k v i w _. ll‘ 1 PAGE FOUR N111: anntorrsrown GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Founded in 188'!) Iresldent: Lleut, Col. W. Chute: 8. McLun ' Vice President: J. B. Burnett, FJ-L Secretary: Lfeut. Col. D. A. MacKlnnnn. 13-8-0- Edltor and Managing Director, .1. R. Burnett. FJJ. Associate Editors: Frank Walker and [an A. Burnett ———————~ SUBSCRIPTION RATES By 0110.11 fn P.E.l., $4.00 per year; $2.50 for 6 months $1.25 for 3 months; 50o for one month city Dctivery $5.00 per year: $3.00 for 0 mtmlhl 51.75 for 3 months; 60o for one Month. By Mall 1n Cllllflllll and U.S.A. 55-00 F" Y"? Saturday Weekly: $2.110 per year; $1.00 for 6 mvnlhl. 50c for 3 months £511 may b. obtained 1t flint-c Squire, New York; 01d Mllk 11nd ‘vllllllllllltfl- hgvnn-y, l‘!!! Perl 5L, hlontrrul; .1. llI\1-.~- ‘Iuruuwt New: Slum], Chateau Luurlvr. Ullimn; I New: Stand. Sudhury- 071R; lluh Tnhiwrr) 5110p, .\lnl\\‘lnn t‘. 8.1 Ellen Bllbeflllun Th; Charlottetown llulullllfw Noun A South .\\*\\n Aut- lhmlnn; nt-trt-ttt-n -r~——>—~— “The Strongest flfrntory is Weaker than the Wcakest Ink." DECEMBER. l6, 1941. T‘. -____ Guam And The lsolalionists It was announced over the week-end that the [Ynitctl $1.11“ had probably lost the island of (11111111. lhls "hind, ltvctttvd 1.500 due flit 0f ,\l.'111il.1, v.;1< 11:15 11f {lie l. st objectives 0f Jilpil- ll i-lnnd, 3O miles long ca l‘. i»; :1 ~21 116-1‘ luv». and ~t\»~1 ltuits- ulllv. 11nd is surrounded b1’ gtrulgr 1,11,, ._~l ltlllllltaf.‘ l>lL1llLl bases. lt could lune llvrcn >'.r~11_;l_v fortified, but it was not, though its strategic importance to Ameri- can deft ~c l1:1s born recognized by army and t1:1\:tl 11111? '- :71‘ uiurc tl1:1n twenty years. liw ll‘ .1 l rflttts ncquirctl 111121111 by the 'l'ic;1‘.y of lfitris .11 the close of tl1e Spanish-JXrn- crican war in 1895. 1n 1919 the joint army and tiztvy board reconnnctidcd that a first class military lit-"c be built at Aprn Harbor in Guam. 'l'l1<-.=o plvns wore dropped in 1922 when the ljtlitctl S Lo, under the naval limitations agreement with Great Britain and Japan, agreed nor to construct xurthcr bases in the Pacific. \\'hcn lapzm (icnouticctl this treaty in I936, the hands of the Vniturl States were freed. Be- Cause of thc islands exposed position, army authorities rcpcatccily advised large scale for- tifications The army-navy plan would have cost some $200,000,000 and have taken two years to build. In 11120, Prcsident Roosevelt, who clearly saw the shape of things to conic, asked for an ap- propriatiozl of $5,000,000 to improve the de- fences of Guam. The isolationists raised such an tiproar that the money was refused. The‘) feared that this work "might offend Japan fltill lead to war." So Uuam was left largely un- fortified until this year when Congress had a change of heart and appropriated $4»7oo,ooo to improve the harbor and build bomb-proof shel- tcr=. ll the expenditures on the defence of the lfnitcd States in Guam prove again to be to: little and too late, the people of the United States will know where to lay the blame. National Morale Commenting on .\lr. Hanson’: suggestion for the formation of a national war government, the Globe and Mail says: A National Government might not do much more (might even do less) than Mr. King's Government. The point is that to tms of thou- sand: of people it would leem to be doing more; there would be less criticism, and less party sniping, and less suspicion of motives. Canada, in a word, WOlllCl achieve more of unity; more of what is called morale. Let u: suppose, for example, that tomorrow Mr. King announced he was inviting Mr. Mcighen to his lliinistry, that the two of them together would seek for a. new Ministry the strongest men of all parties and group; and walks of life that this country can nfford--would not that grip the public imagination, stir urto a new unity, to a new sense of national solidarity and power? Would it not give us all fresh heart at a grave hour in this war? There is something else. The question of selec- tive national service is not going to down in this country_ The demand for it will grow. It will grow as this war stretches out into more years, tvith rletnznid for sacrifices that we now only dim- ly imagine. It will grow until we are forced to come to it. Would it not be the part of wisdom to prepare ourselves for the inevitability of selec- tive service —to prepare ourselves for it before 1t is too latc———hy and with a National Govern- ment? Anyone who knows anything about thc politics and the mind and peculiar difficulties of ~nis country knows the answer. Philippines In History ._ .____.._. “Ihe spread of the war to the Far East has placed the island group of the Philippines in the centre of events. 'l'l1csc islands were Spanish by discovery nutl remained Spanish until the treaty ending the Spztuish-Antcrican War when the United States took them over. The United Slates has had control of the Philippines since December 1o, 1898. The group 0f islands l\ll1>\\‘ll as the Philippines lies in the tropics. 'l'l1t~r<- ttrc 7,083, islands cxtctirling 1,150 miles from 11111-111 to Snlllll and 682 miles froru east to west. (Jf this number, many arc only pin-points on cvcn large maps, but 462 have an urea of a square tnilc or over. Those named are 2.411 wliilc 4,642 are tmnmncd. 'l‘l1<: Pltilippincs, the largcst of the groups in the .\l;1l.ty Archipelago, were discovered first l|_\" Alzlgcllnlt in 1521 conquered by the Spanish in 11'»; .1111] t'(‘fl,"1l l0 the Unitctl States in 1898. ‘lbc 1.11pm of tl1c i-lznlds in the group are Litzou. 40814 .~qu.1rc miles: Mindanao, 36,906 >qu1rc utilcs; lEumy, 4.443 square miles; Pfila" " wzm, .1500 srpmrt- nnlcs; hlindnro, 3.794 square miles; llultul, 1.534 square ntiles; Masbale, r,- 255 511113111 miles; and Cebu, 1,695 square miles. ln the islands there are eight distinct langu- ages and 87 diulvcls spoken by the natives. About four million nf the pcoplc tuidcrstarltl or read lzlnglish. About two-thirds of the inhabitants are Roman Catholics and about four million belong to the Independent Catholic Church, which was organized by a Filipino priest, Father Gregorio Agilpay, in 1899, during an insurrection. 'l‘l1crc are also about five hundred thousand Moslctus and another five thousand pagans. The population on January 1st, 1939, was 15,- 984.24.The largest cities with their populations pe p are‘. Manila 623.362, Cebu 142,012, Zambomigz 131.719, Dnvuc <15.4_t.l, lloilo 88,203, Bztcolutl 57503, and Baguio 24,122. = EDITORIAL NUlhS -. “'l‘l1e Agriculturist” gives prominctme to a case in Prince County where an industrious farmer, having an order to supply pitprops. solved the problem of scarcity pl farm-help by having his two grandsons assist him, the oldest only right ymr: pct-ling :5 pi! fro/xv in our titty. Poor little itinoccttt victims of llitlcr! u n m w \Vhat the Nazis, the Fascists and other Euro- pean enemies could not make hlackenzie King do, "one little ycllnw 111.111 from Asia" has suc- cccdcd in duitlg, compelling thc adoption of con- scription, (under :1 fancy name of course in the Y hope of dcluding the Antis but, in fact, fooling nobody but blackenzie King himself). 1F ll i I \Vhen Robert Donafs new film, “Young Mr. Pitt," now being made at Shepherd's Bush, England, is released it will show women sitting in the House of Commons at the end of the liigl1lcc11tl1 Ccnlury. This annchronism, due to 2111 acute shortage of actors will not be notice- able t0 the audicncc, 11s they have been dis- guiscd. m m u a Maine conservation officials are going in for 11111ss Iartitlnctitm of lulmlfirfi- Construction is scheduled to start 5111.111 on a $40,000 lobster- rcaritig and hatching station at Lcmoine-thc second such plant to be built on the State's rocky coast. The State expects 1,000,000 lobsters will annually be (lumped into the sea when the station begins 0pCrz1liO11S. i ‘ \ i l Christmas mail from England to British troops serving in the Middle East totalled 2,000,000 letters and 250,000 parcels. It was on its way be- fore the grczlt battle in Libya began so that thous- ands of the men for whom the missives and gifts were destined will never know of the thoughtfulness of their kindred and friends at home. Bcttcr write soon and often. =1- w Dingatnfs flay, cclcbrzited by the Boers in South Africa in commemoration of the defeat of Dlflgaafl, King of the Zulus this date, 1840; Dmgaan at the llcztrl of hi5 tribe, murdered Re. “d. 150m‘ lcrulcr and sixty of his conlpanionzl, and then nuulc lutvoc of the lloci" fnrnlers and their fuunhcs cuczuupcd along the 13113111113“; KW?) l Boer campaign ogctittst hitn was 0r- gan1zcd,_and he was decisively beaten zit the Blood River, Dvccmbcr l6; “ltintftig-ly Diugaan was driven out bv l)l'(‘l(1\'lft\1$ and Panda, liciug subsequently captured and pul to dcuth by the llocrs by slow torture. m u a It appears from a report by Professor I. \V. C“ M_T~¢F-\\'1\".‘Albcptrt, ‘that when this xvnr is 0W1‘ lzllropc will bc in (llfff nccd of animal foorls rathcr than SIZIPCHCS: lo far too great an Bjflgnt llrc idea has bccil built up that the end of the war \\'lll mean a trcitientlotts flow of Canadian when to Europe. a clearing out of the world wheat bins to fccd the irccd countries and liussiu. As a 1111113 ler of fact, 1t 1S doubtful if Europe will require such immense quantities of illlportcd wlmat or other starch foods. The starch foods wheat y . Pill-aims. CIR, ore easy and quick m grow. Eur. liJpe 1s expmrding its production of tllcm. Pro- £5201" Ilélzicliuvag gave figures of ‘that cxpan. in ritain. 11c may be sure it \\'lll be equally great on the continent and that even the tummy sabotage will not affect it. But animal foods are another nlnttcr. Livestock cammt be rcphccd in a day and Europe's stipply of liv-cstock is being “dwell "Pldll" 111E Germans have ruthlcssl slaughtered the herds in the conquered count "lu- Tl“? have seized the cows and sheep, the Pigs and the poultry and the goats When r11,- glfifrfeerrlixds Eulropc will be dcvoitlpof ‘livestock, or ' g SUCI a severe shortogc 1t will amgum to fimlllrl- And Russia will be little better off Th' shows where Canadian agriculture can e-arpagv]; “My with the assurance of b th a future n1arkct. 0 a present and m a a 4t 1 ' Cook's son Duke's Son" fore the British law Courts 2"" in ‘lllulime-(ijli; D , his fgyll) charged a Baron (Lord Tey“. Cam bcilln poédiln-gfl“ ll“! Duke's estate. a: I p opu .l1cr1f_f Court. Lord Tkynhan, was dcscriocd as a hcunconnnander in th R l Navy’ will‘ his 5MP at Cambbeltowr l-Ie iii» med f‘ “d fl/ 3/ 5 C0515. The costs wereiaxvard- fgrtilltihlgtllj-“kei M?’ A’ J‘ B‘ Slewall» "Kent that it ivalsr‘: lvm hvcs at Invcrmay Cam?’ 5a"! _ _o a case of. a poor man trying to oblam a rabbit for a starving fqmily The char e afimngt Lord Tcynlmm, said Mr. Stewart wig t t! ' g3 t c ‘contravened the Game (Scotland) Act (m i‘ P CmCWr I2 on the Duke's lands of Auclicn- £531? Ipltppbglosvg, by frcspngsing in Search o; ham’!- a “h b-ef. . lllacKclvie, Lord _T¢yn. when thge iridd o" tendering} plea’ sud that the D ll I entbccnrred his client wrote to ll‘° awlflfilflllfi. aml stating that [hg Puaclllnfl llzul hccn the rcstilt of a nvisunder. standing. The Duke replied, indicating that the charge seemed to have been due to a misun- delslandlllgt and invited Lord Teytlhnm to visit him. "I think," said Mr. MacKcnzic "that the I letter antounts to a withdrawal of the charge ” Mr. Stewart said tltnt he had received very finite instructions that the charge was not to be withdrawn. 1\lr. 1\facKelvie then pleaded guilty nylyclient did lztlcc a polsllot, thinking per- nnssiou in shoot would he the smut: as [lcflnisgintt lo fish.” which he prcvinusly 11nd r¢¢¢;v¢d_ SW1 Mr. hlacKelvie. "There has been a mistindcr- Smmllml- M)’ “llflll l“ a lirnl-connnuntlcr in lhc RfLV-"ll NIIY)’. the cznzlnin 11f a ship, gm] is q ma“ holding a responsible plfillllilfl. lie is thorougblv conversant with the word poaching. Mr. Stew- art said that Lord 'l‘cy11l1an1 was sot-n 1n he SllOOfIIIjZ‘ the ygronnnl systematically, and at]. milled killing inc grouse. NOTES BY TNE WAY Thursday Brantforfl marked ofl’ another full year-Attic eleventh -— wlthout. a sings case of diph- therla, Th9 awry famfllu one here now. and some THE CH ARLUFTETOEN‘ PUBLIC FORUM . ‘Ihll Inlnml ll 0pm In Ill dllcuulon by lorrnpondenfe If qnutlmu of lntarouf. The Chulultutowl Gulrdlln do“ nan noueully undone In ulnlou el eornennnfllntls txlllgent co-operdtton u! line pub- 11c 1n making this acnaevcme osslble. Branhford, incldentally, maintaining a. world record n1 this respect. for cities of moie than 25.000 population. - Brant- ford Expositor. A stout gentleman. determined to lose weight. during a stay cu 111s Vermont farm. hustled to the E9"- eral store for a pair of overalls. e picked out. a pair big enough for enetgetlc exercise. Then l. thought. struck him. “Walt a minute.‘ he told the clerk, “those fit. me now but I expect to lose a lot—maybe I'd- better buy a smaller pair. ' Thy clerk shock his hea . “Mister, if on can shrink as fast as these overalls can. ou’11 be dolnl pretty ." he u. , and calmy went on wrapping ‘the overalls. - Rocke- feller Centre Magazine. A local Jeweller tells me that recently he has had a. greatly m- creased demand for cigarette cases The explanation f" the growing "practice of selling cigarettes unpacked lIl the carbons to which people have been _ac- customed. It. is really astonishing. says the retailer. what a large percentage of smokers have not been in the habit of using a cigar- EMA case, but now ffnd themselves more or less obliged to do so. Ex- pertenoe shows that the recent ap- peal to people to smoke individual- ly slfghlly fewer cigarettes has had good- results the aggregnm. supplies now are certainly not ulte so stringent a they were a shop. time can. - BlrmlnBhB-m P08 . We have heard of great men who have hitched their wags-n to a star. But. the poets have so far not told us wlth what humble room link up their lesser ambl- lons. Take the case of the typical London char-woman. for lnstnnoe. What would one suppose might be her ovennasterlzig desire? A slight conservation between ‘rem- ple chars this morning perhaps gave scare slight. indication, One elderly Cockney "oblige!" was holding forth earnestly to o. friend of the same profession. ‘Yb-av were standing outside the 'I‘cmp1e “tailing apparently for a bus. Looking up into the blue of Heaven, where several barrage balloons were swimming 1:1 the ether. one 0f the chars observed to her friend, quite unconscious that anyone else was overbearing: "Do you know. almost anything for the chance just to dust. one of them balloons!" Here then was one humble servi~ tor who vmnted to hitch her dust- er to an A.A. sausage. Some 12,000 tons of steel scrap, cut ready for use ln the fur- naces. are now reaching the fur- naces each week from the bcnlbcd inras of London. Olher bombed areas, including Hull, are also pro- vdlng substantial amounts of scrap frcm this source, but for cbvlcu: masons ‘it is inadvisable to give comparative figures fcr areas smaller than the vast Metropolitan district. scrap from demolish-rd or seriously damaged buildings ls, ln general, of the best possible type for lts purpose, being heavy and o! good quality In the past. there 113s been criticism of the IrCn and Steel Control for allowing so much good scrap to remain on bombed sites, ‘out. of late a ccrmidciuble drive to remove 1t has developed. Generally, the scra. position alp- pears to be cablsfac cry. The Con- trol slate that the oonnage pro- vided from home sources has 1n- creascd by about. 20 percent. since before the war, and that the aver- age weekly amount received from domestic sources has trebled since September, 1939. Reserves, apart from the Supplies that are coming forward from bombed buildings, have multiplied several time; in $012: areas. - Leeds Yorkshire c . lumeaeurement hn shown that. the sun ls 93,005,000 miles from the earth, or from 100,000 to 200.- 000 miles farther away than was believed previously. wun Winter coculng on, and sprin far behind, this Ls a fine tune to and 11a that scientific jolt-l - Windsor Star. from a. wmnan friend. tn Pretoria. 1 also do canteen work at. a. coodwm club which Ives the will ten, coffee, c u, ma wlchea n11 free — and do we work? I gov there the other morning by e1ght o'clock. and there were over 200 boys waltlng to be served; a tralnlcad of them hMl lust come ln. This canteen wu started by Mrs. Bmuta, a . She‘ Ls not carlng two hosts shout society; she walks about, tow-n without hat and wearing the old velt. sahoon. She shops and carries her goods home 1n u. paper carrier. sm comes lnto the canteen and works wlt-h the rest of us. When Hertzo wu Pflme Minister he had n mos marvelous house built for himself on top of the Kopje, but the Smuts wont llve them; they pm“ their own farm just outside Pre- toria. - Letter to the Manchester Guardian. The number of new and ued mot-or vehicles financed 1n Cen- ada ln September declined frac-r tlonslfy from the total recordcd in the corresponding month last. year, but showed an Increase of eleven recent ln the amount. o1 unme- Yl! ln the some comparison. '4 11ers were 12.955 vehicles flnanoed for 15.881448 as ccmpared with 12,- 989 units financed to the extent. of $5,214,803 ln the same month of 1040. During m» first nlne months of tnh your. i‘ once tea have purchased contracts arising our, of null mes of 154,25: mowr vchlccs involving en amount of 312934.112 1m ten percent. 1n num- ber and twenty-four percent m dol- far volume fiver the 140m runs- acllcns lnvo vln Ill lmount of $B.'l08,4l4 in corresponding grind o! Inst vear. - Bmndon 1m. ___.________.__. MORE T0 GROW 1N LONDON‘ —(CP)- More than 9. (00,000 British growing children will benefit by extra clothing cou- mrm now for three classes between 15 and 18 FBI-fl old. dearle. 1Y1 give- AN ACT RESPECTTNG DOGS Sin-This 84:1. was assented to April 18th., 1931, and ls a llmilhiv‘ not which oontafns penalties f0! sheep killing, and‘ an annual W! for every person ovmlnc 01‘ llflvlni ln his possession or control ever?! dog sum, bitch $3.00. rhq penalty for not paying this tax 1s Set ll- not. mare than $10.00 and in de- fault 10 days fn $1111, and no tax shall be collected on any dog or bitch under the age of eight months. In 1940 this act was amended as follows: Be 1t enaotcd by the Lieutenant-Governor and Lelflfilfl" tlve Assembly of the Province 0! Prince Edward Isl-and as follows. 1. The Dog Act being the Act. Georiw VL, Chapter 10, ls hereby amend- ed by adding at. the end of Sec- tlon 13 the following, as sub-sec- tlon (i1: (ll Frcm and after the pasfsln! of this sub-section the tax provided by this section shall be collected by the Board o1 school Trustees of the school dlshrlots tn which the person qwnlnz 01' possessing any dog resides. The proceeds of col- lection 0f such tax shall be retain- ed by the said trustees and applied many. to the purchase of school books. July '1, 1037~Japanese clothing or other articles or re- quisites which may be necessary m enable or assist. children of indig- ent families to attend school. 2. The raid aol Ls. further amend- ed w striking out l-lle word "June 1n the third 111;: or sub-secllcn (a) of sect-ion I‘) on‘ substftutlng there- for the word "September." The Dopartment of Education has issued a Notice Demand that; includes a guidance for. school trustees and secretaries. Tlfs notice reads in part Tax-J’ “You are also liable for ar- rears of School and Dog Taxes in said school dlstrlct-I’. A discount of 5 per cent 1s allowed on pay- mt-nls up to December 1st. The promoters of this amendment to the Dot’, Act are to be commend- ed. There are still a number of dog owners opposed to paying this Do Tax Elvlrul as their reasons. the ac Io unconstitutional and‘ illegal and therefore cannot, be collected, This 1s a question for the Attorney General of this Provlnce to have a tests casc- by ‘the Courts. I am sir, etc. RATEPAYER CB C Overdoes It lOLlnWa Jonrinth The Crtftatliotl Broadcasting Cor- Iwffll-iml "went to town" on Sun- day's news, and made so complete a Job of reporting the war 1n the Puclflc that 1t had. no doubt, great numbers o! Cflllafllfills sitting close to their mains for numy, many hours, growing sleadily more jit- tcry. Tlznt, this ls a good thing no- body will cluitn. There were. 1n all tho Sunday broadcasts. only n few things defin- itely known. The rest o1 1t was rumor, theory, speculation, pro- phecy, “wishful thinking" and em!- les repetition. And we 11nd, too, the fireside strateezists, companies and battalions of them, diligently and tlt-esomely wivlnnfng the war from the home front. New, 1n such circumstances, ru- mors, carefully distinguished as such, have a legitimate place Lr- the news. bccuute the facts nre diffr- cult. to establish. But even facts lose ' when reltersted endfemly over a perlcd of rune or tcn. hours—tf a newspaper had put out an extra every half-hour or so over that period. with no more. uciv lnformntlon than was available, all after the first two or three would have seemed singularly useless, and merely alnnoying. What, s/Jems to have happened fr: this case ls that Canadian broad- casl/ers WEN? lcd astray by their American brethren. After all, for the United Slates 1t was thezr first taste of actual warfare since 191B.- but we have been at. war for many months, have endured much excit- ing news. and another enemy was just, another enemy. The mthus- lasm of the American stations ap- parently inspired the CBC to an equal effort. the necessity of having "something new" for each of the frequent broadcasts lnduoed over- emphasls on rumor, and the bros-f- casters themselves must have ap- proached a state of panic before t ey called lt a night. 011v were the set news broadcasts numerous, but many times announ- cers broke into regular programs with “flashesfi For the futurc many wl.l1 hope that CBC settles down azaln. and promptly, to its routine of new; at fixred tlmcs—and no interrupting "flashes" save for extraordinary d‘?- velopmenls, certainly not for ru- mors. The unnouncers had s. field day, but one was enough. _____._______._ SPEEDY PRODUCTION A single Canadian plant turns out sufficient Universal carriers to gqulp three Infantry battalions every two days. .__..-€.._.-_-___- READY, AYE, ‘READY 1.000.000 More than volunteer Red Cross workers are producing surgical dressings Army i for the US. We are now receiving a re:- ulnr supply of the following Cull. OLD SYDNEY BCBIENED ALBION BOUND ALBION NUT IAYVIIW SCREEN!!! DOMINION 00K! BRA! 0'01! LUMP Prompt and careful dellv erlu for C. 0. D. union. no. YLO. flillls 8t O0. Phone 176. wotws or CHALLENGE er 1n a l-h l strlke." - Leo . Brock- lnzwn. Development Of War (Farohange) The crlsLs between the United States and Japan leading to out- break o! host titles, began in the Mukden incident of 1931, now re- garded as the start. of Japan's un- declared war and aggression, under the guise of self-defense. The step-by-step development to {he climax Sunday occurred a5 fol- ows: Sept. 18, 1931—Japa.nese troops entered Mukden. Manchurla, and. began the seizure of territory which resulted. 1n the formation of the puppet state of Manchukuo. B-n. 2'1. mot-Jayme troop: landed 1n Shanghai, being with- drawn later but leaving increased Japanese influence. Nov. 5, 1938.-Japa.n signed the untl-Conunlntem pact with Ger- troops clashed with Chinese outside Pelp- lng, starting the present. Slno-Jap- anese war. July 16, 1937.—Secretury of State Cordell Hull enunciated 14 points of United States foreign policy, points which have been the basis of all negotiations with Ja an since then. Dec. 12, IBZVL-Japmresa planes sank the U. S. S. Pana 1n tho Yangtze River with loss o two lives. Dec. 30, 1938.—-'1lie United Stan's sent a stiff note to Japan, warning of interference with American rtgrts "Ammllll °l D1 in China and offering a. treaty con- ference oowsrd settlement of Aslatlc lsuea. July 28, 1939.-—The United Stale! gave notloe of lntentfon to abrogato her commercial treaty with J apart. Sept, 27, 1940.-—Japan entered in n. mllltzirv alliance with Germany and Italy. Uct. 12, 1940.-'I‘he United states urged its national: to evacuate pa.“ and Chlna. July 25, NHL-The United Statrs froze Japanese assets there. Ju 2 NHL-Japanese troops began occupation or French Inuu- China. Dec. 2, MEL-President Roosevelt mode a. formal inquiry of Japan's intentions 1n massing troops tn Inna-China. Dec. 5 AWL-Japan replied that her troops in Indo-Chlna were there in accordance with treaty and men- aced only Chinese concentrations across the border ln Yunnan prov- f-nce. Dec. 6, NHL-President Roosevelt appealed to Emperor Hlrchlto, dlr- ectly. for peace on the Pacific. Dec. '1, lust-Japan attaczs Haw- alt and declares war on the United States. Such l5 the pattern of trickery cf the Ja. s, a. leaf apparentl taken from t e book of Hitler lmself. But 1f the yellow race think they can conquer the States and Britain by a surprise attack they are doom- ed to surprise. They overlooked the fuel. that. lt 1s not the first, but the last, blow which counts most. _____.____._..__ Eggs contain large amounts of the vitamins and‘ minerals lost by °”h€r._f2°ss_1"_mn15@2=£2r1ns. Pr“: (4 P No Finer Gifts For Anyone Our large array of G111 selec- tlons makes the choosing of your Gilt. problem an easy one. Rica's Mllllary Sels Yul-May's Shaving Sela Williams Shaving Sela Electric Razor; Yardley‘; Shaving Bowl Rolls Razors Kodak Cameras Wondhuryk Shavlng Sets Pipes, Clpretteu, Benson Lighters and many other Glftn to pfck from at prices within the reach of all. Yardley (lift Sets For Ladies Keystone Brush and Comb Set s. Ashe: of Roses Gift Sets. Evening In Par-h Glft. Sela. Derny’: 3 Search GIN Sets Cute: Gift Sell. Perfumes. Dustlng Powder Toilet Water, Vanity Cases, Soups. etc. Vlslt our Store for other glft inflections. 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