CPAQE r0012 V W, THE (IHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Project is lll lll€ exlwrilllelllfll static. earl)’ “s” L; G n lmlililiiisellildslallilitstlidll diamond-cutting industry. “Qnnngyrailly il-‘uuuiica m i581) ___ An army of newly-trained mechanics. Prrsidlnl: Lielll. Col. iwchuui- s. Mal-nu ntt- Prusidrnl: .I_ It. Burnett. F-J-l- st-tiriaig: I.ll'lll.. Cul. U. A. hlaclfluuon. 0.3.0. Eifitiir and Man. gllli; Director, J. l». Burnett. FJJ- Assoriau- Llilurs: Frank “iilkcr and ll-n A, lfllrllfll srusciuwiiox RATES By Mail lu l’. ..l . SLUU per year; 52.50 for O mfllllhl. $1.15 tiir .- nunms; 50c fur one month (fly lti-lini. $3.00 pi-r year‘. 53-00 T" 5 "mun" $1.75 ll'l .1 iiiiiiiiiisai hiic fur one Month B) Mail to nllicr l'i'o\iiii.-rs uliil 551W l"? 193' Mun-nu, writ-kl); $2.00 per year; “.00 (or 6 montbl. 50c tur 3 month: machine shop capacity. .-\ rehabilitatcd railway system. _ .-\ sliip-bttiltliiig industiy and lfihmllufi ._ An airplane building industry and technique. .-\n optical glass industr)‘ and lcchmqlm- Fifty thousands pilots. Thousands of airplanes. _ Thousands of inteinal rombtistion engines, diesel engines. _ _ _ A greatly explanded chemical industry. Kids. 1 i. s" mrrrxrm-r. .. etc. _ . iiiimt-s ysquare, New Yin-In A sulphur and pyrite production. viii Sol-ill“qt?Int?‘"cQegtrllilgsgmf Ilqgnfvagleqllbag Billions 0f dollars iii savings accounts and iffiftiilli-Iiffi i-ilin- :i...i it... 51.. ‘Purim-to: N¢Wa stand. Gvvcriiiiiciit builds l" the °\\'l1"$l"l> °f '1": (‘halt-nu I.i1\||ll'l'. (Minna; Wolfe's New; Stand Suh- peophl [Eff ""“‘ I'm’ iwlllf u Shun’ “New” NL; Several hundred thousand iiddilimlfil “The Snonqml Mnmgl)’ is Weaker than Ills power of hydro-electric development. Weakest Ink." \\'ith .\ltlllll\‘lll and London only over-night - , ‘ ' d‘ 1,- ~i r l~-_tl- _l ullbc n0 limit t0 : iiiiziiix. ()("l'()l!hR l7. wt: ‘l,‘~“"“ bl 1mm“ “re ‘ll’ f I __ ,_ - — - air cxpciiisiitii zinil tlic cmplityititiit o tiousants 0f young Canadian airiiicii. _ This is also true of Canada's ship building in- dustry which 1S now developing by leaps and bntitith, 'l‘li<- smashing of the Japanese will tt-itticii lht- (lrlclll tii tunzitliaii ltiitdlltifi- qiflllll‘ \l'llll Russia aiiil Lltiiia sliiiulil It.» enormous. 'l'i'uly it has burn said that Canada is the llll- liOll of the future. lt is this vision we should hold of the Cftllllflil wc are fighting for. horse \‘\ lint It Amounts To “lg of tlit- Third Yic- .. . w -li iiiii |llllltl~ of thc . l.,-,i;.. aullntlfl) (ill this can lliiti-ter t litirchill uliosc ~" i" t'\llllll\ltf have done {Mug ilizin anything w his Cllllllvlljlt‘ to zi. ilil. Churchill after if all do their rind if the best t. tlii~_v are bring ~.?~..~\ itiicc ziquiu ziltlc ~_ t-i ii.li- out the stiirni . ~ iiiciiace 0f l_\'l‘illlll_\', if l'.\'\‘t‘~.\1tl’\' altinc. .\t an)‘ . 1.. UL» (f. try to do, 'l"h.'it \l lll'\lr\'l_i (iovci'iiiilciit-~ t is tlic will of lhirlia- .t- llritisli Empire and liiilvctl together in their will ilcfciid to the death - .3 i zicli iitlicr like good com- ni tlirir strcngih. l-Ivcii ' ldlliilttl and many’ old and t- "Flt-ii or may fall into the i ziizil all the odious apparatus ;lll yo: flag 0r fail. \\'e shall . 1 t \i'.'lll fight in France, we \‘.l~' utiil occans, we shall fight .{.-,;_¢ 3nd growing strength lit ::i the fields and in the lit the hills; we shall never ', which l do not for a Y < i~.;iiitl m‘ a large part of it starving, then our Empire id and guarded by the Bri- _v on the struggle, until, in tic tic\\' world, with all its forth to the rescue and -. — EDI IORIAL NOTES- Tomnrroiv, the great day in our Churches, Slrccts and liiiriiiii. v ll‘ it 4i ljlcsscd are the pcacniakcrs, and the Allied Nations are the ]it3.'lCt'lll."fl\'€l'5 at this particular juncture. 1041*! Surely tlic ravishing of our homes by the Nazi submarines in the 5t. Lawrence strikes at our hearts as with a dagger. Let them have a taste of their own medicine! xxmv After llccenibcr I a full-sized bed spring uiaiuifuctiirt-tl in the Uniictl States may not cou- tziin more than i5 pounds of steel, the War Pro- duction Board ruled recently, A single or twin- sizcrl bed spring may not contain morg than nine pounds. ##1## \\'ho has not seen and admired the picture of Millals “Bitbbles,” a fair ciirly-haired three- year old blowing soap bubblcs~a picture, ap- propriately enough, acquired by Pears and uni- versally advertised httnsting their toilet soaps? lt is hardly conceivable, but the original of that picture, Admiral Sir \Villiam Milburn James, is 110w Commander-in-Chicf at the Naval Barracks of Portsmouth, England. llc is a grandson of the great Pre-Rapliaclitc Painter wlto got him to sit ltztlicntly frir his portrait by telling him fairy tales. lle is known in the Navy still as “Bubbles.” <it~ii< l '\i... . . ., ‘iwfore us an ordeal of the most ‘.\'i: have ltcforc iis many, many f —"‘.ig~_'ir‘ zinil of suffering. You . Es iiiir policy? l will say: It is izi. lintl and air, with all otir zfii- strength that God can \\l‘.' against a monstrous ~-l 'n llll‘ llfll'l\', lzintcnt- .iii ciiiiic. ililllll i5 0H1’ lull‘ ‘ ;~ itur uiin? l can answer iii Nitry ut all costs, victory ttry, however long and i iitr ivithoiit victory, there _, ltt- ri-ulizerl; no survival i: iii .\‘.ll'\‘l\‘lll for all that UfHHl fiir; no survival of the ages, that maii- .. ‘il lt'*\\\'ll'tlS its goal. But -. .i iiiiity:iiiry'. l fecl that our it riil tit fziil ziiiioiig titen. - 1liii to cliiiti the ziid of . . - . lct iis go forward iii-iii] srcngtlr." 1W1!!! Straws show how the wind blows. Portugal, supposedly neutral up till now, sent, through its Presidciit the following candid congratulatory message to President Vargas of Brazil 0n the latter declaring ivzir on llitlcr and Mussolini: ":\t the momcnt of receiving the official com- nitinicatiitii that Brazil is at war l want to cou- vcy to you and to the Brazilian people assurances of my own fraternal feelings, as well as those of the Portuguese people, who accompany the noble Brazilian nation with the greatest emotion at this historical moment in its life." \Vhat can (lcrinziny and ltrily think of this? in it. x tr Scarcity of labour is being more keenly felt iii the wcst than in the east. Mrs. \\". ll. Wark, and her 18-year-old daughter, Wilma, Vancouver, are out of tht- dairy business nftt-r watching an auctioiicr scll off their Lulu ls- land herd of 84 purebred jerseys, which the family built up over a period of i8 years. Short- age of farm labour fiircctl .\lrs. \\'arl< to sell her herd, she said, as slic warned (luring the auc- tion that "there's going to be a milk famine tn‘.- lcss sortie way is found to get farm labour." There have been four auctions of dairy herds on Lulu lslztiid. which lics in the mouth 0f the lirasci‘ hivcr just iiuisitlc Vancouver, in tthc past fcw yczirs. \ liiilllalllili.‘ Future inipliczitioits are the i< lllllhlllQ iii Canadian g s ~iiltlily :i writer iii the ':'i .i l1il\l\ fiir stiiiic iii- lii‘ finds ziiiittiig new 1‘ j. ]t4i~~t\\' uhiii the w:ir >t< it >lt ln Quebec they scum dctcriiiiiicd to have clean fiirnis. joscpliut llztiiicliii, of St. l‘iily'c;ii'|>e, Situluiigcs ('iiuiit_\', ivzis finiil $50 niiil ciists fol- lowing citnvictiiiu by judge l". T. l-Inright, .\lon- trcal, uii a clizirgt- of failing to tibry scvrrzil n )- ticcs ordering llllll to rid his flax field of weeds. lii default of payment, llameliti will spend one month in jail. lnslwctors of the iveeds section of the Provincial Department of Agriculture told of notifying lllllllCllfl several times to re- movc the UlHlUXlULlS wccds and the charge was laid when the accused paid no attention to the warnings. A similar charge, preferred against llzitncliirs son. who OWNS an adjoining flax field, was postponed iiiilil the (‘ourt of l\'itig's llctich, in zippezil, pztsst-s judgment on his fzithcr's con- viction. wVuiii industry. hascd on l ,.t..,~.-.._ t... ii. cvri ~s of ll.'l- wxi ltl'tlllllk‘t‘l‘<. cither as ~' straight tung- ':\ iiir nickel and '5 n til zinc, tnainly . l>l‘:‘~<‘lll rirc being '.l night hr lllllllCtl in r-t iliii I\'. cpl: i-i lira-s products ii.:ir ]tlll']\4l<(‘~'. "_ with tho dcvclop- iil lttsvltlllllf‘ dcpiisits, lit it 1F II Ill Xcvillfls (rttss, ncur llurhriiii, where David llriicc, King of Sci-ilziiid was dcfczitcd and cap- tiircd by tlic linglisli this dtitc i340, was releas- ed clcvt-n years lzitcr on promise of a ransom of 100.000 incrlcs; hiizililc to raise this sum, could reign only in (l('lt{'ll(l(‘llCC on lidwnrd Ill; >ll<‘t‘<'l"lt‘(l by his ucphc\v' Robert ll, found- t-r (If tho Slcivzirt dynasty who ilcfcatcd the lingli-li zit tlii-i-yt Llinsc; luhii liar- littiii‘ (ljllt-QB) Scottish pot-t, rcgnrilcd as father i-f Scottish tilwiry", zind archdcuroii of .\l7(‘l‘tli'(‘ll, wrotc a iuirriitivc piwin, “'l'hv llriicc", in :0 biitiks and ll]t\\.'ll'fl~' of LLOOO lint-s, fin’ which he rvccivcrl from King Robert ll. in 1377, a gift of $50, and iii the following year a per- pctiiril :iniitiit_v of Si, itidicating that poets of lll1l~'(‘ days were. no more llflll(lS0lll(‘l_\' rennin- crnlctl by thc Stair lllllll Laureates of the pres- (Ill d:i_v: ".\h! fl'('(‘4lt>llI is‘ a ttrtlilc lliingl A iuailriviiiil pr-itliiclit-ti itf Jlllllllllllllll. Frceil-im lllitl\'('~ mun tn lizivc a likingl Pvt Iiably siii :ihiiiiiit:i lIl(lll~ll'_\‘, utilizing doin- lirci-rltiiii all solnc‘ t0 man givesl (sale tiqtlivllne sjvmne mid-or anorihoslte. This He li-vu at an, thm Indy bu!‘ f, l ‘kiln-luv in the lint. itn ilic Pacific ~iilt~idi.'ir_v, Fru- friini <l(‘ltti~il_< in lil'lll~ll citliniibia. ii.it:.l< industry; utiliz- '.ii' iticliilx iii cllltllllllllll allitvvs. i, iiitu sliiwly ilt-vclop- "ilil~‘l\'. rnvitn tit lllllllllllll Illltl rn- iii-iii‘. .1.‘ oral-hilt‘. i-f ‘Wihlll! iiiii. -til~li' t‘ ii'iiii~li‘_v, linsril ltll nil. _ , process Vastly increased steel working industry and prlnu‘! h OCTOBER 17. 1942 "("58 Bflfli "l" LIFE INSURANCE 1s THE PEOPLE'S BUSINESS PRDTECTION . "for the people a . . by the people N peace time, peace of mind goes deep. Yet you can often see it in a iace. You can usually tell when a. man or woman has a sense of security. You What aclually l; dehydration, a now much ln Pub-ll! There are viufcus ways 6! taking water out. of focd. It can be “drled" (taklng the vrater out. by any means). 1t can be "sun-dined" (taking the water out. without ar- tlfictal heat). It can be "evapcrar. ed" (raking it out by natural diafi.) It, can be "dehydrated" (taking lthe water out by forced circulation of lrtlflcla] heat). Dehydration Ls complicated anrl costly A prcduc- tlve capacity of 500.000 pound: per ear Ls described as the minimum or profilable o atlcn, Carxozs may be taken to ll ustrate the process o! dehydration As scon as the cur-om are pulled they are topped, trimmed, washed, scraced sliced and spread tn wire trays, upon which steam i5 turned for slx minutes to blandi l-licm Then for six hours they are subjected to the dehydraicr to a teen-""r~'u:i of 150-180 degtces Fiitireirhelt. _ The ysteld from 19H pounds of carrots seventeen pounds. Tlfs will flll two five-gallon cans. A blii of dry lce is dropped lnto each can imd the llrl on the can is sealcd with stiellac The ice makes lung storage possible. Canada backs ali dehydrated vegetabies ln tlrs way. Einctiarige . . . . The real complaint ls that the people lien» were not trkl lciig ago by the nirii who really did know tlie facts U! the niui-iti" that the gold mines would be closed ust as soon a5 the need for (llilll- power and materials became acute. They should have been advised that the 501d mines could not, stand up under the strain at an all-out war effort. And rm Den soins 1n a position to do so should PM" "‘Fl'lP ‘hr l“ - (“for (if 5.11% lfshmerit of a war industry here before ll. was too late to do so Butt, what ls tlic use of nptxikiiiq o! those “should have done" mat. tors. These things were not dune, ~t~ P w. u .-~~-i kr- Lake residents are learnlng their sorrow thati their SBCUYlEy "was shallow: that they nave be. ‘come new victims 0f governmental .,,,... m, .. _. .- . .. . on the part of thcse wni) the truth and would not tell Tlmmins Press inibw it. ov- " hr "Mk earth" _ she orlglnal game of Egypt tn the ""_< t" - ~ q w. -. 0d wnqucrors and would-be ctr-n. Qllefvrs ever since the period \\'llf‘fl the reigning dynasty wm ()\,'(\l‘_ thrown and icplaced by those a!- most legendary shepherd azigs, W“ MPmPv c' w“ v =l'*. lc" Fri‘- VOd to make the Hebrews unpopu- lar ln Egypt fn Blbllcal times, be- too had been shep- Quaiw-‘t - ti .t 5 ancient soil, fertilled by tlit; over, 110w of the Nile, the successive strata. of many cultures overlay each other. recording En the earth itself that human urge to grow '~ r tilts",- whlch we lhouetit. we illld seen ‘he last -uiitil Hitler came Suez, tens of centuries bcfcre the prcsr-nt can- al twhllch ls by no mears ilie first. fortified by a wall iilznlnst potential invaders from A=laz and lt was this wall whlch made the Semitic peo- ple glve FEDYL such nritni~< n; Mam-r (lihe Blbllcal Mizraiml, "Th-z forti- fletl," petipeluaterl by the Arabs vitien tkiev liivrided Africa ln the early Middle Ages. setting up their rule tn Eiz-ypt. or Masr. as they sl-lll call ft today. Ev::'_i,'i'.{1cr0 ln the ancient land of th¢ Phariachs there are names that testify to the pride of the conqueror. a crin- solcuous example belntz Cairo, from the Arzihlc adjective which means "ROYlqtl€l'll'l"." The 00m fin Ezvpt that. broiirht Jacob and hi5 5on5 thither; the wealth of Egypt that " - r “1"l" n t" hos‘~=; tho importance of snez, wblch 15 a. bridge to the north-ens‘. and a. izatiewav to the Indian Ocean _a1l these glittering prizes made it 1n- evifable that Egypt should figure v< -\~. H‘ r‘ 4m wnw-w i, 453. _ llitlearis for the conquest of the earth. Fcr that reason it would be sheer madness to look on Rom- melfls violent the » aid; and sheer complacent stupidity to be undisturbed bv the pollcv that has allowed this brilliant. stratwlst to get so far. June. 1942» JFrum The Melbourne Argus. ri*l\ q. ,_ ,.--. .. .. . um‘! T40 mite-h cannot be said ln sup- port of the Anzlo-Frervh Club which has been established at the Officers’ "Fralnixig Centre here itiiith the rblc"? (if plkllltilltll’, t5.- trl- WTCIJL aricllizg bet-ween the r. prvstenttatlvic: cf the two pfiufiral racial groups in tihc Dominion who are Ln aititexidnnce there wit-n a view to qiiallflwtlon iis junior officers. The very cream of the youang man- hood of bottn Etigllslispeakmg and French-speaking Canada ls now at.- tcntdfng Bromvillels O. T. C. and there could t-hus be no better place in which to break down racial mis- understanding and prejudice, nctt. only for the present but for the fu- ture. The Anglo-French Club can therefore, do a. rmermanenlt work o [great value and the more {he idea spreads the bettr- will l ‘ for ria- l‘.'lllV and '-‘ " Brock-ville hawrder and Times American newsp..pcr men. and no doubt American newspapfr readers have liked to believe that while Government agencies mglit hold back news they would nzt. r l" se news that isn't t-riic. We mny g. wl about being kept, llllll€COS$l\l‘lly in the dark, but we wlll always bsw to an expert veidict of military necessity, But their ls no con- oelvaible military nccrssity for mak- ing us believe that. n cfiiiric: pat;- tern left: by plow, a trail of gtinny sacks ln a fleld, cr ii cltarotl space |foir feeding birds is 'Stl'lJV(‘l'SlV'2” and "treacherous " In ntrmal times such assertions would be investig- alted. They ctinnot- br- wltcn oven the location of ‘he nllfgrd slgns and symbols L; kept socrrt. We do not believe that any (mo not. out~ to deceive the public We assume that. sCme one, coming tipon some exceptilonally good alr phOtCgraphS, though that. the service which took them out to receive a lltle pubtc- ly. Butt this frve-riiirl-ensy- practice won't- do tn war time We are glad that. Gene-ml Drum promise: “itp- prCtpYlnte action tn llll“ time " Some public relations cfflc-rx- wlll pos- slibly be more useful ln another kind of job. The Nrw York Times. Au n. contribution to thr- war z-f. font, merchants of Grimflby. Ont, have been CflflilllCllllg m1 exp-rt- men]; ln cutting sr-rvlce rcsfs. They Qrganlfid a “shop with n basket" campaign and distributed 1.200 baskets to their mislcmnrs A survey completed by t-hv Grtmsby (Xiamber of Ccmmerce shows that. use of tihcse baskets for slumping has brought n 65 rwrr-c-nt. mrluoflon ln wranpfnlz paprr and ill" lnbcr requlred to WHIP. To DHFCQls carrlwl bv customers. merchants: nltricli n sticker tn patrlc-tlc co‘0rs berirlniz the slogan “To help wln tho war 1 any iii pudmge " The savings f ter, can see it in the sprixigy step of a doctor in Van- _ couver. You can see it tn the calm eyes of a farmer on the Prairies. You can a miner in Sudb feel it in the firm grip of ury. You can hear it in the un- ruflled voice of a school teacher in Quebec. You can sense it in the quiet heartiness of a store clerk in Halifax. ' i Men and women wlio enioy the financial security of liie insurance are typical Canadians . . . if you can call four million people typical. Some are young, some are middle-aged, some are old. Most of them are wage-earners and people of moderate means. Life insurance came into existence because these people needed protection, and its assets in Canada . . . now over two billion dollars . . . are owned by the people it serves. Each one of you protects the other, and as you protect each other, so you protect yourselves and the nation. Right now, peace of mind and protection depend on victory. That is why you should work, save and lend to the limit of your ability. Put every dollar you can into War Savings is the advice of your life insurance companies who have invested millions of your premium savings in. war loans to buy the tools oi victory. I'I‘ IS GOOD CITIZENSHIP 'I‘O OWN LIFE INSURANCE This essage is sponsored by Life Insurance Companies operating in Canada PUBLIC FOR UM This column ll Opal hr Nu dluuulnn by wrralponrluh ll qnontlonu ol tum-m. The Charlntmtnwn Ounrdlnn don no! uoonurlly adorn Li. opinion nnnnnnonhnln. EGG GRADING AND HEALTH TAX Slrr- For the past few days I have seen in your paper a youth training programme, covering mniiy courses of instruction. To my mind there ls at least one which mltgliti as well be omitted. That one is Egg Grading, considering the way lt. is doiie_ today. I have sold eggs to four different grading stations, and have seen two dollars‘ differ- ence per case in the returns. Not- withstanding the fact that they were the same price per grade, also that they were from the same source and had received the same treatment. 1 thlnk it, is about time there was an inspector appointed by the Government to check up on the egg grading methods. A150 there ls another matter I would like to speak of, The Tobacco flealth Tax. The peo 1e who were rz-ipoiislbe for star ng thL; cer- tainly had no experience in store- keepiiig or they would never, lm- pose sucti a nuisance on anybody. I think the returns frrm the Health Tax should go towards treatment for them, for there is certainly scinethlng wrong with their health or their heads. I am, Slr, etc. JOHN SMITH Esq. Malpeque, P. E. I. THE SKUNK DIENACE Sirz- May I take advantage of your Public Forum Lo address the following 0 en letter to the honor- able, the infstter of Agriculture: Every year, you, Sir, have given goccl advice and assistance to the poultry farmers as well as b0 other ‘ranches of agriculture. Some few years ago you ‘mported to this province the Hungarian Part ‘lift-gr, a wonderful gatne bird. 'i"liry multiplied very rapidly. The farmers fed them during the win- very few farm yards were without them; we all admired Lhein. But where are they today? The writer has motored thousands of K miles this simmer and 1 have yet to sce a flock of Huns. Two years ago_lt_vvgi_s n0thltlg_tp s§_e_a_d Nor mlne own fears. nor the ptro- phetic soul Of the wide world dreamlna on hliuzs to come. Ciin vet the lease of my true love control. Supposed as forfelt to a confined doom. The mortal moon hath her eclipse endure . And the sad auszurs mock their own DNSBHEZ Incertalntles now crown themselves assured. And peace proclaims olives of end- less n20. Now with the drops of this most almv time My love looks ll‘ESll. and Death to me subscribes. Since. spite of hlin. I'll llve ln thfii poor rhyme. Whtle he insults o'er dull and speechless tribes: And thou tn this shall. flnd thv monument. When tyrants’ crest. and tombs of brass are spent —_j-_wllllfl.l'fl_SIlfl:l(9§DQBJ_'Q. ,¢_—_—__——-____m___._i_ through conscrvtillon of wrapping paper and cutting delivery casts are piisscd on tn the sihoppvr tfircuch lower prices, At tthe same time the wiir offcrl. l: benefited by the rrduc. ticn in thr- iise of lznssllne, rubber mid delivery Other ccmmunttles might well follow t-he example 0f . Grlmsby. ctroln. ‘Ilma ed officially ought to flocks 1n a day’; drive. r The black ducks are also very ew. Now why ls this? Any farmer or his wife will answer. skunks, Tue Huns are nearly all cleaned up by this vile and contemptible nnlmai. The eggs and the young and a.so the old birds are devoured. lie same fate with the black ducks. Thousand; of chickens and ducks have been destroyed, seized in the farm yards. Those animals are now hollng fn for the winter months. Them iirc few barns or hay stacks ln the whole Province that has not one or more skunks with a home for the winter. Whrit about next season? Poultry slniply canncl; be raised 1f those anmals are allowed to litrrcase rind increase they will two-fold iui- less eictermmatied. And now l5 the time to do ft. Now. sir. if you want to do a real kindness and also a grant benefit to everyone wltliln the Province, put a bounty of $1.00 a snout, on skunks. Nothing loss Wll induce the boys and t-rappers to g0 after this vile beast. If you doubt the correctness of the above, ask any reliable person from any dis- trict within the Province. I am. Sir, etc. GRUMBLER. KIRGIIIZIANS T00 _ THRIFT is vital to the lng dollars that is helping HYNDMAN & Offices: Charlottetown, Besides Russians there are many Kazakhs, Klrghlzlims and Ukrain- ians serving with the fnmous Pan- fllo Soviets Guards Division. MONGOLIAN HEROES ‘Tashkent, Studio of Art and the Studlo of the Mongol tsovlet) Klnu have made a bi film about the heroes of the Mon- gol people. Ships And ll/foz-e §hips (Montreal Gazette) Ships are the key to the second front problem. This has bsen stat- flllfl we may iiike it that lack of sufflciciit tonnage ls stlll the gove ning factor. Acceler- ated production of ships llirrefore. bxinl; the front pend upon how quickly we can carry Americas strength amass the sens." All this seems to have some bear- ing, a very direct bearing, on the question 0f a second front. Those who are insistently-at long range -—demanclfng tin immediate Allied invasion of Europe, do not offer t0 go lnto American or Bi-ltlsli ship- yards nnd help to make that tn- vaslon possible. There are no iirm chairs in these shipyards. They are not comfortable places. Men work hard in thwn and sweat in them, but these men are doing what. ls needed to make mi Europe- lan inriislou possble and succcssful. All our production on this slde of the Atliintlc cannot be translated liito all our wiir oversrns uiitll the tools of Will‘ can be czirrlerl from nearer’ and mcdurllon ,5 Qy0wl,,g, their soiiicri to the places where Sir Arthur Saltflr. Brlilsh member 311?}? are 1° bl? Uficd-Cilrrlcd l" of the Jolnt Merchant shlpplng 3 Boaid ln the Unllrd Stiitxs. "par- ticipating ln n Liberty Flo ‘ Dav F‘llrus 1st. of January this your only one IDS, . Canada ls helping. Up to the rndlo programme in, the b:;.:.ii=;iliig of this we0k,_ made th_e statement that. U. S. shp prccluction has now reached the stage at. which, if loss- es through submarine attack do not lnciease, launcliings will outnumber slnklngs. ship construction ls being speed ed by such new methods ns tiviildlng imd the pro-fabrication of large unlts. In every American nrd. accordlng to J. Lewis Lucken ach. President. of the American Bureau of Shipping, the time between keel- laylng and dellvcrv Ls bung short- ened. At the same line. losses through submarine ntuion hrivc gone lnto lower figures. Convoy- tnit is more efflcent. These gains. however are being cltcd ln the United States only as spurs to even greater efforts and greater success. Slr Arthur Salter. whlle compli- mentlng the liinrrird wcrkrrs. warns them that the Allies hnve not et been povlded with the num er of vcmzls they needed. "America's armed "strength Ls growing more qulcklv than we are gaining shins t» brlnlz lt to the field of nctfcn. The Russians, the Brltlslt and the rcst of us need that rz-liiforccrncnt. new soon victory C'I71(S wlll, thrrrfcre. dc- iiiivi T0 giiiiiitiir Rheumatic Pains Rheumatic palm an often uund by ill: lcld in the blood. Thin blood impurity lltould bu uhlded by Ilia ldneyl. If lil- IO]! fail, and uceu uric acid remninn, i! irltnlu lhu nmcle: and joint: causing uuucinlhg pains. Trent rheumatic pains l: keepin| your kidney: in ood cuidilioil. Take ragulul Dodd’: Ki ey PilIr-lnr lulllcmhiyllaefnmiteliiilney ’, m Budd's KidneyPills Cutmditin cargo ship had been completed in yard This week the “COMPL INSURANCE SERVICE ” W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Phone 540~541 ETE war effort Premium savings add to the mighty army 0f fight- to win the war. The Great-West Llfe ls the Champion of Thrift and the Guardian of thousands of Canadian homes. Conserve the Home and stabilize the Nation. B0. LIMITED PRO NCIAL MANAGERS Summerside, Montague ALLISON P. llIcLEAN, C.L.U.—Dlst.rlct Mgr. at Summersldc. EARLE S. JELLY-Representative at. 0'Lenry. CYRUS SIIAW-Rvpresentatlve at Montague. PETER G. McEACIIERN-Representatlve at Victoria F. L. MacNUTT-Representatlve at Darnlcy, THOMAS McAVlNN, C.L.U.—Spceli1l Representatives. fifty-first cargo ship of 10.000 tons is being delivered into service. ll\ the nine months of this year tut- Canacllan shipbuilding industry llllS produced 500,000 dead weight tons of shipping, with British Columbia yards leading In both speed 0f cou- stiuctlon rind the number of vess- els completed. If the until of 1,000- 000 tons ln 1942 ls reached. Canad- lan yards will iizive made a worth- while contribution. The number iif 10,000 ton ships to g0 0r to have gone into service this week rewr- sents about one-sixth of the nrm- ber under contract. in this class. The cost ls approximately $600,000.- 000. Every‘ cargo ship built and engined and manned britilzs it» closer to the (liiy for wlilcli Allied niilitiiry oxprzts iire waiting-mid it is Hitloi-‘s IllLZlLl-llljlit). . “.3. illlllflllllilflll Swine Breeders Now l: the against time to guard I'ICi WORM By uslm: the most effective remedy on the market: MACS PIG WORM TONIC POWDER It wlll thnrnuzhlv abolish all traces of ivorms and lmnrnvr the health of hon and vnunz plats. Price 35c and 700 D" package: nizIvii: AND couon REMEDY Relieves enuzhs. colds. henves and all infections of horses lunzs. Prlre 50c. Are You Troubled with Lumbnzo or Sum Back If so we have one n! lhe b?“ rcmrdlrs tn offer uamclv BACK - RITE TABLETS Especially effective for lum- bazn. sclatten. ncurltls. 10"" muscular mid other forms n! rheumatism which ordlllflfV treatments fall to rrnch. Prlfl‘ 50c ner brim TllE TWO MAGS Mall Orders Given ‘Pfflmlll Attention.