PAGE roux 1 TllE fllllllllllTTiTfiWll GUARDIAN Mornln| Dally (Founded In I881] President: meat. Col W. Chute: S. Mal-um _ Vice-President: J. R. " not!» 7- J- l- sgemaryi Lleut. Col. D. A. Mnclflnann, 0.8-0. ldltor and Managing Director: J. B. Burnett. FJ-l- Associate Editors: l-‘ranli Walker and IJeuL In A. Burnett, R..U.N.V.R. iUu Aotlvn Service) “The Strongest Memory in Weaker Till the Weakest Ink." FRIDAY. MAT/Tillie‘ ____i-— Mr. King Answered Prime Minister King in his opening dam- paign speech cited "as evidence of the Gov- fl-niiieiir", pcrtormatict- in the last fi\'e years the heartfelt congratulations of l.'rin1e Mitt- ister Churchill on Catiadzfs "magnificent con- tribution to ottr common victory." Mr. King. (lioiv modest of hint!) said he did not claim this contribution was entirely due to his‘ (lov- erniitctir; “hut it \\1l< the Liovertitticnt which tuauagetl and directed the ivar effort." This untlerliand attetnpi to exploit the commenda- tion due the Iiuiadiaii people lands .\lr. King in a l“ predicament than before. liecattse, on thc confta-sioit oi one of his own former collcagites --- a niaii who had been a leading tnenibcr of his cabinet for thirteen _vears—-it was not the tiovcrtititctit at all but the Op- position in the llUlhC of Cointnons that was (lirccting our war effort. and was responsible for anv Achievement to which Parliantetit can lav claim f" (In; conncctioti. llcre are the ivords of .\lr, Kitig". tltrnicr Rlitiister of Pub- lic \\'orks and 'l‘r.t~i~;-ort_ llon. P. _l. :\. Car- din, as giicti in llzut-zirtl: "ff:'r)'-- .i/.'/~ 1/ ‘t ltur f'i"l'!l [tr/ran up It) flit’ [trcsrrzf in l/tr frrnrtxur/{tut of the war /IG.I‘ been fnkrn or 11:.‘ )'.‘_i'll.lf of t/iu l/trcaf of u Inaffon or ut/tiutt/tttrzt.’ Minn tun.‘ .1 ll_\' I/Ir O/‘fiOIII/I-OH. (H111 }'l‘r'.l![.\1' of ’-".'w flvxr Iii. .\'.’.'t'.]l n lilo/Yon or rut/t an az/tr/itlrtrrtzt, if frn/wurrll. rcottlri dtxrlrayt f0 a rcr/tttit ur/un/ i/tu srrrzty7llt of our party in the Hnnru of (‘otttiltorrc T/tnt 1's the jraritiolt. I do no! um! to 1w‘ nfrltid to speak my tnittd." 'l‘hat answers .\lr. hing so effectively that it is a wonder he has the audacity ever to mention the subject again. Allied Control Problem die time ts zippruachitig when the Central Control (fotiiiiiis-"ioti will take up its dllllf-‘S l“ Gertiiaity, and put into force the policies which have been conccrtetl by the lll£l._l0l' Allied pow- ers. The problems are both different in tiature from, and raster" in scope, than that which faced the victurioits .\llics in I9l8. SHyS Tim Titttrxr Illlllfrlllllllt‘ corrcsiioiitletit. Then the-Reich was rein l») 1'. on zind iiolcnce, but it had not becn lll\'.ltl(‘tl cxc-"p! for some small 811115. and it had <uffcred little from bombing. The governmental and adtiiitiisirative structure re- mgiiyier], lrflllqlflff was ivorking, there had been no dispersal of ivliolc ciminittnitics. Today Ger- manv is a inst chaos. ivithout govermncnt, irvithi her :itlniiiiis:rative tiiacltitie smashed, her industrics in ruins. hcr people uprooted. ll" organized life disrupted to its roots. The Al- lied Cotirrol Comniissitm will take over a bru- ken nation. ln the Crimea agrcetiient provision was made for the setting up 0f a Central Control Commission, eonsl-"titig of the Supreme Com- manders of I‘ at llritaiii, Russia, the United States and liiiiiice, with hcadqtiarters in Ber- lin. \\'ho the liritislt representative will he has" not yet been publicly announced: the choice seems to lie betivt-en Field Marshal Sir Harold Alexander and Field Marshal Sir Bernard blontgtitiicry. (icucral T (‘Illl(l\\'€l' \vill be the American rcprcsciitzitivc. This body will be the real ruler of Iieruiatiy, entrusted with the re- sponsibility of ensuring the carrying out of Allied policies. Whether the seat of Govern- ntent \vill in fact bc ‘icrliti, retiiaitis to be seen. Tllill, for one thing, ilcpciitls on the results of the survey of facilities rctnaitiitig in the batter- ed capital. Since it was i043, the l‘i.lll'l'7p"‘ drawn up a dct of Iierniattv ltftt" been enforced. '1" established in December n Advisory’ Commission hrts tl plan for the atlmiiiistration unconditional surrender has us are ready, but it tnay be i found lll(‘_\' will ticed to he extended in viciv of the rotiipli-trnc-s of the itiicrnal German trol- llllbl‘ .\n earl-u itiiicial statctticnt (lctailitig thc atliiiin {on to be >1’. tip tnay bc expected, but in the Illtjlllllllllfi certain assumptions may be made. There is no intention of trying to bring into existence a licrnian government. The Control (foiiitiiL-ioii will l\.\llf_' orders and the (icriiiitis \vill haw to (they them. Under the tliiiinii~~iiiii will ht- agcticics or divisions covcritig cvcri‘ plrist: of public and economic life. ln a \\'.'I_\', tlii-sc will be very niuch like l\lllll~ll'lf‘~. (“Ill thcir ivork \vill prcsititiabl_v' be. CUUFIllIIIUWl bi sttlllt‘ other attlhurity imtttcdi- atcly bcloiv tht- (oiitrol Commission. The chcuiical huh-trig for trxaniple, \vill require the clo-thst my) lt is not an industry which can h: jzts: stoppctl, for although so itn- portaiit to Iicrtiian iiar potential, it is equally vital to agiiculturt- and o:licr essential activities “ha: is to hztppcn to such iudttstrial areas ls the huhr docs not seem to have been de- cided vet. lliscttssiotis havi- taken place on bringing it llllllCl‘ some form of iiitcrtiatiottzil control. In dircctinz; thr- lifc of pnsI-ivzir (iermanyg one of the lontrtil (oiiiiiiissiotfs gravest re- lponsibilitics will be the tc-cilitcation of the nation. 'l‘hi.~ will be an iziimetisc task. The right kind of l(‘.'l'.‘lll‘l'.\' will ltavc to he found. school books \vill have to be revised, and a different spirit itifitscil if the new generation is f’) learn the practice of peace. The revela- tions of the concentration camps have shown nnly too clearly the (lvpth In iiliicli national dehattcltmctit has gone. Almost evcry day new ‘Ylsi/tll. %-w~a"—<hr 1/ “i Tl" details reach London of the systematic horrors organized and tolerated. There can be no il- lusions among those who will soon be directing German life, about the difficulty of transform- ing the tnentality which made the concentration camps possible. Four zones of occupation-the British in the northwest. the Americans in the south and southwest, with the French in between and the Russians in the east-have not yet been finally delimited. Within these zones each Command- er \vill carry out the directions of the Central Commission. The Germans themselves will have been called on to help in running the cotmtry, and one of the most serious problems \vill he to eliminate all Nazis. There is at present little information of the extent to which surviving leaders of the fallen regime have made their plans for reorganizing the movement under- ground. The activities of such desperadoes as “ivere-ivolites" \vill be rigorously dealt with. The Allied Military Government ivill con- tinue to function in occupied Germany until it merges into a. larger organization which will take over control of Germany as a \vhole.,Tlie duration of such controls is unpredictable, but it ivill have to last long enough to eliminate the militarism which twice within a generation has brought such sorrow to the peoples of the world. -EDITT)_IQ—IAL NOTES- Chigtiecto Canal scheme should be a issue in the election. a- n- a Tomorrow 8th Victory Bond closes. lletter late than never. u jap U-boats are alleged to have reached the Atlantic; wonder if they be German ones under lap control. live campaign I i O ‘l!!! \Vard V of the city is to have a by-election. if |iiot'e than one catididate offers, on June 4. 'l‘htts, like Ontario, Cardigan and Charlotte- town ivill have balloting to do on two succes- sive Mondays, June 4 and 1t. r u u The visit of Commodore Brock, O. B. E., revives the question of headquarters for the R.C.N.V.R. here. It \vill be recalled the Pro- vincial Government offered a site at Brighton to which exception was taken, and since then nothing has been done iti the tnatter. Mean- time Summerside has decided to start a corps there, and no doubt oould furnish a site for pro- vincial headquarters if asked to do so. An election is a. suitable time to settle such tiiaf- ters. n filllvllfi An Exchequer Court is expected to be held in Charlottetown soon to straighten out the Nortliuiirberland Ferries laiv-sttit. The decision of the Supreme Court at Ottawa tueatis that the Minister of Fittaticc exceeded his authority in litiiiting the Exchequer Court's previous de- cision; and, moreover, the Supreme Court judges felt the interest oti the tmpaid balance should have been at the rate of 3 per cent in- Sleflll 0f 4 per cent as allowed. At its next sit- ting the Exchequer Court will have to straighten this out, as well as allocate definitely the amount payable by the government on both vessels in- volved. ll i II i Bishop Joseph Butler, English theologian, born this day 1692.; in his time theologians and Pfillllflflus were discussing and some of them greatly interested in the Hobbes School of thought which laid the foundation on which political philosophers of the 19th Century and the present day were to build, viz., that the civil power residing in the people was absolute, and that _no internal organizations which might conflict with it should be allowed to exist; Bishop Butler essayed to combat this theory which he did in Analogy Of Religion and his Sermon: preached in Rolls Chapel; his Analogy ts regarded as one of the greatest intellectual achtevemetits of Anglicanism, but it failed to “OP lllc progress of llobbes (lemocratic propu- gatida: “That which is the foundation of all our hopes and of all our' fears; all our hopes and fears which are of any consideration: I mean a Future Life." I Ill i t Of Germany's twelve million foreign imi-k- crs, many thousands were employed on the latid. Today, WllCn the population of Germany finds itself virtually deserted by its Nazi ad- tiiitiistrators, Frcnchnicti, Czechs, Poles, [tall ians, Ritssians, and others are leaving fields. This flight of ivorkers from the Ger- man land is happening during the most vital month of the year-the month when the soiv- ings of cereals and the planting of potatoes must be completed. It means, as (icneral Eisen- hower points out in his instructions to the country districts, that everything depends on the German people themselves doing the neces- sary farm ivork. Potatoes form the backbone of the German diet, and they must be platited this month. Between eighteen and twenty tiiil- lioti tons are needed every year in Germany for human consumption. The central organ of the Food Ministry itself declares: ‘Ratious in the now. A possible shortage of seeds or fertilizers must not be allowed _to obstruct work.’ 'l‘ratis- port is in a chaotic state; the war has cost Ger- many a very high proportion of her oil produc- tion, and the resulting shortage is keeping the tractors silent, forcing the farmers to relv on the tnachines converted to gas burning. There is thus a very serious threat of famine facing (iermanv. The Germans cannot expect to he fed before the inhabitants of the liberated coun- tries. Because of the world shortage of food, and the wrecking 0f the food economies of an entire continent by the Germans, there will in any event be a lengthy period of hardship after the war. “ihrtlier that period of suffering shall be lotigcr or shorter the German people themselves can decide. the d coming year depend on spring tillage work I n8 0th --__ UHARADTTETOWN GUARDIAN iNofes By The Way lfetaln, once the hero of France, going home now to stand trial for his lIfe, I: a pathetic spectacle, but hIs tears will not wash out- the record and It I; the record whlch must convfct or seqult film of treason-Ottawa. Journal. Ono expert uyl It fl correct 1,9 "I f I 0d", th th is’... n5.’ Jéltt- l...’ l’. °' “m” have quI Ottawa Joum . ugh democracy of the was fomlbly Illua- ago when three men went to u Palm,» to receive the crosses their sons had been awarded umotxsly. One was a London fnancler. The second was a Scottish farmer. Aud the third was: mg-and-bona mm from Oamberwell. - Bgwkwm Recorder and Times. Mn. Byme Ho e Sande . tor of Chatelalne,p"on loan-T slerilde 1941 to the Wartime Prices and Trade Board putts It this way: “To "read most of te post-wai- plans for a better world, you would think the were written by Santa Claus. T ls war Is beIn for freedom from work." Beside; If the latter freedom were possi- ble. everyone would soon tire of IL-Brant-ford Expositor. It would be difficult to form un estimate of the entire damage suf- fered by our country during the German occupation. inflicted on t Ukraine two billion rubles. 8,000 elementary schools were estroyed, as was the home of that citadel of Ukrainian culture, Ktev University, planned by the famous architect Beretl. - U.S. SR. Bulletin. Berlin‘: destruction ll sald to be so complete that the once third largest cIty In the world may never be repaired. But why worry about that? Only Tokyo of the other great cttles ever hatched up so much and so horrible letting against the others. Berln and Tokyo could well be salted down like Carthage of old and left, as dead monuments to any future persons who think they might like to rule the world-New Glasgow Evening News. Frazier Hunt, magazine writer, says In a recent article there will be, on account of the great In- crease In the number of wage- earners durlng the war, 50,000,000 ter the war, and that, as a result there will be more demand for consumer goods and a higher standard of lIvIng than ever be- fore. Well, It sounds a lot better than what we're getting these days from the crepe hangers who can see nothing a ead but chaos and joblessness. Lethbrfclge Herald. A man in a heavy rescue squad was detailed, with others. to deal with a bomb Incident In another district. When he got there the man saw two legs sticking out of the debris. The vfctlm was got out and when the dust was re- moved, the rescuer found he had saved hls own mother. She seem- ed tuiconsclnus and was taken to the hospital. Next dry he went to visit: her. "I‘m glad you got me out last night." said his mother, “but I never knew you could use such dreadful language." _- From Empire Dfgest. t? of Sydney has vde free tuition to The Univer- declded to pro Canadian students who travel to Australia after the war, This Is a fine gesture on behalf of the State University of New South Wales as a means of promoting a peace- time interchange of visits across the Pacific. The war over, there should be closer relations between Canada and the Commonwealth. AIr trnvel will bring the two Do- mtnlons wlthin range of each other. Interest In Australla has been sthnulated by the war. London Free Press. 1t In fitting that the Church us well as Industry uncl commerce should pre are plans to meet the situation tat will arlse at de- mobilization. The formation of congregational oommltteee, as pro- posed by the Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, to act as a means of Ilalson between the Church and the men and women returnlng from the forces, should prove use- ful In various ways, especially the Initial difference s en down. It can be shown that the congregations are prepared to hold out the hand of fellowship, fllld are eager to reubscrb or In- troduce the returned ex-servtce man or woman Into thetr Chris- tian fellowship. The Church through Its social life and Inter- est In the secular sphere of tblnlzs can obviously assist In the social rehabtlltmtlon of ex-servlce person; but Its most Ifnportutit functIon-Its enduring function In- eed-Is to teach and proclaIm Cnrlstfan belief, thereby showln: that no one need come from the dread experience of the batttleffeld Into a. splrltual void. - Glasgow Herald. A Toronto bank clerk, Douglas S. King, given by the Police of that. city a reward of for his brave part. In resisting three robbers who held up his branch a year ago. Mr. Kin In his let.- ter of thanks, told ivhat. had been done for him by the Bank of Tor- onto, hIs employer. "I have been excellently dealt with,” saId Mr. King, and he explalns: "After the hold-up In whlcn I was Injured my hospital was paId by the batik, was given an extended leave, and my expenses paid on a holl- day tt-Ip covering some three months. compensated me to the extent of $2,000 In cash. Following this 1 was promoted and my salary has been increased." Some time a o there was crlttclsm of the ban because the Bankers’ Assoclatlon had resisted In the courts an at- tempt by a former clerk to col- lect from a fund out of which sums can be paid to members of the general publlc who may come to battle wItti bank robbers. ‘that fund. It. will be recalled, Is not available to employees of the bunks. The Toronto case - And there Is no reason to suppose Mr. Klng had exceptional treatment- Indicates that the banks In tbefr own way are fair and indeed gen- erous In these matters. and should o far to remove misunderstand- In this connectlon. _- Prom m. Join-rill. Mr. ' about the new U.S. customers for goods af- o; vutsuc ronun Tllhcol PIOIIIIITION AND RIOTING Sin-There has been much ex»- ultatlon among Prohlbltlonlltl recent rIoIa In Halifax, and these gentlemen seem to feet that the cause of Government Control has received a crushing blow. If you look at. the over-all picture, this In actually‘ what hap- pened. Out of 48 states, and elgm provinces In North Amer-Ion that have some form of Ifquor sale, 48 states and seven provinces haved themselves In a decorous manner during the V.-E Day cele- bratlons, and one provlnce, or rath- er, part of one province went on the rampage. Putting It another way: out. of approximately 141),- 0o0,000 people llvng under gondl- tions oi government sale, areas with a total population uf_ say, 80,000 people, were exposed to "lI- quor" riots. works out to about. one-one thousand, seven hundred and fiftieth of me total. I1; would be much smaller than mat. If we counted England and Scotland. On the other hand, an area of about 90.000 people with Prohibition at the helm, had no llquor riots. (Although I ‘did beer a few servlcemen got a In.’ out of hand in one of our cent-res). What. a damning indictment of liquor sale! It remlnds me of the clergyman In the New England States who committed murder. He was also one In 1750, more or less. Among so many sincere and hon- orable clerytnen there was almost bound to be one ivho wouldbeun- faithful to his trust. Yet I nave heard narrow-minded people seize upon that isolated case to sneer at the inslncertty of clergymen tn general. And narrow-mlnded peo- ple will always be in our midst- As i; matter of fact, prohibition probably had something to do with the riots In Halifax. I be- lleve It'was perfectly right. to close the Ilquor stores on V-E Day, but the fact remains that this orie- day prohibition of ll uor did rankle In some of the rotens‘ minds. This, together with anger at the proflteerlng In Halifax In all probability started the riots. Are there not wet canteens with- In the enclosures of our airports? In view of this, how do you ex- plain that the airmen dId not loot; our vendor shops as the Navy dld the liquor stores in I-Iallfax? Mr. Muttart would like to see Prohibition established all over Canada. I believe this great dream his will never come true. But If the leaders of Canada wanted to start off some real Canada- wlde riots, the very best wuy they could effect. thls would be to greet the boys who wIll be re- turning home from battle soon with the news that tn:- snle of liquor was prnhibrcrl ' ’l the Atlantic to the Pacific coast. t ani, C“; eta, OBSERVER. Field Marshal Alexander's Triumph (United Kingdom Information Bulletin) The following tribute to Field Marshal Alexander and the forces concerned W85 bald by Mr. Chur- chIll on the 2nd May In the Uni:- ed Kingdom House cf Commons. when announcing the victorious conclusion of the Italian campaign, the first front on which the Ger- mans completely surrendered: "This force was of so many dif- ferent natlonalltles, that. only some personality of commanding qualities could have held them all woven together. Now their re- ward has come, bringing to a conclusion the work of as gallant an army as has ever marched. and bringing to the pltch of fame and military reputation R cum- mander, who always, I may say. enjoyed the fullest confidence of the House." Field Marshal Alexander's Ita- """ c'"ttolrd one-and- a-half s, wIth some of the \ a . ltgntittg. campaign in Slclly from July to August 1943, leading to the Italian surrender. Alexan- der became Commander of all the Allfed forces In Italy. The land- lng of the Elglith Army near Reg- gIo on the 3rd of September, 1943, was quickly followed by the "out- flariklng" landlng at Salerno by the Flfth Army (of whose feur Dvlslons, two were British). The Ffth Army held Its ground In hard ffghtln? till the arrlval of the Eighth rom the south made It possible to advance beyond Naples to the Volturnn Llne, with a parallel advance on the east coast, In which Foggia. with valu- able alrflelds. was captured on the 27th September. By January, 1944. after‘ severe winter condI— tlons, "Alexander was able to des- crlbe a, seven hundred mlle AI- lIed advance In Italy, so‘\far, "not cl going." Following the Anzlo landing on 22-1-44 where the Guards distinguished themselves In beating buck furl- ous German eounter-attaclucaiuc the determined German stand at Casslno, whIch Alexander finally broke In May. by the secret trans- fer of large forces of Untied King- dom. New zealand, Indian rind Polish troops from the Eighth On my return the bunk Gothic Lin Arm-y front to the western end of the battle lltie, a move In which Alexander took full advantage of the enemy's lack of nIr recon- nalssance. The fiercely contested breach of the Gustav and Hitler lines brought the Allied tmnles to me on 4-6-44. l I O Despite the removal of very nearly amounted to an for "great operations (Churchill). the pursuit enemy was continued mountainous country from to Florence. For the breach of the e north of Florence. Alexander agaln shlfted hls maIn __. i‘ "What army" elsewhere" of the through Kidney m}; ab“ Your Rfost "y! lo gal I pol iighuut. Tlrxunuuzltou-lunwlh quunlicnp. Oltua llll lulu-cilia Dolld’ Klbc II Lil afinlziy Ibo favorite l0! Budd's Kidnhy Pills be- . Rome ' and handsome Tweetls. pnpr“ dom; fort and style. for golf or fishing‘- weather. ll forces-back to thewAdrlatlc Sec- tor, where United kingdom, Clin- udfan. Indian. Polish and Italtmi troops broke through RImInI In September, 1944. _ "we moved another large addition some other; wont to Greece. Thus strength, facing ui enemy whIIrh. certainly In the number of dIvIs- Ions, exceeded those left to nt- tmck him." (Churchill) Never- theless, throughout the wlnter of 194445, Alexander carrlcd out the tad: of keeping between twenty and thlrty German dIvIsIons en- Bflfled In Italy, gradual progress befng made and considerable ens- ualbles belng Infllcted on the Germans (The London Evening Standard of 20th February, stat.- ed that during the winter the Germans had lost fifty-thousand men), though Alexander emphasiz- ed on 2-11-44: ",We cannot expect to drfve the Genmms from Italy this winter." Eventually, In April I905, the final blow was struck, Elghlh and Fifth Armlcs, smashing the " ‘ on the east. éfgle of A enningthseglng u n; n rou e e - mew ln rt. On the west flank the fth Army made a parallel ndvmce through Spezla, while Alexander's excellent liaison with the Rollan ‘partlsans ensured their rfsln: mt I: o right moment In overwhelm the German itarrl- sons throughout Northwest Italy. ‘Plum, Alexander has iwhfeved wniit many strategists declared to be ImpouIble-nn advance throuizh the whole of Italy from tlv south In the north. . . O Alexander has achleved brilliant successes n some of the ivtii-‘s hardest. umpllcns. often, I15 _In Italy, with numerically Inform‘ forces. At Dunkirk he extrlcritril over 3&.000 British. French and Be an troops. In Burma In I942. wffgimly went; thousand British Leisure Jackets are still irery popular. From all indi- l cations their appeal will be even greater thil year. I Never have we shown as swanky a line. Get into one * of these Jackets and enjoy your precious Featured in shades of BPUWII, Grey, Tan, in plains M5 "" Prices a re most for men of action -— Shirts cut to allow _ Iii-way collars to fit a man’s neck with com- Colorful llllllflllflifleS, DTOHIlClOlJlIS, and checked ivool-tiiid-rziyon mixtures. Just the Shirl Prepare now for the warmer SEE US TODAY l HENDERSON & CUDMORE; EllfillfilliliillillfillfilElliilfilElffiliglkijtélulltisllililllffilfélfillil thfs inmy was an army stripped of B leisure. w” i $2. in $5.95 'I‘l<.‘.\ ill-MATES a man free- dllng -... .. ' knew GOd dwelt Mlvhlln my . --B1lB .. . —-——————-_-__ TRIISSES lllTgfllllllloll. d you “M fled‘ with the one YO warm? Does It m. usllhllf ably 0r In It an nntl u. and out of date llylmqlfti, than why continue suflerlug when we can alleviate (h; cause by oflerlng you ii W. feel flttlni, modern unil up. to-dlfn one. All size; m] ptyle; at price; to sult every body. IURMALIN FOR SMUT. ON GRAIN A cheap but lhnrfltlghlv d. focllva remedy. Grnln n”. en would be w nrwwflv need p unwlnpmlgall dlrectlnn; gfmi with each bottle. FOR BETTER CROPS Trent. your rralu with the new Improved CEBASAN A lllIl ilhlnlentant for What, Onto, Grain, Barley. One pound treats 32 bushels. PRICE $1.15 LB. TIN. MAC! PIG WORM POWDER. It will abolish all traces of , worms unrl Improve l-lIQ _ health of yuur plgs. Price 85c lb. ' TllE 2 MAGS HO Great George Street Mall Order: Given Prompt Attention. 64F. llutchesnn 8. SIIII OPTOMETRISTS “Specialists In the fII- ting of glasses for the correction of ocular de- and Indlan reargunrd actlcn superior Jtipunise aIn-it vastly Iroopl. he fouzht a. B8 forces, long iowardsl r-notirzh to ensure the safety of In-P Then m" the In a British base for nxtrlnntlng ll .3 counter-offensive, of dlvlalous to the Western Front, m9 llrflces‘ “w” mm mm w“ mutt-Li. mu. Moat- Alexmder lriuned the great. lamefn offem ve. the PR" lude to hIs successful clearing of uie enemy from Emit. I-Ihva. and s“°°"ls‘“il"i limit: ctimpa an. as n BY. olwed ihtgig stulccess’ pxgtly W“ M! case n ru on o iiil/Itt; limdlflstrateglrinl At Its con- c us on. w yp ca reported to Churchlll: "It. Io my duty to report the Tunisian cam- nIgn ls over. All enemy resistance ms ceased." This modesty Is one of the secrets of his nbIlIt to win the confidence of men o mm! different nationalities — another Is the doctrlnc he expressed on 2-11-44: "I would never thfnk of risking the lIves of men unjustl- fiably." Such Is the great British commander who has now conclud- ed the campalgn against- the Ger- mans on one great front-u front on ivtilch the armed forces of Canada plnyed so great and vall- nnt a part. thong r. t. inner"; ll. J. lIABllll OPTOMETRIST FIMIng and Sgtpplylnx Gluten e. Montague. P. E. l. 0mm flours: 10 to l2 A. ll. II to 5 P. M. - Ilnllrlnyv .-tr.. hv npuulntmenl Office (‘annealed with DIIUGTOII facts.” 58 Grafton Street Proftmional Bards McLeod Q Bentley "v8. sum-Ln. x c. l. A. IINTLIII. u. 0- Iurrhfcru and AIInrnvYI-l" Low is; rrluoo sum ILII. lloaiiii 6' 90- 0mm»; now-ml" I Grafton sum- Charlottetown Ilene 20F '5" m luau!» I Mannlul. 0-5- modesty. h!‘ fiNMR-F-Pra Ilorrolland 00ml"! ll. F. AlllllllBlLll chum-ca Amuwfll Icahn ‘that IIIIW-l CIIIIOQQMII J.A. BGIIIGAI. ll- IAIIJITIB. loucnvl nu no. 00%: dull-I'll"? l M. ALBAN FARMER BA. "*3- ‘a. Onuudlol m: or 00mm’ n Nu m 1-0-4" l“, BAIIIBTEB. SOLICITOR- omuwnnown ALEX w. MATHIESON om“. n amt W" ' 5"”:- fillgtgr-SOLIGTQW ‘N’ _ ll