visceral!“ TllE A ciuintonrrowu GUARDIAN Mvrnln: mu; (Founded In tan-n President: Lleut. Col. W. Chester B. McLnn Vlco-Prelldent: .I. ll. Burnett, l‘. .I. I. Mercury: Lleul. Col. D. A. Maelilnnon. 0.8.0. ltlltor and Managing Director: .I. B. Burnett. IJJ. Associate Editors: I-‘rank Walker and Lleut. Ian A. Burnett. R.C.N.V.R. (On Aellve Service) ‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER zoftim The Soaring War Debt The national debt with which we shall come out of this war would have crushed the Catt- ada of I919. But the country has grown in economic and financial strength, and the weight of the neiv war debt will depend on the further increase of that growth. The country is not go- ing bankrupt and there is no reason for any pessimism, iii the opinil of the Financial Port, but it well sa_vs: "The real test is whether or not ivc pursue policies that will actually stimulate production and maintain or euhririvc the national income; glso, in g ‘If httportzin: degree, on what liap- pens in the rest of the ivrirlil." lixactly the same lio‘d. for the solution of the employment problem, lt depends on the factors that would also ease the ilcbt-burdcn“ increased proluction from our resources and close economic (‘H-“lWYZPllilI l":'.\\'(".‘ll the nat- ions. The nation-it (lcbt lll\‘l't‘I‘.~L‘(l from $3,151,559,- ooo at March gist, iogo. to 98.841.270.000 on March 31st la-r, and i: is .~‘.ill growing apzice. Our per capita net ihlit liris iuinpeil from $27.‘; in March, logo, in 37,1; ~11 .\l:u'cIi 3i, i944, Ind it is estimated at $1M“ on .\larch 31st next. That might be a Flllllltf but for the enor- mous capacity for I uction which Canada has tlevcloped. [larticu v during the \\'1ll' years, and for the fact t die countiy is full oi the resources ivhich the t of the wn-rlil needs. Mal-re Them D0 It i __;u says an i- tween tiiiliiar_v c -n1rol i: emu the crnnient 0t (iCl'lll.'lll' "ind liic imni purging, p:icif_\.ii_;; policing tiic Nazi fain- atics operating as gi l"illll;l or as an under- ground. \\'e tniist finil v. ll induce and coin- pel Lieriuaus to bear the brunt of the dirty work of moppziitg tip the Nazi system. \\'e must not blundci- into a situation where either wc have to tlo the ivhole job or ilie jolt is not done, while the iiiass i liquiiuii people sit by passively, |ii'oi~.~;i.ll . il {til by our cicctiyiyiiig troops, and ivai: to .-.t- whether" or not ilicrc is a future for-.\'azis:ii and Paii-(i "inauisni. / ' its of .\llied s» sciserc that there us to plirv a part in ..'. lZi'lll\'l.‘lIlCll[ could which was so fntractivc is, like those of the ' iiizisszicrcrl b_\' . which will t ClilllC front pat- \\'hen and if with sortie tli<-_v have will have ‘begun "v will begin thc 4 -. we offer the t; that they wouiil ta lllhl. in lir: the ticsizili’)? ll! a riotism and the live nf _v. GCfllIEllli fight for lieri an lzbt tv yazt of the fana gi-‘n \'.'l[ll \\...i fought to fllhlrlh‘ nth-rs. ll‘ t1 rarn their fiwe-liiii. (i'l’l _ r." tozuation, in the o:il_. \‘.Jt\' iii vuh’ h it can be- 1'11 the nzztiozis. ilunless Iilockings. q '1'!) on scientific the inst-tings of the is more a lil'l“lll new world of th: lllilllvfoll» r EIiIlLWEIIIYJIlI [Jl'l)'lll(l"l b) rliineirirau (‘inflniqxl 5'.‘ frciglitrd \\l1ll pr» -i.t'e' than that tll\'ll.\~.2l'_' lllc lllllll of textile yarns wxtlt Syton, a comb lion of fortiizildc- hyde and tiielazniiie. llr. lliinzild ll. Powers, heal of the textile resizirch proqraiiimt- of the .\lou— santo Lihcniic-il (Knnpxirv, ihz‘ a hath n: this solution produces a c l reaction insid: the fibers, giving them a pla- c cox but not rc- ducing their iiatu-ral softness. Sticli yarns have been made into iron-era which will not wear shiny. suits tiia: do ii nuklr- when wet. wool- lcns which will ll it s. .i.ili and \‘.l'i'll' three times as long without cliaiguiiig the icel and texture of the cloth, stockings that \'.l‘l not rim. This lztst will draw the altviiiioii of the ladies. lt will be nice. they will agree t.» lravc the woollens which llr. Poi " d1 ‘l'll) uid to si-e the niez: arrayed in sliiiirs-pi-rtilf si. llut they ar: bound to hold that, at the present time, no other future blessing can hold 1 Glldlt t0 the promise of runlcss sto CWACK A ivarm tribute to the women of Canada's armed forces was paid by a columnist for the Krw York lhtilyv .\'.~ru.i", after a recent trip to Canada (luring which he spoke to many ironic-n in uniforms of khaki, navy and air force blue. “Unforgettable part of my trip up to Cau- lda," he says, "will cvcr be the rccollcctioti 0f the Canddiau girls we me: iii the (‘\\'.i\(."s (Cau- nflian \\"onicti's .\rniy Corps), the \Vl{l§-\'5. attached to tlic navy, and the \\il)'s (Women's Division of the Royal Canadian Air Force). They were right on the beam and their dis- cussions of what they \\'.".l'|lL‘(l in a post-war world made vOu realize that the world has mov- ed ahead at Iireakneck speed. Most of them have had poignant contact with the war. Typical: A Catiadian Women's Army (hrps captain hadn't heard for two rears from her husband in a Japanese prison ‘camp. (Quite a few of the girls have lost husbands or brothers at Dieppe. lint none of them cv" l'l'f.‘l‘l'l'll to her oivti tragedy. I've met iinpressivt- girls before. but these (‘an- adians measure up to tlu" finest. (Zinada has rat- ioned many things. but slu- li.'i.~.u't rationed the intelligence, the loyalty, the poise or the charm of her daughters." l ' ll Illl‘ '1'» a igs. EDITORIAL NOItb _ Goodwill Race Meeting today. . U i l U Old-time Exhibition weather this. i I 1C I ‘- ' The possibility is that the R. C. A. F. Train- ilg School will close here in December. a a a n _ Here is long wear for you. :\n English sol- dier charged at Woodstock, Eng, as an absentee ice said they were stolen from a museum. iv x n- i: There has been an nverhatiling of Bloc Populaire organization since the Quebec elec- tion. Dr. Pierre Gauthier lias resigned as org- anizer for the Quebec district, and Victor Trepanier, lawyer, publicl director, has tired from editing IJe Bloc. " w u a u For three hours last week military and civic officials of Montreal discussed the question of Montreal's record rate of V.D. incidence re- ported to have stood at 59 per 1,000 in army reports for the quarter ended June 30. The rate is six times higher than the 10 per 1,000 rate sought by the armed forces and is twice the average of the rate of cases iu other military dis- tricts. in n- :- “\\'e would like to think," says Olltniu Journal, “that Mr. Little's advice and exliorta- tioiis (to business and professional men to act- ively engage in politics) will not fall on lxlrreit S0ll—~lJIlt fear greatly that they will. l3usiness and professional men -— plus tnany others like to talk about ivliat should be doiie to make politics better, btit that, as a rule, i5 a; {gr a5 they‘ go ~— talk, plus linmilies at service club lunehcons and liigli-sotinditig resolutions by (hambers of Lioinnterce and Boards of Trade." I! vi a v ’1\lr. Upton Sinclair, B. .-\., American ptib- licist and author, borti this date 1878; tuistic- cessful candidate for (iongrcss as a $ocialist in .\'v\v York in 1900, and in California in 19.20; for U. S. Senate in 1922; and a5 a, Demugffll equally tuisuccessftil as a catididatc for the lioveriiorsliip of California in I926 and 1930. llis publications include: The Jilnglc, Tlw .1loneyclniligrr.r, King Coal, Jlrlnnnoniitarl, Oil, Yi/ic We! Pnrntlc, Candid Rentfnircriicrxr, 77m lVrly 011/, Bctzvrcn Th!) Worlds, Dragon’: Tee/ll, lVftlc ls The Gale. i 101 lt scents three locations were submitted to the powcrs-tltat-be for the .~\llicd conference. .\t the time that the conference was first sug- gested. and the Russian leader was invited to participate, (juclicc and two altcrn.'itivc nicel- f i! ing places were proposed. \\'licn it was learn- ed that Premier Stalin could not find time to leave Ritssia, it was agreed to return to Quebec, as being both stiiiable and convenient as well as ‘cable. Eli". $teplicn liarlv, \\'hitc llotisc p; . secretary’, who niailc this znuiotiuccnicnt declined to (lisclose the l‘ es of the ziltcrnzitivc stiggcstimis for the meeting. The President liked to keep that information “up his sleeve" for filt- ure llllSSlhlC use, he said. h‘ ‘+1 ' z- * Protests an‘ ist the rrceiitl_v-ztiiiiotiiieczl dc- cisioii to have active soldiers in Lilllllttlllla‘ army- remove from their sleeve the "U.S." badge once they have served 18 months aii(l then arc entitled to p11: on their breast the ribbon of thc Yoliintcci‘ Service .\lcd:d have borne fruit. .\nnr_iunccineiit from (ltlawzt states that the decision has been reversed and that licnccfoitli military person- nel entitled to wczii" bofh the badge and the rib- lrvn may now do so. The “(}.S." (general serv- ice) badge, on the lcft sleeve of the tunic. is worn by all army pcrsotniel who arc not offic- ers. lt signifies that the soldier has enlisted for service anywhere in the world; and now, after wide publicity campaigns bv the army itself. is the chief tin-alts by which the observer dis- tinguishes bctivccn an ZIClITC soldier and a zoni- _bic-—one called up for service but who is un- willing to join active ranks. .\s all army of- ficers are active, they do not wear the "U.S." ltarlgc. Ill i U O Anglican churches tnay now invite clergy- men from other denominations to preach, and Anglican ministers can now preach in non-Angli- can churches according to a motion carried at the final morning joint scssioti of the 27th Syllllll of the Ecclesiastical Province of Canada, 1' Church of linglaiirl. at Leunoxville, Que. Presented by Rt. Rev. (iewge Frederic-l: King- ston, Lord llisliop of Nova Scotia, and second- czl by Rev. (anon R. K. Naylor, of Montreal, the section will be added to (anon .\'ll, section 2 and will read as follows: “Provided, however, that, lll the case of special occasional services, a bishop may, at his discre- tion permit a clergyman to preach in a non- Auglican Church, or invite a non-.'\nglican iniii- ister, recommended as a friend of reunion to preach in an Anglican church; it being under- stood that such occasional services shall not conflict with the regular and accustomed serv- ices of the church in any parish." 1' I A l A green growth of tuberculosis germs, and ivhicli was discovered accidentally in an ice box at the University of Buffalo School of Medi- cine, was recently announced in Science“ Ant- crica's official scientific journal. The discovery parallels almost to the Dot l7leniing's discovery of penicillin in England in 1929. The green mold belongs to the penicillin group of fungi, but the stuff it produces that inhibits T.B. germs is not penicillin. Penicillin was a failure on T. B. The new green mold was found growing on a culture of titbcrculosis germs in the ice box. It was found to grow more luxuriantly mi T.B. germs than on any other kind of food ivhich the lluffalo experinieiitors tried. 'l'hat fact was so striking that they next tried the iiiolrl’s effects on tuberculosis germs given to guinea pigs, llnmzin tnbcrciilrfis germs, which cause 100 per cent tuberculosis and death in guinea pigs, were first inociihiterl with the green mold and alloived to stand in tubes for one or two was found wearing clothes I20 years old. Pol- t}, f8‘ h allots: By The Way Nllvlilrs a man mug b. stanfly on the alert remain unemployed. Examiner. u h ti W" 9 0P9} t Peterbordi THE CHARLKYITETOWN GUARDIAN ~ PUBLIC FORUM 1t h dllllollll for the ' demand how the Allies out and stlll take b stock Sentinel-Review. Never lcl. ls be said lhlt the Goy- erflmfint doesnt at. least try m get e r-uht man for the right 30b, The Canada. Yea: Book reveals, lor example. ma: the Dimmi- of Welshts and Measures ls E. 0. way, and the Deputy Minister of Fish- eries ls Dr. D. B. Hnn.—M0ntr98l Gazette. to cln fan uses-Wood. While cllen In France and Bel. Ilum, and the cou themselves, liberation, here is an- llberatlon ahead, which be more than welcome to a Brent many. It is thBt o! the boys who have been prisoners tn Gei-_ man hands. They may yet, be home for Christmas-St. Gather. Inca Standard. In victory the Nnzl leaders stole Works 9f art and curried them uft‘ to their cultured rococo palaces. In defeat their attitude seems to be that ff they cannot have them, then nobne shall. 'I‘hey tried to des roy clvllfzatton and failed. they may leave behind them In ruins some of civfllzatlozrs noblest relics arud monuments. Ruins, indeed, will be their only relic and their Only monument-New York Times. Ill-Sgt. Johnson, of Abilene, Texas, has wrltten home m i115 to be held ln Normandy. Mem- bers of the 90th Artillery Division obtained the permission of s. local French cattle owner, he said. "And between flrc missions. enemy aroll- lery and occasional visit; from the Luftwaffe, we sDOIISOYCd the dang- dcst shlndlg in rodeo history." Johnson reported the honors even- ly split between ‘cowboys’ from Idaho and Texas.—Unlted Press. The war hasn't brought prosper- ity to all classes of the commun- ity. Some of them are war poor. Chief among them are me salaried people and wage-earners ivhcse In- comes are frozen. They find the cost of living increased in spite of price controls and bonuses. In ad- dltlou they have their ‘ncome taxes to pay and their contributions to the Victory Loans to make. Many of them are right back to the penny pinching of the vrorst de- pression days-Country Guide. September 7 is Brazilian Inde- penclence Day. on that day in 1822, Prince Pedro of Portugal, who oe- Cllmc Brazil's first emperor, pro- claimed ln Sao Paulo ma. Brazil was freed from any tle with the mother cauntry. The Entplre sub- slstecl until 1883, when the R-z- public was fciuidccl. But YGMIITIIS with l‘ Aug-a] are so close that tn.- Prc t cf Portugal pmgl a vlsi to s. I on the centenary of In- dependence, ln 1522. On the other hand, the Imperial family Ives lzt Pctropolls, Rio d: Jancro Sta o, and Prineg Dom Juan i5 a pilot ill the Brtizaillnn Air Forccs-Brazillazl Information. It can truthfully he said of bolll ri "it and Canadian c-cnscrshlli during the prfsent war, that ihcrz‘ lmvc been very f:\v abuses of thy p’ "er; m; have the newspapers‘ vetiy oflcn been guilty of exceed n5: the Iibcrtics which remained to them. In Canada, censor-snip ad- mlnzstra ton 112s been particularly well carried out. Largely voluntary ln the nature of its lmpcsltoti, there has been a minimum of inter- ference nnrl there have been nhncsl: no serious lnfructtotis of the regu- a ions. But thcfac: that such can- trcls have in this ircz-iod been wise- ly admnistercd and moderately applied does not nican that their continuation atlzr the war can or will fcr a mo! cut be iolcratii- Regina Leader-P st) In many parts of London you will find, almost side by ‘side, the mansion and the slum. - A short. walk wll take You from a D1935" ant and elegant. quaimci" to s rests of dnapuatccl and cvercrbwicd houses; front prospzrlty ta poverty. The same is true of many other British cltlzs, and this bla ant contrasts has helped to Sf-ll‘ the pub- llc conscience against bad hous- lng, prior wages and soclal Inequal- ity- It is realized today tha. no city can be call-ed n fln: CH3‘, haw"- ever gay may be its principal shop- ping streets, however well kept its "select." rcsfclcntlal areas. While a vas; section of its Dvlllllaimn 15 ndden away ln dark novels and Dally airlcs- tenements-London Herald. Arthur Cormi-cr is B NYE" -- I strictly iviilun-tlic 111W vflfi- H3 earns his living by tnaklfijl Perle" eoples of other peoples signatures. During the past l5 years. Germ"?! hag forged bstirvcsn 4.0m: and 5,000 different, slgnatiircs. Most_ol ‘he time, the owners can't tell tiie copy front .113 original. The legal forget is a French-Canadian who came to the United States to study medicine. Before be left. Canada writing contests and won all of them. Once n the United States, he discovered that he didn't like the lden of being a doctor. He found a job ln a letter-wrltln shop when; h; wrobe non-lm tatlve signatures. Then he learned that he could copy almost anybodyi handwriting and that set hm nfl’ On his forging career. Now, wivlth a little practice, there lsnt B slqntiture he can't CODY- -~ Th“ Week. Americans are being oversold. There is too much talk. The con- stant dln of’ compeltlve rOPHBRIIdB seeking their attention s an over- ture for chaos. Lust. year ln one school system there were twenty- llve drives on the children, who dld not have tlme to learn reed- lni; and wrltlng. But. they War! 50d Into becoming llttle Amerl- can salesmen and saleswomen to o out and collect. The radlo ln-rel. the mall bring; It ln (ftslk about waste paper), and the mint 1, ma; tmtn we can get. back ‘to selllng radios, and Wflflhlflll ma" chlne and vacuum cleaner! and all the other sadtzvts. the B191"? sales talents of those not fighting L; belng expended on numerous promotions of vnrylns UWP 11$- We should all be a lot better off lf the Offle- of Defence Trans- portatlon allowed reservation to take nll the promoter away l0 the PROIIIBITION VS. GOVIIN. MENT SALE Shy-People of Prince Edward Island stand on the watch tower. In words that have become hls- torlc I challenge you. “Remember Pearl Harbour, remember Hang Kong." You know the way that; the Japs deceltfully and cunnlngly stole a. march on the Americans and Brftlsh, how they made the foul attack whlle making felt speeches and beautiful promises. In thls same subtle WHY Y0"! Il- Isnd home ls being attacked and threatened by liquor interests and the advocates of government, sale. notice I sald government sale, for there ls no such th'ng lri existence as government control of liquor. Onb/ those who have selfish Inter- ests and care not for the moral and spirltual welfare of the Garden of the ‘Gulf would clamor for the glv- lng of an open track for tlils mon- ster of death and destruction. ‘Be not deceived God ls not mock-rd whatsoever man soweth (and that also means Province) that Shall he also reap.” “Sow m the ivind mother dcscrblng the first rodeo 11' and you reap to the wlnfflvmi’ That Ls what happened tn Nova Seo- tla and the other provinces ivhere izovernmen’ sale was put lnto ef- fect. In Nova Scotln It was Cllll" ed "The Better Temperance Law’). Yes, lt was better but for whflm- the liquor interest and thvlr 55111" .es. Knowing the Island people as I do, having enioyed ten and hill» years among them I'm sure U1" they shall guard jealously m1 zealously the noble herltxitll? llll‘ has been handed dovm by men onu women of the past who had vision. wisdom and the fear of G611- I am, Slr. etfi. A Lover of Ynur Island lloni- ikev.) R. W. LINDSA‘ Mbrgaretvllle, N S. The CYOSS Through 90 Years (LieuL-Col. R. 5. W. _Fl\l'l|l13m- K. C., E. D., in the LPKIQYYJFSW I Perhaps no other (iCCOIEIlXIOII ever devised bv man llfls “filmed the prestige and SlgIIlllCLIllCe that mav be claimed for the Viciqrla Cross in the Etigllslt-spcakin? world. _ ls not such _‘ as I1’ aim-act attention. of British decorations. At the snipe "m9 ll 15 {he 911g most llI‘l7_CCl 1n the thlcc services. Its intrinsic Vflllif.‘ ls fllJ-“l nine cents only, cxclusir» of lli even smzillci‘ cost cf tli: I'll-I'd"!- Ncverthcless. “"1 i119 (71035 “l a Progressive Conservative Polls Meeting There Wm b, a meeting of all Progressive Conserva- tive Members of the Poll Committees of the under mont- ioned pd"! at Bradalbane Hall Friday night In Bradllbane September 22ml at 8 P. M. , ‘, SPRINGFIELD. KELLY’S CROSS iiiiizigtiibiiibli/Iii, NORTH onanvnaaz. soutru GRAN: VILLE, HOPE RIVER, WESTMORELAND and STAN- CIIEL. ' f i 1 p ' C ti e Candidates or 33Zl..f°<§'.°3i. J5‘i"i.°§‘.§¥§....°.“§f.fl?.ii‘i be time i» n» the Committees of these Polls. MAJOR T. B. ROGERS, President. J. A. McDONALD, K.C., Secretary. sZzo-ai SAINT JOHN, n. assumes-crown _ 7.00 A. M. 11.30 A. M. ° 6.00 4 P. M. (‘Mouton Olly) Progressive Conservative Polls Monti; . .- t‘ f ll th Progressive Conser- vativilchlvllbtiililebgeoi Itlheee lgoglloCrlimmilftees of the under- mentioned polls at Mt. Stewart Hall on Thursday evening in Mt. Stewart, September 21st at 8 P. M. ‘ '1‘, PIS UID, i TRACADIE, BEDFORD LITTLT] YORK and PLEASANT GROVE, Both Federal Progressive Conservative Calndgfitti to‘: Queens‘ County will be present and will be p ea 0 IIQO the Committees 0t’ these FONS- MAJOR T. B. ROGERS, President. J. A. McDONALD, K. C., Secretary. 9-20-2i E. R. Brow & Son Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness ll and Plate Class Insurance at Lowest Rate Summerside, D. O. Stewart Charlottetown Agent nt I44 Richmond St. m, Dleppc In August. 1942, and ls Japanese to facilitate an attack 0n now it prisciicr-oi-ivar in Ger- l Thailand, Malaya. and Burma. many. The CFOS: ziwaideit to tlie,Whcu the Japanese Immediately second Canadian recipient. waslbegan to swarm into Indo-Chlnfl, guzcttetl early in Mai-ch, 19-14. iintl l Vichy continued to talk claptrnp deceased veto was QATFY-"i l" sale bv anctlcii 1.1 Ettgland. in me twclttlcs, the tum finally mil 1°" l: by g collcctn \'i'.lS no lefis 111811 ‘ ‘ - 0rd. . At fciv he had entered a scrles of hand- to livery rs and no D iinciiish- . Officers could be ‘I i. companshlp In one or otnrtr of the several British Ocdcrs. but 01.1131‘ ranks ivho had dlsthrfufslicd them- EClV25 in l. ‘ cn‘~ bv Slllk. ‘e. llvl aulliorizcrl. to ltr. ei-i during the Crimean ‘i . It ivns for bravcq- v. .. the Crimea in 1854 that l. e llllllll awards ct” the Cross were math. The Vllarratit under which 1-11‘ new decoration Wllg Issued was thus given retroactive effect. ‘Ilia vary first, award‘ of the C1 .. “'85 made to an cflicci- of tlit Royal Navy for lJI‘."l\'(‘l'v ut tn Junc. 1854. During the attack on some land batteries a lire shell lantlad on the clock of ms ship. Tnstzinfiy he seized tt, while the HEB ivas burning. and hurled l: into the sca. The hero of this cfllsode was serving as a mate at the f-mc H1111 was prcitiotcd to Lieutenant on ‘.110 spot. The Vlztoriu Cross was awarded to lilm in February, 1857. The next awards of the Gross went to six soldiers who had dis- played great. courage at the Battle cf Alma ln the same Cilmflillf-ZII. By {handing firm when the British lines had l::eti penetrated by the enemy, and rallying the men round the colours. thcv saved what had threatened to become a disaster. A; all slx awards were "zavetted cm tlie same <1 February P4, 1857, none could n to be the flrst military reel ll.. Over I00 Crosses were piescntczl for net; of bravery observed dart"- lng the Crltncan War. The Indlun Mutiny, the Zulu War and the South African War broiicht Crosses 290 members of the armed forces. From 1856 tinLll 1920 there were nearlv 1.160 awards of the Victoria Grog; made. Nu fewer than 57B Crosses were earned dur- lng the war of 19-14-18. Canadians moelved 60 of them. Tumlng to the present war, a total of 95 Crosses had been gazetted bv Jllly 31. 1944. since the outbreak of hostllltles. Fourteen nave izonc to Australians. slx to New Zea- landers and four b0 memibes Canadian forces. One of the can. adftms“ won _tl1e prlzed oecoratlon Bend down. O wlntz of pull, O my of mist at sea Bkbe on the salt mist. drifting, rlg- ging of’ ships at anchor: Bend. slqv; ourgauyzlnasv water. Mil/y) the slow sweis be Em- race of love for ships. for rocks sweet lam; or. Lean, fishing l'l'l‘l.’.'ilS. to title rnvs- breast of rnln. Swing Kllillfi. in lovely. endless n ca mz. O sen. tliv gray means hope. not gr“'f al ' subtle and zqllnlcdl ti Vlt- lflfil ivcts ivcn ln Italy. The tnl:cl award y about receiving "solemn engage- to a Canadian was also for bravery . lllCllls concerning respect for In Italy. on May 24, 19M. The French sovereignty," also "tighten. fcurih Cross was earned post- fng the bonds of friendship" with liumouslr by it fllglit-llculcitant uf_T0ky0. End "Cfllllflbllllfl! t0 U16 the. R.C.A.F. in sinking ll U-bcai iconunon prosperity." Occupation Jinic, in the Nurrli Atllin‘ iof Indo-Chlna gave Japan all she In addition, l.\\'t) Victo' c . lnc6<l@rl_ lo capture the Philippines have lJf-Pll won in the 1 _ lllld SIHBBDOTO- Be It noted that by Canadian; serving ivl-‘n B1'itl?.:i;V1C‘hy' dld not ccmmlt this act of {Oi-Cm lW-myal tn the confusion of m; be conhtizied.) lFrauccs downfall. but more than _ _ _ >. f} year litterknnr: Wllhlln slx bmonths ' - l "D811 sruc a Pear Hat" our. NQWV ASSlStilllt Deputy- Those who have crltlzed Britain's lllinistet‘ National ‘t.slfifieinliifiilfcleslgoiiiiiiiim" “m” Revenue ll (Financial Post) ' 1t is rather u proud bcntt Bf P. Lorne Yhuilg. newly-untried as-i slstant rlepuLv-rnlnistei- of NuqFrcnch fleet and the attempt on tionnl Revenue, that the rlcpirrt-ylraq through Syria, we mind mg mung or govci-inncnt with ivtnen, believe VIClIYJVOUld actually allow lie has been connected for Over d0 Jillian to overrun IIIdD-Chlng, years is shrinking, not 2x "inclines Later we took no chances as re. At us peak, the customs hriirvrlg cards Madagascar. of the Department. of Natlotiaii It Ls fortunate that none Q1 m; Revenue beast-rd 725 branch off’ allies have ever blamed the people flees throughout Canada. ‘loony ‘it, (‘f France for the acts of Vlchy. has only 450 offices and hasnt; This faith is now confirmed p; stopped shrinking yet. Shrinkage.‘ d8 Gaulleb in the sense of customs offlcesl Vicky's agreemg 1115-11113, as a rule, increased cf-‘ flcicney of cgscratlon. The: ls I105‘, siblc, giartlv because the Clllfldlfi"; tallv from the U.S. customs. Our; vlciv ls that, the U.s. system of Mr‘ It ranging entry through local cus- toms broker; ls cumberzcnze. In. Canada, goods are brought lntok lllg countrv under bond to Cu-s- : trirs Collection centres. ‘This cuts H (icivn the need for p5 many offices ~ trnds to be more efficient, casts-t and less cosflv for the customer- Lorne Young, a native of Char- lxtetown, P.E.I., entered the de- partment 32 YEN‘: 1180 l" the dfl}'5._ iviicti the Hon. John D. RCICl Wimp Mi ster. He had Just then been! ' ted Ly Editor of the assumption ample end Singapore was made. Even after France collapsed and we had ivarnfng through the ._.._______ ‘aw’..- ll. J. MABOII y, OPTOMETIIIST fitting and S élnflvlns ulna: Monlnrite, P, g_ |_ , Office llnurs: l0 1 r a»: ttetowti Guardian‘, pavtillllllii .-: 3 l0 5 P. o ‘z A' M‘ news aver wor n 111' i cuv. silica 110p ivas ln his teens”? ‘Mall’! elm. hy appointment Then two opportunities ("mic ms , l“ Can-remit 1m. ivay-one to be sports czlltnr ‘of the ,0‘ Fort, Wllllatn Herald; the Olllfl‘ n) ~ be associated in the Custuiasl.’ branch at Ottawa. He chose tho latter and for manv Yea" 31°15 U“? questionable honor of navlng to take dictation as a stenographer fizm the Minister, D1‘. Reid. Dr. Rcld ls stlll talked about wlth awe, bv those who remembered mm. He, was given to much profanity on occasion and could be roused to n high state 0f excitability on the. least Pllvocatlon. Mr. Young's work and interests have been largely centred on ens-l toms administration for ihe pasti SA years. In 192‘! he was made soc-i rotary of the Customs Dlvlsilrln of; the Department; ten vczirs later,‘ genflral executive assistant. ; One hobby h flylnp. With J.A.l Wilson, now Controlei- of Clvtli Aviation ln Canada, Young and four others made p, meoiiorabiei trlp In 1924 ln the open cockpit ut| an Old Veronica. Lorne Young's connection with the Ottawa Fost- lball O b also goes back many years. Currently his chlef recrea- tlon l; bowling". A Vichy Betrayal Voided (Saint John Telegraph Journal.) W. ll. ROGERS l Agencies Ltd. The Vlchy government commit- ted many acts of betrayal. but none blacker than its ant-cement, with gamut entered lnlo ln June” 1941. _ his provided that Vlchy and! Tokyo would “co-operate mlltar-l 11y for the common defence cf. Indn - China." Vlchy, practically! DRUGSTOBE. ' "-- “COMPI. INSURANCE SERVIC " ETE Plmio 540-541 forces, must have- days mountalnsq-‘San Pr naut . clsco Argo-l _l .. or p , It. has its own ltizht. shadow-rinse lmz —G0or3s Abbe. Everybody rlsc saw that. lt mcmt handing over Ludo-China to the m, we,“ 1..., I i‘ To NEW otlscbw L00 P. M. “g0 0n Way (Plus Tu) 1 I-IIIIVATIglNcSx-IEIVIIQDRMATION- PHONE 540-3001 ntiiiimrrtii? tiiiwtvsiislll 7V4 HIS. iirwhiiiii I. [AVE OIIILOTTITOWN 1:00 LI. 6:00 EM. NORTHEAST.“ AIRLINE ,.__.. ______._.___._ Macs llair llostnror u, . . m,” wblch restores. and neuutifles tore! (Irny or lls original helher Black, Brown. IbIrn. Ill-events steps Ialllng . Promotes a new and superlor rowth where m; b: r ls h llng and ls itnmallr- ably useful in preventing rlandrnl. Get your Bottle tu- dly- a 60 cents. All YOU TIOUILID WITH LUMBAGO I BORE BACK 7 If so we have one n! the remedies lo offer namely BACK - RITE TABLETS Iecogunended for Lum- bslo, bclntlcn, Neurilis, Joint Muscular until other forms of Rheumatism. Price r0 cents per box. MAC! P!“ OINTMENT A sale and ellclcnt rem- eIly-lor Internal and external . It» ll pn- . It carries nut lh bem- ehl elect In three ways: It soothes. 2. It Lnhrluales. It h astringent. Gel a t: today. Price 60 cents tube. TIIE 2 MACS 140 Gnu Guru l!!!" Mall Drlsn Glven Prolpt Attention. Professional 0arils_ McLeod 8 Bentley I. I. BINTLIY. l. C. I. A. BENTLEY. K. C- Bbrrbtcrl and Atkrlnyl-ll" Law 1M Prlleo Strut H.F. McPhee B.A. KC- Mr-r-‘fillfhliiillttirs ALEX w. MATHIESON M” y w “u” Collertlons Office: 9O Great George 51"" BAI-IIBTII. __°°'r!°'l°.“' =1“: ll. R. lloana 6v 00- Chartered Accountant! s: Grafton st. Clvwwn- Phone 2080 - BOX 247 llzrrolt and Gollllflfll ll. F. lllfillllllll ¢hnmq Aeeeunhlll Intel: TIBC Bnlldlns Charlottetown MTIFKN viii-MEI‘ 5.5.. lib-B- Onnllsn Bank of Commerce lllll noun 1'" W3: Era nuns-n. 10W" '