"slfili... F91 I‘? THE GIIARLOTTETOWN G UARD lAll Alornln; IJJIl) (rounded In I887) President l.l< ut. (of. H‘. Chester S. Me Vice Prtsldeltl, J R. Burnett. F.J.l Secretary. Lit-uL-Lul. l) A. .\laclilnn0n. 0.5.0, Editor and .\ limiting Director. J R- Burnett, F..|.l. Associate llllrinrs, l-rank Walker and Ian A. Busnetl. Lure Sl l!“ l{ll"l'IO.\ RATES B! Mail In l'. l‘. l. \|.u|t psr year. $2.541 for 6 maul-luv $15.3 lul .' tinnitus. 50..- fo one month. Cll) Uclntty. 0 pcr _\A‘Lll' $15.00 for 6 Ilwllllll. 1T3 lot ll months. By Mall lll lllnalia and l» 5- A. $5.00 P" Yul’- laturuav \\\'\|\l_\ nun pl-r- _vt-.rr. $1.00 for 6 months Lat Int .l tnuntlis. “The SfTuIifII/if s‘! Jlcnttlirigf/“i? lied/Ker "It!!! l/u Hill/yes! Ink." ll l ~n\\‘, JYSE Qiiblo. llw \\ dr Budget budget in- is by Finance .e heaviest in was to be ex- if the in- "" iuipttscd upon c than the deznaud. The .\~'UO..\X‘>.OOO. e1} s, total Ignrtiv of 51.143.000.- i.»~, yyaz" purposes. ‘_ do no: give the :cn Catiada . or war com- t‘ i‘t‘I\\Ct‘Il $110,- o~~ i ' :"<-_y iwizld not he am V‘. " t = "xpcctcil t0 add SJ" year of . , estimated a‘ ‘ iooooooo. Last _\ - 1* anproxinrate- ~‘ i ..i Sguoooooo o! r ~ ' . ‘is " ‘ '1': Ins been no change in re: raises the teases the ex- levies on drinks. auto and imposes a incomes, The .\l:riistcr says. t-w " taxation which v" ~-< in the comznitttirv. ' ' ~ - '»= ~~ ose of producing gn exchange. lle tee-pie of Can- dtion to ensure airmen of Bri- t "e es and equip- : "t or procured." This "=. _ - \\',"..".t otir people ; s l" zudre vigorous p ~ ‘ -" i" ‘t cfi ‘rt. which 11s: be proyiz‘, l. at . of tn-artgaguzg the to implement the _ ' ta dune Colonel ate on the the German the Finance Minis- tcivncnt in pro- natiotial in- .\ S. \\'.'lT pIHYET. sacrifice of our . :< SYJlll-"l advice. \\'e r a‘ huh ends. Our pro- yarcd lo set an .....c‘n has been sadly deprived of the support i..ce, air power becomes :10? in winning the war. ziruaf, as a tiling lll " a tremendous n supreme on ' to throttle the l no: be able alone to ocl that a Brit- to a sufficient lfierinazrv, with \\'l~.at must be looked to as ecisive in the war i, b~_~_{‘ ' force to ". 1.‘. in this Can- ln help almost beyond “e British attack ate submission, in factories. , her harbors, iw is tremen- (-131; depends on gas and 01., ' and new con- nnflglnq . personnel de- 99 = - -~ "I he open to i '1 ospccts the - intitage com- nts, <-\"cr_v:lting f". .= ‘o the air ' : and it hi1 can d and in train- » nto-"t. [Q - (Kobe and M i l ' ~ " 1 t . wit. Lender of the l": . . :7 pirt be play- e; , c t" change in - - n: Inc lllfllsllff‘ ... \ _ . i w. of tlic nation's lv- it ~ <~f lllzlllliuvud‘ fill’ _r , ,‘ - '_'. aiicr the collapse U5 , l ye lion-o L-tnulcr dc- ‘_ p..." I, y‘ ~11‘? Illli ;; tfpynlkl d<l'\ c that ' t ~" "gczicv exists n: Lau- ntlnpnyycr and all Illzs lldllull for the and of the Mother Country and for the defense of Canada; (3) That steps should be taken to strengthen the Liovertimcnt by the immediate inclusion of sortie of the best brains, intelligence and ability in this country, not on the basis of a. Union Goy- ernmcnt, but on the basis of a truly National] Government. Mr. Hanson justified his conclusion that al lldliflllill emergency exists and explained withi characteristic clarify the psychological signific~ ance a public declaration of the position w have. His prediction already has been ful-, filled: the people have been shaken out of their | inertia and complacency and have been tirade to ’ feel that Caitadz, the Empire, and especially our beloved Mother Country, are facing the preme test for our and her existence and that is stands for. As .\lr. Hanson observed, concentrated na-i tional service is imperative. Irrespective of race, class, religion or political proclivities, there is not one real Canadian who would not give his last dollar or serve the State at this time of national l peril; nay, more, there is not one loyal Can- adian who would not give his life. if need be,l that Canada and the Empire may live. The policy of Hanson is the policy of s! patriot and a statesman. His latest contentionl that absolute powers to conscript persons and ’ property must not beexercised by a partisan. Cabinet and by Order-in-Cotincil when Parlia- ment is sitting is sound. The case for Xmiml Cmyerument is unanswerable. su- ll all EDITORIAL NOTES --. Today, the Plebiscite. a s- n u Sunday was the Black Day for France. I I I The first of July this year conveniently falls on a Monday. c u The country never looked better than it does‘ today, and the promise of aluniriant crops is sclf- evident. The first conference of Xlethodist Societies, at which the Church was legally constituted, held 1784. I I I I I I the Wesleyan Methodist this date, I I Tomorrow the Ladies’ Auxilliary of the Char- lottetown Branch of the Canadian Legion are to be the hostesses at an afternoon tea to be llCitl at Government House. Mrs. B. \\'. Le- Pagc Eyeing the patroncss of the organization. I I 1 n c Two pupils in every class of 40 in Ontario schools are destined to spend part of their lives in tucntal hospitals Mr. C. .\. Brown of the Ontario Education Department, told Ontzlri0' health officers in annual meeting. Current pro- hicitis imposed the need for developing among children all possible spiritual and moral stability and physical strctigih, he said. l‘roper care of ihcalth was seen csscittial to mental \vcll-bt-ing. I 1k The Quebec government bill imposing a twofZ sales tax throughout the province has been tahlel in the Legislature. lectcd on each individual purchase of l0 cents or itiore \\'l!l‘l the exception of soft drinlts and aerated waters on which the tax will be levied regardless of cost. .-\n_v fraction of a cent will‘ be counted as one cent. In all cases. the vendor will act as agent for the Provincial Trt-rlsurcr and will remit to the provincial revenue branch the amounts collected on_or before the 15th of the months of September, November, lanuary’, March, May and _luly of every year for the two , calendar lnuuths innuediatcly~ prccctling the re- mittance. l I Ii Ill I I I In introducing Australia's Conscription Bill,l which was passed unanimously", being proudly] stipporfed by the labour Leaders as in line with their own ideas, Prime Minister Menzies said the Government would prevent pr-ifitccring and continue to control prices, and if some pro- fiteer escaped the net it would take all his pro- ' fits. The Government has not set artificial limits on the tiumbcr of mcn it would lféllll—~—lllt‘ only limit was ability to equip them. It would ' be folly" to say that the munitions Suppl)‘ is sat- isfactory; but it was being unprecedcntedly or- ' power to use compulsion oycr Labor but the Governttietit acknowledged it could not get maximum industrial effort without willing co- of compulsion would have the principle of work tinchatigetl. lt would be shocr bumhtig to say trade tinioti standards would never be impaired. The Prime Minister made no promise except that the Government would ask all sections to bear the burden equally. u n Necessity is still the tnothcr of inventionJ Synthetic "hufyl" rubber has been developed by the Standard Oil Liotttpatiy" of New jersey from pctrnlctim and which can be produced in quantity ‘ >llsllllil tho United States be cut off front ' i I its , forcigil rubbci" sitpplics. The new "lmryl" rubber is a cirnnpatiion to "buna" rubbcr. a synthetic product developed in Germany", A plain to make - 10,000 pounds a day of the butyl product is un- _ tit-r Qnflslfllillfill at the refinery of the Standard , (til (fotnpany of Louisiana. "llutyl" tnadc‘ front petroleum by a simpler process than that, tised in making "buna." "llutyl" is not an oil-l resistant product anrbthcrcforc will not be in" 1S lllilTl\‘('lS but the "butvl" product is said to have scvcral snpctioi" qlllllillCS over tinturd rubber. .-\t Akron, Ohio, lhc l3. l’. liwwlricli Company f is also producing a synthetic rubber which i: he- ing used in the tnanufncturt" ~f aubnnivbile fires, _ The synthetic. which has a pcfmlcuiti base. is" called “.\ttlcripol." signifying a tiolytticr. m‘ re-l v ,5 pimptist’ llmv ‘in llllu‘ , c-iiiil-inzitioil of Illfllflifilllfli of .\llli‘l'l\‘.'lll 1113-‘ lt-riiils, Thi- lll‘llt‘l‘llll<, dcscrili-sd ll\ "lfibi-rfv rltb-' b-uy" vim be processed and villcunizrd as i- the - natural product. The (iwutlrltll company ill-i ll'l1l in operation for nearly two years a pibn plant at .\l\'T|\ll where a manufacturing plan! will open in the {all with a daily capacity of scy- eral tons of "Alticripol/ _ - - .--_._.-a~..-n The tax will be col- " D I coup» ‘ she wen‘. direct coinpc-iilirui with "buna" for the specially ‘I. THE Qfi§RLOTTETOWN ouanman NOTES BY THE WAY The gentlemen (and sometimes ladiest who rule the fufcrtnatlcn Please nan‘ hour are very smart. They can tell otfhatid what. actor did what in “Singapcre silences." Play them the first few bars of MoGlnxycls Fugue ln V minor and they “all tap cut. the rest of ft. Ask them Rtbitisoir CTlL=(‘("s real name and thcy have 1t The most gifted of tiicni can reel off the 0,11,; pitchers :n the vocrld serzes of 190B. ' But when this week they were asked a few 51m e questions on taxes they flux: "d. Troy dd not know how tnurh that blue Sfamn on cigarettes costs. Thcy dltl not know the Federal tax on gasoline. 'I‘hey dld not know that there ls no tax on 25-cent nuvlcs. Tney were ignorant of the tax on plsyvzng cards. If these peculrnrly gifted persons fall ln sitcli tests. how can we ever hope to ntake the rcwitrv tax-consrlous? — Nay ‘fsrk Sun. A correspondent of a Montreal newspaper has ft all figured out that the Germans will soon be on the run. Tlfs is “it... he says:- “Bv the use o.’ n Time Factor, WhlCll I d1sccv="" “o. prov- ing 1n the history of .y mar- kets and . l . forecast important events in wars. A st-"tdq." of these timc-taerlcds i ates that Cvermnny" wlll lose and that she has already of her ptwer. '1‘! which has 11s: "Gennnny" wzl; n f0 31st. title wt. Germany. 1 ivll! be tzca g N‘ starting in C might. ocme to n don the for A new prof-r ventton of pre- l Souris Fair, i 1340 (B! I. l- DJ (Continued from yesterday) On December 22nd, "Sourls Mills" owned and operat- ed by the brothers MacGowan commenced work. It was an am- bitious plant. for that pioneer day. consisting of a grist mlll, saw mlll, kiln, smiths forge, barn and dwel- ling house. The latter was a t "perfectly frossproof house erect- ,ed on an eminence commanding a |vlew of an GXDGMIVO tract- of coun- try, Sourls Raver and Gulph of St. Lawrence. ln ‘lbwnshlp No. 44. three miles from the mouth of the harbour." And we are also - flormed 1n an old account. that flcalloes and keel boats can easily approach the mllls at low-tide." lThé grist mill was made of junl- lpel’. had three airs of stones and camel hair boring cloths. The co: was John Leslie, wheel- wr , “The kiln on the west. side [of the dam was the largest 1n the Island at that time." so John lkfactlowan boasted, “width s cast. iron floor 15 x 15 connected to the ‘mlll by a railway." I 0 l I Souris and vicinity Ln 1840 had "trump" newly opened roads. Johl MacGowan. among other qualifica- tions was a surveyor and many of Lot 44 and 45 roads were laid out by him 1n what waa then virgin woodland. Tne newly opened roads make i: easy for those lndulglng in what was called in 1840 the inc anluselnents: to secure ..ss bags of partridge. wild and rabblts. while lXLlCi-S and streams sbounded with wild dilck, plover, and etc. "t casional bite from mosquito ant; gllliuipper" was regarded as cue of the minor evils of life at Cnffzllfl Brac- a hundred years ago, and l: still ls today, though resi- dents of the town three miles " ~ were and stlll are totally t l"q tainted with either in the town ts. izpbilllditie on ills Island. with chemist-s cm y-five vessels constructed ln Ker hlbvrfllo- c calendar year, was near its COVPFPYS 0f ‘ peak ln 18-10. and doubtless Sourls Muff-in R- shbryards had their quota of shlps have been at and 1t. 1s in: "lllifil out in Sourls each n the launclungs of that year. The sealing industry early contri- bnuod its share to the prosperity of tie community. lt cannot. be a “rzaiued whether Sourls had a ti ; fleet in 1840 but later on 1n 1n: same decade three vessels were spring to follow the perilous vocation of sGJllllLf‘. Thc-se were owned by a Joseph Dingivell, liq. Mr. Donald --°“' Br on, and Alessrs. Deagle and Dds sson, and they cleared from im- le Sourls for the fishing grounds as 5n ‘Pm 0m” soon as the harbour was free from aggir-“f! ‘m “w” ice, often arpuild ‘the. 20th March $h§a;]““,§l“f° Not the least. of _Sourls West‘: 28w mmzi pram "lqut citiaens in 1840 was Irpamaem rr Leslie, a canny Scot. pounds of “to treated lll a Piece goods can n. Australian Pro L Although Slates Ynitcil ltetself mik ~ n "i smoking the rea" About . " operation of the trade‘ lllllfillS, hence the power ‘if .= a bit- older than the other rs of the farmlng Club ox- wc, \\'llO, born at the bridge ,0.‘ Dczi. aborclecnslilre. Scotland, in 1787, emigrated with his family f» Prince Ekiward Island in 1833 set- fiitrc n". Saurls \V-.*st where he llv- ca" till lllS y after n48 arrival Alexander b. ‘ was appointed a Justice of ‘ll Pence for King's County, and he and William MacGowan, who was also a J. P. performed many o: time man": ces in Souris, For- tuno, and vicinity at this time. 'f“n.~ first church ln Sourls was a year old in 1840, SL. Mary's no- man Catholic chapel was ln very 'lll‘.lCl‘l the same location as the "i tutu clutrcu of that name m to- It was with great rejoicing ‘ho people ln Sourls East, erection of the church on the ln 1839, saving them the ferry across the harbour to Rollo . Father John MacDonald cele- ed the firs: mass in the same 1840 ‘Doyout. Presbytcrlans of went by wncgon, boat. horse back, and sometimes even shankfls mare, to Bu)" Fortune where services were livid oucc or twice a month by Rt‘ Robert Douglas who also "rtl a: St. Peters Bay and d. The Methodists a few uom worked in the shipyards "w river. met around in differ- antes. not tlll nearly twenty- rs later clzd they and the TETlZIZTS build a Union Soilrls West. MacNell in his 1840 report o.‘ district schools failst l . that Sourls had a a. this time. An act pass- tiiree years previously exclud- ~- i - - - - - '.""k . . . _ ganized, acquiring the executive services of a“ L‘ ‘Agffililxlifixfiltig: scbiigls glglxedill; l .. . . 5t a . . - many first class businessmen. The hill took, VS which hlmd teachers who not "competent book-keepers gratnivarians“, and this per- a; accounts for Sourls‘ absence from the list. In 1833 census Lot-s 44 and 45 were credited with a school apiece. The 1m 44 school liil" been either at Rollo B v or Saul-is West. but the Lot" -l.- tie utidoubtcdly was ln Sourls East. (To be continued» ‘ Mag-inot Lines iNeu York Times) “',°‘,“~"‘ _ The Mngmot Line was to France Cal-PR?) D-i , no in.‘ Atlantic Ocean Ls w the H , _ i tilted states. At rodlglous cost tn l_hr action Ill .| I‘ lllzt l-olun'.n-_ ‘t; gnbor and) ingenuity the . l1‘ :_ ’ as reward 10' ‘ built along the German a bulwark considered bv Fill.- _ and every one else the most thrm i . Jrom invasion. Behind a banlcade SllCll srm and nu. . opnono ster lu slcotp Y tcriscrviltiot". ‘ kmstncu. . or . fondue .>l.an 5..on."o Alon‘. Donuts of Pnllrtl Slates editor! have flfll‘ tn ‘i- cn.~\‘:.1c~ 1'“ ll! t='.l'." Ft Nb“? evod . l."'\ .. .1. i 111:!) tca- lions shoxkd be excluded from " , fusions ln history. '1‘h_e_ _ 41m: could not be breached l: any \\‘oflj)0ll the last war had gods: . they" felt secure agalnst ell- hls- lOftf‘ PHGIDY. ‘me Maglnot Lino. moreover, was mrrc than a defense system. s» fort» rcss made to be manner by a de- fenslve army; ft was s. symbol of the outlook and temper of the French iweople. The I-‘rench ivantrd only to be left aione behind t-helr bulwark. 'l‘he commitments made by sitccrssive Governments ln the 'l'§l\§¥---ll1f‘ Little Duente and the Franco-Soviet pact-never received the whole-hearted support of the lutic ircople, the petlt bourgeois who we tut: backbone of the republic. The parfilershlp with Brltaln was Ilho solo exceplzon to n fear of en- tnnszlltiz alliances as deep-seated as Americas, and thls was because of a creator lean-the haunting dread or faring Germsnv alone and un- l niood ' we see that tne Mnglnot 1.1m- was one of the realest. de- h never Canadlan news-stands my,» would in no way constitute an affront to honest. decent er - can lnurnalisn. - Brsntlord Ex- nor. . - X838 the ipszow and Little Harbour saw‘ But this ' PUBLIC FORUM filo oollll k up“ (u g5. dlnuulll n .1 question II (‘pp labour! flnrdlu l council; "In". n. 00o no- onlllon of unouonhnls THIS TIME OF STRUGGLE Elm-In this ago of misery and sorrow. thls time of strife when Chrlsflnn people are fighting for their llves, there are so many who am faint hearted. we wlll meet them every day. and they see nothing but the dark side of llfo. iwe have them mm. ln our home district who really bellevo that I-lltler, and his cruel followers will conquer the world. Such people should brace them- selves ln time of darkness such as dreams as they may lead others to think likewise. This ls the day and the hour that millions of hearts should beat as one 1n a firm belief that H1 . and Hltlerlun wlll be wlp- ed from this earth forever. Some talk of what should have been done twenty years and more 38°. but that's past history now and the pages of time turn only one wfly. No turning back todnyi! The great Brltlsh Ennplre stands more and more alone with the iron man as leader. e one man that Hitler dreads. Precious blood from our wlll spray the battle fields and the sea. lanes, yet we will fight on and on to victory. Little innocent chlldren will lay dead in the streets while others will cry for bread, men and women will grow tweary and hungry, but we will still lflght 0n and on until l-Iitlerism is crushed forever. We must. remember that. our Saviour hung on the cross while His, the most precious blood that 9V6!‘ b86564 through human veins. trickled to the toot or the Cross, to redeem and save mankind from H911. TOG-av another Devil has come m the world and this time the blood of our great Empire must spill ln torrents to conquer Satan Once more and save Chris- tlanltv from defeat. Let us there- fore from this hour stand hand in hand, shoulder to shoulder, and with ringing volce declare that Hitler and Hltlerlsm must and will b9 Wlpfli fmm this earth forever. I am. Slr, etc. WALTER A. O'BRIEN. Bristol. P. E, I. vorr: FOR. rm: rTrzvn. Sin-Sure. 1r you want w. that's what democracy: for. But be sure you know whlch ticket he's on. One wise M. P. talks about the "valmrlngs of backwriters" with their "sophlstlcated Lheorles" and SOXLS FROM “THE LAND" ...Theheckes1nlday Burgeoned to green; the dravrlng of the trees, _ _ hicomparably" pcncilled llne by line, Thlckened to l.E‘i1\'lDE5§, anu men forgot The intellectual austerity Of winter. in the rich, warm-blood- rus 0t growth. and mating beasts, and rlslng sap. How svylft and sudden strode that. tardy" Spring, Between a sunrise and a sunset come The shadow of a swallow crossed The the wa ; Nlghtlngales sang pushzng blnd v Ported the soil. The morning roofs . by day. 8 and oasis Cast their long shadows. Pasture- ankle-wet, Streamed to me sun. The tullPfi dyed their green To red in cottage gardens. B685 astir, Fusslng from flower to flower made war ontlme. Body and mtnd were princes; the cold m n_ Sank with Orion from the mld- night sky _ ‘The stars of Spring l‘O5e_\'l51bl9I . . Venus. lonely splendor in the wet Roamed over the rapt meadcyvs. shone in god _ ‘Beneath the cottage eaves ivhert‘ , neistlng lprds lObeyed ove‘s aw . . . IAll were equal 1n the sight of j Spring. "Man and his cattle; corn and . greening frees. _ lIgnol-ant. of t e souls DQFP-e-‘liy- V. Sackvllle-West. - —-—— — ‘even had l chance test uicse lnughtv fortifications. The enemy flanked the line and swarmed tx- hind rt; the final irony is tnat t0 save themselves the defenders uad ‘to abandon me steel trenches ull iiWlIlCh they had staked the nauonal security. M much as anything this lLs the cause of the confusion and ‘disintegration of the armes: inc ‘ lei" they had counted on to guard them forever proved as 2159- less as a wooden fence. fiance imagined and created rm Atlantic Ocean and it has tliltd her. On this she based her security; forthls she was careless of other defenses, The terrible moral under- llned by the second Munich ls tnnt. no nation ls today's world can be 1591mm by the width of the nudes! sea or the depth of the deepest l0 €P£""€3‘é@€m'5.- ‘llllllflilllfibie fortification on earth. i l .\t last. they thought. we are safe When You Say “HICKEYS” Every Islander knows at Men n Twist" Once You _ Straight this hour. and snfl-o out of their , “Black 10c per Fig On the sea, on land, peril of flre and lightning, of automobiles, of accident, of sickness. In our modern life we are surrounded by perils, and that is why we employ the system of in_ surance to protect us financially. We are in ‘a position to provide a complets in. surance service. and welcome your Inquiries for advice and information. No obligation. HYNDMAN 8t 00. LIMITED "The Oldest Insurance Agency In P. E. I.” Summerslde hi. l‘ IQ: Charlottetown Montague in the next breath tells you he never lmcl one drop of elnperlenfe- Are 1115 vaporislngs all theory? '1he same authority saw. Pmhlbllllm ys. Temperance q senseless "contradiction of terms"- Lei‘! 89¢ a dictionary and see if Moderation and lemperance don't. mefln about the some clung. Another source of information says all prohlbltlonlsts r8112 hypocrlts. ‘rlils also ls error. lsome are catering to their con- -stltuent.s or supporters in other fields. ‘Iliey are just plain garden variety of charlie McCarthy, vole- ‘dllfl known ivishes of the purse ;llOl('lPl‘S. ‘Iliey are bound to ap- Jpease the gods who supply fooo land ralment. some others are vlc- ~tims of misinformation that has been hammered out lnto precepts and handed dcnvn for generations. until it ls swallowed whole like Gcrniait propaganda, and ls just as false. Others are simply alerglc to alcohol and would like to see it universally condemned. The liquor question was born when tnxatfon and restrlctlon made liquor a luxury, desired by lrlch and D001‘. not for its tnherant qualities but to gratlfv the na- tural Wish for all those things that g0 with the better llvlnz of the more fortunate classes. Lluuor ln electionm-why? Be- cause many electors appreciate s treat. and may be disposed to look kindly on the ziyer. Prosecutors do not. want tu prosecute. yvliy not? Because they ‘do not like to prosecute a fellow lcitizen whose opinion may be as good as theirs. The law of the land Ls what the .people will back up. Law that the ‘people ivlll back up ls not a hard- shLP. It is an accepted rule of ‘conduct gladly acceeded to, The imposition of n law on an un- Wlllmlz subject breeds rebelllon and he will avoid 1t ff he can. Cut law down to actual. unavoidable .1W¢9§5ll§'—-flnd a common de- "IIOIIIIIIBEOT that wlll leave out as many laws as ctm be eliminated Reasonably. Give the matter prayerful wnsldemtlon l! you like. and vrhlle you are at 1t pray for brains to find bed-rock of truth remake the oust. itself. worth lt? c*'I‘l'11e scene In the dlnl 0m B8119 was an exhlbitlo colossal armed strengt ; ,,“,,.§f 5.110 an exhlbltlon 0f moral weak- ness. Hitler found his great mo. ment not 1n a victor’; conquest M the future but ln a childish m. umph over the oast-zvlnm (‘Alllot be conquered. was ll really» wmh ll: to hLm. or to Germany? The y“. tufe. which has not been um. qucred may supply its own kind M answer." TQCZTM FUNERAL 0P‘ DR. GEORGE sMaLLwoop BOSTON. June 24 —-(CP§ _._mm. eral services were held her» todav l for Dr. George Smallwood. 7s, m". ton nose and throat speclalfst who dled vesterday at his home ln Pep- perell. Mass. Dr, Smallwood, a na_llve of Pvtnos Edward Island, and graduate of Prlnoe of Wales College, Charlotte- town, had retlred from active meg. fcal practice at Belfevue Hospfnl and the Presbyterlan Hospital New York. He was twlce married, his first wife. Margaret Arnebt of Charlotte- town, dying ln 1920. Hls wife. for- merly Caroline Ruth Baln and two daughters survlve. Keep Minards In the holTc. ‘vuri = SSEMESAN BEL THE NEW IMPROVED QUICK DIP SEED TREATMENT FOR ' SEED POTATOES and f ct. If d "t. llk . don)‘ as“ u’ ylciu ygpr neiéhglgp: H gngomusrxrlrlhvylll treat Iron. uu Perverted appetite requires crow. ‘ ' Ono pound lln - - - - $1.2m for Heaven's sake let him have l-‘lve und tln (30010400 ft. bus elsl — - — — - $8.70 I am. Slr. etc. -. M" F'“‘""'°“£N- y czazan 7 9 4 NEW tamzo n “ as Worth ' DRY DISINFECTAQ‘ FOR (New York Herald-Cfiibune) WHEAT - OATS - BARLEY "One cannot help wOndeflQa pm 0M round llll -- - — $190 what and how great, were the emo- n" "mu"! “n _ _ “ 53:9“ llorial satisfactlons in Hitler's '“"““ strange soul as he took his revenge PIG WORM AND lll the dining car as Complegtie. ToNlC PDWDER He hm‘ traded through the bloml of 1.000.000 men, women and child- ren to taste the sweets of that mo- ment; the skrlels of the dylng and the agony of the oppressed had attended every step of the way," he had condemned a continent w a ruin. s‘-arvatlon and Q1505 9f which the intimate tale has only begun lo be told. was the personal pleasure he derived from the hu- mlllatlon of the pathetic French- men in Cotnpicgne forest really worth it? was he really nap , ln that historic half-hour yesterday afirrncon? One wonders. "He sat ln the very chair where Ferdinand Posh ltad sat; to (-1143. tate terms just a; the Allies once Macs Pl; Worm and ‘lonlo Powder wlll thoroughly abol- lnh all traces of worms and "ppéove the health of your er " i One nomad package — - 35c HOB-SE CONDITION POWDER ll Pays to Peed Macs Conllltlon Powder The Condltlon Powder purifies the blood and lye: " the lnlmlll colt a flne g ossy MAIL ORDERS RECEIVE anneal-once. u It tones up the system, rem- lhst edles sll skin troubles and ls s s lendld endlealor of worn};- had done; to make, ln clrcum- °' E" Wm" - " ' ° ° stances where none could con- PROMPT ATTENTICX tragllct. the small boy's retort -"tt tsnt so We didn't start the war in 19H; our army vitasrft really llCkKl: I'm not the liar and per- lurer; you are!’ Was this north It? THE TWO MAGS The car is to be carried off to Ger- , ‘ manX;_l~he___mQnument5_Ln§_n1Hk' l IEO. BOX 315 For a Delicious Cup of Orange Pekoe Tea Mr. Tea Poll Says: Use BRAHMIN Full Flavoured Tea l” DON’T LOOK FOR TROUBLE And If You Are Looking For “Hlckefs Twist" Go To The Nearest Store. All Island Stores Carry Fresh Supplies of HICKEY’S B L A C K TWIST CHEWING Manufactured By IIIGKEY 8r IIIOIIOLSOII TOBACCO C0. LTD.. CHARLOTTE/TOWN ml-Lwam-ai .l