‘l i i Pact? mun THE DHAR LOTTETO WH G llARll IAH Aliirning Daily (Founded In 1887) Prmiilent: Lit-ut. Col. W. Chester S. tlcLui-a lice President: J, R. Burnett. F..I.l. Hot-rotary: Lieut. Col. D. A. alacKlnnon. 9-5-0- Etllttir and Xlatrgitig Director J. R. Burnett. FJJ. Assn 1t:- tiitiinrs: Frank Walker and lan A. Burnett SFBSCRIPIION RATES ‘t; .\|..ii in l'.tf.l., $1.00 per year; $2.50 for 6 inonthn] $1 "15 tor 3 months; 50c for one month 17.11 Uulnvr)‘ $5.00 per year; $3.00 for 6 months the fact is that in eating certain kinds of cheese he is ltelping Canadian agriculture and taking nothing from the export of Britain. Similarly in gasoline. On the one hand a gov- ernment official urges newspapers lo make the public aware of the need of gasoline conserva- tion, and 0n the other a government official re- bukes the press for "alarmist” stories about gasoline shortage. In Britain. says a Canadian Press writer, there is very little complaining about rationing. “So long as they know evervoiic is getting tlic same treatment they are content. regardless of how severe the rationing is." Canadians. it is sug~ $1.73 fur 3 months v _ _ _ gesteil, would he equally willing to make sacri- “f "U" '" ("“_":"“ “ml L55‘ 550° p" 7°“ |fit"cs. if it iras known definitely what the sacri- s“‘““"-‘ “‘i”‘i*“‘.lzkfol"nrp‘,'i -“ii“'i “'00 n" 6 nwmh" fices should he. If Canadians were told what ‘ month , i. s t0‘do and why they must do it the Government '11-" HHI- \~-- t-u-ilr-H-H- ma: he abort-Tu on would have little trouble in obtaining co-opera- ..._._ ‘nu-- square, Ne“ \lll' ; m» - , , _ __ __ .,,,.,,_., m“, "m, “-,,_,,,,, M,’ timi. But the orders must be clear-tilt and con- . .\|'\\\ - 124a I'm-r bu, 515m)", litta "l .\r\\l Fi Ill]. , lltil“ . “Ivllvin . tiinil. Sudbury, it... \|i-r||, Hirlirlnli .\. 15., Ellen Robot-tron s. ___€____ — EDITORIAL NOTES — The .\'!.v1»,'::,'<~.‘ Jlrmori/ is Weaker than the ‘i l. tit/sis"! ln/r." .\ cheque for $5.500. given by French resid- i i cut.- of the British colony of lrinitlatl ll, \\'. I.. has" been sent to General Charles dc tiiaulle, leader of the Free French movement. ' o 4 i; n 111111-111-151112311351: 19, 1941. ilav 511th tiiciit Conference A survey shows that more than 570000.000 has been raised by the British government through sale of listed Liuitctl States stocks in gthe last nine months. Sales totalled zibout 3.1100,- '000 shares in nearly IOO companies and were Hnostly handled through \\'all Street brokers and invc-"tinctit hank firms. if IX lit is Ur. " "" .- x "\'.1il ilirt t-zircrs and Pre- .-\.t \\"ili.l l‘illl.'tll\"<3 .\liii- i t-iiileriiig uro- ', as twroposed 1'11! la-t April. - 12v.» plans. the ztt- ‘axe: are of . .. . . . if‘); érévimes Littler-Secretary of State tor .'\!l'. Captain II. . i_ iii lI. iBalfour, .\I. P. who recently flew twice to i the Island, and fished ati Montague with .\la_vor ~11. in return for v l i i p ‘.\., “in ‘my [he ,l\‘o_\" llolinan and City Lilcrlt _l. .\. Fullerton. . , I,‘ ‘um, l,,.,.,\.inc,j “m! ‘has l)l'('ll urtuirrl with lairil |3c-:i_\‘t~rl~i"oi>l<_ ."iiiil ‘- H a , ' my‘ ‘lurmg the several tubers a member" of the llritisli l'.t_‘l»ll4!lllIC ,- p, l , m but 3,, [040- hlissitiu to .\I<J\‘CO\\', to tll$Cll>S with .\fi\'lCl Lcatl- in t ~ ,er Stalin the future business relations between watt: the tizivmeiit to the . . ' ‘the two countries (hiring the war. c111 ctt-il on account of t» iiivtposzil was for the 11/41. the provinces would i940 income. Accord- 'lll_\' amounts collected tlt-tliictc-tl from the pay- s stage, almost all the have been collected by .d probably cancel the year. In June it was unit: The “iashingtoii Govcrninetit has taken over the financing of a $4.100,000 machine gun plant ibcing constructed at Hanidcn, Conn, which the lBritislt originally had underwritten. (lff ials of the Plant Defense Corporation, a sulisitliziiy of the Reconstruction Iiiuzincc Corporation, say, however, that they do not know whether a o" 1040 in air-av 1311i ’§§“iii..i§1“il§.“'§§.l.“filldtli.illlli‘iiilf§.iifii i the Dominion t0 $45 Great Britain. i ttcd annual cost of $80 t‘ t‘ t‘ *- Uiidcr its powers the Licensing Board of Food and Clothing Contract, of which .\Ir. C. A. Morphy has been appointed head, can fix or llimit the terms or conditions of sale of any goods or services, can fix or limit the tiuantitics that may be bought 0r sold and may suspctiil or cau- pel a license when it finds that the licenses has ailcd to comply with any board order or re- 'i"»pr1r<=‘tl_\' fltfldc t0 bring the quirement. It goes into effect at the ciitl of the rots-arable distance of the present year. ...:i the deductions several of "' * * * a marked "profit" by accept- Another Conservative Senator and barrister n of tax collections on i940 l*r (lotion B. Under this me net debt service of ‘" year etiding nearest to w, e ivc 0f sinking funds "ictlianiig the amounts of suc- rd in the period. The latter \\_' 1 'l‘l~.<= actual amounts to be -'.i as follows by .\Ir. Ilslcy: Estimated Option A Option B payment (0O0's of dollars) P a. i_ _ _ _ _ _ - 250 21s 21s N. s_ - - - _ - - _ 1.500 2.12s 2.12s N_ 1a - _ - _ ~ _._ 2.575 11.250 2,250 Que _ - _ _ _ _ 11.000 1.91s 11.000 om. _ _ _ _ _ _ 20000 10.000 29.000 Man. _ _ _ _ .. _ 5,000 3.175 5,000 $fiSk- _. .. _ _ - 2.01s 0.300 s,a00 Aim. - - - - _ - 1.000 0.200 4,000 B, o. _ _ - _ __ - 12.000 0,000 12,000 total _ - _ - _ - 12.000 00,150 Slated to accept the second option are the. three Maritime Provinces, and Saskatchewan, all of w...cl1 szatid to show a “profit,” which would not li ‘y ever be realized since these pro- virices a‘. \\"".".h British Columbia and Mani- toba will no longer receive special subventions front the Draminion. Alberta is regarded u the big question-mark. If Alberta COtlIillllPS to offer interest at one-half its contract rates, it would obviously accept the first o}. n as shown in the table. But if full died last week-end, Senator I.entlriim .\lc.\lcans who died iii Winnipeg at the age of eight-two. Senator hlclleans, a native of Brantftird, On- tario, fell at his home three weeks ago and frac- tured his hip. His death raised the number of vacancies in the Senate to six. The Conserva- tive have 44 members and Liberals 46. Senator .\Ic.\[eans, before his annointmciit to the Senate in July, I917, was a Conservative member of the Manitoba Legislature from 1910 to i914 and before that an alderman for Winnipeg. u v n- u Lord Brougham, lawyer, statesman, writer, born this date, 1778. After a successful career at the Scottish bar, entered LlIICOlIIiS lnn and settled in London, where he duplicated his Scottish success at the bar. As Attorney General he was Queen Caroline’s legal adviser, and his management of her case won him fame. He participated in the founding of the famous Edin- burgh Review, to which he contributed over 80 articles. But he is chiefly remembered a: a law reformer: “The whole machinery of the (Demo- cratic) State, all the apparatus of the System, and its varied workings, end simply in bringing twelve good men into a box." a a u a Faced with I decline in church attendance, a falling off in Sunday school membership, and inadequate financial contributions, an “advance movement" is being planned by the Protestant churchel of North America. The direction of the movement will be under the boards of Christian education of various denominations. The move- ment, which is to be known officially as “The United Christian Advance," is described as "Pro- testantism uniting to reach every person with Christian teaching, In the home, regular Bible reading and prayer; living as Christians in the family. In the Church, increasing attendance; payment were resumed. Alberta would pre- lutnably be able to call 0n the Dominion to pay debt service charges of $5,750,000 annually, and would naturally fall into category "B." Actually, the original offer only agreed to base its pay- nicnts to the provinces on the amounts actually paid in cam for debt service or received in cash for incoitie taxes. But throughout the discussion of the offer in the llotisc, it was constantly cm- pha al ll"l§ the offer sliotild not be constructed as 1w. vciitiz; further negotiation and individual iii"r:ingt=ai.<~r,:= \\‘i'ill the provinces. It was stressed that special grants in aid would be made on the h1=if< Di need to replace the $5,475,000 total of [\'"t-\"ii-i'1= ariiizal grants to all provinces but O11- tari», f)» t‘ élllil Alberta. It was estimated that i-m mvin teachin for Christian diici leshi) ti” “i” ii “iimiii not exceed $3 m $4 miii Inifhc coignmunit gbrin in! ever rsoh iiifItO lr~~i<_ bu: Wfllllll depend largely on the extent fenowshi of ‘one ditch, chirlciies workin 'll-\‘.‘Ili'f‘illl(‘ financing cut farther into pro- together l?“ a Christian cémlnunity .1 The c: li‘ i“m"i‘i lmililiulmiiy with respect to fort beginning on rally day, September 21, will 3i“ "m" rilihmiilg‘ be carried through for four years. u a n a In the Superior Court, Montreal, in July 1939, Mr. justice Forest annulled the marriage of Lauries Bergeron, a Roman Catholic, to Wil- helmina Kriklow, a protestant. because of the difference of religious faiths. Canon R. S. W. Howard, of St. Unbain and Prince Arthur Anglican Church, who performed the ceremony, appealed and this week, the Court of King's Bench, in a unanimous judgment ruled that the celebration of so called “mixecl" marriages by Conflicting Suggestions Arlvnrii 1m in: are appearing in English nt\\:~p.1r>~|~<_ lll~!‘l‘f'.'fl by the British Ministry of 170ml‘ f tin“ di~crilw< how green vegetables ShOUhl hr- v "flail quickly tn preserve vitamins, Another, litwilit] "Tm- lli-appeitring Trick," explains \vlt_v a c inotlirv becomes difficult to obtain “la-n lltt‘ price is controlled. Controlling prices, the si-iivnwnt explains, does not increase the Protestant clcrgymen are legal and valid in the stipiilv liii: rnalilc: a vastly increased public to Province of Quebec. The court, sitting in ap- i l.» (‘Iitlllttiirlihfi " pcal, ruled that such a marriage cannot be over- iillts‘ t-:i:t-r;~i"i<iiig action on the part of the turned by annulment because of religious faiths an exchange. of the contracting parties. The decision of the "'..il H.- t".\l'tllllllt'tl In" our own Canadian highest tribunal in the province is believed to lln- tioml question, for instance. is have solved a legal problem which has existed Canadian. since 1908. It is the first time that Court of Brit-Bl» 1911.1] Ministry, suggests llli"i|l 111g but t-leai" t0 the average g,{,,,,. {til 1,5... 1111f to cat bacon. but he finds it King's Bench has been able to pass judgment a -i_~],..-~,i" m- rp-lllllflllll menus and practically,on such a case, as anniilnirnts granted from tlib ..~, m Iii Jllllillllllt‘ till a railway buffet car. time to time in the Superior Court have never "Don't cal cliccsc," another will tell him; but resulted in appealn, ' , -.»-¢’\ NOTES BY THE WAY The death of Mr. Charla Pendin- bury, oi "Pendiebury"; Arithmetic", bmigs t) mind the immense n. nancial rewards that. come to the author of a successful school text bmk. The author of n fictlon "best, seller", with a cxculatlon, of, say, 30.030 copies, goes about. u t1 no owned tue earth, but. as a rule, after a few gears the back is dead ior all mic. But let a man write‘ 0 really Popular school text. 00011,. and h-s circulation may run 111w] millions, and he will draw huge royalties for perhaps the best part 0t a lifetime. Take. for example, a] work such as "Hall and Knghtisi Algebra". which Ems been a popular ‘ text bock f':r 40 years or more. RSSGHIktllly lt has varied very little throughout the years. and lt has S0116 0n bringing dazzling profits i0 the authors as well a; to the pubic-nets. Such works, of course, are the exception. In school bo:ks, a» ec-"ewliere. many are called but few are chosen. - Ottawa Jour- ital. Moreover, Supulntendent Eamea ls ordered to prepare a report. for submission to the GOYefnflr-J]- Council advising whether or not Halifax should- be declared a pro. tccted area wiittiiri the meaning of the Defense of Canada regulations. The regulations provide that an area 50 declared ls forbidden terri- tory. Only those who were r651- denzs in the area on the beginning of the day the order became effect- ive are allowed t) be there. No oiliers mtrvpenter, except- by spe- cial tiermlsuon. This Ls an idea that h“ bPt-‘fl Ellgilestid on several occas- s tice the out-break of war. Some c- tliat it lssinipler to restrict " to '1 Gliilfe city or district, to protect all the m1li-, that clty or dlitrict, g eyes or evll de- agcnts. Under the’ .. Halifax would become, a ‘ rblddcn city. And the lnhabh! t. s. doubtless. would be compell- $ClllF s01‘? of passmrt or f The regulation. ati ivoultl bring szme slight re- the pre eiit acute housing‘, shortage. - Halifax Chronicle. ' Commander Stephen Klng-HalLl M.P.. starid a recent broadcast tor North Ante a with an a-pocryphall mg a peculiarly Brut-I humor. The scene was . ailcn post on the south ciast of EIZQIQHG, and it was man-l neci bv at‘ officer a-d a telephmist. "i ei"_ti.1s_ searching the hor- "nh ni- bznoculars when sud. he exclaimed: “Take this ge and g.ve it Priority 1A: "_La.g,e enemy foimation approach- ing SIC " ' light naval ‘e esco ting numerous barg- cover of aerial protection y n of enemy force ap- zmately twelve miles 183 d3. P from Bull Punt stop visibil- ity extreme. wind southwest force _flV€. Me sage ends’, Have you gut, that 0.14.?" “Yes. st!" ‘Transmit. 1L at once to the report centre, I'm going on tlie roof“ The telephon- ist. txcked tip his transmlttir and stxke: "Is that» yiu. Alf? The bal- loang gone up! ‘Itler. Goerlng and the rest. of the perlshers are 'ere". ——Lon1i0n Listener. “Crazy as a cool." ls an expresflon , heard more perhaps n Amer“; than 1 here, bu: it tit a firm basis in meta O11 a het- June evening I was start- led by a great contmotion in the reeds cf a p0 d After a mimeut ourcaiiie a i‘ r of caot. Like two birds ‘in a cy film, they foun- tlered at great. speed toward the centre of the pond. There they stopped. reversed and turned up their ivhlte and black fan-tails ml each other. They then retreated slightly, manoeuvred for POSlLlCILl and alt of a stiiiden flew at eachl other back-ivartls, with tails flercel outspread. ‘Ihey rematrd the aft-boll several times. Between each attack there vms a crazy interval of man- oeuvre, in which they bravely vaaltz- ed round and round each other with a kind 0f sinister caution. like a pair of Apache dancers. Then suddenly they would fly at. each other again and fight their ex- traordlnary rear-guard action, eiickllng madly, banging their falls at each other, at. once very ccmlc and very serious. When the perfor- mance was over they left the ring with rather dignified grace, and re- tired to the reeds again, where they appeared to be on the most charm- ing terms with each other. —Lon- don Spectator. The ability to keep a neci-et not usually attributed to women. The estimation will have to be revised. The greatest. secret of the war-the (Zliurotilll-Roose- velt meeting -- was known many London women for a ful week before it broke. As l. news- paperman, I knew 1t ten day: be- fore. So did every girl reporter 1n Fleet. Street. It. was kiwi-acting, for ten days to see now Iandon could be kept. n the dark when so many people must have known. There was far less rumor than there usually la when something big ls afoot. I broke my pledge at ten to three. while I was watt-mg with a frlend to listen t.o Mr. Attlee‘: broadcast. "It must", bald my friend. ‘be something to do with Japan. It. can't. be aiiytlmlng else." Indulglng for once tn my llfe tn the sort. of cryptic remarks wtrdi thriller de- tective; always utter, I murmured week. two people who should have known better told me that Chum- hili was in Moscsw. A third sold he was ln Singapore. One man who didn't. know the story and llkea to pretend that he's "well 1n" told mo very confidentially that. he imd- a group of motor manufacturers had Just been given an audience by Churchlll-"But. dont. re at it, 01d buy!" For a ver oo reason, I didn't. - Londm Chll rig Amherst hiil notlfled otiidenfo coming to college th‘a month not to. bring nutom0blle= with them, be-l cause they can't keep them lf they' do. No automobiles during the col-l 1°86 year at Amherst - or William or Middlebury cr several other New" England colleges! wini u Hill-ll .=n000st. KIDNEY nMNA. .11 l, I \' l’ I l i l 1 THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARjflAN l The iMukden Incident 10th Anniversary Of Japan's Bid F01‘ Conquest B! GLENN BABB Anoclaud Pres Staff Writer NEW YORK, Sept. 18—(AP1- Historians of the. next century, sur- veying the tragic years of this one, may debate among themselves whether the second great war should be dated from Sept. 18 1931, or 1, 1939. is is the 10th anniversary a! what the Japanese call the “Muk- den incident." which opened their conquest of Manchu-la and cori- stituned tlie first major blow struck by a great power at the world oi- listied after the conflict. of der estab 1914-18. It set Ln train a sequence of events that". crushed liberal rule l.n Japan, destroyed the fabnc of Pa- cltic area stabllltv woven at Wash- ington l0 ears before, led to de- struction 0 the League of Natlons, showed the way to Mussolini n Ethiopia and t-o l-Itfler ln Austria Czecho-Slovakla. and Poland finally brought nearly all the world to war. Tne significance of the Mukden incident was that. lt marked the seizure of power in Japan by the. military. It, may be that after these 10 years the wheel of history nu finished a C)'Cl0—-Lh€N are indica- tlons from Tokyo that. the era of mill domination be nearlng| an en . At any rate, c vllizn lead- ers. up alled by the pass to wh1121| a deco e of military adventure has brought their country, are smvnig to regain the reins. These 10 years have brought Ja - {in conquests rtvalltng those of t- e r. An empire of 90,000,000 in 1931, Nippon 110w exercises some degree] of control over the lives of tome 250,000,000 persons, an eighth of the worlds population. Mimchurla, In-, ner Mongolia, Northern and Central China, arts of South China, French Indo-C ‘ma nave been overrun, 1'1 e arms of Japan have carried her rule from the Arctic Circle nearly to the equator and westward to the mountain ramparts of western China l l But this has been achieved at a terrific cost. ln enmity, China, im- conquered, fights on. A powerful Russian army is gplsed on Ja axfsl northern flank. he Nether ands East. Indies and the Phlllpplnes are being armed against her. Bflidlll has concentrated a mighty air force, and strong land and naval forces .nf the ent, Mcst, frightening of 11.11 to the, Japanese is the pace at which the, United States ls armfnfl and ‘CPO-i tiuclng arms for tier friends and Japan's enemies, her stlffenln at- titude toward Tokyo's eXDBHSIOW-Si policies. her declared determlmizlon to give all possible aid to China and, Russia and to keep the seaianes open for delivery of such aid cle-l spite all opposition. Japan cries out that she is being encircled. Therefore. the Tckvo government of Prince Fumimaro konoye ls try- ing to come to terms wlth Washing- V t 2 0 0 t saultsfl-Harry Hopkins. i Q-OQ-OOQ-Q-OQQOQOOOQVQO-OOQ\ O-OO- WORDS OF CHALLENGF A THOUGHT A DAY FOB A PEOPLE A’! WAR 0-0 “The people in my country feel that. this world would not be worth living on tf tlie forces of Nazli power were to prevail and lf the democracies of the world were to crumble under their fierce buf futlle as- return to the horse and buggy era? Must college boys walk, for Heav- en's sake? The ukase will bring consternation to youths who have not. walked farther than two blocks since they were old enough to have a driver's license. But parents, SEPTEMBER 19, 1941- 00 find way regain nei- freedom of choice between the two groups 0f DOW" coptendln for world mastery. o resieih-i ton 1&4 apparently FY1118 l such freedom the ._1~'1l- tan lea rs know they must- 0WD the a: under control. A parentty with fiiiilr in view. a Mt 0M1 (>1- fenoe headquarters under dln-‘cl command of Emperor Hlrohito has been set up in Tokyo to kéfip A 117m grip on 8.1 the land and air force: in the home terrltorles of Nippon. S0 much has ha pened since the Mukden incident at. few remem-i ber Just. what 1t. was. e Japanese version Ls that Jap- anese lnfanfrymen were condueiln! night manoeuvres along the LIQCKS of the Ja ese-owned Soutlr Mim- churla ralway on the OULSKIITA of Mukden. At 10.30 . m. they heard an exploslon on 118m 0f WHY and hastening to t-he scene found that. a section of rall and t-wo or three sleepers had been blown \f9- Three Chinese soldiers seen nearby —t.here was a Chlnese army bar- racks ln the netghborliood—ivere fired on and kllled. But the Non-Japanese world re- mained skeptical; few neutral ln- vestlgatnrs were convinced. Ijhe Chinese asserted the wh0le M1811‘ had been manufactured by tho Kwantung army Japan's 881F150! 1n Manchuna. At any rate the incident touched off what. the Japanese admituxi was a carefully-worked out 00er- atlons plan for seizing control 0f the key polntaoizfvfp-nchurlfl. From that beginning. the Jasm- ese army moved to complete t-On- quest of Manchurta, i; land 0f 114.- , inhabitants ln the next l8 months. Tsltslhar fell 1n Novertioec, Harbin the following February. the Province of Jehol in March. 1933. The former Boy Emperor of China. Pu Yl. was taken from re- tirement ln ‘Plentsln and eventually made Em rur Kang Teh of Man- chukuo. e puppet empire set up tn what. had been Chinese Mari- churla. From Manchurla the Japanese moved into North China. Where. 0n July 7, 1937, again during night manoeuvres by the Japanese army. occurred another “lncldentfl at, Marco Polo bridge near Pelptng be- ginning the war with China which now ls ln lt.s fifth year. en the Kivangtung army struck at Mukden, China appealed to the [league of Nations. The Lea- gue, after 18 months of futile de- bate and Investigation, could do no more than vote censure of Japan. which thereupon withdrew from the whole Geneva scheme of thlxiga. Ems failure was the League's death ow. The United States. standing apart also tried tn vain to stem the Japanese tlde. Washington went. on record as refusing to recognize the results of conquest by force. Efforts to present a Joint: American- Brltlsli front. to Japan failed. Historians of the future may be able to trace the influence of Jap- an's success tn defyln the domin- ant, powers of the eary thirties on the latter courses of Italy and Ger- many. At least. she showed the dlc- tators. later to be her allies. 'he ease wlth which the Le e of Nu- tlons and the scheme 0 collective security could be flouted. When Gen. Shlgeru Honto set "us Kwantung army in motion. Ethiopia still was just one of Musscllars‘ dreams and Hitler still wins more than a ear away from power. The ukden incident was as much the culmination of a revo- lution movement ln Jii an as if was a b ow to Chlna and he exist- tng world order. made cheerful by the realization that. the prloe and upkeep of n Jalopy, plus occasional fines at- taching thereto, ls not n required addition to the cost of a college ed- ucation, may find it difficult to sub- merge the cheer and appear. in the modern manner, pé-operly sympa- theflc. They may so grateful for the gasoline shortage as to resolve to share the hardships and 10in Mr. Ickes‘ crusade by cutting down on their own gasoline. - New York Herald Trlblune. O Nina men out of un, when naked, lay they cannot nflord more life ln- casuany, nwh - ch hm bee lunnco Iml lhro h the Spodll the“ p”; 1ewer§:" lag!” ‘n’; Budget ha: of this orth Amen-loan new’ about him?" Pom. know] Llfn you can now locum Ilia Innu- He went quite pale. During the m“ 7°“ hi" ‘Ml?’ "lmdv ""3 pay u llula u l5 n month. You don't have to lave up lo ply n big premium. Give l2 cheques dated cod-one for each month of the ear. For example, stems 80, on n 5,000 Double Prof on poll , our elmquel would bq for 86.1 on etwyour receipt by null “ch inon thou! even having to ro- m that your premium h due. Thlnhlholofqmodcrmeuyvvnylo noun cxlrl pmloctfon for your faintly, and financial locorlly in war own Inter llfo. Ithont obllglllou uelnl the coupon today. NORTH AMERICAN ill Rlu 8t. Wnlloronta. Ont. ~ r Pl 11nd I format! PM“? 531.155.171.202": m "if Home Adina tqn Al. LAPTIIOIIN I L. l. ITEVINION i Dlnfrlef llnnnleu I40 Blrhnmnd It. \-a “ . . . llie Bank Pledge way is so Simple ” 1st Woman: “I was just saying to Mr. Brown, the bnnlri manager—l1ow convenient it is buying War Savings Certificate: through the Bank Pledge Plan.” 2nd Woman: “You "mean arranging with your hank to lake out a regular amount each mouth from your account to buy a War Saving: Certificate?" Isf Woman: “Yea, by buying them regularly this way ifs so easy, and before you know it, you’vo got a tidy sum saved up." 2nd Woman: "I agree-and you know it's the best way for women like you and me to help win the war." Isl Womcin: “Yes-and with children growing up it's n good idea to be putting something aside anyway." The help n] ovary Canadian l: Mailed fbr Victory. In than day) o] wor the thoughtless aelfish spender i: o traitor lo our war effort. A reduction In personal spending is now o viml necessity to ra- lieve the pressure fbr goods, to enable more and more labour and materials to be diverted 1o winning the war. Tho all-out effort, which Canada muu make. demand: this self-denial of each ol in. SPEND LESS- T0 BUY MUiRE WAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES -- -- - ~ i HEALTH EDUCATION MONTREAL. Que. —(CP1—Ml5-! "Phoebe Hiimllton has taken ovei new duties as director of the health education department of Montreali Y.W.C.A. Miss Hamilton was born 1n Victoria. 11.0.. and Ls a stadium of the Margaret Eaton School 0f T: nits"- "Tl-IUNDERER" ‘i i“ i" i The London Times was the first newspaper to be printed by swam instead of by manual labor. LAST LOTTERY The 19kt state lotterv ln Eng- bmflmio. l They say my verse ls sad: no won- der; Ito narrow measure spam Tear: of eternity, and sorrow, , Not. mtne, but man's. This Ls for all ill-treated fellows Unborn and unbegot. For them to read when the're trouble I am not. -.A. I. Houseman. WHO BROUGHT THIS UP ln Generous folk axe following a new Idea of tipping wlth war sav- tnl ltuzipn. Gassy stomachs Relieved l Every lwrlon who l: troub- led wlth u: ulna. IOIII‘ atom- nch and heartburn should try a bottle of “Dr. Evan: stoni- lch Mixture‘ and nee now qulckly It will relieve all du~ inning qmptonu. Dr. lnn: Stomach Minor: taken at ma] tlmeo. not on]! prevent. lllll effect: from n: ut It promote: the function- al notlvltv of the stomach. u- llato dlgeatlon and Improve! the appetite. Price 850 new bottle. HOLLYWOOD‘! TBU - COLOR LIPSTICK I AMAZING IIATUIIS l. l. I. C. nleunliuteu “Ilultfek ‘than’ Prlu 15o d afMnhctoi- EOII BACK f If no II have one of tho but reinodleu to oflar. namely BACK - IlTI TABLETS | ..-'1":'.1."i.:."'::'.':..i:'::r. which ordinary OIII! treatment: fall to reach. l0 unto not box. THE N0 MACS l0 Great mom nan ' mu Orlen Given Prompt I Attention. land took place Oct. 1a. 102s. in Pnvilcal Eduwtivn- Cooper's Hall, Besitighall Street. mi‘ London. Mlnnrd’: kllls paln. ' FRQM "L55T POEMS" noaooo-ooooocovooo ~~~e v ““ ‘¢‘ ‘“*" Say to Your Grocer I Want BHAHMIH ORANGE PEKOE TEA You will enjoy its fllfleflim’ quality A POINTER Islanders do not need pointers about out. product. They know all about lt and continue to give it. their preferenlcg._p___lwhen they go to their neighborhood store they usually iislrfor HICKEY’S . BLACK TWIST 10c PER FIG - ‘HMANUFACTURED av HIBKEY 8t NICHOLSON Tobacco Gummy Ltd Charlottetown L-