..c_______-..___...._.._.._-..___-_-....-_._.___~ ,_..,,__'_-_*_;___ PAGE FOUR i rrir criliiirorrrrowii a llARlllAii Morning llaiiy rl-‘ounded ln i881) I? . President: Llr-ut. Col. W. Cheater 8. McLure lice President: J. R. Burnett. FJJ. Hecretary: Lleut Col. l) A lilaclftinnnn. 0.8.0. Editor anti Alutuging Director J. B.- Burnett. FJJ. Asset-hate Editors: Frank Walker and llll A. Bllrlletl SUBSCRIPTION RATES By lllall In l‘.l-i.l., $4.00 per year; $2M tor e $1.25 for 3 urontlrs; 50o for one month City Delivery $3.00 per year; $3.00 for 6 ment-Iu 51.75 for 3 montlu By .\lzril in (‘arnurla and U.S.A. $5.00 per yen: Saturday Weekly: $2.00 per year; $1.00 lot I month; 50c for 3 months onllil l-uunlrun , 'i‘ -nrr.~| 5n uure. nmy be obtained II The (lr-rrlrrllrlrrrsrr ' New Inrlr; 0m llurirlrrrris .\t-ri .- Surrlir Nun; \;;irr \ trrrrrr-r Alllk unll Bunion, -\r-\\u Agvllvy, i248 Peel bu, Monlre my an, 'l'rlrolllfl; New: fltund. Cll-Alrhlil Lirnrri-r. - , llrvlfe‘: haul stand. Sudhury. Out; llrrtr rattan-lo blrrrp, trout-tun N. 5.; Ellen Robertson Amherst, .\ h. The Sfrong/esl Jlmiory is Weaker than the lit-altos! Ink." Washington, [that it is industrial and other requirements." Cogent arguments are advanced in the Legion ‘brief as to why srtch "total war" effort is ne- kcessary. The gravity of the situation in Russia, ltlie new resources which the enemy is acquiring latid the certainty that Axis conquest means tlie end of all our civil and religious liberties, arc duly emphasized. The Government's pre- sent policy is “derogatory to the Catiarlian Will‘ effort. It should be removed without delay. lt also has a deterrent effect upon the minds of the people of the United States, whose continu- ed and increasing support we so sorely need.” The Legion “repudiatcs, and takes as a reflection on our Quebec compatriots, the statement often head that Canada is unable to wage ‘total war’ because of the reluctance or tinwillingness of that Province." It also reminds the Prime Minister "an entirely tron-partisan body. It re- presents a great cross-section 0f men and wo- men throughout the country, of all classes and creeds, who have served arid are still endeavor- ing to serve and have no concern other than the truest and best interests of our country.” Finally it recalls l\Ir. King's own words in his speech on return from England: "There is only one way to meet ‘total war’ and that is by ‘total effort’ —- cffort not for a day, or a week, or a month, but every day until Victory is won.” The Legion brief should receive the consid- eration it is entitled to from the King Govern- ment. It is substantially in line with opinions which has been voiced on more than one oc- casion in Parliament and in the press. ’the highest possible strength consistent with our l u P EDITORIAL NOTES -. l~'llll).\\'. UCIOBER. 31, 1941. Hallowe'en Two tl>l‘It‘. writers have enshrined Ilzrlloufiizi r. . “tiou of generations of grzithiii‘. l'\"'l'lf w. 'l'llC festival inspired Rob- Qr-t Hui-in to lwli iillt‘ of his tiiost delightful, pricttls, 'i"<- ‘iuliw iii olil~iiiiic fireside customs, 3,1,1 miirli1-ig_ wzli pziwky humor, upon the Curious mi~l often Illhtlfll superstitions associat- ed u-itli t‘ i. No man loved a merry, convivial l‘\r.i .1! rr neighbor's ingle nook bet- ter iliziu "l? i! ifuisclf. ziiirl n0 doubt he spent nh-mv .1 llz." 'rll \\'llll friends. keeping up the itrziili” ills‘ llll~l ciijrrriug the fun with thei he“ or ,i;.1,,, riii the (rihcr hand, Sir Walter Scott tsluu-g w ‘itillilllllli tenderness, both in 1,},- |,,-..=<~ it-w‘. i- m; to the awesome beliefs which hriil 5 i-iiiit lll tlic perception of my- sterioiis i-zcr- of cril uulooscd on this occas- ion- "On Ho‘. 1v Miss Eve the Night-hag will ride‘ ‘illlflr-fflitl sweeping On by her side; moonshine or swatlvd in the nscl-n customs have been consider- ll iiorih of the Tweed, and . . . ,_ :11 the form of chtldrens przinfi-s rii .\s such they provide an Ourlpi fut,’ \'llll' i'~ , exuberance, and one would be llllllll lit ‘it’ Elli iii disappear altogether. _\'t'\-< llrcv<<fil‘_\' to remind all and of Yillltlllllilll and rowdyism on Halloween as on Slllltll'_\' are ju . u- ivt. other noun-rut, nriil lllfii as likely to get the perpciiuro". um trouble. Tonight's festival proviili: rizi:;-'i~ scope for innocent fun and nicrryiii:il\"~g. . authorities will be vigilant m SW‘ l"i.'il v pl Willlltl these bounds. Let u< liopl- - ll‘ no regrettable aftermaths. (‘lilllT lll iii: lviipvr: court or behind the paternal “(mil s1». I. Ilclpiug The Blind .A\CFF""'l"I to the annual report of The Cana- dian \.'li'lll‘ltl lustiuite for the. Blind, there were, | in khlllilihl Xcivforlurllilud, 12,520 blind ’\Y(‘:'\,'lll -\l ‘ll/p vtril of March 3lSf, I941. Th6 x lllilll the year before. Of figure is 51>‘ g _ > \\.'l'C living in Ontario; 3,565 in At last the Prime Minister recognizes his own shortcomings —he has appealed to the ladies to help him recruit men for the armed forces. a x at r By the ages ahead let it never be said a We were lacking in national gurnption; If we do not, alas! soon ration our gals They will say that we died of CONSUMP- TION, —R. L. E. e u a it Three hundred 3rd Division Canadian soldiers, under General Price, worshipped in Westminster Abbey last Sunday in connection with Czecho- slovakia's independence day, when "O Canada" was sung there for the first time in history. i: "The Old School Tie" remains sacred to Winston Churchill notwithstanding all attempts to disparage it. His advice to present Har- rovians “never, never" to give up, bespcaks well for his reverence for the good things of the past as well as for his vision for the future. Ikiflri British Government and railways are more gen- erous to soldiers and war workers than those in Canada. It has been the practice to issue railway passes to men on leave to go anywhere; now tree return railway vouchers to any distance are being issued to men and utomcn Civil De- fence Service workers who havc been working full time in heavily raided areas I I i I All Hallowe'cn, the popular name for this (late, the Vigil Feastof All Saints,othcrwise All Hal- lows (i.e. revered). As Nov. 1st. and 2iid_ were set apart for strict religious observance in lioii- our of the memory of departed saints, and all other souls, the preceding evening was, in both Scotland and England, permitted to be devoted to merry making and all sorts of innocent frin in which the young, more largely, participated. w r n- m President Roosevelt is profiting by the unfor- tunate experience of Prime hlillistcr King, and has started taking the world into his confidence in war preparations, An Office of Facts and Fig- ures has been established to keep the United States people informed of the progress of the defence program and of defence policies and activities. The office will assemble and arrange for dissemination of whatever dcfcuce informa- tion may be announced appropriate in a time of national emergency. Mr. Archibald MacLeish will be its director. He will retain his present position as Librarian of Congress. a n When recruiting started here one of the at- tlie loiril, Quclicit: '_ ill ilzi: .\lf‘rl'lllfl'l€5; 1,438 in Mani- toliu ftlltl .‘ll<"i\'.'lll§ 1,409 in Alberta and llrili ‘ 7 ' Illlrl 223 in Newfoundland. ln . riiiiiuzil rcport there is a grout llrill til uiwri-stiiig reading matter, but pqrlmp; 1 in»: enlightening feature of the report 'lt‘ sliu lFZlllOllS. There are plioto- graphs o! lt" ziiciiihcrs of the National (foiuici i " l offirizils who carry on the Iii-iizuaii-t zwuiou in various parts of Caunil: TH 4 n‘ illustrations of blind men auil \‘.‘t'*!l“ll .._: tl'i\' "N1 materials designed for use in v. ir '. 'l"ucrc are charts showing the gro Ti i. l iuilusirinl establishments anil the iiivi-oi-iil ii-r of llilking books. There is a phoirigiwipli 7i llilllll filllllCr, seeding his crop with fli- ow» of his son. There is a pic- ture of l \l'1>‘.ll<‘ll hllilllllg for the victims of llll‘. .'l'l' lii-ili-ii-iliiivnt of Britain. There is a pirtiiri ' iuriii in charge of a portable (‘illllPfill iii n l.i..~~h (kiluitiliiun shipyard. The rrpoit ' " ' liriili-s iliut the ycar was one of , Sltzitl)‘ lu- . To li» i rod ris blind. an individual need not uv-i. 'll'il\' llr" riitircly without sight. If a flI\(‘l*\"'-' rH-u discloses that a person has aplllllXlllili .‘ . -. lllfill tcu per cent normal Vl>lOfl offer ("*l'l'f‘r"li\‘€ appliances have been provEil-il. lac k cou-illcrcrl eligible for registra- tion “if, 1i r- lll-llllllt‘. The Lemon's Brief "lrt u» =‘< -lr~_i." f<ll'('\'(‘l' this falsehood that (“.'iii.i:l'r ruiiiiut w. 4v ‘lutzrl war’ without creating itttr-riizil ilrsuriilix" 'l'lir-si~ rriiril- Till’ coiiliiiiierl in the brief pre- seiilril m" 'l|ll\' lw llll‘ (‘zriiziiliziu Legion to Prime. l\lllllsl“l' .\l;~i-l.i~ii/‘r~ King. 'l‘hc "total war" ef- fort \\'lllrll ll'l~ llK‘ unanimous inilorsation of the Legions 1.47m branches and auxiliaries across Canada rlifii~r< materially from the effort which Cziiirrrlzr is making at present. It means, in the Words of thc hrief, “immediate, complete and SClPlllllll‘ iiroliilinition, organization and utiliza- flm, m’ all nil!‘ rmourecs —spiritual, intellectual, mitural. fiuuiu-iwl. agricultural, industrial, man- pQwTr -iii uirli lll5illll('l' that Canada may be geared to pr». i -<~ (“initial foods and munitions rmrl to wage \\.'l!' to her lllilXllllllm capacity." ll nit-nus fll."l l" -"l'\‘il‘l‘< (ll every man and wo- 1mm "ltc l'l\ if» i ll lo the host and most useful ef- fect. accord 'l" 1'» i-gv. imiiiiiig, physical capac- itv and ltlvli"; llll‘ iaiiliiiruril." lt means also the eliuiiiir. Ii u of lll-' provisions restricting com- ptrlsory sr-H - lll the armed forces to Canada only, fllltl f' in» lll'll‘l't‘ll"llt‘(‘ iii Canada and over- seas, iucluijiiig reserves and reinforcements, "at traction: offered was that pals would be kept together. Alas, the promise was not fulfilled, and there were many sore hearts among the boys when the “gang" was broken up and individual imembers sent hither and thither as the “exigen- cies of the service demanded," to quote the of- l ficial excuse. Now the authorities see the folly of their breach of faith, and “keep pals together" becomes official Royal Canadian Air Force prac- tice under an order issued to all commanding of- ficers. The instructions are that every effort lshould be made to perpetuate service friendship by seeing to it that airmen-butldies follow the same sequence of schools and go overseas and into sentimentality," said an R. C. A. F. spokesman. "Teamwork's essential to air-war efficiency. And the most ei- I action together. “It's not just fective team is composed of friends who know 'play, and fight together." l U I I Those who lived in the ’8o's will recall the famous Maybrick trial which was a cause ccle- bre of two continents. The woman in the case, Mrs. Maybrick has just died at the age of 8o in South Kent, Conn. A member of an old South- ern family she served I6 years in prison in Eng- land as the poisoner of her husband, a wealth: Liverpool cotton broker. and escaped the death penalty largely due to the international sensation the case had developed and climaxed in 188i). The couple were married in Norfolk, Virginia, and the crime took place by arsenic poisoning in Liverpool, where the couple were residing. On her release from prison, Mrs. Maybrick changed hcr name to Mrs. Chandler, and lived as a recluse iii South Kent, avoided by her neighbours, who suspected her identity but had no proof of it un- tilafter her sudden death alone in the night. A ncighlrliour found her body on taking in the milk, and afterwards found in her effects a scrapbook with the newspaper history of her tragedy, and Wm‘ h" name in 1161f own handwriting upon it. each other's capabilities and have learned to ivork A frgtsfgnarzrorrtarowist corrupt/m NOTE!‘ RY TNE WAY llexnchlorehtane. the that. forms the base of at-‘lfllll mmerml. looks like salt; TNT looks like yellow sugar; smokeless powder. before it ls ex. traded into lengths, looks like pastry dough; the fuse powder for the Iime-P-lltl on the nose of a shell looks like coffee grounds. and at one stage in. its manufacture re- stmbles a giant waffle; gunpowder looks like soot (nit. on the pantry shelf. we hope), while cordlte looks likelmacaronl. - Frcm the 0.1.1.. Ora . chemical smoke Tennis bulls just made in En:- land have been safely delivered to Switzerland for this year's national championsh ps there. How they got, through will be a secret until the war is over, Their makers are actually sending more bzrlls over- seas than in eacetlnre Spirtsmen in no fewer halt 51 overseas ter- ritories are getting bulls for tennis ‘and squash trcm them today, and they have produced an entlzely new ball for U S.A. Soldiers \. ‘ int: about their food are proverbial, and in ls war there are probably as many of them as durng the Great. War. But when it. is officially announced that most of’ the soldiers under- goln: training in this country are steadily gaining in weight, not withstanding the rigorous EXQTCISP. ithot, most. of them experience, the effcacy of their diet becomes ap- parent A; a matter of fact. plenty of wholesome food plUS adeouate exercise plus fresh air ls usually beneficial to any one - Brock- ville Recorder and Times, The familiar analogy ls still the best; That when the mug puts a. gun on you in an alley, you ac- cept. what help is offered by a by- stander without linking into his pedigree. He niziy be another crook; but for the moment he is; right, and one ought to be duly grateful for rt. Nothing seems as unreal to 013st: who lot themselves be guided by tilieli" enrctious as the stalk reality. 'l"lrcre ls no clearer reality todav than the continuing threat to all pence and order on this planet, rtriiicri is embodied in Hitler. Who helps in his destruc- tion ls a very minor considcrat. on beside the frrct of its accomplish- ment. -— Detroit News. Germany ls always plalntlvcly wondering why other irathns won't tzeat. her on terms cf equality. The reason is plain. Germany won't. act on terms of equality. Cuba has now joined in the parade of coun- tries send ng Nazi consuls bsck home. MlnLster of State Cortintr said: “The G0\‘6i‘Ill’llf‘il[ has bren able tq _p:"o\'c that Ge mrin Con- sul He.si gcr has engaged ln tre- tivities apart fr 1n tho c inherent in his pO-st and irriirh affected the security of Circa “ Same Old story. Same old clriim that they lire some- how superior, privileged‘. unvwlling ti) abide by the ordinary rules ob- served by others. Country after country has found such pretens- lons intolerable Nobody wants to take away fr:;n Germany such a position in the world as it has earned by its legitimate achieve- ments; for it to seize a position of special privilege-this, the world will nct permit. - Timmins Daily Press. Win-n all the contrasts between the air Will‘ now and the Air war then have been drawn. it would be lfoolish- and migut be disastrous- ‘ to conclude that any of these chzrnizcs 1n our fnvir are necessar- ily permanent, The Lirfliutaffe has certuiniy suffered enormous losses ltn Russia; and it. may be hoped {that the scale of these losses Will ibe increased by the p2ll'l'(‘ll)f\l.l0ll lof British machines rind" of ri formations in the battle But. l is very doubiful whether these losses are enough to pevcnt a switching over of the m-Jln force of the Luft- wnffe to renewed allllCKs on our own country. Certainly the en- emy's ability to switch over dc- pends nu the scale of his losses in ‘trained afrmeu for more than on his losses in machines. Again, if the switch-over takes place it. may retard the business of catching up with the enemy's war production iwhich is one of the maln purposes of the R.A.l<‘. offensive. And lastly. lwltih the offset. of winter ln Russo, lthe enemy may be able to rein- fo.ce his air strength in the Medl- berrancan. These considerations all ‘lead to the some conclusion-that. we must strain every nerve both to sustain tire Eastern front. and to develop other fronts where t-be enemy will have to expend his strength. That conclusion is unl- versally accepted ln ths count , where no feeling is more dlscre - lted than the felling that time is rneccssarily on our side. — London | Times. CU l lt was cosy to understand what .winsi.on Chu.chl11 meant when he 'said. “Give u.s the tools". He meant. the delivery on British soil or where the Br-tlsh and their allies need them of tanks, al lanes, guns and the other tools o war. Speed in producing and delivering |rhese tools, as measured by the Jlgures in the President's second I report on lease-lend operations. has |been for from encouraging. It does take time to contract for the pro- duction of the lease-lend su plies, to produce them and to eliver them, but the belated discovery that. part. of the time between ap- .pl'0prltlti0n of the money and de- livery of the goods was wasted by bureaucratic procedure awakens the susp clon that. a better lob could be done than has been done. Congress will not be ObSlfllCllOlllSlZ if 1t. insists on some assurance that. the appropriation of additional American money will be followed .by a determination on the art. of those responsible for the atmlnls- ffflllOll of the lease-lend program to ut speed and efflcency into it. - ew York Sun. Rudolf Hess is reported ni. heve' started hunger strikes twice be- cause he ls being treated as a war prisoner rather than e “special envoy". Hess isn't very smart-no sense 0f fundamentals; for the issue trans- cends any me.e Hague conversa- tions on the treatment of war prisoners. If Hess still wants his abominable p-irtfsans to win one would th’nk h"'d be eating his head eff in on effort to help starve out. England. From a pmrematlc British viewpoint his hunger strikes are a jolly bit of all rlrrht and the lower the better. - De- troit Free Press. A one-armed Spokane, Walk. kolfer quite regulary scorer in the 70's and has four times made holes-ln-one so that's what's Wrcnq with our yolk-we've got al- lfitfcthcr too mrriy arms. - St. " "Imm- wes-Joumu- . i— It seems to us that Kerri Press Tribute To Mr. Justice Hyndman (financial Post) | Mr. Justice l-lyndmrrn. recently nmned Rentals Administrator for ‘ the Wartime Prices and ade Board, ls in the unusual position of being termed both a “westernr-r" and an “easternerfl He ts one who “has made good" at both ends of the Dominion of Canada. l Born in Charlottetown. P. E. 1., ,aud made a. member of the bar in that city, James Duncan Hyndman was labelled “easternet” when he came west to Winnipeg. That was Immediately. after he became a law- yer ln i899. After building up a nation-wide legal reputation in Edmonton, ne also became known as a successful “westerner.” Up to the time of his appointment as chairman of the pensions appeal court in Ottawa. Mr. Justice Hyndtuan had spent 32 years in the west. Mr. Hyndmim left a. successful legal practice in Manitoba to come to Edmonton in 1903. He immedi- ately set about establishing himself lri his profession in the foot-bills province and in July 1914, he was appoint/ed to the Supreme Court o. Alberta. Sever. years later he was elevated to the appellate dlvlslon. His education he acquired in his home city of Charlottetown, gradu- ggmg from Prince of Wales College ere. Mr. Justice Hyndma-n was active ln political circles ln Edmontons early days. He unsuccessfully con- tested federul and provincial rid- ings as a Conservative in 1909 and 1913. He served as an alderman in Edmonton ln 1910-11, In 1902, Mr. Hyndman married Miss Et-llel Davies, n, daughter of the late sir Louis Davies, at one time a member of the Sir Wilfrid. Laur- ler cabinet and before his death o! Canada. _ The new administrator, when he lived ln Edmonton, was fond of golf and billiards and claimed both of these as hobbies. PUBLIC FORUM chief Just-ice of the supreme court , Thin column lo open for lhl dllcumrlon by eorrerrpenrlentn el qnentinnn or erent. The Chnrlntteto n Guardian doe; not neoenurlly curler-u the oplnlonl el nerrelpnndeutt OUR. ALLIED SAILORS Sirz-I sluuld like. through you‘ columns, to make an appeal to the public on behalf of our Allied sailors. These men. as continuing the under extraordinarily difficult circumstances-ant off frcm their country, lillc!‘ families and friends —no news of their homes but the grlm aCCOUllls they read in our popcrs—a1id strangers themselves {it any of the ports they may put n at. Last Christmas, one of our Gan- adlazi destroyers was berthed- alongside two of our Allied ships. By titistakc, our Canadian mall ivas put. on beard one of these other vcsszls, and had to be re- tfieved. The officer who told me of this sald that it made him untamed and slrk at heart to have those stacks of mirl removed. One of those ships received seven let- tors-the other, none! It ls because of thl=—because of their loneliness and their need of human ccntuct»—lhal we nave asked and received permission from Ottawa lo form an organization. under the name of the “Allied Post." to send individual parcels to all uri timid the shins we have been asked to 100k after. Later on. we hope to be ab‘e to send parcels of ivoclens and comforts, so badlv needed lo protect the men from the billet‘ cold and eon- llhllOllS wet tlry endure. '_Tfi:rik what our men receive in this respect, and remember that ot-hers need it just. as much-they rtre facing the some odds and the same deadly peril, 5° 81W. lerse fllve. and let these men now they still have friends who ("n and are free 59nd Yhem "lit". and are only too anxious to do so, _All contributions will be most FOR THE MAN WHO LIKES A G000 PIPE ou know, are WI offer a variety of chapel and sizes, in all the lending makes, that we feel sure will alYord him his partlculnr choice. Hero he will find such well. known brands n carrnomrzs on. runvms MORI-JLL ivrerrniyzrrrs vrnww sown-s copousr. rzasrs my wooprrrs L0l-IW'S n. n. 8'8 Toscirrmrs, rrrc. In Ihlte (‘if the rm. that III s are hard to g“ gm] ll ces have advanced tre- mendously, y" my. care of your needs. By looking over enr rim} You will be convinced er lhh. Prices-Mo lo $5.00. lgltt-contlnulng ' asst. prices. ~ BARGAIN BASEMENT LADIES’ DEPARTMENT Ladies’ first quality full-fashioned silk hose, chiffon, only newest fall shades, all sizes, pair—————-----——--—----- _ 79¢ Ladies’ fall skirts, asst. shades and sizes — - - $1.39, $1.69 and $1.93 Ladies’ all wool sweaters, asst. shades and sizes from -- — $1.00 to $2.50 Ladies’ fall dresses, sizes 14 to 20, asst. plaids and pin stripes and crepes--————---—------------. Ladies’ snuggies and snuggle vests each — —- — — -— - 24c and up Ladies’ Lisle hose, asst. shades and sizes, pair — — — — - - _ _ Ladies’ Rayon hose, silk asst. shades and sizes, pair - - - - - -_ 24¢ Ladies’ winter coats, asst. kinds and asst. sizes. Special each — -$14_95 Large assortment Ladies’ wool gloves, pair — — - - - - - - _ 50¢ Large asortment. Ladies’ pure wool ankle hose, pair — — — - _ 39¢ MEN'S DEPARTMENT Men’s fancy V-neck sweaters, asst. shades and size, each — — - _ 79¢ Men’s Jumbo sweaters, asst. shades and sizes, each — - - - _ _$1_93 Men’s All-Wool fall caps, also winter caps with ear bands, all sizes, each ----- -—-—--—-—-—-——————--69c Men’s Heavy wool work hose, pair — — — - - -24c, 29c, 39c, and 59c Men’s fancy cotton hose, all sizes, pair -_ -_ _ ._ _ .._ _ __ _ _ _ 17c Men's Overalls, large sizes only, worth up to $2.00 pr. Special, pair $1.00 Men's Overall srrrocks, mostly 36 and 38, clearing, each - -- - - - $190 Men’s Heavy fall Pants, stripe pattern, all sizes up to 42, pair -— -$2.00 Men’s White Canvas gloves, Clearing, pair - -- - - - _ _ _ _1()¢ Men’s Leather palm and black rubber gloves, pair — -35c and 39c Men’s Ilorsehide gloves and gauntlets, pair - — - - - - _ _$1_()() Men’s Heavy fancy Doeskin shirts, each - - - - - - -- - _ _$1_19 GNILDREWS DEPARTMENT Boy's corduroy breeclres, double seat and knees, sizes 26 to 34, pair $1.69 Boy's tweed pants. long, a good assortment, sizes 26 to 36, pair - -$1.69 ‘A large assortment of girl's and boy’s sweaters, asst. prices. A good assortment of Children's A good assortment of Children's wool gloves, pair - - - - -_ _29¢ Children Woolette sleepers, 2 to 7, suit each- - - - _ _ _ __ _g9¢ S. A. McDONALD’S dresses, size 2 to 6 and 8 to l4, OCTOBER 31. 1941 $1.98 24c sent 2955 Vlewmount, Avenue, Montreal, or to the Store Room, Marine Bulld- lng, 1405 Peel Street, Montreal I am gslr, etc. ELSA MAY President “Allied Post" Adrnlnlstratlcn Headquarters, Montreal. WEDDING GIFT gratefully acknowledged, l! to Allied Post, Headquarters, DUGOUT CANOE VANCOUVER, Oct. 29 -<CP) — Captain Emsley Raley of New York. son of a pioneer British Col- umbia coast missionary, soon will receive two handsome wedolrig gifts from the Kltlmaai: Indians wliri whom he played as s. child and who later made him an honorary chief 0f their tribe. The gifts are a ZO-foot cedar dugout canoe, regarded as an out- standing example of Indian craft- WORDS OF CHALLENGE A THOUGHT A DAY FOR A PEOPLE AT “All "This is the time for each one of us, whether engaged rn production or management of ocluctlon to think of his own ob, to examine his own ‘ma’: and conscience, to ensure at least that he 1s doing all a man can do. to support. and ’ sustain the cause which is common to us all. to give to those who are htlng our battles the weapons which alone will bring victory.‘ - Anthony Eden, British J!‘- elgn Secretary. _ 00000000000 NIIIYILNEINITFIIJFBQI BACKIIITE TABLETS For The Kidneys A remedy for Bnekuho, Lum- lnge, Urinary Troubles, ete- Prlce 50 cents e box. GASSY STOMACIIS IIELIEVED Every person wire l| troubled will: ‘u in the stomach and bowels shnnlrl get n bottle el “Dr. L. B. Evan: Stomach Mixture," and m how quickly it will relieve all dlatrenaln symptoms... A recommend remedy for Indigestion, Dyl- pepele, Bonr Stomach, Heart- nrn end all stomach troublel. MAC! AMMONIATID BBONCIIIAL COMLPOUN D Believes Acute Bronelritie, Sturmodie Creep. Bronchial manshlp, and a blanket." made with lan Pearl buttons. The blanket was made by Mrs. wife of the chief of the Klttmaats. colorful “buttonl 1.250 Russ-l Richard Morrison, Capt. Raleys father, Rev. G. H. Raley, was the first white man to llve with the Kltlmaats, going to Kltimaat Inlet. some 400 miles north west of uere, as a missionary in 1893. “no cr-oficrrriri runners ririsr Because they know that Irultlry Kidneys remove from the bleed the vmie mailer —tlre GXIQII acid: end poilorrl, formed by the ever-changing lumun body u it . decays and yeburldz ilself. But if Ilse i Kidneys fnl, illness surely follows. Baci- lclre, Rheumatic Pains, Irnpun Blood, Lack of Energ , Toe Frequent Urination, Sleepleuness, endnclres-all may vault from fnultylrrdneyr. As a health safeguard -_u a rinse precaution-re are krdneys frequently with d’; Ki y Pills-for ever fifty year: the favorite COAL ‘We now have a sup ply of Old Sydney Screen Coal arriving daily and can supply any quantity required. Also Dominion House- hold Coke and “lelsh Hard Cobbles and l-lzrrd Nut in stock. Phone us your re- quirements. W.l|. Gillis 8i Bu. Kidney rerneyly-non-lnlrit forming. m Dedd s Kidney Pills l ii VOOOOMO-OQQMQQ-O-O If tobacco is ever rationed in these parts. Can you imagine for example a man going into a store and not being able to gel lrls usual supply of BLACK Caren-h, Coughs and Colds. SEE OUR 30c AND Sle SPECIALS. E. A. Foster CENTRAL DIUGITOII Everything in Smoker! A eclerrtillo combination oi selected qualities of Drug; to - form e ah expeetennt rd I sedative cou|h prgpgfltlmr, The Two Mm ill Greet George ltreet l Mail Orders Given Prompt AHOIIMUI» NIOKEY 8r TOBACCO C0, LTD 9:'Q§..'§Q QQQO§Q .'§§@ l4§Q§..QQQQ§§Q§.'§. §§.'.'§'§§§.‘. . Say to Your Grocer I Want BRANMIN ORANGE PENUE TEA You will enjoy its superior quality i T here’s Going “to Be Fireworks HICKEY’S CHEWING 10c Per Fig MANUFACTURED BY Phone 176. 00-00000000-0-0-0-0000000000 Q-QQQOQ OOOQOOOQOQO‘. __.__ TWIST NIBNOLSON ., crtartrorrrrowN