh B1B AM ‘YEW!- uwnevvrtzes to be presented at the to Write but who» sentiments annual mhlglvtion to be held on m"! a 0f it w set bored with? Nature l. tour hour service. Elvtra help could swaicng of enemy fighters up there w“ Sh“ mmugh ‘he “mach and procured from Borden. If the in that Sub-Zero air. w , boat. cannot run git night. trioke a As one o1 them circled tn I not- wmmdcd amt cry-but ml‘ my service from daylight until tl-zirlg lccdd scmeitihirig kabout it and coii. 1ft nu e ma e , t d . _ what it was. Then Iwpstixoltvtedmltn- W“ wnwmlls of his pain. berauee The EXIICYIGIICC of these two men the prop of its N0. 2 engine was wit-h whom I thus iicczrlciitlv tori- feathered-was oulte motlznlgs; versed was the same as hunzrens As me bomber chcjed out and cam of Others have 113d. I would Wa- in m, the m: end of the field she zest that, the rlifierent farmer or- (‘rapped a “are gantzattorie which have n lame in‘ o; ambulances over terezt) it; our shdliv. [1151/"4111 Cliff sufidcmy m "I. v . t - cc’ ..<,, , gtidCafilbldufilif/b‘ IIOWUIICLVOOIIQIIIITTII- Qjullhd gvm w the Sh“) as Sh‘? e"'s Provincial (‘invcrnrnent whieil; glllgfslffll°gotyllgg argglgwfigle°i_lighlfoség the co-tailots sent. There were other ers, W111 lose no time n IIPIOIII‘! to lltlglfltihfflflfsi IOW-‘Dlfilty 0f l dlt‘ s. Aetl 1st 1e _ - —‘ K 0X11: CV61‘ t e e0- . ,,’,§}1Z§,§"’,f, °,,°;§‘,,_‘,§’S“,,,,,, ,§’§‘;,’§§“,,,,,,?, pilot had me worried The doctor “ma” 1" that We CXIJBHCIIW (If cwly ‘VHS 093111111! an escape ticitcli door n‘? has“ 311mm any new,“ 118v;- n 11011.51 11.1111 two lads of hlsuvcre bringing a . Iiexlbte stretcher with a blanket on R.E. Mutcti has ii photograph it. A head and thoulders appeared _ ___ ct through the hatch and soon the the Beard of Trade art router. tvro stretcher bearers had this boy Svlililt ivili prove the ulaing or these who was Incomtpletg flying ktf with I oxygen mask in their arms. They titted him down very gently and lnid him ~ on the stretcher. One side of his face was I10! fl very nice sight-that hole up there W311 made by a 20 millimeter shell that. exploded on the co-ptlofs $111k helmet. That. flak tielmc-t sav- ed _li1.= life and undoubtedly the bu. terry cold gale coming through the Sarina into motion. tzote above 111m stopped 111m from in his sleet) nu from the sixth 104111: we much blood-but. as 1 said, his face looked pretty awful. We wont; go into any details about; that The pllct who was down on the ground by 110w stood beside llll‘, stretcher looktitg down at 111s burl-iv. His face was chalk white and his Jaw muscles were ivorking. With a very tight throat he turned to the rdoctor 11nd said: "He didn't cccnnlnin a dam bit-right up until he slumped over on'my sbciulder_ then lie said ‘Keep cracking, kid, 111 be okay —and passed gut," T111; sf/IHCIKOII Fortress was standing there with otl dripping from tier No. €I1BlI1€5—llkc a battered 11nd angry but. indomitable bird bleeding to death__ The not-who by now had bcnn Joined y the remaining eight hls crew-looked up at. that. en- gine 11nd tticn around at the rest of the hops. Said he: "I never thought Id ever get her back to Exigland and that's a fact" H: looked down at hlS finger nulls and 111611 F113 at the boys again. "You guys sure did a swell job today." Then an expression of nriutterable Weilflnfss came OVEy his face and 11o turned cn tits heel 11nd trudged away. The other eight struggled after him. They didn't say anytht —-they were an unhappy bunch xiii M a a . kids The ground crew were swarm- ing over “beading Lady’ by now, T1191‘ W911! Welly solemn Loo-their foul‘ engined baby had been hurt and that co-pllot: speeding away in the ambulance over there was no Joke either-anything done to one of their nlr-crew was the some as 5911142 if to 111cm. One of them looking down the runiitav. swore Befiilv and said: "There's another." ll Ship 111st. coming in. It taxed the ib-lt wasn't. far, and the ambiii. i=1 888111 Very zently. they let down with a verv small ary. I learned that. an to a verv stout. heart. know carries the team a! spec combat on those missions graphs ta en as the bomb; tilt, s . . Well. this ship dropped n flare too. At first I thought l4. wasn't. too bad because u trill youmznter with his sleeve ribbed n. nnd the shuttered forearm swat ed in bandages cllmbStl down under hls own steam. His face w: dripping with sweat’. and his oxygen mask had left. a nnudty dNle some: lul forehead e days ago I came home 1mm ' i m,‘ I w anneal ywmelm, m" run mu. com: s0." hi" d from lone out a new .__. 0! M: who tered ton-z nitaatorimffttng 1dr Tfghlryl (War flue) dy hld been kind enouzti t-aaiaare 1n limb! to . m berwll} no 531.; Blrild. "VI/be lav: tanned to sieltlva- , e runn u en- e o ro t; “m. tries in each class, adding greatly that yoiiouwont nilarid fngugfeiiigii And grind‘: m that ln Britain theta must be I many H1910; o! Interest aside from Robina will wear their leathery m war My husband end I have lmxl-and several times, and Whlet 11 IIDI‘ I I respect Your confidence-but I m “"3"” Wm?“ “M”? e I am being uxieeemartly gory, per- tmd I saw a couple to my M; just lending you my eyes to let you Relation; Officer was talking to scme of the boys standing around Wflihnx their tum to 11o into ttie Interrogation Room. They were mumhlnl heft-y looking sandwiches I Hm they were excited and keyed-up still-several in each group trying 1X18 in B. hltlher key than ueuaL-one or two of them laughing at, almost, homing because of the let-down that ccrne; after seven or eight 31011115 0f $11M. tension. I heard one felld say: "Holes? In our ship? Gosh shes get so many holes 1n hei- that when She flvs she Whistles." Says another: "There wasn't, no Home Guards manning 11cm flak- kuns when We were ccrntng tn_. ins Lady" c m t th . rogatlon Roiimi o“ o’ e Inter m5 Hi3!" Engineer. He seemed to Bmmerjlned t , ,1 . "ed 0 9m an an ant I looked 111p and sure enough... there was that flare droppt from other way and I went over to its dispersal point. Just as two other ambulances were speeding tctutrgyd nnces beat me to it. when 1 got there another ClOClOT/Wllg climbing out of the ship , and two more I stretcher bearers were readying the vices who have been mentioned 1r. Streamer on the ground. The doc- tor grive thrni 1i funny sort or look with an almost imperceptible om“ Shake 0f the head. There didn't Seem to Ire much wrong with the sh1p-—1ust a tiny round hole 1n the plcxin-Bluss over the bombardlerh ace The crew trcrn the other feet first-n figure through thé the advise izlven to the clerizy b! gfgfgiaaatgga lfil-ltfgfihréasklltll 911%’; medical orderlles might have been Irvine not to woke him. That tig- ure was limp and waxy white-tits hand slipped oft and rested on the Ground. The tall-gunner bent down and carefully replaced 10-. making it comfortable a, 1t were, The doctor folded the blanket right 0V" find tucked it In as you might ba/by Yes-that boy had done all he could for hie Uncle Sam-no doctors were necea. IXIIIOUI’ viewing bullet 11m made that little th hole ln the nose up there and had 80119 fight through tits flak-cult 1n- The lead-ship of the wing was late getting in. The lead-strip yaw at ta on whom depends the success of the whole job-they lead the wing mu; which end un with dead-on precision bombing pictured on aerial photo- uic with their round; And in the 9001s ma: at 1%: their whim on a low fence-wire: Wm care gfelui. when 1th drone. R0116 ’€ —lora Teasdale. \~ - - . /\ nd down cheeks. As h Ploded 8W1‘ to thehkamlmlurioe he ‘tried 1o ~\ good aim --r.tien ‘Ale beckoned back at. the ship over ms shoulder with his urucxib. ‘rne next; twp men didn't come out under their own asnt lying quietly. They say the Was-quietly —aknost wimpertng like a hurt dog. I chink tie wasnot. e kind of guy that he must be to have his record doesn't consciously WlmPEr about anything. You think 11410640 You madamf-Fm not. YBBUIG- I'm just stating tacts— see what I saw the other day. I'm M11118 you this because as you 0W. In war—t.he wat- that you're bored with-in war. nothing worth while can be gained without pay- is not by any mean; the over all picture-but, for this ‘L524’ bunch of boys it was a tough run, Afterwards. back in a little room beside the interrogation rocm 1 talked to l. fair, grey eyed, wiry bantam of a man who came in and cocked a let: over the cc-rner of the desk. He was a Major. and the pilot of that ship iii which three of the crew were wounded. Not only doe; his body look as if its made o‘ whlpeora and leather, but his nerves must be too. He's from Texas, and very ctmseryatfve of speech, He said he dldnt get 5 chancg w see what. was happening as they went _over the target. because. n: he said: "with three crew members wounded the remainder o1’ ua had our hands pretty fu1l." Not a bad piece of understatement, that. Out-side in the Pfliiflge the Public .d taking great gulps of hot m}. ee from huge mugs. A.s usual, cue. talk at once-all of them speak- accumulated divi ends. Then a. drawly voice Just then the pilot o! the "Lead- He was talking to e a little more back to normal tan when I saw titrn lmst- out i419“ by his sh . The ball-turret p discussion been“ about m" rovlnclrl Manager: find engines on fire. It seems that ivhen “Leading Lady's" No 2 englng was hlt 5116 we; set on fire for quite Life. Suppose the ’ 1909. It age 25, Twenty Pr“ forte and I owed the cumulnte. Now here is what happened to these men between 19o ,_000 ll in t0 1e. would‘ lmvg 9 and today, In 1914 22 have died before urchin eir families rnthe Great- plus accumulated ffiflllllmj age 30. Bach of th received $5,000 fro West Life, dividends, ' paid avenged on In I924 Another 46 have died, their dependents receiving $5,000 lus the rofim that had accumu- g a "Cl 01' 00BX59. you must nted. T ese men had paid into the Company an average of only In 1934 Another ten yen-s have passed and another 71 men have died. The Company paid out $5,000 in each case, plus i-ccumulated dividends, altbou hthe remiurns received aveng only 2,734. In 1944 138 men, between the ages of 50 and 60 years, died in the past ten years. Their depen- dents also received 55.000 plus dividends. Premiums paid X‘ amounted to $2,850 in each 723 are still living-age 60. $5,000 insurance protection, over the entire 5S year into the Company $2,850 and yet t _ each policy hu own to $5,165, plus substantial a! they have had That is the way Ife insurance works. Many ersons pay into a common fund. The depen ems of those who die are protected. The policyholders who live receive bfenefits later on. IIISIIIIEIICrCdIS "fill -. no smaqul d t _ m z u for each dndeach orell . No man can: o to e dunno-look iiire mftkaf,’ Geri "lbw llf= W'- rles dldnt like us flying over their country." came out o! the mix-up _a 1n ; "1 5W Your bombs land,’ ‘Gyus-g-you sure had ‘an rtgt}; deed on," - Werur-wisrz/r: 4530M”? 6001/4/11’ HYNDMAN 5 COMPANY LTD. Oturlottetown LIFE IIISIIRANCE - ACCIDENT It HEALTH - GROUP INSURANCE, n while. The pilot said he didn't; feather his pfipp tgtit alwey-he let her wtndm after he's shut off --—-~—- t e m wool -1uai to get her for a moment. I hope - feathered tti t t , , 11° BFIYWB-Y opened all Life gliiiwillnfloaliitis ggve if»: in“ do!“ get bored with Um“ w“ ‘Ihat’ whe I 1 0k d t "We f"? Igiflflvlelutegmitilil lno Xiigiig llitlfanflhgfflgllihlebsfiflkids 511M110?‘ ‘These three came to a halt 1' conversation. ‘Hie Public Relations m“ d” l M?" they we“: fhmum e,- came out too-he'd been ' tfllklnk lo some o! the Interrogattng BBC mums "SERVICE Officers and was very proud of the aesrtttzts of tune Grouptingvork. ‘Ikie e on PM me wav l, at: o tptiotograph showing bombs burst» - . a all over the air-field. Over In the corner the three boys frfl. "Leading Indy" were still tal liiz. Then thev moved across into f-he llt/Ue office and 5mm the door. One of them sat down on the I‘ ‘ i floor with his knees dranvn 111p the Einglnee m on 1m table, and the pilot we ked up and down restless] tn the little room. ’rtiey were a1 retty dirty but. I Quest; they wet-g oo tired to start: bringing themselve ' to have a blth and go m bed. '11 ldd on the floor was a. massive, well muscled luv-Hound m elf sur- wlaed at what I heard hm sayln . He said 1t completely without self- oonaciotusners-looklng up a; the C ,, use they thought we was a lame duck-I don't mind telling you ' IIaBId me p prayer I really did-and . ' Im going to say me another one P11012841“!!! 1n the eye. He said: "I don't. nilnd telling you Lieuten- tontg/ht. Somebody up there was mire looking after us and I got a 5' 5 ow 1'11 mighty thanklul and I'm diimwe"! izonna any so." The Pilot etormed tits paclnz and looked down nt the bov on the floor tor a mom- ent Bays he: "You ain't. klddln’ brother and then he resumed his Phone 540-541 purine, looklmz down at the floor Twai- vim lit-vi- had ii elore un / eoulnt into Death's eye and they me=n't. every 11""?! thev were saying, Nn Madam I don't mvpoee _ you M11! "W" In" 7°" "t" "H! l drained clear d! fuel. Then. he though you ma“ m" ‘Muhf “l. wind n chance to blow the fire out. ,,%Z,,§§L°‘§,,§”},'§,°d Iuiazflll o“ RYIMTI e a r iy 11-‘ Gassy stomachs In the doorway and continued the" "l"! to near you sly that you were; Every person who ls troll: bled with gas In the "1"" and bowels should If: of Evans and I" will relieve all distressing 1x11111101“ r . l1 e- Dr. Evans ulfllnlramlgb ‘L’? only prevents‘ all lmd v - feet! from Ila but l1 Pa”: motel the functional 1w v tlon and IIIIPW"! m‘ DON'T nanny - 0RD" voun norru: TODAY MAPS PILE OIIITIAEIIT d A late and elillgaelllgxrzj name pnlvedilf n . t“. ryqllllglbl! iii-pose. u OIITIQI m l" geneticist effect In loothee: a n u ntrlnlvilf- on s m» mm- Prm “"- TIIE 2 MACS no at. own l!’ en WWW‘ lln o hun 1111mm ho. I ve t1 d r11 In. mu fieili smiifnia giiiiri L“, peel!!! lllll three