PAGE FOUR ff“ T_l:I_E CHARLO'I"I‘ETO\VN (LULARDIAN SEPTEMBER 4, 1942 I THE "TIT" ciiiuitorrrrowii GUARDIAN Morning Dally iFounded In 1837) President: Lieut. Col. W. Chester S. Dill-l!!!" Yicg President: J, R, ‘Burnett, IXLLDSO Secretary: Lit-m. Col. l). A. alacKlnnon, "l. ii‘ Editor and Managing DIYBFI-Dr. J. L. glurn; inn-puke‘ Associate Editors: hunk “BIKE! and “n - SUBSCRIPTION RATES u‘ , , ,, -l.il0 ar- $2.50 for 6 mon s By NIEHSWiEJITErIII lsllflllllfifieirsflfl fill‘ "l"? mum‘ h i - ~ -. '-_ » i» - $3.00 for 6 mo!“ 5 i’ C“Y$l'§§"1‘..'§ xsliiligniilfifsblldllrc’ for one lllfllllh . ' . » -- - -- $5.00 im- w" By “all to utliir l ruinices and L‘ 5 '\ 0mm . , i .1“ »; 53,00 per year; . 0 for 5 m i Saturday “B1 3 50c for 3 mumhs 1 .. btalned at The Churlolletmvu (an id i} 1113K h}? o,“ Yo“. liotallingis News .\;;i-1 i, limes §q\h\l‘€, . w ‘ . . -. (‘ ‘.\lilk and ‘Vashlnfi P" gggtzgiliplilafqlvoi 111 Xiwislflgrgeney, 1248 Peglt 5:1 Montreal: J. lfiiie Ilbl B1)’ 5!;- 'l'",':°'¥"_“i_ Nsfgsd £61m’ Chateau Luui-ii-r. (‘Ilia a‘; “olfes .1 B bury Ont , llub lunar-cu shop, Aluuclfln - - - than the "The Stronqest MemorY ii Walks’ Weakest Ink." su-lczuistcii 4. 1942 ‘lltc Soviet and The Church "1 1-1;;-; 111 knit-iv." 011 the flu“? i‘ l. ,11~,i.l pic future (if IC- hgmn in m, g 4 111c- possible co-oper~ h,‘ 1. . 1 wilt-s wiilt the Soviet “It is the plain ._,1i 1pc 1ir11pagaliun of w iiiiicizilly- hampered at _ Riissizm Christians [ll produce £1 lllflll l as brave ziiiil loyal l2. yillffii: this wzir seem . 11c iilfiCllll dislike of st 1i lifillilltjtl Marxists a- ' ~,;.; .31. 11m deny these facts. ~ _11v iilicrs who are not i iikably convinced ill L l‘ belief that re- - between us, They ., ,-1s is right, ti1ai1il_y' t0 r 111111 if ‘it value right their (1'.'.:1 w _ , . ..i1~,,1{1 of that bridge tut of c: might l» "Xoi- is possible. lull‘ it is now l‘-'il‘l have any in" cause lc~~ share izi ‘ "Ir 411114‘ i -- iilicr way, wholly im- izippeii, and in Cl 55115!‘- piialism may cease to .11 orguiiisctl religion be- . rim-s i1 have any effective , of i-ur social ITIZIIIOIIFIIIPS. .1.~'i1‘e to believe that capital- 1i can stirvive this war. ItS ‘witht-riiig :1\\':1v ily make a vast diff?!‘- cnce to the Qrxiciuvc of the Llrtglish cllililYll. l' ._ 111w zhe sort 0f Lhurch which fins-cu: k““ii‘.'.l‘.lllll>l Lfi1ri~tiai1s could under- staml. ppm. m, 111.; l'lll-~filll >lilU it is clear that all the PM, < »~ f, ' iliszibilities visited upon (iiri- , .. -- 'i1|[ sizuiiped thcni out, and ism in its iilfl f ' have no 111-.1..1.-C_ 1.1‘ 1i11iiig so. Nor have they i; 1',- 1...t illcgitiiiiztte to hope that i11 i113 end 11C llu 51m government will see 111,11 ji< ("Kim-cit can i»; lu-ougiit ivithin the util- {111-111 \\i11>I.~111-“ 1"" \\lll§ll 1t craves. _ I>I1I ,1“, ,,.‘.\.,111 ' ‘iii-r; is .1 Russian Church and liicr chy m1. whom contact can be made; 111e,? 15311 “kw gt‘, <~\-,11 amid ilic fog 0f will‘. the Iicumeiiical l\i11\'t‘ll'.:!lf, to 1iroviile a method of QQHIIICI‘ ;1-.i<l lie u}... iii-ire than any living niiln has mad» Illlil muiiRlt-il that movement is now l\rrl1bisi1op of (‘z-uiteiliur): I11 these facts in tire religious spiwrc llQs‘ lite surest ground of hope. Fertilizer Subsidy z ii n Under {he Diillllllitlll plan 0f paying 5ubf ventioiis On feri‘ izcr used 0n feed crops approxi- mately 1751a») li‘lilt‘l'$ iii the five Eastern Prov- inces “,1 11, 1' .11 (joluuibia have so far receiv- ed Subgpigp; 1111» the 13113 spring season. Continu- ance of this pcilicy 11:1; been ziuihorized until Dc- cember, 1943. \\'i‘.li coittiuuctl commitments for bacon (ind (IfllUY (‘\~£'llll.'ll f0O(l PfOflUCl5 to be Shipped to liiijjlziiiil zuiil the iucrlcasili-g dCllld-lld for similar pri ducts 111 Criiizida, 1t is more im- portaut than cvcr ilirit the yv-‘lili 0f fem-l "OPS be maintained. Subsidies will be paid in the fall of I943 for fertilizers i1» be ll‘l'(l ou pastures, ineadoivs arid fall \\'llt'.'" To use available fcrilizcr sup- plies a5 rffisit 1i_\'1i\' posulili‘ llil‘ Ffllilllcrsghd‘ iniuisiixiiui- in or». '11i1.11 with the National Aqroipuiiic t31111<11 i-rcoiiiiiiiaids the i156 0i the (,_1_-.i. _».1_».1, 111111 121p 4-12-0 as generally the 1mm Cc,.,,,,11,,,-;1i 1‘ .1< 11.1; 111i the crops specified in 11“. 1'1“. ' 1,11 1'1'1.vi11c<-s, (Jther mixtures for gfyils ]'(‘i1l_1:I',1 it ;ii 11v; llillfhil, lllC LZ-IZI-IO Zttltl lllE O-IZ-IO are "1»:1,111 Tlilvil, Illl'l on soils requiring more pliosplizit h 1 (bill-ll. 'l‘l1e standard chenil- cals, so far as ilzi are available, are also eligible for H“. mi _ | 1. ,\';1111i11nl Agronomic Com- mittee iuriiiii s‘ 111 ".i.l1‘.‘l'.$ from each province and me i)1,111,111..11 i>.~p.-1ri111.~11i of Agriculture and acts as n11 :11l\~i_.,<,~_1- (‘wltlllllllPC to the Ifertililel‘ A(llllilll~ll‘1ll<il'. '1'pL.;,111.,1-,.-1.,1' .11l1\i<l_v:1ll<1\ve<l is based 0n 3o cruis- 11:.- 11" 1 ifiiiw-evii null I5 mils P63" uiiit LJlCll i-i p.111 1E1 trig acid and potash. This workw- out :11 f4.'.;i> :1 ion for ilk‘ 04-36 l‘) $390 11 11,11 fwi‘ i1;~- pig-ii :1111l $11-10. On signing >1 fairm swim; 1L11~ use lllPr-C ferliliZefS 011 th¢ crops 111111 l, f .11 r- arr alloived the amount of 111C 5111,." ..1'1 priri» of the fertilizer when making their lilllTli .1 'l’l1c seller" of the fertiliz- er is ti1<>11 ixpid in, :'..1~ iliiiililliwll (iovcriimcnt. Bureaucracy rind The War Th1- evluiit to l‘ liirii (Eiitzuliriiis are Subniiliitg _,, 1,,,1-_.,111¢1-;111',~ 11.111111].- 11f all kinds in order to fi1ril1:-i' liu‘ \\'IlI' effort is lrttiillillfl more apparent n; 111111- 11.,“ ~11, 'll1~s<- controls arc necessary iii 11~_l»l1-il1t-ii.'1ti11ii to focus its en- 11‘ ;1~>ii1»ii with an ecoiionty of lziblisiierl and zthfitit l0 lJC over labour. over man- power mil iiiwviliij :11 lli, 11v. r \\'Il'{l_‘ prire<, though l\tlllll‘1it‘-ll_\' :1 ,1 \‘.i e tlic irttioii i5 “Tlflllll "total wzir," '1 fill‘: ilii- ailniiiiisiratinii of the country tnirrr l 1111111‘ into the lianrls of Ii buivaucrzicyg "—ll'l\\' a regular army of officials ii1111-11f v,'.'1i' 1111i (rLIIQQ 111111 1-11 >1 —\vl1icli tiiay desire to perpetuate ilfi hOld 0V6!‘ the tiatiott when the need fOr its (‘Xiilcllfif i8 Phl- Tlie Montreal Gazette, recognizing this danger discusses the problem pointedly: “Under existing conditions Canada needs this bureaucracy. Canadian citizens recognize that many of the men who compose it are serving the nation well, often at great inconvenience to themselves, and from tnutiveS that are purely patriotic. They are 111211 who have left their o\v11 affairs in order to serve their c0u11try_ Their civic spirit is beyond praise. Under and about them, however, there is grow-lug tip an official body that is coming under stispiciun, not of the ordinary kind, but suspicion of :1 tendency, of an attitude and state of mind, that are definitely un- democratic. Some of these officials, at any rate, appear to cherish the idea that they are not in office for the duration i1iercl_v' but will go 011 in the peace years doing exactly as they are doing 110w, regimentiiig and controlling. . “This tendency 11111>'t be stopped if free enter- prise and imliviilual iuitative are i0 be restored when the war is over, Unless they are restored, Canada, cannot hope to progress. The various Ottawa boards, as the Vancouver Province has said, get things done, they shear through red tape, make short cuts, and achieve restilts. lut they do it at a cost. “It is vital,’ says the I‘rovii1ce. "that (Einzulizms see that the cost is not too great and that if d-ies not involve the abrogation of their liberties for a moment longer titan is ab- soliitely necessary. To this end it is important that our temporary INllllllllSlTIlfOIS be reminded constantly how tempuraryr is tlieirtenitre 0f office and that they be restrained front exercising any more power than is absolutely necessary to the discharge of their functions." - EDI IURIAL NOItS— Of the 0,500,000 Ilritons who pay income tax noiv only So have an income of £6,000 ($28,700) or more after all taxes are paid. In 1958 7,000 persons had an income of £6,000 or more after all taxes were paid * * I I The Toronto Star Says .\Ir. humble man and the Utiawa Citizen responds tiiat everybody else is so, too, since Mr’ Ilsley went to work on them. S0 also Uriah lleep, as Dickens took particular trouble t0 emphasis. s- :- n- v Ilsley i5 a very john \\'ai1:11n:1kcr wrote: "If there is one en- terprise on earth that the quittcr should let alone. it is advertising. .\rl\'erii.=iii1 docs not jerk —it pulls, It bsgins gently at first but the pull is Sl€fld_v_ It increases day by day, year by year, until it exerts an irresistible power." i i‘ 1F 1|! “.~\rt" Ilruce will be itiissed more than many who lived fifty per cent loniyr 11nd held much more prominent public positions. He ivas a like- alile fellow, happy, congenial, soft spoken, and above all genuine. lie did his bit in the last \\'2ll‘. suffering the consequences. and entered heart and soul into warivork iii the present hostilities, lle will be greatly missed as a vocalist, as :1 man, and as a friend of lll(‘ll. 11: n- o n Hudson River, the beautiful and iinportziiit waterway in New York Mate, discovered this date, I609 by lleiiry Iludsoii, who subserpieiitly explored it in i609; rises in Adirondack Moun- tains, having a totzil length of 350 miles, 15o miles 0f which are tidal; about 00 miles from its ed mouth, the river passes through picturcstpie high- lands; Iludson zifterivards sziilctl to the Arctic, hoping to find a North-West imssage to India, and (ll5COVCfCLl instead Hudson Strait 211111 llay; 011 his last voyage in i611 his crew itiutiitied, Hudson and other officers being cast adrift and never heard of again. 1k IF 1F ll Official proof that the Germans have signally failed either by promise 0r threat to draw suffici- ent numbers of workers from occupied territor- ies to work in German war factories is furnished by a decree 0f Reich Labor Dictator Fritz Saukel that henceforth ziil manpower in these territories must be mobilized to serve pi'iii1z1ril_v it not exclusively the German war effort inside Germany proper. Much of the nianiioiver of coit- quered countries will noiv be transferred t0 Ger- many, probably by conscription, the fifty-six- hour week minimum is to be illlfOtlllCCd every- where, and Sunday and holiday work rendered compulsory whenever tiecessary. The decree also affects war prisoners. n- w m a IIon. Louis St. Laurent, the Minister of jus- tice, recently ordered the release of “certain i11- teritees," (Communists iiirltitletl) (says Winni- peg Bulletin) but refused t0 make public their names. His pretext for this refusal was that to be "branded" as 0.\'~illlCI‘l](‘(‘S would ltaiidiczip their efforts to reestablish themselves as repiit- able citizens. Some of the released men have now reached home, and without even pausing to breathe have begun to itiake speeches, write let- ters to the newspapers, and otherwise engage themselves, getting as much publicity’ as possible for themselves as ex-ititcruees. If Mr. Si. Laurent had realized that transparencies are nO longer considered amusing, he would have ltaiid- ed out the names with the warning: “Light your smudges, folks: here comes the plague of Ot- tawa-inade martyrs. " a 1 s a Tlie New Zcalaurl Labor Government under Mr. Fraser formed the present .\'.'1tioii.'il \V:1r .'\(ltllilIlSll‘i'Ill0ll, which is coinposeil of seven Gov- ernment members and six from the (lpposilion. It is carr_vi11g on the war with vigor and deter- mination, and it has forbidden strikcs_ The needs of war, as The New York Titties put it on Fri- day, have precedence over social advancement aiid the Industrial (‘ourt has rr-jcctcil a workers' application for fresh ivzigc i: ‘rerises. This is total \v.'ir in :1 sister lloininiou 11nd tinder a. National War Ailiuiiiistration controlled by the Labor Party. The New Yorlc 'l'imes says: "New Zea- laiid spares no effort and 11o sacrifice. Like Aus- tralia, the other '_vi1tltlg <l1~1i1i>vmtii~ nation of thi" Pacific, to use an expression of .\lr. Fraser's, slic is giving and doing her utmost to keep demo- cracy from extinction." Canada is not, In more than one respect this l)oii1i1iir»11's war effort falls below that of Nriv Zealziiiil (says .\lonti'cr1l (Jaz- ctts), (‘amirlu has no National War z\(ll1lilliS- tratioii. (fanada tlOC§ not forbid, or at any rate does not prevent, strikes in war industries. f INOTES BY ‘HIE WAY The Revenue Minister has very klndly furnlshd tables for the lh- come tax deductions. Now if he will only supply chairs while we sit down to think 1L ove:'t"—Wood- stock Sentinel Review. Proflteers In Afghanlsan are hav- ing their ears pinned back. The muyol‘ of Kkllliillhfll‘ ordered a. num- be: of butchers, suspected of o'er- ehargtng their customers. “ to be trailed by the ears" to thelr snap doors for two hours. . Professor Irving Fisher, of Yale, who Ls ffigflldlld as something of an expert; on taxation, has been udvls- lng the Senate finance ccirmittee at Washington to tax spending and exempt saving. Taxing savings, says Prof. Fisher, amounts to kill- ing the goose that lays golden eggs. It may yield more today. but to- morrow iiizd thrcught the tomor- ioivs tihere will be progressively less -vaticouver Province. It ls now revealed that. nearly ‘l0 Si. LHWICIIC} ritual-sized freighters have been turned over to the Aci- mLzility for saltwater service, If it be cioiibtcd that they are capable of such duty it need only be recalled that; most of these vexels, small though they are, were built abroad and crossed the Atlantic to this continent under their own power. Many of them ire, moreover, larger than the Slllilll-bvpt.‘ tramp steamers which ply regularly in Bcettn service. —Br0ckville Recorder and Times. —If Is of more than passln Inter- est to letirn from Ottawa that nylon 11s now made in the Kingston ll’l- dustry. is adjudged better for para- chutes than the silk which itsed to be imported from Japan and Italy. Hereafter Canada can be free from dizpenditnce upon these two e11 |~.1_v countries for this ini- portant tnziterinL-Jiingston Whig- Standard. The fantastic war-lime earnincs of child en-a question which mops up nearli/ every day-is u great: and growing evil. It ls not only corrupting the tastes. outlook, mid fu-zure of bDys and girls just our of school, but is tiiidermiifig bite stability of family life. Nob: .1 iris the ziglit. to cast stones at these children. If a boy is paid mcre than his father ever cut-tied in his life, what. ls lie to do? Refuse to take “time rate for this job"? And if‘ such tmwontcd affluence goes to his ltend. who is to blame him for lacking the balance of maturity? He may want pizcntal dirertion, for the father itiuy be in the Se!"- vlces and the itiotlicr 011 war work, at the behest of the c yllllllllliy. It, is therefore the clutv 0f the community to rare for tins bay and the many like him-London Dn.ly Mull. A tomb of’ popular iitcresf near the front in All Sai 1's Cluir-cli, Maiden, is that of Edward‘ B- who died 1750, aged He w _, ed 44 stones, i616 pounds», m(~__‘111»_ ed zouucl the test 5 round the stem: ., 612. round the middle or i115 2 in, and round 11's 1c: 2 ft. 8 111., being 5 f1. 9 1-2111, 1n liciglit. his death a wn could be button iviiiiiii his WJlSt- cant was decided :1: tlic Black Bull, Maiden, w‘ 111 uct only the five "1911 Ploptse but seven nun, wt |\ actually eiic cl flier-tan wzthcut b coking a st .ch or sirziinliig a button. The said waisccat ls still prescrrccl-Canon I. L. Seymour, in London Tiriics. New England ingenuiLv has scor- nncilic big triunmlt in the AYmSKr de on to zidtpt rubber- less Annuals for its lll(‘ll. at a 51i- 1112 of more than one and 1111.0- quaiuer pcuncs of crude rubber iii-r cont. It_l1.1.; found a ilcrfeci sub- stlttite in \\'.llll. is cctnine cially called Suflex, thanks :0 a Framing- ham scientist, Joseph L, Hflgg This tough, resilient pInStLc would ordinarily have gone into safely glass windows and Wllldivlllcldfi, bur its ticlapntlon fc1'_11_1_1y‘ 115g W111 Sin-e n5 mu“! Q5 l_7..>u.i,uilt) pounds o‘; rubber on ranicoats tilone, wluli fuihcr bellClLlS to be derived for its use lll liospaal sheeting 11nd gas protective cloth as well. -—B0s!.0n Pose. _ As lltougli Il-were a relatively m1. lmpoftlillb piece of news, u few 11mg fllluotintxd the other day 11111; 111C Nazis have alreiicly incited between Lwgiptyf and’ twenty-five thousand ei into uni IXIUILIIOIIS. Civlliz. titiun had to ilpcn for centuries bu. fore men came to appreciate the sound of bells. That, 59111111 15 fllrioilgst the most ClVlllZQd 1101505 vvlilth human being make, $111,311 M it is witn its innumerable overtones N135 by flceidetit have bells bee 11¢; “sscclfllid will! U19 most. sclcinit and Elly QXIH-‘Yifll s known to man- kind. An umlei urrent 0f tiituur-m and feeling bus giudvu this CIIUTCC Even lire bells, sitirtlzng as llley wtl have u highly social puck ground Some tinagaiative historian has if fearful chapter awaiting him wner ‘kill?Tlllllslgllllllflllfit: of this enthus- til-Ellie Nazi conversion of Germany's sacdfdillll) instrumciitg OI <~,@511~11C1<,,,1, _ out in [Lcpgy prospective against m‘? slllTli-IBU’ 0f these times. -—Pr0vldence Bulletin. Many perso_g (011119 are Inc regret over attitudes lweflldllegf. able not only in 113110,“ o; at Wm‘ acllvlll’. but EISCOWIIEFO Llirogti fi- out the United States Al; an; same time, those concerned with w; liéine front hear a growing pm. lfdlilst the tippazent itiulffer- cnce of some Americans toward success In the ivztt". Less, ltowevei" seems lo be said about. the fact t-hiif mcml attitudes and the winning of ‘he “i” bmr a clcse relation to each other, Either because ~90 "Iflfly fellr that they may be 1311110“ puiintnlcal if they lltkg 11 5111M m,- i‘ high mOF-"lllll. 0r because they mve not considered the mutter at, all, HWY "Ct us if motility temper. 811W. lempernteness, were’ Win10“; Vlml beflmlll in onilitary enterprise. War _for a great integration of enefgles. not the lasslbudc that follows the Irilteriiig away of en. CTZY- UHIO-Rs we free peoples are 531F901 by moral demands. mid supported by them, we will not. 50011 wln the war against Hitler and his powerful allies. But if we aze con- stantly guided by something mag we know ls in keeping wltih 1119 1,951, in us, we slmll 11in the concentrat- ion and the dr ve that stieccssful wnrfnze requIros-Chrlstlan science Monitor (Boston). The lllarlllme provinces have, In one icspem, been ln the war-life 11nd hrart, nnd.llmb-lonzer than any other part of Canada. In lite now distant, strange days of "bore" war before Dunkirk when many m the Dominion were resting in com- placency, the Marltlmes could see the grim ships of battle riding ln - ‘>- Work Well Done (N. Y. Herald Tribune) The Canadian Aviation Bureau- a. small but potent azerwv which helped more than 6.100 flying Imerlcans t0 join the Brltlsh and Canadlan at: tomes and ferfY commands before Pearl Harbor — was packing up its records YB‘- terday on one sixteenth floor of the Waldorf-Astoria nnd preparing to close. Its work was done. Today Americans who want. to fight. in lhe skies or Instruct pilots mllbl d0 so through agencies of the United States. But during the as months of its life, particularly from June, I940, to October, 1941. the bureau, with its l5 offices and too emDIOYNS. played a powerful part tn the Allies‘ war effort, Through ll the American E8818 squadron in England received fly- ing personnel which blasted scores or Nazi planes fzom the skies. Most: pilots of the early trans-At- lantic ferry command. WhlCh kept bunkers flying to Britain, Came from its rolls. In June, 1940, after IPrance fell and beleagueicd Britain no lonzer could provide Instructors for the Royal Canadian Air Force. the bureau sent American Instructors to Canada, and this saved Canada 530900.000 in cost-s of training new instructors. The saving benefited America five Limes over, After Pearl Har- bnr, when the United States awoke to war. this country was sadly short of flyiniz teachers. Bv Pavement with the Canadian Government. the Unlled States sent a special train, commanded by a general and an admiral, tn Canada to bring back carloads of lnstzuctors. It is estimated that the Amer:- can saving in cost of instructor training was about $l50.000,000 because, after a year on the job in Canada, the teachers were far moze competent than when they set. out, strangest feature of the bureau's work, considering the great record of its flyers, is that it. sent. to Canada and abroad only men who had been turned down by the nir services of the United States, or who were not eligible to fly for their own country be- cause they lacked two years of i11iive.sity education. N0 pilots were solicited. But so many Americans wanted b0 f even though their own country turned them down, that the liiireati never lacked aopllcattls. Even after a mcgi was oksiyed in this country, he was not pe~ml‘.‘.c'l to join up until he got to Canada and looked over his prospecllve outfit. If he decided to back down. his return ticket to his country was provided. Homer Smith, a Canadian citizen who hits lived In America for 25 years. the director and founder of the bureau, is about to leave for Washington as alt‘ attache to llhe Canadian Ilegallon with the rank of wing commander. Most of the otiltci" supervising personnel alreudv are in service. Mystery Of Old Hickory (From The Printed Word) Andrew Jackson ivas rm ignorant man. It ivas generally ageed that tlizs must be so because he missed school due to being wounded ln the American Revolution when he was twelve mic! due to being busy from then 0n fighting duels and Indians and the battle of New Orleans. They called him Old Hickory be. cattse be was tough, but they had smnli respect for his learninq. In tne Presidential election of 1824 he was opposed by the New Enqmnu Sf‘llClfl'., John Quincy Aduas. A dilly went the rounds during the carripnigii, setting out the respective inc: s cf the candzdates: Jackson “'90 m" fight or Adams who can iziisfz.'*iiiri “"".‘31“““ 911 rum s c on m}; Cumbe land. pan a ‘on on c“ ILAW jigtiiing of an edu- OVERDUE Her funnels crushed with salt. and m 81' E. Nine weeks from port, and the hell of a tlme, I-Ier stanclilons twisted, boats stove-in, And its "Notify her next 0f kln:" For three of her men were 10st that day When a green sea swept her bridge 8W8)’, And twill) were lost when a U-boat l9 Carried nway her wlieel as well: Her crew dog-weary, unshaven, gaunt, with redlrlmmed eyes, No pleas- ure jntmt This trip In a damaged cargo- boat, “Whose riddled ltull will scarcely on . She's overdue these three weeks past, And] eyery day they thought he: as ' gone, a. fireman Her skipper! dead, Her mate below with s broken head, I-Ier forehold leaking, her steering- gear smashed and battered beyond reps r. Her cargo shifted, ' her wlrelesl gone. It seemed that ship and crew were done. such the havoc the U-boat wrought, Yet now up-Channel she llmps t0 port. Eight men tn their sudden dun. gllYECS Whoye fourtlit with death in the outer seas. —By H. I. Bhlpton In 'I_‘ne_ Navy, Iondon. —————-+ ~— I tihelr harbors, and their streets re- sounding to the tread of the United Nations long before Mint. nrme was thought of. Today those eastern rozts see much of the torrent of wnr goods that ls pouring across the Atlantic. They see the (thousands of eager, young Ctlnndlan nlrmen, soldiers and sailors on their wav to meet the enemy. Here ls felt n silrge made more tingling by tne knowledge that. beyond this last lnt. of Canada lies the foe. Hard it. by years of depression, the Marl- time provinces have moved forward vigorously. Its heavy industries and turning out a great flood of vital war products; it's coal ls feeding one flames of victory; its farms fisher- lea, forests and mines a all play- ing their full part ln otsnlng tho stnews of wm-Irlnsnclal Post. 1 ATTENTION 01= 1111 CITIZ. INS The following communication has been received by me and specks for itself:- "Depanmeng of National War Services, Ottawa. His Worship Mayor B. Roy Hvlmfl". Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. Dear Mr. Mayor: I am enclosing a copy of a letter which I have today written to the churches and religious organ- izations of Canada. _ b k It is our desire that every possible step e ta en lo urge upon the citizens of this land the great- est possible attendance at the churches as indi- cated and I would greatly appreciate it if you and your ‘Council would give consideration to this and rake such steps by way of proclamation, publicity, and organization as you may see m, to see that the wishes expressed herein are met'by Ute p180?- est possible number o! those who Ilve within the bounds o! your municipality. Yours truly. (Sgd) T. C. DAVIS Associate Deputy Minister." B. ROY HOLMAN Mayor t except to rend forty §ZllZ§§l>e‘l-Z.“§1Z .11.... these pipers carefully io Bi\'?_h11“ a “my 8°“ sampling of Opmwn 3°!“ “l1 "filler me LWellty-SGVEII or s0 states ihu-h made up the US. ln those Gill's- Like another homespun mail 0i great, heart, the late Will ROI-WIS Old Hickory knew nothing IXI-‘ellt h, what he read 111 the PBl-WYS- All" four years of littering the house with all the Issues of forty new:- pnpers, Andrew Jackson bud an- other tiy for the Presidency. This tine he overwhelmed Adams and he remained Chief Executive for eight years, the greatest. President between Jefferson and Lincoln. Even then some people iusiswd that he must be ignorant because he hadn't been to school. "All 11¢‘ leads is the newspapers." they said» They never could understand MW 9-4-5.‘ liable reports. But because much of the farm work ln Erin-ope ls al- ways perfoimed by women and chll- dren, mobilization of manpower 1n- to trite armed services may not. b: so deterlmeittal as it would be ‘n Canada. Extraordinary effort was madam Germany to mobilize labor for farm work. All farmers are required-lo work longer hours, including Sun- nnder two years; from July 1, 1940. L "'"'""""“"“mme¢ WORDS OF CHALLENGE _.._._. “We cm wln out, and we must; wln out, and I still be. llcve that we will wln 1m. bill; lb Olin only be by 1; 10m; > effort made up of the 11111 contribution of each 111111 every Individual." I-ton. 1.0111, at. Laurent, Minister of Ju5_ lice. octoooqx ggoggflclency running 1,11 em.“ “of An order requlr a rallve otflclsls antllngflatilonaalirfrl%h clubs: Party officials tn ism-o‘ Iorralno during the plllllflriu 593:‘ to spend three weeks on £21111.“ lleu of annual leave Indicates a 11,1“ labor shortage in tha ion 313g‘ lmllar conditions 01,-,‘ Norway, Slovakia France Itilla Hungary and Rumimla. ' y o§§fih Souris Exhibition Wednesday, Sept. 9th, mud-- ‘oflflqnunnnnnnn-nnnnnnnnsucnnn Special prizes donated by Townsend & St. John, 3011,19 One Bag Dairy ration for n1 best dairy herd, a One Bag Laying ma h the best breeding 115911 ti: poultry, L1§.’°§l?.!..l’5"i2.'i1'§£:§=,j3,,g' P31- "W yell-s and over and junior on‘; Ages calculated ERNEST UNDERHAY President, n. F. McAULAY, Secretary +o+o+oooo+++wo+onuh lL-l-Zl Professional Bards days and holidays. In January the -——~~ number of boys and girls 14 years and over mnde subject to compul- sory farm labor was raised tn 200,- 000. Farmers in the army were given furluughs to May l to work on the fimn. Effective April t s11 persons in rural districts were re- qulzed to work on farms. Later all qualified women and girls includ- ing domestic servants 1n u an cen- tres were mobilized into farm labor McLEOD a. BENTLETYVTT W. I. HENLEY, K. C. J- L BENTLEY. K. C. Barrister: and Attorneys-n. LII HONEY T0 LOAN 154 Prince Street Old Hickory came to know than tihey did. Farm Labor (Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph) FaLm operations In _ ropean countries have been St!"‘.0l1S- ly hrmpered this year by shsrtaue of labor, “mm battalions, Reports indicate that l. Workers and prisoners "vnltmtazy foreign" agricultural large number of foreign v were also sent to work on farms. At the be- ginning of this very; aboulta‘ 1,200,003 wor ers an III Europe 750,000 prisoners were working farms. Since then several hundred thousand "volunteers" were added. many Eu- But lmpozted workers lacked the efficiency of German workers and were a poor substitute. Despite all rquimneut these pnensures the shortage of farm and draft, animals, according i.» i-e- labor In Apzll was still acute with Adequate colour for all household decorating and protection requirements is still available in the famous quality of C-I-L Paints and Finishes. Recent rulings of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board limit only the colours that may be manufactured. On the shelves of your C-I-L Paint dealer you may-still find a large assortment of your favourite colours. C-I-L Prepared Paints are noted across Canada for that top quality and durability which offers the greatest economy in wartime preservation of property. See your C-I-L Paint dealer today. CARVELL BROS. LTD Dlsfrlbulors FOR SALE EVERYWHERE NG PROTECTION ALEX W. MATHESON BARBISTER. SOLIUITUR, 5T0. 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Every person who ls troub- ltd wiui {:11 in the flwamlff; and hove should l" ll‘, Kn» of Dr. Evnn‘s hfltvlvlmlalckly l‘ all’: as‘? ‘f: d tresslnl symptoms. m,’ En.“ smmuh Mixture “y”; ‘g mQI times, nnt. ‘only uremia .11 hsd we?! “m. n. h“ I‘ “mum”! ‘I 160MB”!- “onn ‘cling: llgflel‘; lsmtlffl"! "he g5 cenll l0. l3?- ‘iifllis L w snd 596- m vslne Dernevs FM‘: Powder and Toilet WI!" 69° cgmg-M.‘ ImPIOVGd Italian Balm - riirkrvio iiiiics Given PWmP‘ m" °"'°;'ft¢..u»n