i ‘ i l l l . P. or nova Z;____. _ .\. .i rzis clilultiilrttewu 001111111111 (Founded tn 1881] Hull-wit; 11.11’- 1-,..l ;,-,i1 ii, ,r (..1. 1t (‘llfialtl S. ncLuro bill 1'1. .-.(‘l|l.J j ft. Burnett, l-JJ. nevi-truly 1...-l.t till U A Muclilnuou. 0.5.0. “it... ,1t‘-. t: 11.1w- ,; UHtUfUK .I u. Burnett. FJJ. Ass-hint, 5, ,1.ii.. l-lallk Hauler and Inn A Bllfllfl-l .‘\t.‘-l‘ lilil’lilll,\ RATES 1.1.1! pr: H541; $15.50 fur ti months : h 1-1111», 50c for one month . .il. ;,t| yuan‘; s34“) lul ti muutnl ,. HMIWLHB, 60o Inr one Munlh. By 31.111 1o l.l.l~.-i 1' ‘flilllflla and U. s. A. $5.00 per yen §Jl‘4nl_t_ .\l . l u- 11-1’ itazr; $1.00 fur b‘ munl-hl. S-t- for J mouths flan Ulllrfl .1111 may no obtulned at , |l1l\'l aquure, new Yurlu 01¢ 5mm: _\I‘\\H \ , (‘llrln-r 111th unit Wlnhfngton. "In-furl; 1l.-l. .i;. Ai-m. Air-wiry, 1241f Pool UL. Mllllll-‘Jl, 1 . .. ‘.1 n.1,. sL, Tllflblll-ll; New: fluid. (‘hurl-iii .1 1 lllllltlt; “llllr-‘g \o-\vn Gland. Piualhury Ont; 11i..- --:..._., Mlnnvlun N. ll.| ' flulutlllg ~ w .5'.'.~t=i.;i-. Weaker than the We: "est Ink.” 1.. : liz-firiu-ltlt. 2a, 1942. Enlpii. \tiutl1 Movemenl This weer, ly-zti, has been set apart {or gelt-bi-alrlilz- lll connection with St. George's Day and illl‘ llpirl- Youth Movement. AS mired in t; ilifs Gnliriiiiiit, arrangements are being iimlli- 111' .1 parade on Sunday after- 110011 of Liharlottetown l0 _Zl0l'l (ftiiircl, _ wlnYs llnsilica respectively, where V <~ .l rvicrs will be held. Sinlilar delnrnn. l"? being held throughout the Emillrl‘ Th? l», ‘youth Slovcineitt took con- (yflg f. i’: :"ti.~ of tlle Coronation in re of enthusiastic H137. 1~. i i 1' v lot-stir» ' n-l Yttllllg people from all IVA,“ ,l in London, and in icvr-i-a! iii i ~ ~ -¢ . in Royal Albert Hall, :: ~ -- ~ “er alibi-y, Westminster (Tnitrlifl, ' ~ ‘ ii- t? Synagogue, mani- fested 1' . l"'1llC1'5l1il) in the pllr- siiii .~.,-' "j, <i' l iliwlls. .»\s olle means to that e111‘. '7 \\ , l M1 there should be st! lpafr 0H9 year in which, from m4 a.) --.~ ~ * l , and in every com- rritlilizin if-r '! .- iuitilirge and the respon- sibilitv rt l "it he pressed home. The tragerty of "- -. "i1 U?!" has served to under- line the " f. l'.‘l‘. a Crusade of Youth- ], g, i, ' - 1- no city, town or com- tnllnitv ibi- a will let slip this op- portilzlni l 11in to the ideals for which tb- l-‘iiil-i- Youth Rlovement stands. ~ ,,.',1, QlVHV a personal interest F V’ tlrlrlottcloivn next Surl- ‘ the kivdleil idealism of essential tn the cofl- virin democracy. A. l‘. l‘. Ell iiritish Columbia -: 2i.<‘\' are not wailing for the iir i-ven the Provincial s. to finance air raid pre- 1 ‘\'lil"('ll5 A. R. P. trust ftlnd l, ziiid it is being supported a ll-i. weaker sex. The \\.i:iii*il zlllrl other woulelfs int; a llousc-to-house can- .-\ lllllllljillltl women canvassers i, uuth the object of raising $451‘ wing mite 011 the cattlpaign is sup- Iizin .\lc.\laster, head of the , 1i, “tin reports “that Miss Rae Gillispic, a retired school teacher from Prince Edward island, who is here for a holiday, vol- urlteered to ralivzlss for a wcek, bllt became so enthusia ic tl-lll sh: i-xieiiilctl her holiday and is now worl l; {or the third week." Prince Ed- ward Islanders are evcryivllere, and always 0n the job. No reason why we can't qualify in thil Province as the most progressive A. R. P. community in (faliada, \\'e may well take to heart what .\lrs- l7. j. Rolstoile, I\I.L.A., told a. Vancouvtr azlllzi-llcc of ivonlcn: “If all of us- nnd especially mothers with children —had a cleareridca of what may befall us, the $225,000 (w111 Vancouver objective) would be sub- scribed overnight. 'l‘l1ere is no reason why Van- couver should lrlve any God-given immunity from the fate of other cities." No reason, ex- cept in our facile imaginations, why Prince Ed- ward Island should have any such immunity dither. Faith And Democracy A British journalist went all through the Lon- don "blitzkrieg." and subsequently visited the louth-cast coast, i-cllere it was still possible to see and hear llie 5.‘ . ' attclnpts to blast the white flu-re he met a young sergeant, rock: of Dover. with a decoration on hi: breast, who had ex- perienced t! .- bnr-rirs of Dunkirk and was able to give f-'r=t bzind (li-scription of how the Brit- ish .~\ri1ij.', _> .'|"itl .-\ir Force were able to handle tile "b2 'll'l leasts," who had over-run France, and iilxilr.ircly' to escape, u if by mir- acle, to the liomclsllml. llere are a few pregnant extracts: "I still think l\"ll’ an obscene outrage on the intelligence. lliii this challenge by the Nazis is ultimate, ll 111/ v llJlYC their way, then there will be no right lir v. - '11:. iicithcr good nor evil." “Slni-“ri- i~ l lli». but the mind in chains is nnt, '11.» l, (vi fllt" fnnuilaiion of Chris- tenilniii. .5 ' i ill lli- kl-pt on the British coast 0r will lwl li, I i\Ii'Y.‘.' tliiit llritish traditions and affairs may ii:r' l1 if ihis is resisted, but they will gill-c i "I h 1t '1~1 rtisistance 1'5 mflflfi. That is all ti. . l1" i. hi3." "\\‘iiliii 1"‘ l - i tviir<e than (lat-k. when llii: rlli- ~' " l ', lilfilllli‘ to downfall and cflnjkl‘: i'~,i--i i". 1r» \‘lll‘l'1' what confronts ii mav lii ... ‘qfiiritirili as any other of inn11rirt.1li . "l1 u» _ ‘l ‘w’ fight flir their lives. |l',,,< 1‘~_- - \' l‘ lWil l"t‘t>1l1l‘ :1 lesser mal- tvr, 11:1 t i" i.‘ ' i i" l1 fur f/il‘ lrfnxllr’? 0f /,'f,- l/lw 1- ~' ' l .'/,’, iii! for //I(‘l!1.\‘¢‘l'i'f‘.t. [f thr‘ ;--- ‘ "bl 12' ri- ti. be lost, as ,,,l,.,- u...» t ' :' '9 1.1ll\' lust, rr/lln/ qfliivhl I11‘ ,7 ,/ /li 1r 171' r rirr/i/trl/iri/l of I/lr mill/l, \‘1'i=l1 l ' 11i iillqi illiFlllllllllfl to Elude tlii: zlllIi l:~ ill w l lYvii Wind ivoultl be I‘ driven by the engines of power and pridfi. 11"" death already had come, the adventure of mind under the stars would be at an end." "Despite all doubts, and despite the dismay- ing certainty that our enemy is such that he U\‘C1'\\'l1L‘llll8d the formidable army of Iirauce ln f2 days, we have found that we must continue to live by faith and works. We British still be- lieve that there were no better soldiers ill Europe than the French. Then how befcll their tragedy? [Fail/t hull lrft I/lcnl, and they were urmrnlcd. For us there was Dunkirk. Though the ‘encir- clement with fire and steel’ of the British army was triumphantly announced, what was imposs- ible was accomplished. Dunkirk, as a sort of mir- ltclc, stayed us." "Faith is but knowledge surpassed, Well, we have some knowledge on which to support our faith. Enough has happened at sea to_tell us that what Englishmen used to do with ships canstlll be done by our seamen. It is ‘as lf our mariners have never lost the abrupt disconcerting wlt of youth. Perhaps freedom, salt, and sunlight are preservative. We have also learned that _ the kind of men who long ago drove the Spanlflfdi "P" Channel, have taken their lively devices to the clouds, and spend day and night crtnslng the sky between our land and Germany. , “Democracy is not old and W0fl1- NW" 5°‘ lieve it. It in still in its earl)’ 5t§8¢- I)‘ "ch i" adventure as this it shows its JUYFHHC adapt- ability, sprightliness, and temerlty. _ _ _ It is for us to prove that the Democratl}? 5W“: prevails here as in the Motherland, by 5.1V"!!! W)’ Democratic government the authority it says 1t needs to keep the Democratic flag flying after the 27th of this month- .-. EDITORIAL Note? - Flags should be flown today. iv io- v v Tim Legion has undertaltcil to look after the Plebiscite vote in the City. They ltzlve had prac- tical experience of war and its needs, and should have a personal interest in rousing the electorate to their patriotic duty. a 4- n- in- Bitter complaints are being tirade by rcsltlelllfi in Euston, Hillsboro and Grafton streets about the smokc nuisance which prevents them open- ing their windows 0r drying their clothes out Oi (100.3 Can't the City Council do something t0 remedy the nuisance? n- it- u Mr- J. D. Lorimer, chemicals controller in the Munitions and Supply Department, announces in Ottawa that Canadian (listillcrs have agreed to use wheat as the base for their product, a move alm- ed at relieving the current molasses shortage. It i: estimated officially that between 2,000,000 and 3,000,000 bushels of wheat will be uecdcd annu- allv to meet the distillers’ needs. ' iv n- u- a Bicycles to be rationed next? 'l"l1e_n1ul1ltlol1s and supply department announces appointment of I. bicycle advisory committee to cq-OPEYMQ mil‘ Supplies Controller Alan H. \Villlamson_m cori- nection with control of bicycles and their place in the Canadian war program- ». it >1- v >11 Saint George’s Day. The Saint of the dragon is the tutelary saint of England, Portugal, and Aragon, also patron saint of chivalry in Europe in ntcdiaeval times; reputed tii ltavc been born in Capatlocia in 303; rebuked Diocletian for lllS persecution of Christians; was arrested, tflrylitlf- ed, and killed at Nicomedia. The dragon tradition dates back to the 6th century. Ill l! Ill 1F A questionnaire has been forwarded to every operator of a truck or taxicab in the Dominion and every operator is expected to answer. the services administration of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board announces. Purpose of the questionnaire is to obtain an inventory of all trucking and taxicab equipment in the Domin- ion. c u u a- Commercial production of sand and gravel lfl Canada during 1940 totalled 31,375,415 short tong valued at $11,759,245 compared with 31,- 294,341 at $11,241,102 in 1939. Of the total output in 1940, there were 21,465,961 tons used for concrete, roads, etc., and 3,834,904 tons as railway ballast In addition there were produced 1,961,604 tons of sand for building, etc. n- u ii- u United States imports of maple products from Canada usually average about 25 per cent of the domestic United States production. Prices being offered to farmers for maple syrup are higher than those prevailing during the past few years- A premium of two cents per pound was offered for the early auppliee. Wholesale quotations have not been released u yet but, in view of the higher field price: as well as an expected heavy demand for maple products, there is no doubt that these prices will be increased. I Imports into Argentina from Canada of com- modities other than newsprint and farm imple- ments were more than double the value for I940. Seed potato shipments however, were valued at $122,512 as compared with $261,325 in 1940 and $619.27; in 1939. Apart from newsprint Douglas fir lumber, kraft paper, asbestos fibre, calcium carbide, and furl accounted for the principal increases in Canada's sales to Argen- tina. in 194x. These increases were achieved despite the continued severe restrictions in Argentina against the importation of any com- modity not considered essential and the export control measures in effect in Canada to con- serve needed war materials. a u- s n- Preliminnry figures released by the Domin- ion Bureau 0f Statistics show that the male population of the Dominion in 1941 was 5,- 826,022 as compared with 5,374,541 in r931, and the female population 5,594,062 a; com- Paml ‘Yilh 5.002.245. The increase in the male population was 451,381 or 8.4 per cent during the 1o year period and the gain in the female lmfllllalfml 591-317 or 11.8 pcr ccnt. The total population on June 1, I941, was 11,420,084 a5 rolnparcd \v1tl1 10,_‘17(i_;86 in 1931. The above returns arc subject to alteration (m liq-gum of the closed dwellings, fllfifnfpp 1,O,,§¢1,o|d5 and inclnbiuis of the arlncil forces not (“mun-raged (It 111611‘ 1I\'ll-'1l place nf residence. The additions to be ullulc will probably increase the propqy. tlon of lllilltS to females. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN uunzs av r111: w111 There Ira few clvflhn dentlstl 1e! i. ln Germany and toothame has beocmc a, common torture. About all that Hitler has brought, n1: 0- plo, however, 1.: pain 1n one orm or another. -Ham11wn Spectator. Notwlthsllandfng the III, then ts still a. good demand for fur coats 1n Australia. Inn-ports have been cut drastically and substitute-s for expensive furs from other coun- tries will have to be‘ found u» meet gtlady‘; wishes. m Queensland coastal creeks. Australian fur coats made from the pelt. of water rate, or musquash as they also are kmwn. are being retalled gt Q) or '10 gutneas, Before the war aimltnr coats were imported from Canada and WBYE sold at 40 to 50 pounds. —Austra11an Press Unloa. Army wives are pin: to follow their men around, as they have a perfect. right to do. It 1| their tn- dtvldual right and nobody want: to take away the privilege But, collectively, t-helr moving about 1a creating an economic problem Perhaps the over-crowding of the cities adjacent to training centres w111 brinp lts own solution. The ladies wll zieallz» the benefits of living tn the vfllagu ant! rural towns and g0 back of their own ac- cord. That 1s always a. nice way for a wonlan to go. -- Vancouver Sun. 0f’ l5 to officers 1n the Brlt- Lvh Army, eneral Ritchie, com- mander in Lybia, is youngest at 44. Sir Henry Maitland Wilson, com- manding the Ninth Anny, ls the oldest at 60 Twenti-tiwo officers who were coloneis when the war began are now major generals Russia's supreme ccmmander, Marshal Tlmoschenko, Ls 4'7 and most of the other Russian generals are tn their forties or early fifties. General Rommel, 51. ls the yflung- est of German senior generals and their average age is 59 ccmnared with the Brllislt average of 52. — Vancouver 51m, A batch of service revolvers made by mass production methods 1n Australia was teéfid tn Sydney WCPHU)‘. Based on the Enfleld six- chambcl type of weapon, firing 38m ammunition, the revolvers are made entirely of Australian materials After firing one of the revolvers at the proof range at- tached to the Sydney factory where they are made, Sir Philip Gold- finch, chairman or the N S W. Area Board of Management, Mm- tstry of Munitions, congratulated the management and workers. One of the visitors ‘described the pm- dwlwruof the revolvers as "a masterpzece of Improvisation.” He said that the factorv staff, unable to obtain the hutldieds of lathes, macllme tools, fixtures and gauges required had ntade them them- ieltijcs. The cost. 1s half that of 53mm" Weapons tn England. - Australian Press Unimi, It 1s clear that, whether or not any radical mcdificafion is found be necessary lrl the structure imd Qlltanlzatlon of our fighting Crces. we canot afford any longer to continue acting on the assump- glon that sea-pc-wer _is a math-r m; 111m alcrle. m which air forces may sometimes intervene if they ca" 513""! from other duties. It ma}, be that the bggt anmdous to the disasters that have sprung frvcnp the, perhaps unconscious, PKlPD-zon of this theory 1s to be found in some system ct’ rmalgama- ticn or lF-Jns-fcl‘ 1t mav l» that llnprcvrri intlcr-Srrvice collabora- tlcn can do all that ls necessary B!" ll i5 quite clsar that we have 80h to learn. and to pill, into OPI-Irfltifln. a lesson which the Jap- anese tialve clearly teamed already, ifkfurlfiber disasters rmc not to oval- Y‘ -°- -— '98!‘ Admiral H G Tlnirsf-‘cllrl ‘n T19 ,11 " _ View (Landau). 1 N1 anal Re In addltlnn t I. , _ farlcus dutlcs uiiblclllle biiliilfs mlliliitvie undertaken in ccnncctfcn with fh-f‘ war effort. we hav" rccsllllv agreed flffcfale an entirely new servjcq- of a srmctvhal novel character .. _ 119d to brill! into operation wlll greatly and r {the tmnsfer of (clothing : d °°~Wearl coupons tserween f8 ers by reducing to a mmimum the lrkscme labour cf counting and recounting the cautions and by obviating disputes and claims for °°11P0ns lost, stolen, or destm ed 51110:?) 6011mm themselves (about h, l°°°l000 a Year) w111, tn mt. g D585 "Om the retailer to his p! er and thereafter w111 be re. D-aced by certified transfer orders, The banks Will operate for every trader affected by the Order a up. umte account 1n which the cur- "mw Wm n” b0 Poundt. silllllngl "Id pence. but clothlnq coupqm, g Hard hardly say that no over. Y“ 5 °n m“? 081111011 accounts W be permitted. - ‘Ihe Royal Bank of Canada Monthly Lethe W0 ____ I men no not to b I the I-Imne 01mm. Th1: tau 511?.‘ Pet-BY! 10F W81"! answer to a mem- orial from the Home Counties that women should be Qnrgllgd w de_ "m1 "115 wlmtnv. But the crea- tton of women's volunteer unit; _ Wflys to defend their homes — are Increasing weekly. There are now 5° 0f them. and some of them Kenslngton for instance, have mm-é Tnflms thin they can cope with. A new unlt has come tnto being at to l 1111i Pm roi- drill and rifle practice, 11a m KtrLs w111 have Canadian ride; m; akllled instructors. _ car-dug 500th Wales News. ___... The Assochted Preli In author- lty for the report from New York that the beauttclam (lovely word, Isn't. 1t?) are going to stop "W"! flbflllt just "a blonde.‘ The benuttclam (the also call themselves coemetiol ) m fl“; ti? 13bit?" u“ 0n ¢. 1'8 d onde, Rare Lit-Ian Blonde 0r Brilliant. Bel“ Blonde." This is all very well, but M10 are the beautlctlula to m up nrbitnrv new claimants? when does the tradlttonnl Strawberry toua new terminology? - Vancouv- er Sun. -_-.___ If Wllllun Randolph Band wishes to tour this country, he hoprs to grind more than one axe en route, we suspect And we have no rlght to expcaie the Allied cause to the damage that he la quite moablc o! dotnl 1t. dlrectly WORDS OF CHALLENGF . Id 1i d h d_ 1 lu$‘i2'¢»"£€§§ “"211. 1m‘ .mnnn.......,..-.......mm-m-.... World’; Debt T,o Britain (Detroit Pres Pres) The RAYS raid on the lndustrlnl suburbs of Paris Tuesday mint was nottce that the British Government intends to treat France, ham now on, u an enemy. The British know thelr Europe. Separated from the ‘Continent by only 20 miles of water, they cant take any chances with the Nazis and their collaborators. They have . r ’ y decided ttie nlme has come to treat French war slants u they dld the French warships at Oran - as legitimate objects of destruction. With that. decision Americana cannot disagree. The troops we are now pourfn Into the British Isles tndtcate t Importance that Washington places on giving Hftler * Polls open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., D "' m *5 nowr Fall "r0 v01‘: Nul propaganda has null that Democracy l: u fallen, bug bqmguuey can work. MAKE IT WORK by voting cl lho Ploblsello. ON APRIL 27th Your direct answer 1: wanted on the question: "An you In favour ol releasing I110 Government lrom any obligation arising out o! any pull eommlimenh mfrlch lng the method: of valslng men for military service?! Then ls ample limo lo vole on this question; Daylight Saving Tlme something to thlnk about m West- ern Europe, while the Rtmatuls are pressing 1.11m 1n the east. The fulcrum: from wlllch the Nazls and the Japanese w111 be topped to defeat w111 be found In Brltaln and the BrltLsh Empire. dfgnltly The debt clvlllzatlon one; the British people Ls worth mnlember- Brttlsh lng 1n these crltlcnl days. that Hitler dominated 1t? “Pen the Japs approached Pen- Gladstone s9. am: their planes dropped leaflets War on China, a century ago, urging lts Malay Dflpulatxon to join smelled to heaven. Yet greed and tr While this has zreatlv profiled W! rave attacked then. We should have tn through three centuries of emplre- were, with the war in two 008mm We still hear people complain building a fine sense of the respon- whm, we are no geveflsmy prepay- that our British friends "dominate" siblllty of advanced nations to back- m; to see ghroiigt l! quarterior the globe, as l.‘ that ward peoples. There have been blavk The 18 months resplte thus gain- We" a CY-me- w111-lid the)’ PM!" SPOF-S- The B06? WM‘ was deeply ed. we owe to the character and German has sent the Mayor regretted byd most Englishmen. courage of the Brltlsh peoples. who Lambeth the equlvialent of $10111 fund n40 authority DIN. d Ilu Said! q! Stall. 01love p] stood like a rock 1n sla very. of man. it had fallen, too. Japan would Apnerlcans should never 1i; a .- 151“. "W" "B5 8M1" been confronted, unprepared as we INTERNEITS M|TE LONDON — (CP) - An tnten that the Opium would rattler dte free than ltve 1n Warship week fun . them tn throwing oft‘ the "wnlte ruthlessness have been the excep- n1an’s yoke." Are these tieoulo tinp- tlon. pter tcday at the hands )1 tlze Jap- The Dutch East Indies, M11111 anese invader than they were under Britons are now fighting to save - the rule of their British s-Jzeraln? Americans should not full 1nto the of the error of overslmolifylnlg the pro- seized. blem of India The Hindu majority ary armies overrun tn tPat subcontinent demands tn- were r dependence within the emplrl as been put away. to lflfilt‘ rlglltfu‘ the price of all-cut. wai- effort. A owner. strong MosLem minority fears ally canard Increase 1n Hindu power. Churchilrs given up a piece of land over which posltlon has always been tha: the their f Indlun leaders must, agree among themselves before they can be safe- We, lv entrusted with a larger measule tildsbted to Brltzlln for our beflnn- V ' ings to listen now to misrepresenta- Would either Western civilization tlons of her motives or political of self-government. or the welfare of India's teeming ethl and varled millions be promoted by for The Netherlands, were once part W? are equallv indebted to her for Brltlsh Empire, ‘They were when the French Revolvton- Holland, 2M eturned, aft-er Qhpoleon had LOBSTER‘ FISHING SUPPLIES That ls the answer to the that Ic British have never lag has once flown. O U I O as a Nation, are too deeply giving India independence, with a manning and holding the bastion __,§_$:.-___ ruthless and powerful enemy al- which randy 1n possession of lts backdoor.‘ ward domination of the We=tern The British Empire has been said world to be the result of accldents ra Per Afte than of foresight. Certainly 1t was r ' fashioned from a Hitler an blue- print of world domlnatton, although Chatham did have an 1de.1 of planting colonies of Engltsnmen around the world whtir would furn. 1'11 English factories wlth raw ma- terials tn peace and England with fllzhtlnz men 1n war. The way Canada, Australia. New Zealnnd and 301111 Africa have ral- lied to the defense of Brltatn 1n tmes of peril 1s the frult of that. idea Also 1t 15 a tribute to B"'l'sth character and genius for expansion. - When men fight to the cleatn at Hongkong or 1n the juarzles of Miliflya for a country tlhev have never seen and to which they are bound only by racial and senti- mental ties. that ronlfrl has some- thing worlh 11:1 tlnz for. T119 British FAIIPlPC has been the greatest factor 1n spreading mvtilz- atlun trat. history can show, Wherever the Union Jack has been planted there has emeged law and order. The primary objective has been trade. Among the by-pnoducts has been a limit?" conception of the IDD “n! SCI FROM: TIMES G0 B!‘ TURNS The sea of Fortune does not, ever OW, um She ma. .. her favors to the lowest. cob, Her tJAC-r have equal times to come "m" n a so. Her loom uuth weave the fine and coarsest web; No joy o.) great nut runneth to an en No nap so hard but. may 1n fine amend. Not always n11 of leaf. nor ever I . No enuless nlgbt, yet not eternal ay' The salculst birds a season flnd to s n g» n“ ’°"““9,ffi film“ ‘ “l” m” amlanucrlunumlunutu All! YOU TRDUBLID WITH soon a . Thu, wtth succeeding tuna, God , peretb a , 1-1 nut. man may hope to r109. yet fen: to fall. —Robert*svog_t_hwell. ________________ _.. lndlrectl , m: pmipoud iibtt. No, hi: Rough ‘viii are 50:; . oust, tin: too 01d {or the fatigue; travel and we Dlnldlum 1.1-9 m busy helnincb to defend Democ- fall i If: We are now receiving u reg alxhnpply of the followup 0L1) IYDNIT BUIIIINZJD ALBION IDUND ALBION NUT IA YVIIW QOIIINID O of pl-anoeu. I70 on-emfidlv with tub and shower. 1m I aoociulfv. Ind wrvioe of metropolitan aundnrd. Hotel and railway elation Inbrlna taxi and baggage SORE BACK ‘P If lo, we have fine of 0,1,0 d! to r me - “lllfishm-‘lv infill-is A remedy for W“! Iihe Lumblgo. Nenrltll, Joint Muscular and i other form! of Bheumllam which ordinary treatments MACS‘ mm ‘£813.21... A delicately perfumed ure- puntlon vvhfc mural. mailman and heuutlflu the lfwm mum ore: Ihlr I» Promotion a new and super- for growth when the holl- l: hlllng and 1| remarkably une- A very affocflyo-mmdopgnnh: the dlgatlvo h dad checked Hitler's onrush tic- in the dork day= of 1'11", _ r France fell, Great Britain Babbit Nail! Battery Cable ,, Battery Clips _ Battery Connectors P1119 Old Cans, Machine Oil Cans, 5 (tallon and Batteries, Storage Hi9" _ No.6 m-v Cells, Bat- Popket Kfltv" teries P71111913? W1" Brass Fittings Butcher Knives secondary wit. Alann Clocks ggfgzrlm“ ‘I - k - iigili-jtiiiiit splrk Plughinamh a weave" Ghampton) . Guns Priming Copper Tubing NOVA SCOTIAN l HA |F _ _ _ Ertqin P ckin L AX N s Elbow: a g 1 Fan” When ‘tn Halifax unv- n the F B It “N Q n. 0d .r an B. 8 - filiei-iiviiooieiiliiii-iiir: “T... in: Faucets Unmm’ etc‘ latest tire Drnterflve nc- Fla-x Packing Wrench-es. 59?»! “d Stilsons ninted meal meme. all Hatchets & Hammers Hose 3-4" 8t 5 8" We sell lobster supplies wholesale and retail. Manv lines are difllcult to procure. Mel-cli- ants, Fishermen and Packers would be well advu- ed to get supplies now. Phones 105-1308 uruasneo iruiamr serving fondl- of [In urnvinoo u normed by nriuufe. elim- BIIRIIQI- T. Rate: from 84.00 per day. Ask any (LN. R. Aqmtt yor booklet or write: Man- apcr, The Nova Scotlun, Haltlaz.‘ 111.8. The RUGEBS HARDWARE 0011mm 1.1mm: LUMBAGO on rlnary Troublel. to roach. Prlcc 80 oeuu box. orlllnll color. m nmentlu $11311] Ml Sea-Power“ Will Win And 1n Its modest field our tobacco has 111""? wins to its credit. Every Island community h" its quota of people who use IVAN! STOMACI MIXTURE organs, vvhlch 31"‘??- "ih? ?-=-"3~'*"~="-"=?-“-"1li Hicke ' Black Twist INVIINIII QCIEINID laiwhabflfllalllhl for In- y 8 from» and careful dellv erlu for 0 0. D. order:- etc 114.11. c1111; a ca. Phone 176. Ml T o III! Stomach an‘. ll stomach tumbles. Mall Order: Given Prompt - Attention. MANUFACTURED BY HICKEY Er NICHOLSON Tobacco 0o. ltltltillarlottetown l! cent: not Clo. PE TWO MAGS Ill Great George Street