PAGE 5on3 ‘IIIE OIIAALOTTETOWII GUARDIAN Iorlh‘ mil; (Founded in um mucus m t. cu. w. c vlco-‘Proaldentx J. Iooutcrr, Llent. Col. D. A. “sq-mi” iqueainm- miiit weird-mi um. Ian 4 Burnett, slonvat. (On sum Service) ‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker: Thfl the Weakest Ink.’ MONDAY, JULY 2A, l9“ The Army Manpool Of men who enlisted. in the army for over- loas service there arc approximately 140,000 ltill in Canada or in adjacent territories. 50,000 or more of this number “are or can be made available" as reinforcements for overseas serv- ice. Of the total above given, 8,500 are memb- ers of the Veterans (iuard; approximately 50,- 000 are of an age 0r military category such that they would not i10rmally' be sent overseas; 25,000, while not "definitely unsuitable for overseas service", are in age groups, medical categories or ranks such that only a limited lumber of them can I absorbed within estab- lishments of the 1Q qiterseas. Excluding the Veterans Guard and men in categories unsuit- able for overseas service,,tltere are approxim- ately 10,000 employed on the staffs of admin- istrative, training and servicing units in Can- ada. As many as possible of these are being withdrawn for tivcrseas service, but sortie will no doubt have to he retained permanently be- cause their duties require fit general service volunteers or because of special knowledge and experience which makes it difficult t0 0b- tain suitable replacements. The above information, tabled in Parliament the other day in answer to questions by Mr. Diefenbaker, gives a good idea of the urgent need for a greater manpool for overseas re- inforcements. Canadian soldiers are fighting both in France and Italy. While casualties have been comparatively slight to date, there is no telling when a heavier toll may be exacted. In the fierce fighting which may be expected from now until the end of the war, it would he crim- inal folly not to provide for filling gaps in the lino. According to the last issue of "Canada At War", official Government publication, the army overseas numbers about 245,000, lflcllld‘ lng more than 800 members of the C. W. A. C. It i; made up of one army headquarters, army troops, two oorps headquarters, corps Itropps, three infantry divisions, two armored divisions and two independent armoured brigades. The German Mind a flie point of view of the citizen of a German- occupied country is .vividly presented by Finn Hammer, a Norwegian, in The Norseman. He explains that he lived for two years in Germany during the Nazi revolution; he was there as a student, spending also considerable time in the factories. He has since visited Germany twice -—-the last time, he adds, involuntarily, as a pris- oner of war. From these experiences, he is convinced that, if a "pet the good German" itt- tieude prevails in Great Britain and the United States when this conflict is over, "we shall have a new war in twenty to thirty years’ time." it is not the German political system which will be rooponalile, he asserts, but "the German mind." Not the Nazi leaders, but the German le are to blame for this weird mentality. e throws a. lurid light on what went on when the Germans were secretly arming for the pre- sent war. How they used to describe their bar- ncks as "hospitals," and how all Germans were delighted at the cunning and deception which were practised. He holds it to be vitally im- portant that people who have not seen the Ger- mans "at home" should understand their true character, as Continental Europe understands it. It is still more important that Allied statesmen in power "should draw the necessary conclus- ions." Germany has got to learn once for all that war does not pay, he says, "and a mili- hry defeat alone will not be sufficient. - - - A generation was required to knock out the Ger- man military machine; it will take st least a generation to knock out the German mind. And that job must not be left to the Germans alone, not even to the ‘good’ ones." Feed Grain Situation According to the Winnipeg correspondent of the Financial Post, there is now no longer much worry about the ability of oootorn Canada to obtain during the coming crop year supplies of feed grain from the West. The prospective eastern need has been lessened by the east's own good crop prospect; existence of sufficient sup- plies to satisfy that need seems to be assured by the satisfactory outlook for western crops. Accordingly, during the past week, theICan- sdian \Vhcat Board began to issue permits in quantity for export of western barley to the U. S. and there were abandoned the suggestions formerly heard that barley in store in terminal elevators, accumulated for the purpose of ex- porting it, vnight be impounded by the author- ities in order to he sent e851- ‘TTT wheat, at least until the Canadian Wheat Board tabulates and publishes its returns from farm- figures may prove to be too low. ..__._________ EDITORIAL NOTES i- On Wednesday evening Mr. John Bracken like the seeds sent for our gardens from Can- ada, has both a sturdy and a luxuriant growth." s- a- w it ist Viscount Cardswell, reformers of his day; when he was Secretary of State for the Colonies, when transferred to the portfolio of Secretary for \Var, he instituted in the armv the short- service system and army reserve, ‘which made enlistment popular, and kept always in reserve a_ trained force as a stand-by in case of neces- sity. i I it w 1mg. 811d, with the skilful and constant pro- pagaiida of untruths from the C. C. F, now be- ing spread among the farmers, if the Liberals makf? elmllgll fiffflfli. they may yet make it ini- possible for the Pro-Cons to carry enough rural seats, atid thus give us chaos at Ottawa. Neither Liberals nor Pro-Cons have any sacred right to Ontario seats in Parliament. We say frankly that we hope the Pro-Cons will win in this sham battle—not because of any love for the Pro- Cons, but because of complete conviction that Mitt A former child prodigy. William James Sidis, has died in Boston at the age of 46, and in the capacity of a $15 per week clerk run- ping an adding machine. At four he “as operat- ing a typewriter, at eight he could speak half a dozen languages, at l6 he graduated from Harvard with a. cum laude degree, astonishing the professors with his original theories on the he made his first application for a clerking job, where he would not be “required to think.” He was "discovered" by a New York newspaper, which published an interview in which Sidis said he turned his back upon intellectual pur- (writes Mr. P. I. Philip in New York Times) to he suffering in an astonishing degree the in- conveniences and unhappiness of sudden growth. In reality the country was never so prosperous- and never had such cause for pride in its ac- complishments. But almost all one hears in Par- liament, in the press, among the public and in covering themselves with honor in Normandy and Italy, in the air and on the sea and the rc- cruiting of volunteers continues to supply all rate of casualties the argument is rising to an even higher pitch for conscription for overseas, as well as home service. The fact is conveni- ently forgotten by most parties and people, sl- though they were reminded of it last week in Parliament by George Cruickshank, that at the outset of the war none of the major parties ‘had the courage to face the public and say that it would put conscription into force as Britain and the United States did.’ The fact is also somehow overlooked here that Canada's volun- teer foreign service Army, like the Air Force and the Navy, has a special and justified pride just because it is composed of volunteers." a s- u -_ It is evident that the multiplicity of parties in the Quebec Provincial election is an obstacle g to propliesying. L: Droit (Ottawa) freely rec- t ognizes this: “If there had been only two par- ties to contend with, political observers would be less hesitant to make pronouncements. The Liberal Party, they believe, would suffer de- feat. But there are four opposition parties to W f0 m situation. The multiplication of opposition groups will allow Mr. Godhout to put up a At the same time it was announced that com- panies handling oats would no longer be ‘re- quired to see that one half of the oats arriving at lakehead terminals are offered for shipment, to eastern (fanarla. leaving only the other half to be exported t0 the United States. _ Estimates nf the size of the coming wheat‘ q-op vary widely. all the way from 400 f0 59°‘ million bushels. Those who have seen the dry areas. WlliCll lic chiefly in southern and south- eastern Alberta are conservative in the estimates. Those who have seen chiefly the tiiagnificent stands to he found in Manitoba and Saskatche- wan find it easv to think nf possible yields IX‘? acre larger than. tlic west has previously known. When the time comes for [iublisherl estimates to be calculated thcrc will be difficulty because of u is the 1cm! the women's vote. will exercise t-heir right 0f suffrage. The total of votes will be at once doubled. How will they vote? Nobody knows the answer to that par- ticular question, though some believe that they will vote jitst the same way as their husbands; others believe that they are the hitterest foes of conscription and that the Liberal party ivluzh granted them their right to vote will owe to them sot-em 9L" tiniest. A, " erals. ln addition, there is the complication of For the first time, women f 10W! the reinforcements necessary at the present 1Y- ulde l1 ed. be reckoned with. This is what complicates the an,‘ moss,“ objects’ such u tools, weapons or ornament stone, flint. bone or bronze. Hu- ’THE weaconrroww~ GUAIZIAN lotus By The, Way The robot standards of,“ tlon and mater after all moved. derived from meaning statu nik" meaning a serf- oontrols have been uality, construc- Ill for furniture re- "m "first: s y u produc- raldn on lrlhln brlnl the Czech ‘robotaf’ te labor and "robot- he Czech Farm Problems ers. The Dominion Bureau of Statistics has ___. set this year's wheat acreage at 20 1-2 million Mun-Mm u 5am," “mm acres, about 4 million acres, or 25 per Cent. tfllelgfiollli: be stopped aa soon as 4 ll ceded last ear. That 9°" "i" f!“ War. the Bri- .___ above the acreage actua yIs _ Y _ my, o; “M, m “M” h u o‘ c is much higher than earlier figures, which had deems. cgta m tlipldustry t ynqnllllliutm) will sliggested a“ mcrease of pilrhaps '5 p" cani" gcofmentr of IOQI-Slgethllllrswhlfi; brill Now there is widespread belief that the Bureau s establish ' (Continued from yesterday's Guardian) Llvo Stack Domestic animals bred for fern purposes have become of increas- ing interest to farmers. In the The last week of our second‘ best summer gif,‘g',““;,',3g.',i,i;‘,"‘,,“’,‘tgfin,gt,,gff‘gi £i§5§,vg"“'°e1', 21;‘ dmffv-e ghflmlglggi month. ‘ ‘ ' ' 311:. furniture industry 1n POIOO- 4w, ,,,,,,h,d my hm, m,“ - bii w o , a distinct brunch’ of urlculturo, has advanced great- . . . . Th l- l e I 15 go be on the gm into more common use a word of- gm 90$; gnlslgu ‘an ,,.,,§. t U t I fie“ ml-‘lpmlwunciid "W" m” m‘ tics revealed at December l, 19 . ‘ resslon that it ls French. The w . . 9,, the following increases in 1 e Lady Tweedsmuir recently paid tribute to “on l‘; 1&9]: ggiilg; a? lfgwggfllsag stock numbers tn comparison with r - . g 0 . ‘the Womensylnstitutes of Canada. _She said: dictionary closely approximates gfig,“,fif,,“"°”s,,l“pgfl“fl;,,lt°ll,ifi,p The Womens Institute movement is one of "how-bout". but Amerlcpn dlctlon- pa, ‘cent up 3 p" gem Th, Canada's greatest gifts to the Motherland and, Fggwmaffh lllfmtlfi” EQ‘; sggilg i: number of hogs has shown a continual increase since the first. census, and the latest estimate 1o 9 1-2 ml on. Many farmers, u on T - dramatist and novelist Karel Ca- {emuflng law has raising’ depot’ An excellent lnlon treal. ls that Vancouve ligated l th f e ma er s at r w tons of material of all kinds are g ° mg “mam” °" “ m“ m“ it and out of the part, This being hot weather. let's not ket too serious. We have the was: of that Pans, Illinois. walked down Main stre er day wearing a woman's skirt: suits because he was treated rigorously by his 111R- father as a boy. fig’? r 4 n- at And "Canada just now seems to the observer Wm m m1 ships? would appear at: 1'12 ference 1n A convoys will B.C. ports again will handle var- goes of canned flsh and lumber now belnrz shipped through East Vancouver stands an excellent chance of being No. 1 — Vancouver Sun. Coast. ports. port 1n Canada. of making, milllnery, plueanerous other fields were belit- grounds that they were "unman- " It took another world war to justify husbands and fathers of washing dishes. getting the children off to school. wives and and calibrated parts. and liking beds. 1n pek ogglnated ll In 1920 1n hll b h_ d 8 British statesman, glgg )U.R. Jmsitspm’; ‘Upllversal om t l5 are, 1 r3; fgcognized as one of the ots, a so riza on o t e mu- greatest social and military chine use‘ which was translated into English 1n 1923. — Toronto Star. he introduced and had passed a hill abolishing Rum-Md some“ who we", p". the transportation of offenders overseas; and fesslorial diggers are zetiirik lire- South are to the by Mon popular impression here from r has largely been elim- The truth of waterborne trade the war. thousands o btpti because of war condlUnns ‘ ~ t er movement in detail must be ‘tilzitiojilbsryals cannot, and can only mess the situ- kept secret. After me w“ when be eliminated an eccentric or maybe lie has a sense nine for office this publicity. B sound at that. men Who wear trousers. lriz that a skirt 1s much c more comfortable. humor. ut argument reaches us to indicate that men canning discouraged on mothers made It last. a doubt. from England states lone exhibition 1n Norwich, obtained a mark of 100 per cent for a home- made bag. Only one of the wo- men equalled the achievement.- Cltrlstlan Science Monitor. People of _BrTtnln ‘are to be naked to dig for hlstor . ands of amateur to act a; 0d lf the Council of British aeology are able w carry out plans they are wide survey after the war. Thous- are ecologists, observers, will be requir- Arch- mnklng for s. nation- In a to be sent round to local nu- orlties the Council tell observ- ers some of look for wherever earth is Here are the things they can disturb- some of them: Any undatlons or floors (except of BY XUU r An course, those of modern buildings. just destroyed by bombing). They be only beaten earth, stain- black with charcoal. or ela- Ci I am the man who walks patiently about the ilardens of his frle happily a nds, while they prattle bout how they nursed the nasturtlums through blight, and gave the pennies hot cocoa on the cold Winter nl hts. At tervals 1 say, "Héflly? I wlsh I had growl that I should have seen oen last week when 1t was at its best, I always sly, mean that 1t was better than this!" "z “i” “in: "a: 0 DQ051111, BI‘! 8V8 0 of smelling ethn- poanws flow-l 1n- ft for making things when my host says his gor- "You don ‘t Africa ln the allocation of certificates for dia- mond dlgizlngs which b6 OPEIIEG. Three alluvial fields vtlll be developed this year. 1n the Kimberley district and one ln the Uchtenberg area, on the Ventersdorp side. been thrown open TWOHI The fields have by the De Beers cugury for the l'u- 1n tiire of Vancouver's deepsea ship ping trade announcement that this port's revenue last yea was second highest 1n the Dom- , exceeded only and Judge who et the oth- Probably run- fall and needs is He is rebukinrz WO- contend- ooler and There 1s nofih- per se. effeminate about. a as the Scots and the fight- reeks have proved for aizes. every woman wearing slacks confess, if she ls honest. that skirts are much more comfort-a and much cooler‘ sh lilo been increasing steadily. rid e only wears and the however, that. equality has been establish- ed without the shadow of dispatch that one wlt he "loss" feed. Even under the very best practice, only about one- slxth of the lngolng corn stays on the hog as usable human food. and the average efficiency 1s much less than that. Other llve stock are even worse: good calves return one part ln l2 of the food given them, and the best full grown beeves only one part in 300. As for poultry, kept on nearl all farms to sup- ply the farm home with eggs and the housewife with pin-money. the laying hen returns one part tn 20 of her food 1n the form of eggs. Other Form Products p Horticulture ls a distinct and 0 t. - ..~.. -- ‘sirl::“i...:';::esm:it:.‘any “i?” o’ ere ll cani criticism containing some 1 l d h 5' c“ m9- "m m“ 9. e 3"°w"3' grain 0f truth, from “The Lctler Revisit)", an Qvlebrlffli-l 1nd stihriagailebeent gbsridringf lflfgflififlfi :35‘ §E§§‘}‘§, ‘ffiojfiffifi Ontario publication: "Liberal Convention in Ont— ham rush many wh° we“ m” dd 10K‘ vmflmentfltlon. NO significant ario reflected th 1° --t {Lb 1 - Prilfeiimml‘ l°°k Pam siwrtue amount of fruit and vegetables u 4 e w spiri s o _i eras n1 the of natlvehlazqr ls hanpvlering rilg- find, m way mm mdumm use, ovince. However, the Party is still in the gvggitélrlnléansilllllgld “d! 0f e 1n Canada, practically all being used as food. either fresh or pro- hllc potatoes are a staple the diet of farm families, and ' nearly all farms grow at least enough for their own consump- 1‘ tlon. there ls a rivalry between provinces for the honour of pro- " dueing the best commercial pota- toes. One membcr of parliament from a western constituency told the House of Commons recently that 1f the ivest ever went tn for cessed. W would drive the eastern off the market, because of size and quality. Nevertheless, the Marl- tlmcs maintain their reputation for fine potatoes, supported by high export demand 1n ordinary times. Canada consumes, under ordin- ary circumstances, about 450 mil- lion pounds of fats a year, ex- clusive of butter, and about 55 per cent: is home-grown. Oil seeds constitute an important crop group. forming the basis of s substantial processing . ‘They provide the base for short.- ening, salad oils, soap, paint, lin- oleum, lubricants, and a host of - other commodities either 1n whole product. _ _ lnsteadof trousers, because ha m- m pa“ gunadgp ' 1 1 11. fourth dimension. Later he withdrew from his “ldpllfi {mind that Harms“ mum booting will is flzxgiiéii? piawliicli old associations and went to New York where c“ ‘L The gentleman may no “Flames linseed °u “s we“ ‘*5 flb soybeans and sunflowers have been engaging attention. The for- mer enter into an amazing array of things-oll. sugar, fertilizer, cat- llc food, vitamin B, and scores of plastics. The objective for sun- flowers 1n 1944 is 50,000 acres, suf- ilclent to keep two crushing plants in operation, supplying high qual- ity edible oll and protein oil sult- able for stock feed. The area growing tobacco has a 1n 1942 reached a total of 79,000 acres. ‘em because 1t ls the voszue and 11 b13350 r m h ., she thinks she has to be ln fasli- Euebec ,...§°'§s,,f,,fi,”_ c M“ m gen. The ‘onlly klegllélmate exqpse or womens s ac s war wor .-- Th Detroit Free Press. e Firm" . 4" So much for the products of the EV"? d" 50"" m"! m!" farm: now for a glance at the persons who produce them. Nearly ., , , _ are proving their equality WlI-ll all our farms were famll enter- pclitical_ meetings is a_chorus'of complaints. women. Perhaps those are rlgnt prises m em days, u, m; the Everything else is lost sight of in the universal "l" Wk" m" "l" m" ‘"5"’ h“ services v! a iilt and adolescent . . _. is real opportunity till now to show members o; the gamuy and pm. grumble against growing pdlflS. _It breaks out how capable they are. {jugly-m vldmg m. ma, needs out o, the on the slightest provocation and it leaves noth- 1:111"! "Bplllvn gal/E lllflrldfilvif-‘il farm produce. But Canada has ilig unquestioned. While the Canadian forces are Spififl] $312,“ ,§',‘°,o,,,,’,',‘,‘§_,‘_'",‘,§§;‘,_ 93g’: “ha” “ch 59"‘ 1f possible, is no longer desirable. The world of to- day offers many things which cannot be made on the farm, and 1f the farmer wants them he must have cash crops or else spend part his time running the farm and part away from ft: earning cash ln supplementary occupations. While self-sufficiency may be “preferable to insufficiency, and w_ e it may be better to live on submarginal lands rather than in city slums, no farmer should feel that he ls lim- ited to what he ls able to do to- day, because all science ls trying to help him realize something greater. Of course, farmers differ great- ly 1n ability. lust like men 1n clt- ies. Some have greater knowledge than others of soil and climate. Some are more thrifty, more ener- getle, more forestghted. There are marginal men as well as marginal lands and marginal industries, the kind of men. fn whatever line of activity. who seldom make more than a living and never accumu- late a bank account. To make a. success of farming, a man must. organize his holding so as to achieve the greatest efflcleqcy. He must keep sufficient records to locate and correct losing ventures and expand and make t e most of the profitable features. 11s must know something of many sciences, and a great deal about some, and he must add to what he learns a wealth of commonsense. He must be able to put in practice the ded by the Agricul- lessons prov tural College or Department. Ho well for his neighbours, be- cause his farm has peculiarities of its own, and it 1s a sign of lrn- rnaturlt to think that everything current y popular ls really good. JIQlEEPZIl-lfilledl . ers: as a matter of fact. the en- couragement and praise which I dispense are largely responsible for the high standard of garden- 1m: which some of my friends achieve. Without my admiration they could never keep up the pace. y-Marchbanh ln Peurboro eminent red nerves. The thought. will gill! that thl 1 . a fight wltnln h —-——- was strictly a desired to take over ler at that ed his S5 tar, cou d d‘etat against keep himself in power, he "ll- Ex- outdated" fill llllhfltdl U Obhbll W110i! l0 fé-é-é/ fill a No one down by the sea talks about cooslol defence. That has been held as u surprise for the enemy. But the quality and friendly goodness of Rosebud —lhal's no secret! Yet the satisfaction which It continues to give, pipeful after pipeful, yeor offer year, sometimes surprises even those who hove been smoking it consistently for a lifetime. Rosebud PIPE TOBACCO Hitler's Days Numbered By LOUIS P. LOCHNER. (Chief of The Associated Pres! Bureau for 21 years) Adolf ed. His purge of 1944 is sometl-i from which he, his party and army will never recover". purge of 1934 was child‘s play coin pared with it. This time the split. goes through the entire nation. The conspirators whose bomb baiely are hoping and praying for. they looked to some elment in the army to do something to end Hit- ler's tyranny. The conspirators chose the ivay of assassination. They failed this time. Hltlers life will more closely than ever. counts with everybody who dared cross their paths. We shall probably never know whether Col. Gen. Ludwig Beck was guilty of conspiracy . For Hitler 1t was sufficient that this former chief of staff resign- ed in 1938 to protest Hitters march lnto Australia and his rnpo of Czechoslovakia. I knew many of Beck's closest associates. There ls no doubt but. that he foresaw dis- aster from the very beginning of Hitler's war upon civilization and was never carried away by the blitz victories of 1939 and 1040. Nobody should be surprised to hear that Beck's suecassor. Col. Gen. Holder, or that. Field Marshal von Rundstedt, Von Beck, List, or Cols. Gen. von Falkenhausen or von Blaskowltz - I name but a few of them-have been "liquidated." When the Nazis get started on a blood purge, they wipe out every- body who's inconvenient at the moment. I U O This purge, however, ls not a slan of strength. It ls n sign of wen ess, a measure of despair, and expression of hysteria. In the immediate future there may be internal peace and quiet, at. east. on the surface. If the civilian population de- cides to support the army 1n gen- eral revolt, the greatest bloodbnt 1n htstor may result. For Hit- ler's fana lcs will shoot down friend and foe-anything to maintain power. During the next hours and days, mfizxpiootlngsro‘: loyalt to the 1n- willy be held throughout tho Reich. Goebbels will tell the world the German na- tion 1s unit incomparable Pue eoe solutely ur 90D have shout loudest, to hlde th emotions and ‘intentions. I O ed 1n its love for the hrer. meetings will mean ab- nothln, as far as meas- tho reel feelings of the o ls concerned. Those who Nazism most will probably elr real better shOW- . But will the multiplication T.§‘i'.‘...ii“§§.'i;s°'d3f§§ tftmlliiiii 3i 3%,’, “iflfiflglf'“fi‘,‘°‘,",i,‘lii,,flfifl “u; ifiiTffitt, rendered iipwtgtillll°ii of such opposition groups be sufficient to as- bronze. And gold objects. which keep the “m, machm" 1,, "m. did others. He could not have be f are subject to the law of treasure “m; Order. H, m“; “,1” . been suspected even by the ubiquit- lflfe t0 Mr- c°dlb°ut the Emilie“ “um r ° trove and finders are rewarded hflowphy capgble o; w m; ‘my; our Gestapo, for he planted the seats, even an absolute majority over all the by their full vulula-llnndon Even- £10,»... ‘mm; 1mm 1. u,’ m. bomb unnoticed. Hitler owes his , T - h t- i» The lng Standard. m“ wan," dmuim “m4 m4 escape onl to the accident of other groups‘ hat l’ not. er ques Kin’ . Q war.’ He musf keep obi-east of tho "l"! "will! ll - ' writer goes 011 t0 say that if the Social Credit GIdHn whlnt I51 “Heal n PlfI:“Q change, o; the day whue ha] n8 ufifltrllaqy gsspallpayg gain an Tax‘- - t , ' r ; o o er e's 8 s cous er on. s Party_ 1S running away with Bloc votes, the "gweglfilaut pigdulze "one Pgfpmy gqwtgleély 1:11;: fgizililgriirliqglnrlnezst 1:11;: “Mm” ,5 bound w have a ma,’ BlOC l5 faking 59"" "m" ill! Um?" Natlmflale own. However, I have my place cop 513,451.15. m, plan, m“ terlng effect upon his alrend jar- aud the C. C. F. is stealing some from the L1b- in the Blrdefl- worlc aunt s or that man whom o trusted may be carrying a ls- n. purge" resulted from part hm and hs rownolilrted SA the army. Hit- tlme had not yet arm- cnd made tt the mili- lnstrument that 1t nnw ls. He Hitler's days are numben, m: .. - ' msi FORTRESS "Ab No ‘The I I alleged i missed Der Fuehrer are but sym-l bols of what millions of Germans Dis- armed, oisfrancnised. terrorized! l Ii l parties: Etluiéope 25s no roof- rom t.e a en s es Armies rain among the wheat- Soldiers rise. Watch the crop implanted here Grow and stpread- _ He who sows the dragons teeth Eats sharp bread. Lift the boot and era-ck the whlp- Threaten and exhort Time Etows sho 0n the nrlsoned town st upon a piece of silk Hdpufiloats down. --Frances Mint/urn Howard. shoot the licstagq. neat the slave-J ""—__-"""'__""__" r . - l Here behind the conquerors back! H m: For Foot Ailments CONSULT u. J. A. BROWN, v.1». ,1 Orthopedic l Ol-IIHOPOUIST 14S Great George Street CHARLOTTETONIN P.E.l. CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS 58 Grafton Street. Charlntteta . iitafieiiiiieid hlsucriirades. last of German Chancellors fore Hitler. had also been purged ivanted and more, to build modern conscrlpt army. did not know Hitler. They did not to the army or the Fatherland but only to himself. guard came now. Hitler able Heinrich Himmler, seem to have the upper hand. QUICKER RESCUES time taken to free people trapped En than raids of 1940-41. MAX FAOTOR HOLLYWOOD BEAIITY AIDS ‘Mo: Factor Face Powder ._ - - - - 75o and 51.85 Max Factor Pancake Make- up-------$i.'i5 Mu Iaohr him-lob Refills --—--— lnllLM Mu Isotor lone lolllh Mu Footer Cold Cream -~——-—75caniI 51.55 Mn libctor Powder Foun- dation Cream — 75o and 81.55 Mn Inter Aatrln ent ——————'I and 1.85 Max Ilotor Al ent Foundation — 75o and 1.35 Mu Factor Makeup Blend- (Llould) - 75o and 81.35 __i-._ Sun Tan Lotions 8liol——--—---|5o _ Noxemn Suntan 0ll - 20o filler“ ‘M w money's 8m ‘hn 12mm GI‘ LIQUID STOCKING MAD! IlP No-Ilo: — - -- -- — 00o D u n _ nif-litii. 12.5%.“. .. ti.‘ not afford tofrlsk a coup the army. So. tn his best friend. Roehm. TIIE 2 AIAOS 10 Great Goon-n Street The Junker class thought they were sitting pretty. It irked them that one of their own number, General Kurt von Schlelcher, ltjhe e. But they forgot the incident when Hitler gave them everything they up a They not realize that his loyalty was The pay-off for the military old and his henchmen, especially the unspeak- LQNDQN -(0P)- The overly: flying bomb incidents in Southern Bland has been reduced by more ha]! cmnpflltd Wllih C110 heavy l l McLeod C4 Bentley W I- BENTLEY K. G J A BENTLEY K t. Blfflilers n-fl Allnrncvo-lf- ‘ "LII v Ill Prim-o Street -<---.>. ‘———-——-————---—-< M. at hAN FARMER B l!» 1L. LL. . llhlmsrbn. snurrron. 2T0. bl n Bani of (Iflrnllltrre Bid; luonnv_'r_rv 1.01m at n w. MAlH-IESUN “Orifice? $5M. Geor cmiifiiiii. asset's-rent. soucirbic no. - -.-tw ‘ "Offllland Company n. r. Anciiiiuiin Chartered Aeoolntento f f lantern rnn sum»; } Clarlollolowl 'l BELL d: MAIHIESUN noun no norm H. F. mil-lime NOTAIY lo. IAIIIIBTEB SOLIUITOI llley Building Chlrlolleltlfl PALMER lit HASLAM " ‘sliiiff-"f" “wit” " of Nova Scofla cnimun Charlottetown Poi-NI oivlv. ‘I0 LE0 m‘ Pllll ir; I EYES exmmsul l aiisstiintinrn |1. s. TAYLOR 1 OIYTOMETRISI‘ f so i °;""J,.l‘.'."'=.‘.'i.i’.-l§l_'_j§;;, l . D0 vonlnl; tn q.“