...19.1o 1111111 \'i<llt1111...1_)11isl111g through _ lived i11 the l\'eicl1 for years and is generally r¢- PAGE FOUR THE CH ARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAI! TIIE BIMILOTTETOVIII Glllllllllll Inning Dally (Iulndol h II) Indian Hunt, Cal, W. Gloom l, Hoe rmttlum 1|. B. Burnt! IJ-L amt-m um. ca, u. A. lulu-u. mug Inf-Iter- llll Inuit 5 llluolur, J. I Ilrleil, Idl- Q“ e litlllnrln: Frank Walla, and Hook Ill l. Burnett. H.U.N.VJI_ 10k Active lervlee SUBSCRIPTION IAT§ fllmlllllflll-IO-Hl DQPIPIFIUJCI QIOICII it,“ lo: I uunthn I00 fer dh II (my Dvih cry limo per yuan “.00 Iv In ilJl for l muntlli We for on ltlll l0 other Nruvlnfll lllll ‘LI-l- Il“ l I1 manila. lllllflll] Wwkl]! um Dll‘ I'll! ".00 III Q 1w» In: l loathe Th: Challuttetuwl Glllflllll may he obhllol ll Ililllnlltlfu mews Alene], ‘flnu lquun, flew Vern 0G! loath a“. Agent"), Uurnr 111111 uu WIIIIII|IOI Inlklt llllrujwllhlu Noun Anna-y, In! rut it. Ionrellt 1|. Ilka IM Bay at, ‘lamina-v, Nun stud enun- uulnn Ottawa; \\nlle'l New: mend uudbury. 0am lllb 1111111111111 aim, 1111111111111. u. u. '71} Siiongesf Memory i: Weaker I'll! the Weakest Ink." ', AUGUST 31, 1943 Before The Leaves Fall’? Ten 1i:1_\': bt-iurc lllc forces Of the United K111111111» 111111.11 n1 51cm", .\l1', Churchill sp0ke 1n the Liuilunah 111 l.o11d1»11 and declared, among other, "11 1- 11-11 pr11hz1ble there will be very 11.11;. liguldg 111 1111 .\l1~1li11¢1"rd111-a11 and else- \\l1.'1c c. 11111 111c 1e11\1s of 111111111111 fall," that the .'11l111l 1111" 1111c1-s 11111 lengthen their arms “by 1135-11; ;1111l L11 1l:1_1," and that they will seek out 1111111 i111ln~11rk1l and military" targets with "@11- 11-1111111113111, 111111;" also, that h-hcn the tnajor clues 111‘ 111-1111111111111: disposed of “we will fOllOW tl11: 11111" i11d1:s11"1 of the Reich to the small“ IOWIH.“ Most oi the forvgoi11g promises, notes 811 exchange. b11111 iullilltwl according to 1111111. The 111st 1x11111111» 1~i 1l11~c11e111y urc- fleeiitg acroSs the 1.arr11\v >11~;1~1 11f .\l11~si11;1; the arms of the r\ll‘1°(l air forces rcalcliing to parts of the RQlCh which 1h: kcuhrer fondly hoped would be Well out of 11111141. The visit of Auierican Liberators to \‘\1.1;o X111sn1dt has dispelled :1 notion to uhiclt the 1111111 of llerliu were clinging recently. Apart fix-111 the plrvsical significance of this lcngxhmin; process, the psychological effect will 501m btgm 111 111110 its mark on pe0ples 3111i workers 1\l.11 l1i1h1-r111 thought themselves rela- tively iuuuuue from ztttaclt. lint "the leaves" of 31111111111" will soon begin t0 fall i11 that part of liuropc where the free and ensiuved world is expecting the United Nationi to 5111111. Unly :1 few 111011 are in possession 0f the time-table 1111 which the Atlantic seaboard portion of "Festung litiropa" is underscored for action. It is our task to be patient; ours, none- thelcss, the right to hOpe that the great Soviet offensive will be 51101-1 complemented by “amphi- bious opcraiiotts of a peculiar complexity and hazard on a largo scale" somewhere between thC North Cape and Cape Fillistfirre. Norway .ls Paying Her Way _'.l.‘ha.11l1s 11> the earnings of her merchant gnarine, the t1111rtl1 largest 1n the world, Norway has been able to pay hcr own way all through the war. ‘That is 11ut all. The Royal Norwegian Gorernmem 111 London has also itianziged to keep pre-war obligations i11 order: U11 August 1o the Norwegian Government paid the 1111111 instalment of $991,000 on a 20 million dollar loan obtained at 0 per cent interest in the New York market in 19.23. Norway 110w has outstanding only o11c of its old expensive dollar loans, a o per cent loan of 25 million dol- ilars contracted in 192.1. All but 2.5 millions of this has been paid off, 11nd the balance is due in about 0111111‘. i11~1:1h111-11ts payable in February and August 1134,", The lust instalments paid 011 this 101111 111111111111111 to $1,107,000 and was paid August 1, 1171.13. (>11 both of thrsc loans, as well as on all other Guveriitiieit: 11nd (i111:ru111cnt-guara11tced loans in the Linucd Strut-s the Nomegiaui tjoverumetit has paid i11t1r1-st 11nd :1u_1orliZi1tiou, according t0 the loan conuucts, dining the period after the invaszou of .\‘or11;1y, just us before the occupa- tion. During this August and September the N01‘- \11,-gi.'111 (11111111111111! is pairing semi-annual inter- est 11nd :111:111-1i;::11i1111 i11s1uhue11ts amounting to about .1 1111i: 1 11 d-illurs. This l'LCllll.\ 1111 episode from the autumn of ‘ Sweden asked for 11 pos1p111u111c11t of interest and-amor- ti;.;1:11111 l|l>i1'1llll.‘l‘l\ on Norwegian foreign 108115- 1\‘11h111"1j1. 11".; htuiulizttuig answer. The R111al .\'111 111 511111111112111 i11 London 1H5 paid up 11.11111)". Ludwig (Tn German Morale 'l‘i1:1; i.1:11.11:~ l1111"111.'111-hor11 writer and IK- lurer, lfuul Liuiwig, who is 110w visiting i11 Mon- treal, gave 11ut :1 stutvnteiit last week in which he exprc-ull 1111 1" 1111i1l-11t belief that the defeat and total (1111:; .- 111' lit-rmauy are 1111111111ent. Although .\1". l.11d\\"i_-_-_ is not a German 111111611 he 11:1» b11111 i11 than cotuitry- of Jewish Parents» garded as 11 (lcpclilhtltlt: authority on matters r6- lating to 1111- lmckgrtniiirl of the (icnnzm [Xiople- For 30 yt-zirs has liven a citizen of Swillerlilrld and latterly has been living i|1 the Umted States. I11 the c1111r~1 of his press ll\lCl’VlC\V on Monday Mr. Ludu-ig ndn1i1t1~d that his belief in the im- minutcu of (ierumu defeat was not based on 6X- pert 111ilit.'1:y authority, but was derived from his personal knowledge of the German national character. For “different psychological reasons" he has reached the conclusion that the war in Europe is dcstitird to end this autumn, being convinced tltat another winter campaign would be "quite impossible for the Nazis." He gives three reasons i11 stipport of the conclusions he has reached. The first 1'11 that the aerial bombardment of the Reich silttplv cannot be endured by the masses of the (ieruvzui jtPfilllt“ or even their rulers. 0t! this pninl ‘"0 swvs": “(iernirui nerves are not Brit- ish Ilt‘l‘\'\"<. Th1- (lcrinnn is an excellent soldier so 11111;; ns ln» has .1 stiperinr officer and a uni- lHFIIl. 1‘\l4l|11' nnd in civilian clothes he is weak." The second rr-nsriu Mr. Ludwig gives is the wavering in their fidelity to the Liberal Party. destinies. Hitler, he point: out, ha: abdicated, in fact if not in name, and the Germans know it. The F uehrer is now a mere "prisoner of the Gen- erals" and this fact has made a tremendous im- pression "even on the Germans, who are so naive politically." The Fuehrer has been regarded all along by the German masses as a “mystic figure" and to see him converted into a mere figurehead has shattered their morale incalculably. Thirdly and finally Mr. Ludwig say; that the Get-mm il “excellent in an attack but no good in defence." He recalls that in r918 Ludendorff had asked urgently for an armistice “at once" in 24 hours after the defeats of that year. Now he point; out the German envoys are sitting in the VaticI-n and in the Quirinal asking, "What shall we do in order to make peace with the other generals?" Mr. Ludwig's great misgiving is that when the hour Allies may yield to the temptation of a negotiated peace. He admits that there is little possibility of anything of the kind in Great Britain but says he has observed disconcerting evidences of it in the United States." “Ex-isolationists, including some big men in New York and Washington, would favor dealing with the Germans and discussing peace terms as soon as Hitler and a few of his more highly- placed gangsters have been eliminated." The possibility of a negotiated peace Mr. Lud- wig regards as the only real German menace re- maining to the safety of the world, because such a peace would leave the Prussian Junker undil- turbed in the seats of the mighty at Berlin. =- tDITORIAL NOTES?! It is going to take a lot to buy votes this elec- tion —- money being so plentiful throughout both urban and rural comtnunitios. i i i ll Queen “rilhennna of Holland born this d3" 1S§0—at present an exile due to Nazi aggress- ion, but keeping pretty tnuch t0 the front b)’ residence in England and visits to U. S. A., her absentee government functions in London. It‘ 1F 3 i Only $36,000 remains to be Obtained in the plan to underwrite a $l.700,000 deficit _of the United Church of Canada. The debt 1s bemg underwritten by church members with war bond purchases, a portion of their saviugs being des- ignated for churth debt at maturity. 111 11 >11 =11 How is this for fast mail service? A business man bade farewell in Toronto to a couple of friends en route for here at 11.30 P.M. Wednes- day. Next forcnoon he flew to Vancouver; Wm" a letter there and posted it for Charlottetown b_y Air Mail. The letter reached here before i115 friends did. n1 111 111 111 There is not a single inhabited plflCe in this world that cannot be reached within two and 0116- half flying days from Charlottetown. Many places that used to be Weeks away can now be reached in 24 hours by air. After this ‘N111’, WEE)" one is not going to fly everywhere, but travel will be facilitated by air routes that will ehmmate distance. The new Car Ferry should be con- tracted for without delay, for today air irelght costs fifteen times as much as rail freight. 1K ll‘ 11 1K \\'ork1nen‘in war plants must be protefited at all costs, judge l. C. Langlois emphasized yester- day morning in finding Domipico Donatop67Q2 deGaspe street, guilty of carrying a match 1n i118 overalls while inside the danger area"_0f_th¢ Montreal Works of Defence Industries Limited, Chabanel street and St. Lawrence boulevard. Dortuto was fined $50, with eight days 111 lall ‘f the fine is not paidiwilthin‘ ameight-day delay. Whether it was his error or his fif-lltlng the world owes a debt of gratitude to an unknown ptiuter. A correspondent of the Edinburgh Scotsman writes: “The late Professor Samtsbury told his students during the session 1906-07 that Gray wrote “The curfew tolls, the knell ‘of Part‘ mg dayy” but when the proofs catne to him fr0m the printers the coitnnn was omitted, andthe Poet 1111s quick to note the improvement in the line" "Thus was one of the most flawless pieeesfti poetry, which had taken several years to write, improved by a printers error." 11K l? i 1F Will “Alcan" Highway f0ll0\v suit? Rietrfflt- ing quietly i11 the wake of widespread criticism» Amgot has taken a 40 per cent. reduction 1n name-from now on it's just Amg- Ami?‘ —Allied Military Government Occupied Terri- tories-firs." got public notice when it f°ll0wt3d the combat troops into Sicily. In no time at all, somebody discovered that 1\1ngot_ was_an U11- printable word in 'l‘urk1sh, the Axis radio made gleeful reference to it. American c0mrl1€r1t8t°Y5 bctnoancd the unfortunate choice. Now 1t hi5 been abandoned for the mere initial letters of the first three words i: represents. I l‘ I? Say: the Globe md_Maili "Now new: mm that the Liberal Prem1er of Prince Edward Is- land, after consultation with Mr. Mackenzie King, has (lecidctl to dissolve 1111-. Leglslature altd seek a new mandate. The revelation about tlUS conference is rather astonishing in the light 0i M1-, King's frequent-proclamations that he never interferes in Provincial pohttcs. I-lowever, 011$ motive ascribed for this dissolution 1s a desire to prove that the people, of one Province are not Ilut since the Liberals now hold nearly all of the strikes and the enemy becomes helpless the llltll I! The My the umenfttu, , f tint W?- ol "l! o“ $111111,‘ 115?; Wnfllrc who bud made good In the cltv- In; education takes 1on3- er and com more than that of any other of the learned professlom; he 1115.3 understandably mxfous tomak, mark In his career, after the ‘lacs an o! fmamtm/ unm- lDDIOnt-lcuhlp, and 1t Is not my u ‘r1133: 115111‘? 11"‘ “it ‘m t”, M". e . — ont- Iurthar evidence a yum m, y“ h" 5°" W rwlrse trends comes from Edmonton, where It Is revealed flint gucrowded hotels are not no much by patrons who seek to leave by Improvised fire es. "PM. ls by would-be guests who try to set In that, way. -W1nd,sor t. , Well. It really beflnl to look l! n" N"!!! hove been boo little add too lute on the Russian front.- Vancoutver Province. Mlhgggaplmznmlgnts a; Swed- ra w wro of the ‘Yenflld 991111111 efforts to remove non-essential cftfzem from the capftal, out of fear a! afr raids, are re rted In trouble with Nazi autho ties. They mad¢ the mfg. N156. npvflrently, of not saying those fugitive; were skilfully dig. finklglngnahemselves from the R. I . C. A. F. accord- fm m plan. -W1ndsor Star. A Irony of armchair rlflcu had V°l°°d min)’ and vart views on Allied war strategy while a soldier 1n the optkislt corner of the car- riage listened will Ill-concealed 1m- patlence. As the train drew up at the next gtatfon, one of the amst. eur atrateglstk was expounaing 1n no optimistic straln, the value o! Blmrne troops In modern war. "r11 tell you what 1t 1s." cut 111 1111-. 5111a- ler. as he let down the wtnaow and Yeflched for the door handle. "It's time some of you chafrborne troops c111“! up.’ —Prom Yorkshire The hour ls not hr off when our Brent father-land will again breathe freely. The Russian people no long. er stand alone In this deadly strug- RIe. Bulde them are the soldiers of our Allies —M0ecow Radio. 5 ""71 “Production X-rgy machine capable of inspecting as IIIBIIY as 17,000 airplane castings In 5 3441911!‘ d!!! has been developed 1'01" u. Mfd-Westem war factory by Westinghouse engineers, 55y; an ex. Chflflle. This machine which, for the m“ “m9 M11188 the advantages of assembly-line speed to X-rny work, makes It poulble, 1t was stat.- ed to X-ray metal castings for de. IBM: at the rate of one every flve 80001165. As a result, Amerlcirs growing alr forces will get better airplanes faster. The key to this new unit/s speed Is a moving con- veyor lorty feet long and three feet, wide that transports the castings throuZh the X-ray Inspection. This provides the fastest method yet de. vised to spot hidden flaws quantities of metal parts. change. “I know that the great clock had been built over 80 years ago. . ..I leamed that prior to 1913 B11; Ben hours for two men to complete the and installed an electrlc motor, and 40 minutes. Big Ben, which was named afber Sh‘ Benjamin Hal], who was Comn-nssfo of Works when 11 was built. 1s neither the clock nor the tower as most people sup- DOSE- B13 Ben 1s actually the fam- ous clock’; bell, which weighs over l3 tons and which was-first. carried to Westminster on a wagon 111-awn by l6 horses. Whoever winds the big clock’: mechanlsm has to ellmb those 202 steps to the watchroom three t-‘mes Weekly." -Alastair Loch In a BBC talk. Wlllllm M. Jeffern f; of the op- fnIon that. synthetic rubber has pro- tlm war, It will hold its own with tiatnral rubber, both as to use and u to 00st. “Progres-sw" f5 the cor- rect word, ff guch fa the case. Synthetic rubber has come a long way from the day when, cut off from Its normal sources of crude rubber, In Malaysia. and the East Indies, the Unfted States began casting around for t; new supply to carry its war machine as well as a part a dependable guide -have no prov- Isfon at all for the reader who likes to mix smoke with his books. This Ia kg fnconcelvame n5 the failure of mun art museums to fumtsh n ortlbls chm to alt down In while looking at a great picture. Many men cannot properly take In am full flavor of a book at all unlesk they smoke a pipe while doing no. Under present condi- tion; they are forced to Interrupt moral effect m1 Germany of Hitler's virtual dis- appearance from absolute control of the Reich's J ‘ _ E_ I_ Le ' 1 t th ith- their rudlng and 3o outdoor Into Who, blwa these If that pea-gnu " _ 131i‘ mi“ 1m ‘hinii 11 11 g‘s“1:11‘1‘“'111=‘1.1‘1‘1‘¢111 "w 1M1 w. oven 111 wehiew “*5” tweed" ‘ ° "m M" 11%‘ “Fifi.” Q3 a“'3_° _ P°P 5 PP° , _ . . of Winter, w take 1t moire. This Hones-rive has never rend of n you“ h." um m.“ “mm. ; Party 1s likely to be less serious 1n the Mflfltlmtl Ia not only q hum-d In health. It ghugumagtg°us "Pk d0!" b! "l. mot of his opponents, n, my w, H 1 Provinces than elsewhere. Perhaps Prmcfi Ed- gays!!! #:3113111! tlrtaoagglri; dmg,’ dmplgyP-‘if’ “fill gfidyf; Inch fr: ha; null-her been re- '11; pplg m4 plfljn 0W -_ ward Island Wlll provide a soothing lotion. mum“ A mm“, w“ ma,“ b, work at the Red Grant House Q . ' M‘ ‘mun “m” W 7 - 1‘! . - ‘lho u; f0 m]: revehb- ‘lb mobs In walktng, ~ ' " ‘ "‘ at tout oumfortabl h "m" 3'1"" ch" ~ 1- 6S 1 - " ° " ' °'“° autumn could no do n1 um tr m ‘ ‘ m‘ PMW‘ “m” m“ mfl,,'“""’°'" our Mr. Willie Grant, ex-M. L. A., for Cbamflam muwdfi llgnmbggfik "Vi? “mm “N”, m "mt g a In the Ill!!! 1 In ‘M4 llwlflam I , . p in Quebec Legislature, and uncle 0t‘ the Hm- stars. A11 ofben u not 0111's; at- u“, "tlllgwkg: “h” l“ mmigmd a mfnwaiw" 501M t0 1W0 u n‘ u. um r1111": 3 Maurice L. Duplessis has 1115f dted at the age of lrlbutlble M 16in warm-Mums. h “° “mm” " the Iaehllture - - two absence . at mun — ll °"“' , . I - - - and mt 111 s11 In keeping with the ‘° °°'- °"° h“ 0W w drtve n1 But 11111111111 of msdneu .1- alnlnw - °‘“"“' - seventy-two. While a member of the legislative “M, o‘ u“ "harm"- thmflvu the country roads to sec that mos "gmfm" ' ' n‘! "'1" l if‘ 5"‘ of orchards black gamm- 2 Assembly Mr. Grant found himself at time; who ‘n by mm" "n", hemyj $752!‘ ‘gfxfemwlnfgz wuufd fut. or the matter I: that ‘thug: fl,‘§‘,"1,22“‘°"" ‘mi Al mu nrvlco I": m ' facing stiff attacks, particularly from the dlrec- homftulbo people _o1- would be ff we“, washer-l d“, “WW3; were only veomofu tn the m4 w, m,“ w,‘ 1w. 1 0f onlrlfll" l,“ ' ' ° 3 tion of the Three Rivers member, Mr. Duplessis. "" "ztlfml? ¢"d°"°d' wfhh bouquets from the first pusq mmml", " ' 4°: ‘W!’ 51"“ ‘m; llnllfl 7"“ ~ Although Mr. Duplessis was a nephew of M1’. -——-— r" iiVste‘fs?“‘ui“a1‘1‘1‘f1‘i‘1‘1ii1.‘o ‘h. ‘In “um” “d.” ' n" “l” ‘Mmmn alxyhfieinliv; fl not: llfllutlln. Write or nhonfl l“ f Grant, through marriage, they did not spare Cad! .11. m‘ o" “Nan”. Evldentlv " oqreaslve" mun 59ml" when the duly slum] And In out-burden IIIIOIMMQI" other ‘in 111-tine when the occasion arose, gener- 1'0 remgvedlnk spot-w from rtnsm ifiiii‘ lmenriftesriwdilgh "l‘1‘5‘é'.1."§‘i h? “iii: “oak F flufghflltll ‘ftllyhthien forestry nmtfers were 0n the agenda. 315x020“? thtzfn 11 mawgnfindlaub $11 111s Mt u 111mm" m1- the]: ougu (hobomvw from the Plt- w 1 "mfigon, m . . W1111¢ _Grm1t_h_.111 ideas as to government for- ‘m, "m. A1“ mcertmva o, m,‘ w", d“? the?féwflzlmgnélflanfggrflhgtgflchtfdlf {Pnug- fiofifqmlf'mtg°ng$ $1 once loved nu you, AND SON estry policy which he tyas not loath to prcpounce appear. ran to. It I: their children who are of the very people who found It so %,‘,‘,’°,,‘,Z,° 1': a“! °°' r 0 nU-I-cugofl "W" against the formidable attacks of his nep- ii‘ 1° be tmwht- I'- h they M111 will em tn out Wm aide. e ' b, ‘I gg-ggggsou he,‘ Th0 chill 0110011 of Honduras la be the adults rt tnmorrotv. There- mattered. even If than gents were l-‘lfteoilcre Spencer. In Munlin ' 1banlnes NPOYIIQYQTIIXIHDOWIQM_IQXQQIQQW.*Q|QQI. .11 rqaerklrflbunqA 0131- Immediately there Is a meet- fn large ing of the school board and rate. _Ex- payers, 11nd as a result the wind. ows are replaced by new and but. ter ones. for every window 111 11111 111111.11» be- cause the color of the old window used ta be wound by hand three Fhfldes 1S hfllmful to our e es? tunes a week. and It used to m“ This 1s dope for the rural sc ool and the 01d discarded shades are 3011 gut 1n 1913 the “m, designed used 011 (he wznclows of the homes In which the less fortunate par- now the we“ clock L, wound m ems llve. Bliwkboards are repaint- ed and changed to more suitable gosftlons In the classroom so they homes have n11 these? know how many rural schools of sue-h equipment. greased to the point where, after st selves net n program which consists twenty nunutes eve day. At m 011d of the school yergr these 1111111: all the wrftters’ work was slates which after the completion and correction of an exercise were literally "licked" off. Today even the Pupils of Grade 4 hWVQ l. pep- arate work book for each amidst». runuc rokuu FOB A NEW UTOIIA Sin-Allow me to expreu lune mews lgpnfertni around flu oom- n. e . To many It will be lust lanth- er election filled wIth promlnl as fruitless as ever. But. to oth- ers II; will, or should be, u time for serious thought and careful consider-at‘ . Some of the thought and quel- tlom “m: — beside: thou of the war — must be: Can we afford to mark time In such mo- mentous days as these? Days that demand our blood. our sweat, our tears. Are we taking stock as to what. has, and 1s still being done, 1n such countries as New Zn.- lnnd, Australia or Great Britain, our own vast West, and last. but not. least, In the great U1S.B.R.? we are not askIng there questions, we shall awake 1n a. not» far-distant; day tn find wehavo won the war only to have Ion the peace. ., Today. we In this tiny yet not- ed Islund where (Mnfederatlcn was cradled, have for the» first, time the privilege of register-lug our votes for theCanadfnn Com- monwealth Federation. Let those who believe In the Status Quo, vote as they have always done, but we who are alive to the new world order qufl: being Neroes and vote for the C.C.F-, or where no candidates are nominated abstain from voting, and show In no un- certain way to those who will be elected that we demand action, not Drornfses; Jobs. not. doles; l ltvfng in accord with our age, not a mere existence that belong; to the Dark Ages. In thus doing we shall lose our votes and drop our plums. but we will have done our part In putting new heart fnto the soul of humanity and that o; Democracy. " Why not make Sept. 16 a red letter dfly by doing our part In making Canada a land to love, a. Dominion fitted sooner or later to clnsp hands with those In everv land, across race, class and creed In one grand world brotherhood and lasting peace. I ¥]%l1r1.CSl]1;,!etc.. . . UTTA . Marshfleld, P.E.I. RT 111mm. scnoot. 13611111 $11'.— In re 1 to " ' " letter regurdlrgg“ "the ll tlfawvéeld School House" I certainly 110W all the rural schools of our province don't fall Into tluif “category? the school house is the most neglected build! In the com. munlty. I would Ike l0 know how many of our farm homes receive as much attention as the 1111-31 School. 11w many housewives would like to have modern wind- ows in their kitchens in 01111191- the; they might have more 13-111 better light. but due to flnunrll circum- Smmes they at home ta to work In the most. out-of-date, Inconven- ient houses and barns, 1n m-dgr that their money may be spent on the school, the buntnng 1n which their children are educated, A public health nurse 0r super- vLsor ccmes to 1'1 school and reports the! the llslhtlng is not satisfact- HW mam’ of Us get ne-w shades Ill not be ruinous to children's eyes. furnaces are Installed, and all "Progressive" gees on to say that the mhool our parents attended was fitted with a piano and the apparatus necessary to teach the rudiments of science. I'd like to twenty or tthlrty years ggo had Today several rural schools In this Province are equipped with laboratory app“;- tushgpt such has recently been In- a . 110ml aizo (before recorded hls- tory) PTldfly was devoted to P. T. per way to conduct a meeting and they them. of music, plays, contests and ameg dome on the ltllde t with 191111‘? but even this In a ‘$219M 211m roars I" AUGUST 31, 1943 choose the 11119111111111 any of these i tein ‘Chartered Banks . . . lcnlr of Montreal The lunlt of Toronto The Canadian lcnk of Commerce The Dominion lcnlr Imperial Bunk of Canada The lcnlr o! Nova Scetlu The Provincial lcnk of Canada The loyal lcnlr cl Canada lcnque Clnudlenne Nofloncle Barclay: Bunk (Canada), Security and privacy are two fundamentals which the Canc- dinu people have always de- manded of their banks. They maintain more than 4,550,000 depollt accounts, knowing the! These banks are constituted under the Bank Act- an act of‘ the Parliament of’ Canada. They compete with each other for your business; __ This makes for fair and eficient operation and for quality of service. Enterprises 1nd individuals may go to my or all of them to deposit money, obtain loans and transact any other banking business." IH _ If: every lease of the word, the bunks are servants of the people: Lord Macmillan wrote in the Royal Commission report of 1955:"The mechanism pffinauce is a delicate one; the confidence their money is available when upon which it is baled is e slow they went it. In thousands of growth, but it may be destroyed daily contacts with bunk mun- over-night, and than Io whom is 13ers and staffs, they know that their private affairs will be held strictly confidential. summed responsibility for the wel- fare of tbs people mmtpmcaadwitb caution intba adoption of cbangosl! hmyefnlenlhullflfldbmeltumdwb-qeneloaoffluodtuhnd Ianhoemufinodayoueoncnfnrdyuurluvhprandllacmyow Ilnclelddfairlwllhaammcelhdprivaeywlllbemcliahod \ THE CHARTERED BANKS OF CANADA b they m. represented by oolleazuel. ' I am. 811'. Mn- And the Premier evidently expects “INTERESTED? the electors to be hoodwfnked by Flt-ii? JON“ AND THE giéch camopiglage." Ifnthge wgs 11H H J 001131817!!!‘ _ M1000 nan, en a _, _ _ EBECTIQN decenc the Liberal party should A ROWN’ DP’ " -——— re-nom‘ ‘ these absentees In un- Blrt- 111 I rwont 188W o! T119 ffonn and do all In their power r0 "Patriot" editorial comment In f- have their electlon assured, tn re- ferred In criticism of an Editors! In the Guardian, commenting on the announcement; of Provincial election for of Interest shown by the general public since that ann- ouncement was made and Its ap- athy towards an‘ unaollclwd con- test, seems tn fully justlfythe att- aken by the Guardian that time. It. Is true that a clumsy effort to bring on n snap election wul attempted, but I to have been utoceasful, utlve Council. should have Inslsted B1 The lack A d llc tel f d - ‘"2": .1:"*1"::;:: 1k:.1:::11z'11':r:...::.r~':::1 e=mraes*sr..zs..ssr:i“ari.zs $111151; 1! n15,’ “$131,155,13- respect to such deliberations. Their canopy of secrecy doc; 50cm to be rather pOtOUB on occasions. difficult. role to ffll. He In leading g, House that ts more or Ies; divided against itself. He has enemies wfthfn the gates mdwtfhoutundsomeof those wIthIn are on moat. friendly terms thou who are without. What t1 lmn n political o - ponent m ht gym lthlu were It riot for Premier Jones has a “mime and rsritirrl- Today 111111111 ma. Perhlt m1- 11, the dest 11- dievoted t» short tests on the to which e 21111111211111.1111. J11‘: 3°21: 3%,‘; w: ‘J',°,1't’h":°'lnwi‘1i‘¢'§t1ii1ii‘cn if," 5°“ dmmfl the Week Ind whIch he now pmtdev may lend p0“ or every msmkér ,11;p¢m¢ 0g ma bows 1111111111 let I M" J figs‘ lrziue-Tmfi 51%;" wfhwthl him, may but. be lettled by the gupporflng m; (gdmpgflwn go;- mg tle of Dr. Evans Stoniiaalyt ohnéngn mam the mo ¢ 9 voter; of the Pmvlncc In n general nun! by manfptflatfon of "'3'!" "d '°° M" q“ election. The Patriot edltnrfll states that. "Mr. Jones came to the h ad of t _ t t1, 1,- h _ hi! Iovlrflmfiht b)‘ I I511!!! mlfor- mandate from hf people and tut. _ t fn,"ggikfljtgxfifénrfiggfggsg,%.111.°11.1‘L1“‘l1.28fi3§‘§.1.l§1.2£.1§2’f 111 11111» “111-we m- 1- ~1=111~ 1111-1111? 111111111111 11111111 1w ‘w: r1".:'..'"':1."1'1’1 American Industrial inventiveness l"! 111116111 01111? for those who “my “ruck H’ my m" M“ m! m“ "by ‘h! 1mm!" "Id 1111!" from“; but nrflmtttfl ‘h’ Th, , duecw, m, m, m," were musically 1111111111111? lelwtrd 11v I- smnll minority of 1.1111111 11 generul Provincial election. hmutfui uflvlly of 1M Y"1:~1'"*"'=""**""~= 1.11.1- ": “‘°"" “m” °‘“1%11T11" 5111212131‘ .1‘1r1"::::"1:1. f": '"-="*'- ""- maeo t300,00t.o f b- - W‘ _ R ber. nidstehnf‘ next yearystlre tgtal er “ho goes m mach h" '0 hi" up“ “y u mo" “mum ‘m W" much “Yam” “M!” W". ' . n a cat-tum“, “flung that he 0,. u“ der a particular form 0f duress the ponem, u u, when m Du," flu“ order Miur ytshiietyagggtiu‘ “oomo mm‘ _K“"' has ssed 1m exam In P. T. and h "O 81M . election would take place e bottle lodny- ‘PPM 95 “m” ' _ i» M... s...‘ ~. 1111-11- .. 1.1-1.1: 1-11- "w" " t’ 1'- "Mt WM" 111.1313. wgek, ‘;'.‘.‘°“...,“°’,,,3,',‘3 lrnment wfthout co ma, M “hm”! "ll °""‘*l- °b'°"“'4°" l! would like, but from 1mm, w and u; premmably thout nu" ' nzes er - ' o twinge Inspected 5y one Bufnrvjg- u no‘; t}: pub’; chotfgeogg the P. T. dike. Ineeadfintngragchtfbi-“aet: eder. On that, ogcufkin he M!" 91'1"" 6"“ 7mm‘ When Mother went to school by a “commoner not- Atmmn tlhdlln-foneabe locum» general September suggest, that: the with e fact that. the untenable posftton he new occupies Ia prtmartly that of his own mik- tn which thFyTIIvTmeu soldier occupants! The dis- clcan and a tructtve. In most can! mots they repnguilented were still cognition of what they were prn- pared to sacrlffce for us and our countrv. Evidently that is not the attltudn of the Liberal Party un- der Its new leadership. If Premier Jones thought that his noattlon was secure he would not have hesitated to continue In office indefinitely as he hu done for the past three months or without a mandate from the people and he would have found precedent upon which to base Jus- tification for such n course. The fact of the matter 1s that. the new Premier dld not dare meet 148 Great George Street CIIABLOTTETOWN. P.E.l. MAGS ~ llllllt IIESTUBER at. Exec- of the plans of his supposed collea- Bues to defeat 111m on the floor of’ u" fir‘ Promoks g gar‘: the House - - were developing and a? h‘: 20;. await; a fie. maturing to a point dangerously close to t; certafntyTHe learned a1 lesson from the result of the On- tario election and the Dominion Irv-elections. 11111111111111 11k Intuition had hitherto led hlm to believe differently. He ftgured In hfa own way. that In order to long his tenn u Premier It. wou be much safer. t0 face the people than the _, Legislature. He could scrap the soldier member; of the mlrklbly useful In prevent!!! dandruff and destroylrll 111"‘ ulttu hlll‘ killers. Just "'1' low the directions and y"! will be amend at the "8""!- Prlce 60 confr. GASSY BTOMACHS BELIEVE!) 1t wui relieve n11 dflmw" tfhe tnatlngcmventlons. And a0 ‘ympwm this man of "decision" concluded e that a new Premier should have a Improve: the 1111111"- m amt Georlfl 5m"