.....'...,-...,-,,.. -. 0...»--. .- 1. “.1.- o.» "s-aagflg‘ P691’- FQHR; TliE BIIARLUTTETOWN GUARDIAN Morning Daily tFounded in Ill?) President: Lieut. Col. W- UIIHWI 5- “cl-u” Vice PresidegizL ll.) RABJIIIRI}. Jill-u!" Secretary; Liens. o . ac n . - - - stair-n mud Manning Director I It BurueikuFJ-t" Associate Editors: Frank Walker and lan A I"! SUBSCRIPTION RATED n: mu m P.E.l. $4.00 n" m" 321'" "" l‘ """""" $1.25 for 3 months; 50o for one month um Delivery $5.00 per rear: 53-90 "Y ‘l ""1"" 51,15 m; 3 months; lilo for one galls. “t B] Mail to other Provinces and U. S. A. W!‘ I Bllurtlay weekly: $15-00 P" "a" 51'“ f“ 5 mum" 50o for I months w» Ohlrloltatown liuariilan ma: b0 "will!" i‘ noun-ir- u". Agency, sum- alum. MI lrorlu 01¢ “we; Hews Agency. Corner Mills 1nd rrashinllol. Bunny; llatropulllln a". Ann-u. l“! P“! I"- Ialtralli J. Fina. 8M l!!! 5L. Tllwnul 1"" sum,‘ Ohntenn lmurler, Ottawa; Wulwa news fltllld. tludhnri. 05;; lluh Tohanen Bhlll). llonelon N. B-I i ‘The Strongest Memory la W841i" "W" m‘ Weakest Ink.’ . FRIDAY, MAY 1, 194%. The French Language Pfflblel" _ '5 lebiscite, according biheQliglttit nocivsiptuibntfiiilyf-P ii-ifmfidm‘ i5 m“ “l: people have spoken "with two voices,rpn¢ 5P°3u ing English, the other French.‘ T it, 35 h Canada sees it,bis tgie ni051t tragic "Pcci °f t e nse iven te eoPfi- "ilgiierc igs no denying the fact that the Eng‘ lish speaking Provinces voted as a body l0 W" lieve the Government of its conscription pledges md that in Quebec Province the Montreal cop- stituencies --—\vhfif¢ Engll-‘h l‘ most ‘vldey spoken —~were the only ones t0_d0 SP- I This creates a situation which is decided]? dangerous to national unity, and which the King Government should have forseen if it had not been so much concerned about its own politi- cal interests. _ _ ' Many years of exploitation and misrepre- sentation by political demiigogues_lie_ behind the gttitudg of Quebec op the conscriptionussue. It it significant that this campaign was invariably most effective where only the French language was understood. , It is time for the people of Canada-for our political and religious leaders in particular —t0 grasp the fact that no section of the country can be isolated by language barriers without dis- |5trQll5 consequences. They have only to cou- aider what has hzippciiecl in Europe-how dil- ferenccs in language fostered jealousies and su- spicions which paved the way for Hitler's early conquests ——to realize that our war effort can never be I00 pcr cent effective without a com- mon ground of tiiidcrstanding in terms of speech and literature. Thi< is not to deny the advantages of bilingual- ism. The French language in particular is rich in cultural values. It is a heritage ivhich our French-Canadian citizciis llavt nOi Only th! right but the duty of preserving, and which is rightly regarded as an essential study in every high school and college throughout the country. Nevertheless, we must bear in mind that the war is bringing about changes of far-reaching im- portance to Canada as a nation. We are likely to see a closer union of all the English-speak- ing democracies, and particularly between Can- ada and the United States, which may lead to the abolition oi all customs boundaries between us and our American neighbors, and to the in- rush of people from the United States to occupy the sparesly populated parts of our Dominion. As the Minister of justice effectively pointed out in the plebiscite campaign, what hope is there for the French population of Quebec, totalling 4,000,000, becoming a French-speaking empire on this side of the Atlantic, in the midst of an English-speaking population running into 14o,- waooo? Far-seeing men like Cardinal Vil- leneuva, Premier Godbout and Mr. Bourassl. had no doubt this in mind when they urged Quebecers to become English-speaking, because otherwise there would be no future on this con- tinent for their sons and grandsons. Nor need they have any hope of receiving encouragement from what remains of their mother country, France, _nor aid from Great Britain to prevent their being absorbed, through the exigencies of W". by the populous country to the south, Many Inventories 1t is fortunate for Canadians with a Mac- kenzie King Government at the helm, says the Toronto Telegram, that their country has the ocean at her gates, cast and west, the Arctic up north and s. good friend to the south; otherwise they might never have had the time or the op- portunity in the last thirty-two months of par- ticipating in all these interesting events which have done so much to keep their trill-ids off flsc war: One general election. One national registration. One census- One plebiscite. One manpower inventory. At first the Government was not enthusiastic about numbering the people but once in the ove it looks as if it will be an annual affair. e objection, not a particularly emphatic one, arises from having to answer the same questions over and over again. It seems silly, especially as we have it nu good nutlioriiy that the ques- tions lion. "_|imiii_\"' fiardiiicr asked in the i940 registration wcrcirt vcry useful. If they were the wrong questions why repeat them? Au iuvcutOry of manpower, to be worth any- thing. ought to get down to brass tacks about the itidivithiztl citizen's capabilities and his will- ingncss to do something useful for the coun- try. Patriotic citizens would not olijcct to being zlslccrl if tlicv urn prcpnrvrl to shoulder a gun in ilie active nriiiv or tho rcscrvc. lt would not he going ton fur lo inquire the occupations in which tlicv have llt‘(‘ll viigzigvd in rcctrnt ycars and wlic- flier or not ilicv arc prepared to transfer into some essential war work or industry. The qucsiitwiiiiriirl» which Canadians are now bring asked to fill in is :i slfrlcliy affair com- pared lo ilir- l‘. S. nvrcupniiorinl qumionnairr- which is bring nerd as a basis for _.'l(‘lll(‘\’lllg a complete utilization of lllilllliflwfl‘ iii llli‘ country. This American questionnaire inquires about th¢ citizen's education, his present job and the dut- ies required in it. He is asked_to describe the typg of work for whitll lit DQlIQVCS ht ‘IS IJCSI fitted and to give atlditioi-ial flfifllllailolls m which he might work. Thirty-SIX professional and scientific occupations are listed and l]! skilled trades. The registrant _is_ asked to _iu- dicate those in which he has training or for which he would like to be trained. Iayidentl)’ the S. administration is in earnest m taking an in- ventory of its manpower. _ _ Canada's first national registration seems to have been useful solely in checking up Young mm liable for home defence military training. 'l“lic decennial census taken a yefll’ 380- does "Oi appear to have been related to_the war effort at all and the present manpower inventory. lfiilqkd by the Unemployment Insurance Commission. has every evidence of b61118 a Perilmciofy 3f‘ fair_ _ 1 = EDITORIAL NOTES - May Day, before the advent of Hitlerisrri, was the great Labour Day in Europe. Now it 1S banned. a a a a The King's Birthday holiday will be observed on Monday, June 8th, aCCOrdmg to government proclamation just issued. u m 1r at The determinedand unconquerablc spirit _0f the London“, which did so_ much to establish British morale, is illustrated in the case of Edith Evans, 24-year-old nurse who lost an arm lll the bombing of a hospital, aiidJs bzicl: on duty. She says an artificial arm is no hfllltilCdp-—ln my spare time I play badminton and tcnnis and have a good time at dances." $ II‘ 1F At the plebiscite convention licld in Sumliicr- side and addressed by the Hoii. j. L. Ralston, remarks were invited from the body of the hull. when a. man rose and said: f1 Ycllreselli fllfllllsh Coiiservativcs and can promise you I00 lXft ‘will ‘yes’ vole from tlicre. It tlicrc be any hoes they'll be Liberals (Loud laughter aiid applause). The returns showlk thitfipveifi 134 '30“- Sliowing an example to others loss fortunately sittiated, Princess Eliziibclli, iii hcr Girl tiuidc uniform, like thousands of other li)~_yC-'l_l‘-Ui<-l5. went to a village labor exchange and registered for war work. The children of the Royal fain- ily remained in Britain to face the (lziiigcrs of war and now the cldcr of ihcm has pllicctl hcr Services at the disposal of the static. Like thcir parents, they are iii the front lilie- 4t 4- v w- The late~H. R. H. the Duke of Coiiiiatight, last son of Queen Victoria to survive to the pre- scut rcigli aiid who dicd fCC(‘llll_\', was born this date i850; he had a loiig, brilliant, carccr in llic army and iii Imperial Civil service, not the least important part of which was as Governor- Gcnerztl of Canada; his sou, Prince Arthur, married the Duchess of lfifc, (laughter of flit‘ late Princess Royal, and became Governor-gell- eral and Coiniiiaiidcr-iii-Cliicf of the Union 0f South Africa, at the same time his royal father held the corresponding position hcrc; one soil the Earl of Uacdtlff; his daughter, Priuccss Pat (Lady Patricia Iiziniszty") was equally popu- lar iii the Dominion, one of the battalions in the Great \Var being named after her; she has one son, Alexander Arthur Alfonso David, born in II. 99 flit!‘ One must mind their “P? and "Qifi" these days of multiplicity of orders-in-Council under war regulations. George Brooks, employment agent for Pacific Mills Limited, Occaii Falls, B. C. has been convicted on a charge of unlaw- fully advertising in a newspaper contrary to the recent order-in-council governing employment in essential and non-essential war industries. Appearing in court Brooks pleaded guilty to the charge and was ordered to pay a fine of $10, and costs. The charge followed an adver- tisement inserted in the Trail Daily Times April 2: for the purpose of employing men for the Pacific Mills Limited without inserting the fol- lowing phrase: "Applications will not be consid- ered from persons in the employment of any firm, corporation or other employer engaged in the production of munitions, war equipment’ or supplier for the armed forces unless such per- sons are skilled tradesmen not actually en1ploy- ed at their trade." The omission was contrary to regulations contained in order-in-council PC6286, of which assuscd probably bad never heard. m a is a Montreal instead of Toronto, promises to be the centre of tourist attraction this year apart. that is, from CharlottetownsOld Home Week. The Montreal Tercentenary Commission there has announced that, as part of the city's 300th anniversary ceremonies, His Eminence Rod- rigue Cardinal Villeneuve will celebrate a. public High Mass there at Jeanne Mancc Park on Sun- 4i)’. Ma i7. Attending also will be His Ex- cellency grjAntoniutti, apostolic delegate, who will read a letter addressed to the population of Montreal on the occasion by His Holiness Pope Pius XII. In the afternoon of the same day, and at the same locale, the benediction of the Blessed Sacrament will be celebrated. On Mon- day. May 13. according to the communique, hom- age to the founder of the city, Sieur Chomedy dc Maisoiincuve, will be paid in the morning at the monument erected to his memory on Place d'Armes. A military march past will be held, chorals will be sung, and representatives of lead- ing organizations in the metropolis will deposit ivrcaths. Following this ceremony, a reception will be held at City Hall, to which His Ex- ccllcllcy the Earl of Athloiie, Governor-General of Canada, has been invited, along with other gtlCSiS. During the afternoon of May l8, visits will be made i0 the six religious communities (‘OllHCClCii with the founding of Montreal-the Order of the Gentlemen of St. Sulpicc, the 5pcicly of Jesus, the Francisan. Order, the Grey l_\uns Order and tho Socurs llopiialicrc-s dc lilotcl Dieu. Visits are also scheduled to historic sues of Old hlnntrcal. The rlav will be con- (‘lurlPrl with a piililic concert aiid r.'illv at lll(‘ ITOFIII". wlil-rv uiruilwrs nf 1h.- fi-dvrnl. provin- cial aiid civic govvriimcnis will spcnk. Iyl-LQ gll-IARLUFFETOWN GUARDIAN times av TIIE WAY I- Mg- 1.",°,,",,‘§.°‘“°”" ._.____ Amount. Arfilment. Ari- "- (Ottawa Journal) Bwllllful» 3°" » ciiu-“e- “fl-Mm If "Anne o! Green Gables" wen chance. Chanse- Olrar- Cwmm- published tcda hard-boiled book comparison, condition, Conuectlv-‘l. “View,” w“; u" l; um; gpgcg, 00w. Decision. Decree. Desire. P" ,4 slanpla slung. they would say, velopment, Different, Existence. ‘M no; “mm; gum; y“; um. Ea. gait. t - lem- ing u, set u» lyoi-iadprike. 24am" P" - ' i birth a N" I89. Fiction, force, Form. Hoe. In- 259x,’ and m, genus 11mg story terest, Knowledge, Law, Let, level, of . country ‘m caugm m, 1m. Living, Love, Make, Material, “ma,” o! we“ numb“; o; "m. Measure, Mind, Motion, Name, NG- em you“: ‘M 01¢, ‘m; mu“; “u; tion, Natural, Necessary, Normal, Mm, o, n“ h Mu 81'. 1' - - - trac s. war -w ‘;“”‘"f' P3i’.°iltp'°l§ll3§°' iii-PK?! "‘ ivDer-y. “FWW- a Y- ' e Mont me , who tlon, Reason, Relation, Represents» wrgltlgyalgnflfilédof Gmengocalgsi- ‘m! Live“ Rmpect. Responsible, Right, m various suocasors m." . pm“ same. Say St-‘ienw- 8“. m- o; as years or so, died in TOPOIMID 5m“- 51811- slmpk- "Ml" 5°“ on may. She was Mrs. Ewan mic- speclai, substance, Thing, Thought Donald’ w“, o’ g datum-n. m True- Uae- way’ Wm’ wow’ work’ private life and fiction with her The 55°“? Paragraph m“ m" l°°k was but p, part-time career. But "he s" t-‘dlfmlfl- m“ l‘ M“ I’ 5' millions knew of i...M. Montgomery Richards" “I” i‘ “ "mwned who never had heard oi’ Mr . Ewan’ semammm‘ L‘ i“ my “u” “gm MacDonald and the author lived leaders would do well to familiarize to s” new], mud": puflmw" u, themselves with its contents. For the old how “Gum only.’ m that. passage L; mode up, aocordiiéig Prince Edward Island’ when “he l° M‘ mdmrd" °f m‘ Hund .. first of the Anne books was written. Great Words-the “key words. The place now 1a m m’ wand.‘ “the most important words," the national park “alum, is a so“ "Wfds mrwgh which the "est °l course whim perpetuates the name the language may be“ b’ c” Green Gables and the Island's pbmdfi " gamma‘ sun‘ tourist iiteratiue makes mitch of PM" Mi"- "M "are i" élfn’t.i‘..i‘lt‘sfi‘lt°.‘f“f.t‘d.°tlzi mm“ support M m‘ new Gown” vin nd launched there her dis- mem is precisely the appeal m” tinoteiisii d career For at num- one would expect to ccme from a be! Me rem '0! Li}? Monk r-enegfide Frenchman who“ very o: 'pgVEH generation‘ her old me “ow ha-ngs on l Gem“ Vi“ fgtomgrihaa literary shrine and there torv... This arrant nonsense ig- b m ea the m“ ti!“ 50m” “i” ‘he m“ m” l‘ w“ Hm" trim era the syirlt ofp toen- own gfmsgleftllfglol stiapck diowp Polanp. Yong‘ ° p I16 uwar aga ns a wes- - ern’ spread of Russian influence. Si"? Mllmlflréfiy 3W?“ lure It. ignores the fact that. it was a’ ‘Lewlgei ill" an_ tmag ‘F’ Hitler, and not Russia that made "9- a" ‘l’ e" W? i513’ ° Va “e . ;t .- . d l, - them as literature we should do so war ‘on We. crn Eucpe an ramp b f . d t d led ifs culture under foot. it lg- .5’ "Si °°mm8l¢° B" u" e" a" ' nores the fact that deniccraczes on m8 °f the slmP 9}” WW1‘! l" which three COlll-lllents are making w“ they had their oiigin. Millions of m, Russia-s Side against amen be- readers have loved Anne of Green muse may we clearly enough Gables". and that ls a. tribute from where the real threat to their the heflrt- t0 H street- Canadian safety lies It igitozes the iron WW1“!!- icllap that. Hifilcr has“ arotgid ——-———-—€————— ava ‘s own nec , a co a1‘ t. at. wt,“ ,,.‘,,._,d,,,,,,z h, mo,“ m, East Speaks To West raiol“s iea, I ignores ever- '“ thing m fact,‘ except Lavaps deg: ‘Ope of the most moving articles pcratc nerd of any argument. hoiv- “e five read l“ a k3,"? time 3'3" ever fraudulent, that tie can use to ‘lfimed l“ 135i’ sulldays New Yolk frighten s, still rebellious France Times‘ “om m” p9“ of m“ 5PM’ into comm ob5d=enmy to heel u,’ uoman. Madame Chlaug Kai-Slick. mm“ b" - N” m“ Tim“ gull.“‘Zvilfilmlfiillhlilsiléii. 222i ha“ humility. but mostly it Ls shatter- trouble convincing recruiting offic- g w ‘m? °°ml71“°°“°3' _ (‘r3 ma; m“. are 5,311 as gocd, 0,. Generations of us were brouont M any rate nearly as gmd me,“ as up_to thiiik of the Chinese as in- tiiey were in 1917 and 191a should "I'm" we ihtmgh} °f "m", “S *1 take a hint from Ernmcbt Donnelly, m“ l“ fem“ °f ‘Chmstown’ "N" a gardener frcm Santa. Barbara, will," 9' 1°55“ breed “ihmii ‘h’ (jaljf six ymes Emma“ med to law ; as people who could be simnle Qullgl. when 1,15 Own 1mm New“. vet cruel. and V\I'O were without. the jng 0mm said N, h? go, m [m 01d Iiusiness ‘instinct? and brains and bils and joiirncd (p five Du“,- cem even this ‘cducatmii’ aiid ‘progress’ tree still they said n°_so Em_ of the West, 'i‘.iey were, in truth, melt got mad and sen; off this the “heathen Chinee"; people to l..egrdm to the Adjutanpqenera] whom we might send missionaries, in Washington, D_C_; ~1 (m, out- but. who mostlv were despised. onlv shoot. out-march and Qlil-yap gny a few scholars. hardly less despised, guy from elghlggn go thirly—:_lve knew of China's literature and who can enlist In three wed“ philo-ogly; of her place in the I'll be a b-etter soldier than you can world as an ancient, mighty civil- mllke out of a kid in twelve months mamm- rni f01‘ly-ihl‘ee,5o “hall 111,, draft Pltllcss ls Madame Cliiaiig Kai- W l take m9 ifl lazer. but I want Shek in reminding us oi’ these ln now Llock at. yQur map and things. But it is in her review of _ tell me to keep on planrlng the tale of the past two years mat _ re is no place in the with a touch of uncoitcealed "corn Aqnciican Anny for a. uaitied and she scars our complacency. Willllflg soldier, “mat a \l\’Ol'l(If1Ofh(‘I1lfl9l‘6l1CB‘llWTC l‘ W?‘ ' ‘ iveen the a: tug at Saaixrz- wlll be , l . the I-al in 1937 aiid the defence of the Santa atbara recruiting officer so-callcd imprcgiiable Masziliot to swear in tho pflnj-‘y-grciwel- 1m- Lfnefl The Chinese were not allowed mcdiately. - Chiuago Sun, by the foreign powers to fortify , ———--- the Shanghai arear or even '0 din The UIlIf-Ed States Employment trench-cs near the cltv. though the service trill no longer ask appll- Japanese were permitted to use cants for work tlic question as to Shanghai as a naval and mllitaiy affiliations. an base. . . Yet lllggqulpprig on s .e im rovised ll i s iheyspaca? provided for religious Japaneseymassgd forces,nveasffi/a 3iilllflll0l15 on official blanks will iierioi‘ artlfcry and warplanes and be} ignored aiid new cards will be far better armed infantry." printed without 1t f ' ' plrlilllv flarlgflfgfltiibl0lf0fulil£ need for dc p CD3 011 lll e WEI‘ !'O- Rb I18. 6119C] n Ertlim FQBBMIB-‘is 0L race. ciieed, and in other ‘battles aivlilig Billie’ cc or, or national ongii. I!- recos- Chinese liiet. Japan and what hah. nzes that» a mans faith is his own ironed when the West "met. 1h:- P-fld 110i a ropcr concern for a shatterlnc impact of Japan's federal emp oyinent selvlce. - St might". '1| us- bouis Post-Dlspauii. ' -—-_ Old soldiers who have X f n 1 dnsiys an expert. Mod- eaio n rin .218 r0: ' th ' g drivcr's.- Toronto ErieniiiiggaTelef $21,521°§§§g,,<,,w§figh§?°1“'“°d ma“ Ellington‘ ‘smto us ina ______ 0 n. In a celebrated pie-war speech incomgmhfigilblf,’ “hi: Pierre Laval asserted ms was; m. so long “ P011 stilts, indignities an H9 with who would su Europe upon its - '9' yea" fieskllw» If’ “"115 m" liciern lbs? liigmlllgiiioivifllflllcoliiéiil’ hale i: 3&9" m; ‘gain? Faeéfa lBut “I110 Madame Chiang Kai- wherein men ilk: Laval have buried Sm‘ d ' ‘he m“ ‘m the honor of a natic a; at one time o. stan 5°“ France ‘g-iaiilt. Laval w cie ‘w’- enough ave 11L the same from létngi-mi-lglir 12g "or Ealch “m” Political theories also seem to have _ ° h“ h“ a. remarkable adaptability. ' in; his lit-leaf career he shown a wonderful elasticity in re- gard to his views. However, dur- 118 his public life his one consist- ent’ D°1l¢y has been an admiration _ for _Germany.. Ho. our darkest mom Soviet Rus- Jchn Telegraph That woman are playing s ‘eat fléfdllh‘; l" ‘f. t lfllr’ °‘" ——— °“'- “ l l" "l r-mi this linti {fdfjf flflflllfi“ "m" m" "n" ma‘ fiiiitimsltreniigliiilg?‘ thin: nick ‘to mat: vifiiieh chiiingisaxii- “M” flw“ w "tn? n Andtosulwmoatiiatpasa Alderley Bviihoisreiwevidf: if; 65mg.‘ I" m“ “W” 5°)" diiced by Palmerston to a foreign h; l d m dlplonistist as “our chieif of general 51ml?“ ngilfinielflali-IQNG '3' fine as staff, but there was never a war frosty fut] l" hill"? 1h which there were so Azure and violet. $11,185,136 Ollrll-‘alflfidfllil mninimpeffitirlln; Ami rose and green. . a w :10 g a they are all on the side of the strung from its gilt brass ring Allies. for we near no mention of By threads of scarlet, all its gay any woman of really first-class im- affairs _ Dortanoe in the Axis sdicme of —Haxai°"4. ‘ gméhLChlana igishekh in- 5P"! llld llnl- t or Jilmfiiowvfiflffi Day in, day out, it makes gplttcd state, and i” very fact A wit-imaging 11511105)’ '- l-llmlfll. a so h f - have corrrifriieiliitg lfriaergely (tiling-iii: Lu“ ‘"3115 l“ bumlnli detitagls of, tthat influence only serv- BY 1118M l‘ "ii-k"- es un er nc its im. rta . In o“, o“, mum“. we b5; mmgum, And faint as drowned Elizabeth one oi the best of wo- echo of ch, $lil...‘i.’€“£§3f‘?.€i' léfimotlfi? w» w» feminine causes. Perhaps the most. Th“ no clock m a‘ Pteresiizlng of our recent visitors rom ussla was a women trade union representative, and the part ENGLANITS LAST QUAKI played by Russian women requires no underlining. Nor should the ‘me last, violent qsrthqugkg p noble fortitude oi Queen WH/iel- England occurred in 11m, minis be overlooked. It is surclv a _._.__.._____ paint of some significance that. EARTP" svinracp their ls n; frmlnlne enuival-ent of any kind m tin- Axis side. -Man- chestn- Giiardlan - THE WIND-BELL , lqI-IIICI — -Audrey Alexandra Brown. The earth has ni.510,000 squan miles of land surface. .-r‘"" [- garmrmrs-mts-~.-r.... an c -heeolpeat example oi‘ darling’: the mi r Waterman’: Field Piioven Pen BUILT FOR-SERVICE In every branch of the armed forces, Waterman’! 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V. 0., war Commentator For The Canadian Legion 440404 0o “c4040 ¢o+¢+o+++¢vo0 0+“ o+o+++o+o+ moo» ‘ Cmllllllled Pllbllvly hung or shot over 2,000 (318809, a very poor cniliitry, ctin- patros, Iii attempts to make them not feed herself. and _\=-2t GBJHUIIIS betray their comrades Jvrr 1.000 have robbed her of food and de- were handed over to the Gestapo. stocks they many to be tortured Llllll] tllev alcu remove. Her entire stock or became insane. ' of olive oil, one of her m products, has been taken the before the Germans finally killed N811 will‘ machine. If Greek villages him, Universities aiid sJioBls have cannot produce the excessive quotas been closed and prcregsors executed of food demanded of them ioi- (ior- or sent to prison camps with thous- many, hostages are shot. Terrible ands of students. many no iihcns one day 109 students from University were executed; were kicked to death. Some of the Ger Itall n t‘ toil: b ' " a ac :0 L‘ 'he 19 , a out 150,090 Czechs limi been bodies of those who die in the imprisoned. Of 1,200 students ar. 551W“- PQODIe rob the Braves for rested in Prague in November, i939 e. 10o ma died by last December: _ Scientific instruments and precious i’ ones in northern Greece, mass- libraries have been taken to Ger- acred 15.000 men. women and ctiil many. Other Fbraries have been lilrelalil. npd took the remaining in burned. Execution “mos any 1a tan s to labour in Bulgaria. Czech Mic opposes the "COIIEJHQII" The GWEN hlWB mulled witli of winter-clothing for Gel-man “Nth-Se. and sllcrilla warfare ii. troo .Czech farmers are being mountains that. it avic and reoltwed b qcymgm, KNDI Occupied several divisions of But the Czeziis are fghisliig back Axis soldiers. Unable to quell Greek Production in armnmeri": factories Yfilfilllncfl 11y fighting. the Germans has been reduced 40 per cerit. In are burning towns and villages one factory 20 million 1‘O‘l".Il5 of and flXwlltlliiz hostages b_v ll-c niin- ammunition were spoiled. Railway sabpénse is so avo others often takes a month instead of three days. In the Carpathians wrecked a mill- ook eight unloads Yugo-Slims ifiafél. will“ “ff..°°“‘“"l‘°‘l hi "Y 9 W‘ 5 llifl M lie-suns and ammunition Slavonic ‘peoples. following her The Czechs have fought for eivll W 0f defllrvylnc Blrvs and religious liberty for centurlgs :0 mags ‘for Gennans. Even and will not cease now. rom - - “nous gggn awn Gpgoéanipoéigtyp (To Be Continued) stolen food, 1e vin the l to _ imve. Acoordiiig ouitliiiipfaei- S0 The Yams Spread esale massacres The? ) Freeman one German oc- < When (sci-mm Nllwfldflys one hears so much over VORDS 0F‘ __ i ‘HA LLENGF I- "We have all got to sacri- floe." Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the Uflilfll - States. u UDDQQQGQUUUGQDOUODDOCW- is seen merely as an effort ‘to ein harass the Catholic Church in Bra all and the goveriinictit of tli country. By this time. of coltrse, millio who read it in the press or W" heard the very windy gentleman” the radio, no doubt believe wlia they heard and. read. In this wa more so than in any ct-hci‘. the P" lic. is long suffering through 5?! heads over nothing and in partiui lar, from the plague of radio com mentators. The latter, in many 1P pects, may be classed in the i ~ ance category. SUNS HYDROGEN The sun sweeps up 110.0000 ions of hydrogen from 5P3“ ° ' second and uses it as fuel. “W” in! to a new theory. BACK 30 0110 YEARS A 80.000—year-old Bill"! "l l” historic cave arts vras disco ' last year near Montisllllit l‘ Southwest France. Use Mis.a.rd's for dandruff. Till! WAY T0 Better Grain Yields New riirrnovrin causal llllls certain Smnts and oillg V seed-borne diseases b? Contact and Valwf- Uwheg i l yields of (iiiiiiibiitariey. rm 1"“ 1Ib.‘tIn———-“' ly. o; n; enough mm to the radio that can be desi atzd 1d blood‘ u, d_ only as trash that surprise is ardl women an; children. Eieiiiremfialwriisi °°°“~°"°"°d “i "l? "ftrem" 5° W11“ and V111,!” "we been bombed w some of these commentators” will lheeground_ and mo“ who are m,’ ggflin order to tr, land create a sen- wi pm m»- m wit. ...ii2..i<:.t° an ..*:."......:r**u.:.: Tod th fr» i" a tc men o fflblIII under {leneral Mfe- mom 1e e haliovi h in the mountains o! mcfifiy ‘M; central and western Yu o-Slnvla. y‘ a r 0 commenlam’ l“ an dive-bombers, iaarnclniie the mm“ s“ mil °f lrliiif sigiiisfmwmf dim" lam” moun s pos ions. "m; Several Axis garrisms have been ands. stored all ready 18551.5 wiped out. Today. no Axis soldiers ‘There was of amuse, dare go outside rifle-shot ran e of al to as the Bmgfl their posts; and they only hol the quickly showed. for no towns they garrison. Unable to cie- had been made and, feat the Yugo-Blav soldiers, Germans no arms or Nari pro vented t-iielr rage in January by ut- In any Bruilian mon l7. Faint, faint. H5 the iiiioks? of tiu-‘flfirlgflgjitiféivina thr-a towns south But the story spread until it w» -; lIl6— , m one “no llvln, p, _ alleged that several Catholic institu- aon was left." Al, Kranuievnc 4.000 "W! We" lflvmvfi lnli-nellllllfi’! men and boys were outclicreii as a l" u" Uflllld 51L . and e - lilz."".l°'.. i: ‘irri-"u. ""°" ‘M’ ""°" " " """'"“"' a oun e 'v . e ., ~ - ,P""°* g-p- 1-»- lilk"..:":iti".i=:ti.ilr:.i" ‘m- um a ‘N, p" engaged sewn‘ The Vicar-General of the German dvislons badly needcri m x B I Russia. ‘their history shows that 3,21,?! fiuxgurgk Ad)" “k5”! Yugo-Slave will never rive in. w any out g mapameh cmh°'s'°"k" iiiioaiiitierleiildtomt-Iheofvlritiitii aiirosiiheiniie h“ ‘ m cmchms, "k, m d remained oi the story stating time o...» I°""i°'- "-...i...:r*"i:l is. y‘a soap or ,_ on which to put. a headline, Wasn- i Archdio- -. NEW IMPROVED SEMESAN BEL t tr W‘ d. ..2l'."'.'.‘°t."'. lul- s: all treatment that CIllIlITl-In’. _ labour and loss 0f ‘H; lib. ti ' ’ IOIIMALIN m m SMUT on GM A cheap m thorwll"! ‘l’ 5 festive remedy. i be H" an“ "we" '01:“ order I‘ I, . fivifi-Z-faziriw-ir """‘ - . ‘rill i»- TlIE TWO MAGS , m amt new» W" m; , Gi n P" . llall OrdZI-‘aunuéf. t ,. . -.,. to»