tIlIAlILtI-TIETEIWII nutinnuit PAGE FOUR M’? r1111 tntanturri-zrown 0111111111111...) ‘I'll! Morning tIolmlul ll llfll prqm:lJaI.Ool.W.ChnlwB.Ial1In Vldr-‘Irosltnlit: J. I. Burnett. I. J- I- . Secretary: 1.1m. c111. n. A Hulk»!- "19- L "u", “m Mugging Dlroowt: l. I. Blfllluv 7J- ‘gwutg Edlton: l-‘nnk Walker sud Haul. In A 51,111.11, autumn 10a 1mm aemui "The Strongest M0010"! i! Wflk" T." the Weaken! Ink.’ MONDAY MAY '1. ma‘ Wanted: More Sclwlfi" A few days ago President Conant of Harv- ard University issued a PflmPhlet addrfi‘ 1° men in the military service telhng_l‘10\V Hflfviifd is hlaiittiiiff lo help those who 111511 1° $511215 their studies after tl1e war. The sllflwien ewho pjahmp i5 not only to lend a liau to t ose deserve every break they can £91. 13111 11150 1° help replenish the nation's S11PP1Y “f tmlncd scholars and scientists. espeflflll)’ at" ggcilfrmtlfilg ate lcrcl. .i\ simtlztr aim is express 1 _ . , . 1-_ axmual NP“, (,1 Dr, Raymond B, Tosdict residenuof (he Rockefeller Foundation. ivhfl disclose. that within the last rear the founda- liort 11 1s t‘<l'll111SlI8(1 an unprecedented 1111111l1er of scltolzirsliips .'i1i1l fellowships for returning pug-q,“ "While the task of turning 011! \\"trriors. and weapons has IIIOIIOPOHZEd most of (m,- efforts. the responsibility for producing scholwrs itfeflfiqs artists and other creative n1in<ls has 110011 largely suspended, DY. r°= click i111irits 0t!!- The fellowship programme of the founda- tion (mu-nu; it. crcry branch of learning - éhecificzillv to iiiadiciiic. 1116 P11."51‘7a1 Scienccsm (he c-nqinl science. 411111 the humanities. Thc need for 1111711} scholars and research \\'0r1<@r5 111 rticdicinc and the physical sciences is obvious. Explaining ivliy the foundation at this tune is enCmu-aninfl the study of economics. sociology. anthropology‘ and nthcr social sciences. D1’- Fostlick says: _ “Because war tends to sitbstitute fear for reason and propaganda for truth, imperative necessity requires the support of the‘ tgencies a111l the spirit which make for nonpartisan und- erstanding in the field of 11111111111 relations. P131111 solutions cannot be exteniportzetl. 1'0‘ we“ i; 1m», n; the long, 510w march which mart is tiiakiiig ‘.<1\\'-'11'<1 a 215319" kflfmlmllle 2f hin\~l‘lf and of his relations with his fellows. 'l‘h:it march hr..- heen interrupted 11y the war and in 11i.'11i\' parts of the world, has been forced by Nazi and jap barhzirisnt to retrace 111B ,m,; m‘ ]“§l|\\ 5-11. <_ lt 1s fortunate for the world that universities and fotiiitlatiotis stand readr to ‘ac-ist the countcr-offeusire against 1g- uorai-ce and bigotry. A First Peace Condition (flnt- thing, 111111 1111c thing only that will make ticriiia11_v's capitulatioit a sure guarantee against future trouble will 11c the total dcmihtar- ization 11f the whole cottntry‘. This is implied in the ttirtns 11f the .\tl:1t1tic Charter of .-\i.1g- ust t4, 11,141, which declares that "the disarma- ment 11f nations which threaten or may threat- en aggression OIIISIClC their frontier, is essen- tial." 'l'h:it uiai- he taken as reflfcsentlllg the .»\ti~;l1i-.\iiicric:11i policy: The attitude of Rus- sia. huitcrt-r, is less clearly defined. 1n his rpeeclt to the .\I11scow Soviet 011 i116 @6350“ 0f the twenty-fifth aiiiiircrsary of the B01511?- Visit hevolution. .\l'arslial Stalin postulated a difference between the llitler state and the Commit ,~t;\t1' 111111 :1 parallel difference between the lliilt-ritc armr and the (icrntan army. H»: declared that jusf as Russia did not aim t0 destroy the Gcrman stale. but the Hitler state, lo she did not aim to destroy Geriua11y's mili- tary ]11,\\'L'i‘, liut only lslitlcfs. Stalin's view may well hare changed since that statement was made. lti any case it is to be hoped that as a realist he will come to sce that between a "Hit- lerite army” and a “German army" there is no different".- whzitcvcr. and that wrtrld pcitce and security 110111111111 tlizit both should be destroyed root and l1raneli. The suliicct of Gcruian disarmament IS dealt with in :1 l't'lllJll‘l\'Zll)l(' recent l1ool<. "Primer of the (fouiiiig \\'1n-lrl"_ l1_\' Leopold Sclitrarzscliil-l. The author points out that the fatal mistake of the |1C21COIllt11<CFs of 1911) tras iii allowing a cer- tain Illllfilll". of military force in Gcrinairr to rc11i.'tin. Stich powcr was itecdctl. President \\'ilsoi1 iuaintafnerl, "liecatisc it is certain that [r111 much security on the part of the Allies will make :1 gcntiiuc peace settlement exceedingly difficult.” 3o the German army was reduced k1 100,000 men, and certain types of weapons were prohibited. The theory was that it would he impossible to wage irar with such a small lrmcd force. 1111f this was a fallacy. No stand- ing army i11 the world can wage war; it is only the nucleus and framework for the 11inch larger wararniv. 'I‘l1c rcduccd German army (which incidentally was always larger than the 100,- 000 troops pcrmittcrl liy the treaty) performed the service that is usually performed by a ltaitrliiig army iu the transition fro111 a peace footing to a war footing. It supplied a large professional body of officers trained in all thc lspccts of the trade; it studied and tested the lrmament i1roblcn1s and i1reparcd the prototype weapons and their mass fabrication; it kept llive and notirislicrl the traditional militaristic lpirit. liach company was. and felt itself. the chrysalis of a rcgiitient, atid spiritually the re- duced army ivas at, any time twelve times larger than it was in rcalityx There can be no doubt that if Gerinauy- had not l1ecn permitted a 10o.- ntm-itiaii ar11i_v. but only a o-maii army, we should have had 1111 war today. The crux of the matter. says the writer ,1...” quoted. is obvious. The program must bf to permit in Germany nothing, positively 110211111‘. to survive which can materially nr spiritually become the nucleus of a new 1nili- of soldiers, not one destroyer, and not one plane. Not even a civilian German plane and not even a civilian German pilot-for the difference be- tween military and civilian in this field is much too tenuous, and all air transportation needed by Germany can be carried on by foreign lines. No general staff. of course, no Ministry of War, no War Academy, no military attaches, arid no Wrhruiissenschafl. No manufacturing in Ger- many of war tools, weapons, and munitions of any kind whatsoever for anypurpose whatso- ever, not even of hunting rifles, revolvers, or industrial explosives. What Germany may need of these goods can beimported, and it would be better to give them to her free than topermit her to ntanufacture them. No barracked, mili- tarily trained, and militarily equipped police. No veterans’ legions, militas, rifle clubs, or march- ing or exercising private formations. No em- ployment of German nationals as military in- structors, air pilots, armaments engineers, and so on, in any country. And all this not just for a few years, but for a minimum of fifty or sixtv! - B)’ A- D- 2.000 the last Germans who have ever led or trained troops, or handled or manu- factured weapons will have died. Even their sons who have indirectly experienced all this and l1a\'e imbibed the war and army spirit through cdtication and environment will be grcy. It will be a getteration of graudsons-—a new genera- tion which knew not Joseph —- which has no longer learned anything of soldiering or been surrounded by armies and militaristic tradi- tions. that time. fifty or sixty years hence. :1 condition will perhaps bc achieved in which Germanywan be left to herself without incurring 1116 Present extraordinary risks. The grand- sons of the present victors will then have to decide this question. , -E DI TURIAL NOTES... The prime duty of every one in a position to do so, is to buy Victory Bonds now. u w 11 n- Hoii. John Bracken, leader of the Progres- sive-Conservatives, announces his platform to- night at Brampton, Ont. 111 11- 111 s The Liberals have re-cliosen their old stand- ard bcarers both in Queen's and King's, where their records are known. I it: It is still good agricultural policy to remem- ber that the 10th of May is the earliest date safely to get on the soil. and the 24th the earliest to g0 fishing in comfort. it it 1t 111 In Saint john they have taken time by the fut-clock. and announced that the retail 111ercl1- ants will observe Victoria Day as a nrunicg. rial holiday; notwithstanding the Mackenzie King Government has abolished it as a statutory holi- day. l Ill i “Watchman, what 0f the night?" It i5 dark, and the cries of rage and anguish rend the air, but the golden inorrow is at hand, ivhen the valiant youth will return from the stricken fields of Europe, where their heroism has pro- claimed to the world that justice is the best sits- tetiance for valor, and that their valor has won a lasting triumph for justice. a a 111 111 With the adoption of the system of paying of $1 each for liquor permits, Quebec has gone mtodinc with the other Government Comm] provinces 1n the Dominion in each of which there had been a charge for liquor permits for several vcars past. As a result the Quebec coffers should be enriched by 111orc than $1,000,000 in addition to the funds obtained from the collec- tioirof tl1e_'new' six per cent lttxury tax, ivhic-h applies to liqttor along with other luxury items. I fi i I 591191111 N19018:‘ JEHII-dfi-Dieu Soult, French 50141". besieged and took Badajoz in Spain 11115 (1816 1811; it was retaken by Wellington the following year; Soult was a devoted favour- ite of Napoleon; led the decisive charge at l-‘\l15161'11lZ; was commander of the Spanish army II‘. subscquetitly conquered Portugal; he rallied to 1\apoleot1 again in the Hundred Davs, but fell from him after Waterloo; he held X-m-{ous 1111515 in the French Government from 1830 to I847 when he ivas tnade llfarslial-(iencral. I i II I Automaticitraffic control, miles under the earth. 1s provided by an equipment now under construction by a British firm for service in a United Kittgtloin culliery. The new equip- ment is designedto operatvautomatically thc iIIf-lOCk‘ doors which are essential to the whole ventilation system of deep mines. It is so ar- ranged that the stream of tubs carrying the coal operates a system of photoelectric relays which shuts the air-lock doors as required ‘to let them through. At the same time it automatically counts the tubs passing into and out of the air-lock. This new system of automatic elec- tric control has great advantages over older sys- tems and isexpccted to be applied to other forms_of_ mining machinery including hauling and winding cqulpmflnl, iii! Science has at last produced a waterproof match which lights when wet, says Time. For a year and a half, it has been I military secret. Last week military censors let the light shine forlh. Most modern friction matches are made of sesquisulfide of phosphorus, which resists high humidity, but goes to pieces in water. When U. S. troops went to the soaking Pacific tropics, the Quartermaster General appealed to manu- facturers to produce a match that would survive amphibious landings and tropical rains. Chem- ist Raymond Davis Carly. of Diamond Match Co. finally found the answer. It looks like an ordinary kitchen match. but it. is coated with a chemical (formula: still secret) which sheds water.’ Diamond is now producing 10,000,000 a day and G. L's in water-filled foxholes have found them a godsend. Even after an eight- tary renaissance. No army, 11o navy. no air Lket of any size whatsoever-not one company hour unkind, the much Babb rcndflv. Notesqflhe Way l PUBLIC FORUM l ‘m h h mm" oolnlnlltlllhf 1.11.11§-.~1st1":2~-'.-=;1-.. =: j-j-lmfifi --1-- - ““'""“'1°‘°"‘ “"‘°" Gullhn on mu- "Bur the hen‘! ankle for the sake of the e88. LIttle annoyance; must. be put up wIth because of great advantage." “puierm. lupus oouIInuu Io Ion her wu- shIp. She should b the lamest undersea exIrtence.—HamIIt.on spectato A|_ n wlsecrnoko aptly remarks: “They sly It's 11-. all world. but It's wonderful when l three-year- .o boy can’get to." - Stratforu Beacon-Herald. Al thing: now shape up, the h would be smart. to pull out of 1111i war and get back In the ex on novelty trade. selling us Vlcgory pennants-Chicago News. Although I have travelled hun- dreds of miles In Germanv, I have not yet been shot at or met any- one who has, a war ‘ writes In the Yorkshire Post. So r 1110mm! to Iy constructive? Never-t dIan, I trunk the mtnd of reader by the far I have not met a single one of’ ‘the KLIEITIIIA! 111111 Goebbels “ilsfmy Pfvmlsfl 118- average fanners Count Felix von Luckner. “Sea Devil" of the First World War. met the Allied troops at Kalle and was captured. Von Luckner was. fam- ous for having sunk 511.000.0011 tons of Allied shipping and, after the war, tearlng telephone books two at. American cocktnfl parties. That will not happen ths time —-. It L; we hope-Strafford Bea.~-~-"-':.-.~a!d. A new car for 540D that {Ives 50 miles to the gallon and makes 60 miles an hourl- Dream stuff? No, It's a promise from two up-and- comlng Brltlshers who now make cannon for Spitfires. Hurricanes, and other aircraft. They're ready, In tact. to bring over 26 demon- strators to the United States Im- medlately.~washlngton Post. In the vicinity member. --— that. If A memorlnl In more than 56.- 000 Brftlsh civilians killed by enemy action during the war ls to be put up ln London's Westminster Ab- bey, the ImperIal War Commission announces. The mem- orial has been designed by Sir Charles Peers, the architect, who \ was formerly chief inspector of ancient. monuments. It will be aced In St. George's Chapel, war Unknown Warrior. — London Dally Mall. Radlo Tokyo now admits that more than three million persons of Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya and Kobe are "" vI Ims" as a result have seen, the 770.000 have been destroyed. For Japan the decision may soon be an acceptance of the Allied terms of unconditional surrender or the sobering alternative of uncondi- tional destruction. Her statesmen know what has happened to Ger- many.—HamIlton Spectator, The truth Is that the such] secur- ity problem Is always and inevIt- ably 11 two-sided one. We want: to mitigate for Individuals the penalties for failure or tnlsfortune, but. we do not. wan/t to weaken the Incentives to production 11nd success. In the physical force. f. sights we dish genius. SEW reduced with skin. were piled crematory. tion. flanker today, however, Is chiefly were on the other side. We are In dan- ger of forgetting the effect of un- employment benefits 111 reducing the Incentive to find useful work. ._.New York Times. The biggest. feat. of loading M n single port. In maritime history was that achieved by the portof South- ampton In the sIx months f0!- low rig D-Day, according to U11- Ited Kingdom Information Ser- vlce. This port, one of four tnaIn supply ports for the shuttle ser- vIce to the continent, fed the Al- lied armles with 75.000 19.11145 11nd vehicles of every description: _300,- 00o men, and over 16.000 railway wagons. On their return trio, the fleet. of 4,095 landing craft sem- barked 178.000 prisoners of vmr. 16,000 BrItIsh and United States cpsualtles, and 6,000 enemy casual- tes. Time was vvhIn-‘Ihe oIl news be- Ing published In the Herald these days would have created a sensa- tIon, taklrig pABCBdEHCE over any- thing else In the paper. Today, 11 competition with the war news. 1t causes hardly a ripple. Not that: it Is nut. Important b11I In rela tive importance. with the lives thousands of Canadians at stsk In the flghtlng zones, It docs 11c Impress us. But the oll news I bu; news. nevertheless. find W119 the war Is over. we'll b28111 to real - e Wh n 200 b0 SOD-barre wells come In on the plains fleicl I may be taken for granted that t-hc are not. a freak occurrence. I means we have an oIl field-betr- bndge Herald. "Ile wept openly, but during th singing of ‘The StarSpangled Ban ner’ his voice could be heard abov the others, loud and st-ronp." tIc fancy. of refused to COIIQUCTCG ' You have but Nazi party bee In ctorles near manpower. tough survivor Gerness of Ame -1 for senators services President Roosevelt there Is Shake»- spearea?‘ drama. 511:“ Palate , ore m," Bwrlflshgtl. saved the British hl 21.2111"- “1, ""1. 111:. we pra , mo . that his health withstands the strain that our own leaders could not-a strain that they Jbore w- gether wtth an underst rm among loaders o! International 11l- IInncm-Ohlcago Dally News. Irllllh Collllnbhd hllu of bGllll’ human beings. world rejection of theosls oI’ I will not dwell that '11 cash In Domtnlon, “the 1844 reveriuelsestf- d out Industry-cannot help bem FARMING INCOMII ' Sun-Jim a recent Guardfari I in: see a new: Item from buIo In: loom- heless, as a rural Caru- __ wrong Im- presslon Is likely to be seeded In tne average urban at ontfnuous repert- 0f penses will eat up 40 f8 a-t to ground In Germany. ame OTI. u- S rlcan and Is Ifon of tnese large rgross" figures, covering agrlcultural Income? Why not the ‘ I h ‘ ‘ 1* word concerning the farmer's operating uld mean that. the "net" Income 0013161831 be $9011. . 1n than the gross total shown above? In urban buslness, as you know, the “net" Income that real- ly matters-and I think that It Is not more than faIr that the fann- ers “cash Income" should be look- ed at from the same vIe quote from an Item In todisys news: ‘Dr. J. Wallace Mccutcheon, sec- retary of the Ontario Medical Az- aoclatfon, said that a salary of $5.- 000 would be a falr beginning for a young doctor ‘but one must re- he added, 111111 nu ex- olnt. I r cent. of he must suppy hi; awn medicines and equipment?’ That statement accents, precise- ly, what. Is In this rural mlrid. I 11m, Sir, etc. "cinuis" long 011 The Awful, Evidence (Malcolm W. Blngay, Detroit Froe Press) I! everybody could see what. we would over North America 11 understanding of what Nazism means as a threat to the peace of ‘I519 world and the hopes of man- 11d Tliat threat will not. end when the Nazi armies are crushed. The threat Is not that of mere sweep complete It Is the power of an Idea con- ceived In hell and gestated with the Buchenwald. the They have been accurately report- ed. I saw hundreds of creatures that were once human beings now to mere skeletons covered The only happy ones like cordwood In the yard watlng their turn at the vast I saw the of gallows at which many were hanged, to die of slow strangula- long row I saw the clubs with which they beattra. I saw shades made out. of human skin by the prostitute wIfe of commandant to gratify hlz sadistic desires-from ski living flesh of vlctfms when the ‘tatoo marklngs pleased the artis- the lamp- the Nazi I saw more than 5,000 children. babies of 4 and 5 up to I8. Some of these In the last I2 years have grown to adulthood In thls camp. These people were not prisoners war. "They were thrown Into this hell on earth for Just one reason: they accept philosophy of the Nazi party. They were slave labor. Jews and anti-Nazi Germans. then other brave souls who refused to conform: they came from all the of Europe. look at them to understand why there Is no under- political First When the. supreme Germany. all opposition was killed. starved or Imrirls ed enough. sortie at. the age of . Through Interpreters we talked to dozens of the dyIng. and strangelv animal-minded children ~ —puzzled, even frightened, by the kindness of G.I. Joes and the ten- In 'I‘hese men worked In the war Welmar In the quarries. They were fed only as long as they could work. Then they were allowed to die. The little children were fed and allowed to live because, as they grew older. they could add to the They were forced to labor as soon as they were and SHORE 8 I0 I0 - the the nurses. This Is not really an ‘ COIJIIGISIIIOII, newspapermen or ministers of God. This task should be unsigned to accredfted scientists of the mind. psychiatrists trained to dlspasslon- ate. Impersonal study of the cess- pools of Inlqulty which lurk In the human mind and which flare ‘forth when that mind becomes distorted. It Is not time for emotlonallsm. It. ls not a study of any one In- dlvldual human being or group of a national neurosls. the mass production of n Insanity generated by the power of an evll Idea-the elIrnI- nation of all IndIvIduaI rlghta, the the human no dental of God himself, the epo- op osltlon clean and wort y thlng. We were flowii ‘from PIIII to III, the IO QVGIY Welmar, droppI low over lfujglejg m“ F131,‘; m‘ bfvffii the winding 1111111» to see the divorced were dIffIcuIt to obtain Inn-shed bfldw 111d the 2111M changed now. operlhg at the county courthouse flflhflt 0! flflfl regularly. Decrees are granted the 591108 Qlfl nd couples o their own way wfth- 100d gut even bogherfn to co down to i-tt i; to toss their beautiful, none fieatilfriffrilfiilges Intgc the river. Out In Reno they walk out. of th e Ioral loveliness. courthouse and 1m the rlnn 11110 ty of Coblenz. then over the agricultural glorlea of Tburlnzll. In: land. with all h y: ,, Int wlth IIIOIO At Wetmar. except for m; section of the world 1| moire hountlful. War seemed fai- any In the pu- ‘ III occa- ttie ‘Illu- In no Arnertcln the Truckee. 0f course. that river aonnl amuhed but dlnl flows right. b the courthouse and B1011 continued. Ia no task throw the t-In: Into city have I ever seen In wartime the stream. Decrees are given for cause In Clfllfll. For Instance, In Ontarlu If n mun hu a blond! wIfe and he wants a divorce, he can go for l trIp with n brunet. He war kh children. ‘The could tnke u bonde. but the dI- vorce urge like: to have vnrlety.- b0 Wlndlor 086i yr seem averted. If German elvllhl thQ a people who looked better fed, moremprosperoua. The women m ' I ran have shoes of a éype dented our eep women and glru and the 111% mid an u. IIMMK bouomod k computed wftp {not} a contrllt- Inch 1m 11in iconquwd WW1‘ gm, umd M910 11:31"; pulqufl ulrc Phil! . 8H In co On an’ III-cpncegled m" I “m” “If ngt articulate. One hu- k to ouch other. f th I Iu 09 9. .'ll.‘.1"t11‘§'§‘.'..°.1 thee lfoi-inciarscermnn. republic. we drove And then out n: mIIu to Buchenvvnld once the buntlnl unto of 31mm!!- And there, nmIdst the rlcltnusi- of the land. the pros eroumua o! a people well fed m clothed be-l cause the food and clotbfnl 01 1119‘ peoples of Euro?! "l", taken from them. we 111111111 1R1- MIft/onhn Hades. Never were men ‘rhea poor creatures did not have to be starved. It- hi! never been a question of 09111111115 needing food because there WIS not. enough to Io BIOUIIIL-"OIIQ look WeImor uid the surrounding country of kbtmdaxice refuted any such defence. These men who had refused to accept totalltarlansfm ‘are no longer able to work. That s . were vlctlim of an Ide- dom ended In a handful of ashes at a cremntory. That Is why I say that Buchan- wald Is but a symbol, a symbol of a concept of IIfe outlined Years no b Adolf Hltler In “MeIn Kemp." Buchenwald Ia the logical. In- exorable result of that philosophy of brute force, the repudiation of Isaiah, the denial of Christ. I think that. Is Why Eisenhower has had us here. He knows the military war Is won. It 1s Just. a quertlon of mopping up the rem- nonta. But he knows that tbIa HItlerIan soul of the Werewolf M11 live on In the mlnds and hearts of the people he has corrupted. It wlll carry on In the warped lnds of a whole generation that flowered under his horrible regime. This Is the must terrible prob- lem the human race will have to lace In the post-war years. iiii. s... _ Vi‘ 131013.’? I ' OI/IZUI. _ -_-_ ‘H!!! ONSET Always the same when on a tested At last the gathered mow lets down as whI A! mHY be In dark woods and wIth a song If shall not make qgafn all winter orig- Of hlsslriiz on the vet uncovered [TOUR '— I almost. Stumble looking up 5nd round. As one who. overtaken by the end. j Gives up his‘ errand and lets death descend Upon ‘glmd where Is Is, wItI-i noth- 0H8 To evil. no Important. triumph won More h1g1!!! If lIfe had never been gun. Yet all the precedent Is on my side: I know tfih winter denth has never tried - The earth but It has falled: the snow may heap . In Ioruz storms and undrIfted four feet. deep =11 against maple. birch o . an n It cannot check the Peeper’; silver And I shall see the snow all go down the hIll In water of a slender April rlll ‘That. flashes tall through 111st year's thered brake And dead weeds like a disappear- In; snake. Nothing will be left white but. here u. c . - And there a clump of houses wfth 11 church. —Robex1t Frost. The Worm Does Turn 1016i» 111111 11/111111 One hundred thousand retail grocers In Great. BrItaIn have gone on strIke agnlnstv filling out Gov-. ernment forms revealln Inventor- caterlng estwbllshments. Having defeated the steel of‘ their enemIes. the British are not:- golng to submit. to unnecessary regImentntIon on the home front.‘ Doubtless they were encouraged by n recent observation of Mr. Chur- chill! "If we are to recover from the measurelesu exertions of the war, It can only be by a large re- lease from the necessary bonds and controls whtch war conditions have Imposed upon us. No restric- tion upon well-establlehed British .¢--n-—- -.—-~-.-—--5 #115 “garters 515s YEARS. s?‘ ment of the great Churchill: are determined that the native genius and spirit of adventure, of risk-taking In peace as In war, shall bear our fortunes forward." Ies, sales and exIstIng a . ey Y ,qll.lflkblh|lluizll0blllit quick- uy they are tired of serving as 1111i Meecneln ofiilighmbglm "up nId cIvII servants". The straw “Elgfifg-"gurfi m, ‘QM, 1211B broke the camel's back was a Baum“, ,,;,,,_|,,,,,1¢,1n imp", and new form which was to be fllledi In prevent! 11111111011111. Bonus wt weekly 11nd related to sales to 11b! dronsb mvorbewltboutntin l of Mum. l" t "MfCCAbimivitzti unrsifai-aiaioitaiotsiiouitaiufaiaisiilairsiounng YOUR VICTORY LOAN SALESMAN 1 HAS A BIG l0B 1'0 D0 m1 can ONLY REACH 111s OBJECTIVE THROUGH THE COOPERATION or EVERY PATRIOTIC cmzun. PLEASE BE PREPARED r000 BUSINESS 01v r1111 FIRST 041.1,. THIS IS VITALLY IMPORTANT TO THE SUCCESS or r1111 LOAN- iational War Finance Committee IQIQLTETEJIEIEIEIEIEIIEIQJIEIQIEQQQJIEEIEEIEJIQI liberties that Is not proved Indis- pensable to the prosecution of’ the war and the transition from war to peace can be tolerated.” In every ‘- ' establish ent. In Canada before the war there were employers flllfn out forms for the Government. been multiplied several times by war regulations. Now men‘ are tired of It. and II will be surpris- Imz If they do not. rebel when the war Is over. Control for controljs sake will not. be accepted. Some regulation may be r dur- ing the readjustment pert . But nations which fly the flag of free enterprise will endorse the 501,16;- ‘ e Canadians have submitted loy- alty to essential controls. but It Is tolerate the Imltatlon totalitarian be doubted that they wIIl ever system whfch some political partfes are advmatlng. The vote-catch- GASSY 8T0 MABII ' RELIElIIU If you have my trouble with nau- sgmuh utensil Imllgu on, n. inn Stomach. lieu-tar’: GuIrIo Dlnre. etc. Than don't de- lay getting n bottle of Dr Evan's Stomach Mixture Im- medlalely. Bvllu Stomach Mixture h It very elective mum of ob- tnlnlng rolls! from disorder! of the digestive OIIIIII! which no attended by. us. hul- mhe, henlburn, pnfn and u mm of renuro below the 1 SHINGLE STAIN This Heavy Duly Protective Coating WI" rotlcl your homo l|llllll I o continued offal of but, nIn, snow nil ulnl. In I r Local “In turn I POI CITV HOMES AND ATTRACTIVE. 3.1.11.1 011.1». 111111111‘ heart. co 85o per Bottle. | an: vou TROUBLE!) . wmr LUMBAGO on 80E! BACK T l! w, In have ain't»! 0 but rnnedlel I0 offer name v SUMMER 507156551191” other for ‘of Ithcnumtllm 1 - cost. us! to Artur, II-lgfla 111311111111 twain-n" >- N t . Price 50 nunh“ M’! Bu. TlIE 2 MAGS Ill Grant 800m street Mlll orders tilvui hump Attention. he task has In .... Ing devfces recent] Canada and othersywhlllclltoddifljrr-g. 1111M! v c1111 83111111111115 1111111111; for oflfce. will found lfsomg unfnlr and mlschlevous. Red-blood: ed CanadIans demand the right use tbeIr talents and Initiative. _____ ‘ljifessional Bards 1 II. It. Duane 61 011. Chum-e.- Aeonanunts $8 Grafton Street. ' Charlottetown P110110 2w so: In lllldblbb W Mannlnl. O.A. .§_“'“‘ Tmiiiiiliiiik 5....-. . Jland Company 0. F. AIIIIIIIBALII Chartered Accountant: Banana Trust Building a Charlottetown JAIIIHII-ltft-vtslswmn-‘avwlum Back-Rita Tahlntr McLeod 6' Bentley w. s. nan-run. 1r. c. .1. A. azunu. x. c1 Burhten and Ailnfllwyl-Ib law m Prhn ‘so-m tts@*t-7tsts.rxvma:ztrt.viam$ l M. ALBAN FARMER BA, [alt-B- Cnnulhn Bank of Commerce llll MONEY TO LOAN ‘BABBISTEB. SQLIUITOR. ‘To! UHABLOTEETOWN ALEX W. MATHIESUN . strut fig». 00 Groin Cullen“. u» Inna. contort-oi IN, ll. J. “A8011 QPTDMITIBT Imlng and Sgaplvllll 51"” Moisture. I. l. I- 0 Io II A. I- Ollu Briana!’ n l I HIIQII “$111!. ‘Elnfii-W“ 31111 DBUGBTOIII 11. F. 11111111111111 a son OPTOMETRISTB ' II- “Specialist! In t1" 1 Ilng of I153“ f‘; corregtton of W" ' I ts. “B8 Grafton Street l