P:\S‘-.E,F_0UR THE 0 HM LOTT ETOWI G IIARD lllli THE cuAm.o'rrE'row1}i_ouARoiAN ' SEF_TEMBER__6,1939 -. . , . 0 0 ‘T nuns in mg my What Hltlers Record F01 Vltalitlj always me (Halifax Chronicle) so far as the [West is concerned.‘ Deutschlarid class really rank as cruisers, though because they carry heavier guns than the 10.- ooo-ton Washington Treaty cruisers which could catch them, and are faster than the big battleships which could blow them out of the Adolf Hitler came to power in laemisny as the result of the elec- tions of March 5. 1938. The new llfomlng Daily (rounded In 1887) President, Llaut.-Col. W. Chester 8. Mcblln Vice President. J. B. Burnett. l‘. J. I_ water, they would take soiiie iiiiining down as commerce raiders. it doesn't appear that the Herrldge movement is likely to arrive any- where in particular. Once bitten and twice shy, so far as Albertal at Reichstag promptly passed an en- ablirig act conferring supreme pow- er on Chancellor ltier and his cabinet. In May of that year, Herr ‘BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEA Secretary. L|eIIt-L'0|~ 0- A Mltlflnnon. D 8- 0- But more important in a long war than the prese protect its hard- ili | . ii‘ , gum,“ p_ ,j_ 1 - . . electors are concerned they are Hitler said. ‘t lditor and Managing DIrector_ J R. d 1 ‘ _ _ 5 _, _ | L? Amman Educ.’ Funk Wllur l'llf‘ll.an siips on the figlitiiig front ‘ire the eco gusplciolls as to Mr Herridges I I Gevi-many ha‘: only swsing: clixeh ,1 noiiiic strength, the spirit and the (‘llilli|’ElllC€ of ability to deliver the goods he ad- Sim. mi-me Y. - 9 SUBSCRIPTION nuns “°l’F“d°"°° ‘‘“d 85.00 per year (In advance! delivered lo Cit! $4.00 per year (In advance) mailed to P. I. Island i5.oo per year (in advance) mailed to Canada and In Members Audit Bureau of Circulation: vertises. Neither do they like his joyous welcome of “Social Credit.” Communist and other questlonablel parties flocking to his banner with, no other incentive than betterment} the home front. The (.‘C(lllHll‘iC situation in Germany tolay is more like that of 1917 than 1014. ;\Ieii and iiiacliiiies have been worked at war tempo for years, with neither rest and psycliological I-_’I_|"_'!~!_!!§_!&.x | January, 1985. brought a plebis- cite in me Saar district by which [the inhabitants voted to return to ithe Reich. Just before that plebis- cite, Herr Hitler said E. R. Bmw&s?I Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness TABLES OF ‘FOODS WHICH WILL MAINTAIN HEALTH —-——~-:——-—--———-:-———'' for the one nor re 1 ~ r 1 of their own discredited auses b 3 . p ziteiiiuit for the of ier, C Y! our food experts. those who. ,, _ "The Strongest Memmw “ ivealwr "ma The author of the fort-goii1‘1 statements Pi'e- mufnblng a ride °“ the “her 191' really know the value and action ‘,0,?:t:get '°" °énEhm";n “es”, and Plate Glass Ins the Weakest Ink‘ dicts that both (_iL‘l‘lllIil‘i and Italian strength MW‘ b"'°k~ “ Cflgm-y Hem” °’ ‘°°ds ‘mm sciemmc mvesuga“ willing and delflm fled 10 B06913‘ urance - tlon, have been telling us for in us tnnex-most, soul as wen 3,; ex. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 0. 1939ZmYl"" "°°°"""‘ °° Th‘ "’°°'“°" lyears that the regular daily dlet.tema1 formulation the Pact of to- Pl'°55- “"0 5°l°“”“5,h“"° °““°"°"‘ C now in use is unsuitable for our .carno." ed what causes railroad rails to (me put 0; [gem-no wu ae. .w0i.ild be quickly sapped by the enormous cost of the offensive which the very nature of their at Lowest Rate ‘pztigii, it will be i‘.~.'.'ill<-il. ==-——.~.--————v regimes would force lllt‘lll to take and sustain. needs, We set en0\lSh 10011 and _ ,\/illlalll Polish Resistance Stronger at the beginiiiiig than Britain and iiifinkgaigifir 9ef§§:;e“g_‘iElI;c::s°!w°a£lS0°d 10:1 but W11: 30 ri]ci>xt.ngete;ipu§l‘:|F>tlJ8!';':j°;1r ‘R: Pb‘°%‘r‘1‘°;5y“la‘len]_“";‘:§"“"Il&°‘;'1‘; Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis ._ _ France, because they are periiianeiitly mohiliz- remove 18.600 rails in the Unltediainzm 'ef,::,(::ha {,1mm_u.'_5 n_ thelgiurln, Frapceil Great Bj% sari 144 Richmond St. Char! t . . , . . ed, Germany and Italy would have little reserve 535993 End Clmada ll‘ 1937- N0‘ food factors which stimulate chem-lpezcfl gguvlégstyem ‘““,§3§‘,,,,,. “nae . 0 tetown ft-rriiic as lx'lll<‘ 1iiiii1<l1iiieiitlloland 15 talimg of spirit 0,. n,am,,,,1 ,0 can “pm and would only has the cause been found but icai action, igemum. mmerwok w ,,,.1,1,-_,'-Me 5. __ , . _ __ _ __~ {Wm [he ‘\‘,_I ,”\;M,,,.\., as mdmated Pamcuu_a,._ steadily grow “_ml\_()ry “Ink Britain and France also the cure. This will be aDDrecl— Dr L. H. Newburgh, Ann i bout disputes with France, Bel- m '.y in iuil:i_\'s Ili'\]l(llL'ili‘~, 1hi< was regarded from the slllll ;i- lll<'\il.liIl('. The sanie furious cam- lllIl|'l\'€ll the first stages of the lii'l'lll(lll Il1l\'£lll\‘(‘ in the Great War. In .’lll> e:i.»f-. for the time living, Poland is coin- plciely .\lllll off frniii iiiiliiziry assistance by the iieutrality of the li'iiliC States, Russia and Ru- iiitiiiiri f’XL't’ltl for lili‘ ii:ii'rnw llaltic entrcuice to the iftwi-iili»i' iiuw iii pu<~e~-int‘. of the lil.’,I‘lll8llS. This fncii.-vs (lll*.'il'.lHll on the .\'iirth Sea and the l’»i".ii~li i“i\'l'l Ililil air llll'C('S. .-\lre'.tdy attacks lizive liewii i.lllllC‘l<"i iii l)l‘l‘.'ll{ the iieriiiaii hold 'Jll the lillillt‘ and l‘L‘ll])l‘ll a direct avenue of in l‘i-l.iiiil. cuiiieiili-iiily, the weight of eli .'ii'iiiv is living coiiceiitrziteil against the Sit‘£{fl'h'tl l.iii«.-, i':ii'iiig the Freiivli fortifica- tiinis «>11 tile‘ \vi--ii-1'11 frniit, for the purpose of ri-in-iiiig the iivriiiziii }>l'I‘~sill'8 iii the east. llllv iliiiirq ~|'('lIl\‘ .ilnEniis_ lixceptiiig for the Dll(‘~\liil'll rililllll gii she is now Clll‘i(l\lClil’lg ag- llll'\‘l l‘«il:iii«l, li(‘l'lllIlll)’ is clearly destined to be lllllliiit t‘\'(‘l'_\'\\'ill‘l’L‘ on the defensive. She Can- not peiil'i1':iiI* the iiiipregiizilile .\l:tgi110t defen- ies of l"i':iiice, lllll‘ liupe lil do battle with Eng- land on the \'1‘.'l<. Tiirl<e_v's adherence to the Aiiglli-ltireiivli muse will give the Allies access [0 liuiwpe by way of the llzirdanelles. Britain's o\'c1'\\'lii~liiiiii;; .\‘<‘.'1—p4l\\'L’l‘ will ultimately re- open the wziy to D.'iii7.ig, as well as to North :l(‘flll.'.il_\’. In the meaiitiiiie. the Ottawa Government has been in cniisiiltzitioii with the British autliorities riiiicwiiiiig the llliist effective lll(‘Z1Flll'l"S that can be Iltl4illl(‘(l iii the tiiziiiic struggle that lies ahead. \\‘lieilier C;i1irul:i'; C0llll'll)llli0l1 is to be in man- power as well as ltif)(l.\iilfiS, munitions, air- planes flllll other equipiiient, will be decided l\'ll(‘ll llzirlizimi-nt meets tomorrow. There will DC 110 l.iCl\' of loval support and cooperation of the jack rabbits slimv signs of depletion; a would grow simiiger, :15 they mobilized all the great resources of their elllplris. .- EDITORIAL NOTES -. The Marne this date, 1914. ll 10! I t The ranks of the regiiiiciits Iiuvv rn training at the lixliiliitiriii iil'<>llllfi are fast filling up in readiness for ilt-p:irtui'e in Halifax at an early date. -0: Lord l\'iicli<‘iier, ("niiiiiiriiiiler of the llritisli Forces in the last (Emit \\':ir, cuiisiilererl the Pay Scouts one of the f_fl't‘Jllt‘§i illil\'i‘lll(‘lllS in his or any time. "Tlie .\\'<.iiis" he told l.t')1'l lia(leii- ]‘owell, “are a gi'e;i l<*~i‘l in the iiaiiiiii." .-\stl1r‘y were in 191.1, so .'il‘t‘ iliey in 1931). ll 1‘ ¥ it # l # Great horned owls are taking a l'l7illfl at Grain Quivira Nzitiiliixil .\l«iiiuiiiei1t, Neiv Mexico, in what seems to be a drive iigaiiist an excess pop- ulation of jack rzibbits. llidiiig in the prehistoric ruins, the owls are quick to pick up the trail of a roving rabbit and tlart out in swift short flights. \Vith their ra7.or—like t:iloiis_ and violent strike, they are like tigers of file ziir. !\lrea<lyil1e ranks fact noted with .<.'iii<factioii by fariiiers, and :1 striking exriinple of iiaiiirtfs iiieihud of niain- taining 21 biologiuil lialaiice. -0: iii The prophets are at a tliscoiint just now. A promo te it. The fact that 18,000 placed will mean less business for the steel workers. That, however, is a minor matter compared to the the world today. Filled with petrol in place of bombs it; could fly non- stop from England to Australia. The range of the first model. loaded with bombs, is (1,240 miles: its speed 265 miles an hour, But warplanes in R.A F‘. sqiiacirons are only the forerunner; of still bet- ter ones which will very sooii ap- pear in large numbers. The dis- closed performances of British bombers at present are of ma- chines 'itted with two engines, each of about 1,000 horse-power, More powerful engines now being built; will greatly increase their capabilities The extra power can be applied to the carrying of heavier loads of bombs at faster speeds. — Daily Mail, London. Those summer cv were beautiful. I always had a passion for the north, for trees and water and silent places. I felt this pas- sion strongly in those long, light- filled dusks that lingered softly after the sun went down, There was peace then, pure and sweet, and a wonderful quiet lying on the land like a benediction. And fortnight ago Lord li(’1l\'(‘l'l)l‘UOi(, Mr. Henry Ford and others were loud in their protests that there would be no war, the \\'l>il being father to from kiaiizitlizin ci1i7eiis, but it is for the Gov- eriiiiient to direct and co—ordinate the nation’s efforts. Germany Then And Now A writer in Harper's Magazine gives a strik- ing crmip.-irisiin of the Germany of today with the Lit‘l‘lll.'lll}' that went to war in August, 1914. That tici'iii:iii_v, it is pointed out, had an army 1')0llFll(‘.'l mid perft-ctetl for decades until it was a glcaiiiiiig precisioii iiistrument. Every able l)ll(ll(‘(l male in the country was a trained mem- ber of it. Its cadres of officers were complete from top to bottmii, so that 100 first—class divi- sinus could be placed in the field at once, to be rapidly filled out to 200. It had a long—d_eter— mined strategic plan to cover a war on both western and eastern fronts, with a magnificent railway system tailored to measure and the staff work prepared down to the last detail. It rode high on a tradition of victory over the chief military powers of Europe, Supporting this great land force, Imperial Geriiiany llflll a navy large enough to protect her coasts, to raid enemy commerce on the seven seas, and present a real clizillenge in battle to such ‘forces as Britain could maintain in the North Sea. Behind this war machine and supplying it when war limke out was :1 blooming economy, large stories of rziiv iiiaterials, a steel production (togetlier with .\1i<tri.1-lluii;v_ary's) greater than that of llritaiii, France and Russia combined and. on (ll>lll(‘\'iiC ores, a flourishing foreign trade, large invesiiiieiits and many warm supporters and suppliers in neutral couniries almiarl, and a billinii-dollar golileii war chest. The pnpiilziiinn on the whole accepted the war with eiitliusiasm. emifident in an early and glori- ous \'it‘ll>l'_\'. l7I'f‘\‘li anti well-fetl at the begin- ning, the (‘r¥ililll‘y proved able tc support four years of terrific strain. lliiler's ('.<-riiinn_v is so much more ferocious and ii-igliteiiiiig thriii \\'illieliii's that it is not ap- parent at first sight how much weaker it really is—~for actual iv.-irfare, that is. (For the kind of baiiditry ii has been practising, it is im- nietiscly strong). The army is short of officers of every rank, but particularly lli.’l_lUl‘S, lieutenant eolonels and Colonels. Lietiieimiits and captains have been made out of the mrpnrals and sergeants of post- war [)f'(lf(‘S<lflllIll R(‘if‘llS\\'(’l1l", but it has proved quite illlpnssilllf‘ in build up the magnificent cadres fliltl staff org.'iiii'/.:ition of the 1914 army in six short years. Many of the reserves have had only :1 hasty sir<—weel<s training and behind them lie the 17 aimunl classes between 24 and 41 years of age, largely uiiirained. Nor is the same bulk of man—power available for service, despite the ncquisitiori of Austria and Suiletciilamlz the Gerinnn authorities estimate that, on accnuiit of the greater industrial de- mands of iiiodcrii warfare, they will be able to put only about six million men in uniform in place nf ten million last time. \Vlien we look at the navy we see that, in place of lmperizil ('ieriii:iiiy's l’(‘(l0lllll-’llllC fleet of the tlioiiglit. Now the sziiiic type of prophets are (l(‘Ql2ll'lllg with cipial ciiiphasis it will be a short war. \\'ell, so did their predecessors in 1914, until Lord Kitelicner shattered their pro- phetic spirit by declaring that instead of a short war we were in for along war. “The development of armaments," Lord Kitcliciier observed on November 9, 1914, "has modified the applica- tion of the old principles of strategy and tactics and rediiced the prezciit warfare to something approximating siege <~per.'iiiniis." llow nuich truer is this warning lii(l.'l_\' with the still fui:ther huge dcvclopiiieiit of .'ii'iiiaiiiciits, strategy and tactics? Iii! Overseas export clearances of wheat during the week ending Aiigiist 25 aiiiouiited to 1,885,- 710 biisliels C()lli}).'ll".‘(l with 3,282,136 in the previous week and 1,;'28,<)31 a year ago. Clear- ances by ports were as follows. with the figures of a year ago in brackets‘. l\loiitrcal, 1,048,052 (1,423,606) bushels; Snrel, 500,183 (nil); Unit- ed Stzites ports, 169,980 (182,326) ; Vancouver- New Vvestminster, 149.995 (nil); Three Rivers. 17,500 (122,999). imports into the United States were nil compared with 5,000 last year. Export clearances during the crop year to Aug- ust 25 were: l\l0l1lr('zll, 3.602.027 (4,245,808); Vancouver-New \\'cstiiiiii.=ter, 2,227,746 083) ; Sorel, 1,913,024 (nil) ; United States ports 897,971 (837,446)-, Cliiirchill, 588,114 (nil); Three Rivers. 581,028 (335590); Victoria, 46,- 309 (nil). These, along with lliiited States im- ports from Canada of 538,000 (10,000) bushels make total clearaiiccs of 10,415,119 (5,434,936). II Far from becoming a lost art with llie demise of the sailing ship, tzittooiiig is t<.(lay as popular as ever with men who follow the sea. That is the verdict of Dr. T. \\', Atkins of the Anchor Line Athenia recently lOl']10(‘(l(‘(l. “Talt.O0lll;Z will flourish as long as sailiws sail the deep," insists the doctor, who has stiulictl this needle art in many parts :iiiil his gaiiien-rl ?lllCC(l0lt‘S about it from many cni'iiers of the globe. The doctor reports, for i\llC thing, thzit few sailors ever have anything tzitiooeil 011 their legs, For another, many of their fancier designs are put on to conceal initials. It seeiiis that a sailor gets revenge on a sweetliezirt by having an eagle or a serpent tattooed over her initials. (hie of the finest pieces of tattooing Dr. Atkins ever saw was brought back fmm Yoknlirmia by a chap who was an Atlienia ‘steward. The design W}\S :1 simple one, a black and white stnrk. \Vbat made it outstaiirliiig was the skillful shading of the design. ¥ U i lit! Sir Percy l7.vereit may be looked upon as Lord Baden-l"owcll's alter ego, and lint altogether dis- similar to our own Lieiitt-nant—Governor Col. G. D. Delilois. lie was the prime mover in the acquisition during the last four or five years of the several big natimial camp sites given for Scouting in Great llrittiin. lie is credited with watching over Scouting acti\'i'.ics throughout Herifor(lshirc's 600 square miles "seven days a week." He was (lireetly C0ll("‘l‘ll(‘fl in working out the organization features of the Movement (67; there was music, too, God's own ated by the railroads, and will also, safety in travel Like‘, many other benefical discoveries} it will carry some misfortune with- rails a‘ year will no longer have to be re-. good which will result. — Hart-‘ ford Times. The Wellington is the most} efficerit twin-engined bomber in music—the rustle of leaves whis- pering, the distant sound of surf on the shore. the songs of birds There were the sweet songs of veery thrushes and, from beyond the field and far down along the edges of the bush, t-he sad, pensive pipings of whltethroats. —-Forest and Outdoors. News came from New York that s big metropolitan art display showed that Canadian painters are more interested in scenes of nature than in politics or surrealism. And on the heels of this ‘report: a native artist, arriving in Montreal, com- plained to the press that his fel- lows in the Dominion are too con- cerned with depicting horses and slelghs. They are, he implied, the drab motif of the national palette. The gap between "art for art's sake" and the tastes of the average individual has never been bridged, and it is not likely that it ever will be. Yet there are many who woutd take both of the above items as rather complimentary to Canadian artists. The world is full enough of propaganda disguised as art. of grotesque plcturizations of social and political and other kinds of prejudices, without adding more to it. As for the cult that made this grotesqueness 'fa3hicnable,“ not even the most naive of lay- men would accept: the doctrine f athomsble. tor. Hamilton Specta- llarry C. James. of Alta- finders School for boys, believes that camping is good training in self-reliance. He is also an en- thuslast on western history, so he combines the t/wo ideas by taking boys on Summer tours along trails followed by Coronado through New Mexico and Arizona. G-arces along the Colorado, and Fremont in California. Last year he led a group of 20 boys on a Summer-long expedition from Fort Benton, Montana, to the Pacific along the route of the Lewis and (Clark expedition of 1804-05, Packed _ln with the camping equipment ‘were copies of t-he journals in which the explorers described their lpathfinding journey. By day the boys followed the trail in cars over rough mountain roads or hiked cross-country, stopping at land- marks the explorers had noted. By night they gathered round the ,csmpfire to read the quaint, misspelled journals which told how Cltpmiri Lewis had sighted the Shining Mountains -— looking just as the boys had seen them that morning -— how he had straddled the tiny stream which is the head- waters of the mighty Missouri river (the boys did, too.) —5unset Magazine. Quebec politics are a mystery to people in the rest of Canada, There‘ are so many curious cross-currents that it is hard to fathom what is tgoing on. However, there is no doubt that Duplessis' moves and fluenee upon the next Federal clmlnllns -- London Free Press. that art is only art when it is un-‘, dena, Cal, president or the Trail-, attitude will have considerable in-' Arbor, Professor of Cllnica1I.n- vestigation, University of Michi- gan, in a special article on Diet and Nutrition in the Journal of t-he American Medical Association gives these food tables that should be known in every home. The first table gives the foods' eaten by the average city man. do- ing office or light physical work. It consists of 1 pound of potatoes. 1 pound of white flour, 1-2 pound of meat, l-4 pound of sugar, 1-8 giiim, Poland, and Czechoslovakia.) plebiscite, Herr Hitler said: "We have no more territorial claims to make of France." In May. I-lei-r I-Ilt‘e_'r reiterated his adherence to the Lccarno pact. In March, 1936. Ge:man troops occupied the demllltarized Rhine- land. Said Herr Hitler: “We have no territorial demands malce in Europe. Germany has Following the | ,neither the wish nor the intention ,to mix in internal Austrian affairs, .or to annex or unite with Aus- pound of fat, is total of 3200 cslor- ma." les. Roughly, this diet only gives‘ (lime) I vitamins one-fifth of the calcium and oiie-tliirid of the necessary for good or abundant health. This is called an ‘inade- quate’ diet. The second table Dr. Newburgh calls the “simplified adequate" (or‘ sufficient) diet for those with a small income, This simplified but siilficicnt diet consists of milk, l quart-; 1 pound of cabbage or other green leaves or fruit; 1 pound whole wheat bread; 1-2 pound po- tatoes; 1-4 pound fats —— butter substitutes. lard, vegetable fats. This gives a total of 3000 calories and supplies all the necessary lime and vitamins. It will be seen that no meat is allowed, owing to the expense. As this simplified adequate diet may not be sufficiently "interest- ing" to one who can afford to buy adequate but more expensive foods, Newburgh gives what he calls Dr the “wholly consists of : adequate" diet It 1 pint milk; 3 ounces of cream: 2 eggs; 1 pound fruits and green leaves; flour, bread, cake—1-3 pound; 1-2 pound meat or fish or poultry; 1-4 pound but- ter; 2 ounces of sugar. This wholly adequate diet gives all the food including sufficient It is the land that freemen till, 'I‘hat sober-suited Freedom chose, The land, where girt with friend; or foes A man may speak the thing he ill‘ W . A land of settled government, A land of just and old renown, Where Freedom broadens slowly down From precedent to precedent; Wheggad faction seldom gathers But by degree to f 1 The S5l‘n8Dh sot iioiirieigs thought H8.t«l'5lp;/?Y;l§.Nld space to work and —-Tennyson. is 1‘ "5 , E bat“-'\c»(Kc N f |“'I . x DH: guru Tilassy tftmachs E flefieved Every per on who is troubled with gas in the stomach and bowel: should get I bottle of Dr. Evans Stomach Mixture and see how quickly it will re- lieve all distressing symptoms. Sharp pains in the abdomen or about the heart are often due entirely to gas pressure. Dr. Evans stomach Mixture taken at meal time not only nrevents all bad effech from (as, but It romotes the func- tlonal at-tlv iv of the sioirueli I sign di lion and lmprm (‘I the appe te. - Dr. Evans stomach Mlxlurr is sold onl at the Two Man at 35¢ per ottle. Get Your Bottle Today. BATHING CAPS We have t received a new supply or thing Caps and Beach Bags In the very latest styles and color. | Prices from about ll.oo. ___...._._.._ SPECIALS , DODDS KIDNEY PILLS 39¢ per. box And again: “What do we Germaris want of the world? Nothing at all. We want to be let alone. We want to respect ihe frontiers of others. just as we expect others to respect our fronileis.” Herr Hitler made a radio speech in February, 1938, after conferring with Chancellor Schuschnlgg of Austria, to say that he was guaran- teeing the independence of Austria. German troops marched into Aus- tria in March, 1938. Herr Hitler said: "Germany wants only peace. she does not want to add to the sor- raw of other nations." But the passing months. last summer brought ominous signs. A crisis developed in September. German troops occupied 5ucleten- land. Mr. Chamberlain Herr Hitler as saying: “Thts is the end of our territorial claims in Europe." And in a radio address he said: "We have no more wishes or de- mands. We want peace." And in November of last year: "We ant nothing but to g t on lime and vitamins. The only sug- gestion is that where iodine is not present in the soil iodized salt should be used to prevent goitre. These three tables, the inade- quate, the simplified adequate and the wholly adequate, should enable all of us to know whether or not we are eating the right kinds and amounts of the foods that main- tain health. wfih our work in peace," The but everyone recalls. March of this year saw Herr Hitler seize all of Ozechoslovakla, then Memel. l and establish a “prof/ectorate" over *, Slovakia then Slovakia has come: completely under German military control. ___%m l WHITE INN PEPPER JAM 1 (Sweet Remove seeds from six sweet ripe 2 red bullnose peppers. Put through‘ the meat chopper and sprinkle with salt. Let stand three or four; hours and then clralii well. Rinse with cold water, drain, put lni kettle and add 1 1-2 cups white ll UV OMETIMES the alter- sfleeli oi lire Ira Iboul in bad a. the fire Hall. For lnslsncs-where would you live while youv home was being rebuilt ails: I ltve—and who would pay your renl? Six or eight monllu rent expense on top of every- thing also would be no ioke, believe moi , age to a house is one that -.5 ram" 'ThIi pveblern was solved for mo in liq limo by the agent oi lhe Naiional Fire Insurance Company of Hsrtlord. He Ii“ ranged Rental Insurlncl protection for mo -3! unbelievably law cosl—arid now, i! my home should bum, my rent in tempor- Ivy quarter: would be paid by ibis insur- ance. ll's simple-doesn't cost much. and it run mighl be very inlportanil" W. K. ROGERS AGENCIES LTD Customers ihr 3 T0 ADVERTISEMEN S-—COPY— cur . ARTWO'RK—WRl'l‘E UP to Advertisers ‘in T iiiuiirnii All SE Simple Plion CHARLOTTETOWN oughout Prince E will always - - ' ' .sror Y ARRANGED T OR ANNOUNCEMENT READ A PROPERL supvlled “"5°‘“m he Chm-lotieiow EYE through the facilities of e i32—0ur COW "V'“" \/ ill; Mia liittmlanliimllmtiiiti lilllilllmliillt. = ~ nit Auction sales call out dward Island RATl0NS—-IDEAS ILLUST S__RE ADERS y FREE n Guardian. the ll\l|BE BUREAU Going, coma. GONE AND sow T0 - i doesn’t require the services of an nuciinneer 0 sell our product. It sells on its record. naiurally ask for HICKEY'S BLACK TWIST 10c Per Fig gar. Stir unfil:si.EV“ then bo.l lllllll itah sistency of honey «It im,n"stoii. lly) Seal well With wax nan‘ ewe’ [0 the Jar as well. i R T ‘T ATTA('Hll\'G GARAGE To HOUSE OFFERS riiosu:v' The [)l‘0lll?l'll- of aztaehing 3 3” difficult to solve. ' of the garage, \K'lll(‘ii:lhCa1'tia:)Kpe3nd‘I’?r‘ llufilllly. are geiit-i'iill_v 100 C0; spicious and do not hsririoiiiu with the rest of the exterior, It i, very desirable to i ate the garage so that the tlDOr.~‘ will not be in front of the lllllltllllg, mi; ,0 me side or rear. 1iAY1«:s.T1«:Tii?ia7.ii—: on _ the bulge-Si‘llOOlI(1f i.lii= eaiial barges - -llils been moored iii/' sles" - -childreii of the crews this Middlesex village as 3 5mm. "°"“"' If you are having symptoms of strain—headacties, gar; eyes or diulness — consult a spec. ialisi. At your service with years of experience and a thorough retracting service, :‘ Call in and discuss your dil- flcultles. G. F. Hutchesnii G. F. IIUTCIIESUN. F. G. HUTCHES N Will Call on You _j . ‘l. plenty of buyers but 1 people Mn. Torn itlnrlre, Ilrll woman mayor of Dublin, refuses to don the robe; of office on the ground that they are ‘red raga from the -British period as is the charter of had to be Dublin." The Lady Mayor seems to be I more ardent and unbend- ing Natltlrnsllst than any of ‘the. . mere in e Lord Me on who e- he was knighted by ceded her in otiiui -— nontgrssli .....-..~..A.,_=L._,._. __ __ I PABLUM 45¢ per box ! VINOLIA cA§'riL£ soar i I l I at its origin. It was he who represeiiievl Lord llriden-l’mvell at the Aiislrniizin Scout Corro- boree held in 1936, during the great Australian Centenary Celebration. (In coiiiicction with this, the work he had been doing at I.l‘I.Q. divided among seven different pr,-oplci). It was for such services, in coiiiicctioii both with Scout- ing and Girl Guiding, that 519: Qeorse L’-. rlreatlnaiiglits, Nazi Gerinany could muster just two batilcsliips. the, 20,000-ton Scharnhnrst and . Giieisenau. (At least they \VCl"e~lall|1Cl‘IPd long ‘i ago and supposed to be in emnmission by now, although rt-inarkably little has been heard of them.) The 35,ooo—ion Bismarck and Von_'Fir- pitz laiinclicd this spring will not be finished until next year at the earliest. ' The io,ooo-ton “pocket battleships" Q‘ 1111 ‘EAST POINT TO NORTH (I.-iI’E" Manufactured bl’ . lilGI(EY and Nlcflolsilnl TOBACCO co..1'rn.. CharI°“°‘° 4 ».. i0 CAKES 25¢ ilio 2 MACS III Gill! .0003! ltnfl I 1 i 1 n