. .. 4u,gqzr>§.r‘voirfiwi:iaw- -;,.-p.vuv- TllE GIIAIILOTTETOWII suliinuiu ' lomlnl Dull! (Iillul ll u." Incident: Llllll, COL W. Cbulu I. I95!" "an President: J. ll. Burl“! IJ-l. lavatory: bloat. Col, D. L. In lulol. 0.5.9. “m” “a [gnu | Director, J. I. Inrlnll. I'd-l. lunch! item Irult .I|||'IM‘C.,":.O.N.V.H_ 40a Audra Ionian) BUBNCBIPTION IATII k IAII ll P. B. I. “All pct your! Us“ l0! O IlulI-ll [L25 for 8 lnnnllln I00 l!" l!" l9!“ On; Dsllvflr)’ ill-W u» run 85W l" I Iwllll ‘L75 [or I mnntlu; 00a for lllll IOIII I7 lull tn other Provlneu uvl ILILA. 88.00 IO! no: Illlrll! Wall): ".00 WI’ "I?! Mu lol- S month: ‘Ibo Chullottolovvn Guardian may be obtained at llotnlllnfu haw: Alena-y. ‘finial llfllllfl. New Iurll 9W loath News Annvy, Comer lllllk nnrl Wutvllgton Bantam Iotropnlltun Nnwn Atom-y, I21! Pool Ill. Innlnllt J. Inn l“ Bay 8t, Tnruutni News Bland CIIIUOII Luurllll Ottawa: Wullufn New! Bland Bradbury. 0am Bub ‘Ioblrv-n Shun. Mnnclon, N. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” ruissnavfiilhv 11. 1m Next Objectives? \\'|',], 111p t-flptut-C of 'l'iniis and Bizcrtc, the battle of the blcilitt-rrzuiciin niav 110W b6 Salli W have begun in earnest. TllCfC are four islands in close proximity’ to the Tunisian coast, one or lllt-ll‘ of which may wcll prove to be the next Allictl objective, all of uliich must be taken in urdcr to win complete control of the wcswrl! hlctlitcrruncan. The strategic value 0f their tslzintls is thus summed up iit filllllfi Lanipctliiszi: eight square miles of rock, 80 niilcs cast of Tllllisiil. 100 miles west 0f M11110. Most of it is rugged. but there is flat land at one end whcre an airfield has been built, and a sinall harbor on the south, reported t0 b6 B torpedo-boat hast: Palm-ll: i: inithvay in the Sicilian Channel, about htilt ih<- 517C of .\lalta with a simmering volcano iii il~ centre. its airfield is reportcd to be CUllllVClWl liv tunnel with a small underground hangar. Thc lizirlioi" can b: used 3S a Sllbmflfllle b3\l‘. The whoh- i~hiii<l is strongly fortified. Sardinia. rcinfurcctl by iht- enemy by air from the continent. could seriously harass any Allied invasion of ltaly. it is a big parallelogram 0f more than 0.000 square miles, nine-tenths rug- ged nioiintziins. ivith so few harbors and such bad coiiiiiiiiiiicatiotis that its defense rests on isolated strong points. Cagliari is one of the Rlctlitt-rraiican’; mainr naval bases. L1 Mad- dalena a minor mic. 'I‘li<~re are several import- ant airficlds, such as iilmas and hfonserrato, near these bases. Sicily is rcally formidable. It has a naval base at lllessiiia which can take vessels up to heavy cruisers, and submarine bases at Palermo, Aug- usta, Syracuse. It has beetiaStnka bzisc since 194i with great dive-bontber fields at Catania on the east and (‘ottiiso mi the southeast. It now has between i5 and 2o well dispersed air establish- ments. all good, all heavily fortified. Sicily has already been subjected to the greatest raid ever launched from Africa, 400 Allied planes taking part in bombing the docks and industrial areas of Palermo. Thesg "pilllioxes in the sea" will figure pro- minently in the news during the next few ivceks. Food Conference A food conference is scheduled to take place next month at Hot Springs, Va., which has aroused a. good deal of interest. 1t will be at- tended by delegates who manifestly can have no authority to bind their respective countries, but who will be empowered to offer advice and sug- gestions, co-operate in drawing up a blueprint, and then report back to their governments for approval of whatever program is adopted. The conference, if it achieves these admittedly lim- itcd objectives, will have done something worth while for the world. It will have produced the basic plan, on which \\'lll be constructed the complete lllilClllll9l‘_\' which will operate to ban- ish hunger as soon as peace returns. The three main headings under which dir- cussion will fall (lcmonstrate what a huge field awaits the confcrecs. First, there will be the mattcr of studying causes of nialiititrition. This involves more than simply considering the sup- ply of ample quantities of food. The whole broad subject of properly balanced dicts enters into this subject. People suffer from malnutri- tion when there is no quantitative lack of food. TilCFE is still grczit iiccd for education, parti- cularly in sriiiii- of the “backward" countries. This is zi task that must lielindertaketi, for the sake nf the gciicral betterment of the health and [ihysical stziininzi of the world's population. Scc-iiiill_v. lll('l't' is iil\' mattcr of expansion and adapnition nf priiilitctittn. Certain foods are grown tn ihi- linilil of providing unwieldy surplusss, whilc otlici-s arc kept in scarce sup- ply. Priiiit-i- distribution is a legitimate sub- jcci for (il\l'll>\l'tll Ill a confcrencc such as this, for it ilii-t-cily affects the prospects of adequate nutrition. liiiizilfv, fiirilitiiiiuii and improvement,‘ find (listributittn must he considered, and this is a large sulijcc; lt involves not only producing enough food and supplying sufficient ships to carry it to ivlicre it i.- ntcdetl to sustain life. The whole cnlIlplvX structure of ititcrnational markets enters into the picture. Airplane Manufacture Airplane inaiiufzictiii-e in this country has been hit. The Hurricane fighting plane has gone, and lltc lloliiigbrukc short-range bomber has (ll58])|)(’i'll‘('(l from the munitions program. Other types of trnitiiiig tilaiics also have had to be discarded. 'l'aiil<s have not been immune from the fcvrr of cliziiiuc and improvement, and the Valentin:- inzicliine is no longer made. But another, the i\l4 Ram type, has provcd its worth. Many guns, for» have been displaced. 'l‘lie anti- aircraft WCapun is iuticli lrss in demand now that the United Nfllllrlls‘ have tissumctl and maintain- ed the Offctisirc, and one of these guns, the 3-7. has bcctimc Zl \\;.: t‘. uially. Production 0f most Walk". Ind Ling In l. ILW for I luntlll. volume 0f men availab no dispositio obsolescence e-ED A splendid seem niucli, every Caiiad obligation t0 and elsewlier the armcd forces. pect that there can be considerable amount of program is now on a replacement basis. Bu! this weeding out of weapons that chang- ed warfare has shown are no long" "Sal"! doesn't mean any reduction in the Over-all munitions production in Canada. This country's munitions program was formulat- ed on a basis of having 1,250,000 "W" 311d W0‘ le for employment in the plants, but some time ago it became evident that this number could not be secured. Instead. the mun“ tions industry must be content with about 1.000: O00 men and women. That is as many as can be gotten, from present indications, for there is n to complete for manpower with This fact presents the pros- witliout causing unemployment. I IURIAL NOTES- wind up to a week's whirlwind campaign-now for the last lap. i: n- »: w The purchase of a $50 Victory Bond may not but every $50 purchase helps-and iaii should realize it is his or her help now. u u r u Alas, in spite of the glorious news from Africa. c, the victory is not yet won, and is not likely to be before many more millions are stibscribcd to back the attack. Ill llK It! All It is ii0w officially announced the Royal Can- adian Mounted Police will on Friday take over the historic I for use as barracks. l ficial said. Battle of the French, British, in Scotland, Saint John its airport a planes. The tiiendation of which Mr. planes than 50st of such William Burt housework, o of the guns, moi-cover, made in this country has catight up Will] the initial demand and this had received Austrians, Dutch under the Duke of Cumberland. and then later captured Touriiai; the Duke, however, distiii- guished himself in the fight, and afterwards was commissioned to put down the Jacobite rebellion newspaper: "Wanted: 7_'~;—r0om Halifax noteriii unfit». y- n- in u Foritenoy, in Belgium, this date I i745: during the war of the Austrian Succession, under Marshal Saxe defeated the and Hanovcrians, winning the battle of Cullodcn; he fell into disgrace for his ruthlessiiess, becom- mg known as the Bloody Cumberland; had iiiis- fortunes in the Seven Years’ “far, but ultimately regained popularity. I‘ in i: ¢ will seek the opinion of United States experts in theflnattcr of the suitability oi t Millidgcville for large transport decision was made 0n a recom- the airport committee of the city, advised the city to communicate ivitli W. F. Schmidt, engineer employed by the States department of commerce, to secure his Civil Aeronautics Administration 0f the United services as consultant. pass on the feasibility of enlarging and improil mg the airport sn that it will accommodate larger He will be asked to at present, and also estimate the improvements. ##1## Here is one way of getting a maid, Mrs, is inserted this ad in a Newark Girl, ivliite, general wn rooms, radio, good salary, nice ionic and wear my mink coat 0n clay off." Mrs. Burns said that up to 2 p.m. that day she about 200 telephone calls. Most of the inquirers wanted to know the size of the coat. Most eager inquirer was the man who pleaded his wife begivcn the job “because site's always wanted a mink coat and God knows ] can't get one for her." By IO o'clock at night, when the Burns family took the receiver off the hook, almost about the posi band, who is said his wife 600 persons telephoned to inquire tion. At that hour Mrs. Burns’ hus- hcad of aii automobile company, finally had found a suitable girl. He declined to give the girl's name, but did say the coat fits. Illlllri _ Canada's part in the Lend-Lease programme is contained in a statement released in Washing- ton from Mr Lease admini United States March n, i941, valuc of considerably more than $1o,ooo,ooo,ooo, About 9o per overseas, and months was as follows: Russia 3i per pcr cent; Fai- Plhf" fife-as. I per cent. Then Mr. Stettinius indicates the mutuality of the arrangement. “The programme of Lease-Lend States has been accompanied by similar pro- grammes of air by our Allies. ample, has provided $i,oo0,o00,000 worth of supplies t0 its Allies without payment. portion to population this is equivalent to $12,- ooo,0oo,ooo o States. And $I.000.OO0,000 mutual aid programme." a u a a A parliaine salaries and expenses paid various bureau con- trollers as fo T. Sterne, $8,000; motor H. Berry, $9, A. H. Williamson, $8,000; D. B. Carswell, con- troller of shi transit controller G. S. Gray, $7,500. Con- struction controller John Sclioficld, on loan from the Canadian National Railways, receives from the rail which is charged to the government. devotes part of his time to railway duties. Con- trollcrs who serve without salary are: Ralph P. controller of aircraft and director-general of aircraft production; ‘Thomas Arnold, ma- chine tools controller; G. C. Bateman, metals controller; G. R. Cottrcllc, oil controller; H. J. Symington, power controller; F. J. Kilbourn, steel controller; Henry Borden, co-ordinator of controls; and J. hlcGregor Stewart, coal con- Bell, troller. Mr. of $25 a day field. Mr. Ba Mr. Borden and Mr. Stewart. Thc other direc- tors were listed as receiving no allowances. Thc rcturn said the department bad no informa- tion on expc . Edward Stettinius, Jr., Lend- strator, who indicated that total Lend-Lease aid to it; allies, from to April I, 1943, had a. total ccnt of all this material was sent the distribution in the last three Britain, 38 per cent; cent; Africa and Middle East, i6 East, including India, l4 per cent; from the United Canada, for ex- In pro- f Lcase-Lcticl air by the United Canada has started on its second ntary return shows the annual llows: — Chemical controller E. vehicle controller J. 00o; rubber and timber controller p repairs and salvage, $8,000; way a salary of $10,000, part of lIe still Bell receives a living allowance and expenses are paid to Mr. Scho- tcmaii, Mr. Cottrcllc, Mr. Kilbourn llotos By The Way Sonmtlmen pull can get you a [and position, but lt. takes push to get on a crowded bus. —Kltcherier Record. Placing a llmll of 2 5-0 lnchu on the height of women's shoes tn the U. S. ls 80lng to bruit; a lot of flapper-s closer to the earth,- St. Thomas flutes-Journal. Mr. Lewis, the labour czar, ls siald w have had a hard. unjust child- hood which embittered him aizatiist capitalism But with him llvlnz permanently ln the palatial Waldorf Astoria lii New York, and seldom seen without a tat. perfecto, he P.0- pears to be making up for the ce~ brlvatioiis ot hls early years. - l-lsimllton Sbtrctator. The term "drinking g toast‘ was originally coined to describe an early custom much in vogue ln old waterfront taverns. records The Kansas Clty Times. It was 00m- mon practice t0 but small pieces 0f sugared toast 1n the bottoms of tankards of hot tioddy. hflt 8T0!» mulled wine anc other drinks DOW‘ lar among seamen of those dHi/s. The sugared toast made a t0olli~ some morsel comparable to the cherry ln the modern cocktail. — Exchange. National Posture Week ls some- thing new ln a. series of health cam- public opinion is iidmittecly ‘jdlvid- ed lightly. The stress which 1s laid on 1t by Dr. John Howie. M 0. H.. ls well merited, and particularly so in time of war. when the health of the public assumes added import- “The government i5 pm- ance. It is one of the contparatively chasing the building and not leasing it," an ot- i-ecent. discoveries of medical science that our posture. how we static. and walk, and sit, has much to do with the maintenance of health. Our bodies are pieces of delicate mecli- imlsm. which can easily be thrown out of adjustment, with disastrous results. Correct posture is simple to learn and follow Proper attention to it. will pav big dividends in health. -Windsor Star Mr. M. B. Davls, Dominion llortl- culiurlst, told the Ouiiiwa ltotiiry Club that Canadian city (twcliei-s should produce 500,003 ions of rege- tables this year iii in 1: back yards. 1t may be suspected that lie ts over- optlmistlc a million victory gar- dens would have to raise. each of them. half a ton of vegetables to teach the objective, and it takes a good many carrots, cabbages. beets and tcmutoes to add up to a thous- and pounds. But that is a niiiior point, The real point is that. every- body wllth access to a patch of earth and a reasonable amount of sunshine can grow some vegetables, ease the problems of his wartime table -and have a goon time with it all .—Atii~ herst News. Strange as lt may seem, it is only a few years ago during the drought- depression which swcpt tn: Prairie Provinces, that the guultry‘ flock was often about the only iiiuiiey returns 0n the farm. and it. was stretched to the limit t0 kccp the family in food and clothing Thai-e is not the least. doubt that in those (lays the farm Wife was the must important. member of the family, It was nor enterprise. that saved the clay We are glac. to see that the farm wife ls being recognized. She is cock and mother, the keeper of the dairy herd and the farm poultry flock. and in good many lnsttinces she is riding the tractor or truck and taking the place of a lilred man who can't be found for love or money. She is a mlghtly uriportant cog in the war belmz carrier; on in Canndzrs food front. —Lethbrldtze Herald. Tnjo sllll talks about a. "holy war for the destruction of America and Britain," but there are indications that the war lords’ dreams or vie» tory are beginning to face even in heir own warped minds. Toklo i185 not dared to announce the latest dis- aster. nor to counter it with new lies about victories. but the grapevine of the Far East can be depended upon to spread the news just the same. And Chis tiews raises the spectre o! Allied uir armndiis over the "land of the gods." which ls al- NBdY filling the primitive Japanese mind with the terror of the un- nown. Army spokesmen openly hint; at the possibility of defeat, public opinion ls admittedly “divid- ,. Coll In lllll tllu ra-mrv- ~' 3-413 S. F. llutcheson I. G. IUTUIIBON G. I‘. IIJTOIIIION ‘renews-- ‘i.\"lfZ-‘lffi:;e&,_,‘ ' Professional Gard; Iswe-nmnmmi- ~,~- - - > w».- McLeod 69 Bentley W. B. BENTLEY. K. C. I. A. BENTLEY. K. O. Barrister: and Attorneys-at,- Luv MONEY T0 LOAN 1S4 Prince Street _...__ _____ . ______ llorrelland Company ll. F. AllllIllBALB Clurtered Accountants Eastern Trust Bulldlnl Charlottetown Tlie Prophecy of lleinei I V/lllllllié‘; 157cc Press) The prcdicticns of Heine. t-lie port, a cintiiry‘ before lt happened, that thcre WOLll(i be an out/break of Sikilgéfy anion; tlie Germans, has often been referred to 1n articles about the ris- of Nazism; and the text or‘ the ai - in which the prophecy appeared is now made available 1n n volume of his prose, newly translated and published in Nev: York. This article, published in 1834 under the title “Religion and Philosophy lii Germany." declared that the doctrines of Kant and Htche hart developtd revolutionary forces that wait only for the clay when they can erupt and fill the World with terror and admiration. Hclrie wrote of “the demoniac en- crglcs or ancient German panthe- ism" and the awakening of "that fighting folly that we find among the ancient Germans that fights ncitlter to kill or conquer. but sim- ply to fight." Heine continued: "Christianity has somewhat mlt- igated tliat brutal German lust for battle. But it could not d-estroy it: i and once the taming taltinari, the Cross, ls broken. the savagery of the old biittlers will flare up again, the insane berserk rage of which Nordic barrls have so mu-ch to say and sing. That talisman ts brittle The day will come when it will ‘pltiably collapse. Then the old stone gods will rlee from the forgotten rubble and i-uib the dust of a thous- and years from their eyes; and Thor will leap up and his giant hammer start smashing Gothic cathedrals... .. .. .. .. .. "And Wllfll you hear a crash ast. nothing ever crashed in world hi5- tor)‘. you'll know that the German thunder has finally lilt the. mark At that sound the eagles will fall dead from the sky and the lions ln the farthest desert of Africa, will pull in their tails and slink away into their royal caves. A play will be performed in Germany that will make the French Revolution seem like a. harmless idyll ln comparison . . . . ..You have more to fear from s. ed" and the authorities seek to bol- ster up moi-tile bv promises of im- proved alr rald precautions. -New York Times. Th; Clvll Service is urged in a circular issued by the Home Office to use simple English mic. less red- tape. Some of the hints given are: Answer letters quickly. Write in clear and simple language. Keep your sentences short. Avoid of- flclalese and. alnve all, avoid cliches, Avoid ambiguity and do not hedge. If something is red say so ant: not "It appears to be of a somewhat reddish tint." If you have to turn down your correspondents request. make it. as clear as you can why vou are turning tt down. Avoid stllted phraseolozy —"I inn to." “I have to," and so on. Avold ‘on the subject of” and with reference to"; use “about? and.‘ "regarding." Time and trouble are well spent in seeing that dr- culars are clear and concise. Re- lations with the Public. —As a clvll servant. you are the servant of the public — of the public as a whole and not. of any sectional Interest. — Mandhesticr Guardian. Fourteen yearn ago one could not open the morning mall without find- lntz at least. one letter from a total stranger who was preoared to give lnfalllable advloc on how to mnke money On the stock market, In a, surprising number of cases the tlp- stem were right -unti1 October. 1929. The magic carpet. was carrv- lng us all to a falryland where nll desirable things were provided with- out work. Then. with a fearful bump. lt ‘lilt the ground. Neverthe- less the mornlniz mall t; nzaln brlnz- lng evidence that. the holes worn ln the matzlc uni-net by the blg pumn have been batched. Awun one ls urzed to buv shares lii holes ln the wmvnfi‘. tn help scratch our ini- ncrntrhed natural resources of the Pre-Camhrlnn Hhleld. ‘The hint. this time In that stock market. calm: are not subwct. to lrvomc tax Veterans of the 1999 v-rash mav be deaf tn the sound or the bMlerroom. but them must he a ttoorlly crrm of new ntosnecfs. One recipient or the mule garnet travel literature ti: rio- lnz hls llttle blt. to make It heln the national revenue. 1h. return! ewrv nse allowances paid by firms with which the controllers were associated. envelope on which tho senders "IWT- ‘_T:_1842 the seer renewegljils pre- libernted Germany than from the whole Holy Alliance with all its Croats and Cossacks." Are you In your YSIITIIFIII. 40's‘! Everyone knows people who look h! younger than thelizxpieara-vvbo radiate ealth. non and go humor. Yet moot people. especially over 40. allow a very small thing to slow them up, rob them of that glrid-to-be-nlive feeling which ll the bass of youth and personality. ea, your system is like an engine-ell must be kept clean and umooth-runnlngor lt brickfircs and makes you feel and LOOK half-sick! A sluggls system dag- gcd with poisonous food waste can be quickly and gently cleansed with a purely vegetable remedy — Bile Beans. Then small laxative pills l0 concentra- ted vegetable extracts that have In amazingly ntle 4-way action on liver bile, stomach upper and lower bowels. For brighter. peppler days. let Bile Beans coax the system lnto healthy regu- larity» pleasantly, ever so gently-mot hara ly like cheap laxatives. Be convinced —-get Bile Bean: at any dru It. only 50c. Made in England. Over mllllon boxes sold last ear. proof of amazing popu- dlctions. “Wlld gloomy times are Roaring mwdrds us, and a prophet wishing to write a new apocalypse would have to invent entirely new beasts-beasts so terrlble that St. Johns older animal symbols would be like gentle doves and cuplds 1n comparison." Warl25 Years- Ago Today (By The Canadian Press) May 11, 1918 -F‘rench forces cab- turer. important hlgli gmund north of Kemmcl on the Western Front and British airmen raided German defences in Belgium; British troops in Mesopotamia made further 11d- yzimcg: along the Baghdad-Mosul 0a . lllYl MIG! WHERE'S ‘ Moncton... , Saint John... Summerside... PLANES ‘DAILY:- Lelve Arrlvo Charlottetown Moncton 7.50 mm. 12.30 pan, 4.80 p.111. Fare - Charlottetown - Monuton 88-50 Single - 3.11.10 Return x. lnformatlon l: Reservations . Phone 540 1403 ‘Except lllntlly Maritime Central Airways LIMITED larlty. You'll glad you tried them. I n I am instructed by the E late James S. Walker to sell due to freshen within the young cattle, hens and pigs. Auction Sale THURSDAY, MAY AT ONE O’CLOCK P.M. ing stock and implements: Stock, 1 horse, 10 milk cows, 1 month, 1 newly freshened, 4 gle plows, springtooth barrows, spike barrows, disc har- 13lh, 1943 xecutors of the Estate of the by Public Auction the follow- Machinery, 1 sulky, plow, sln- rows, several wagons and slelghs, quantity of wood and lumber, hoes, rakes, shovels, forks and numerous other articles. Terms of Sale — CASH. antes to pav five vents pr-Hwr- but h» "turns them empty -'I‘he Print- ed Word. W. H. BEATON, Auctioneer. M, ALBAN FARMER B. A-. LL.B. BABBISTER, SOLICITOR. ETC. Canllllan Bunk of Commerce Bldg. i. “°‘-“E.Y-_1°J3Qé§i ALEX W. MATHIESON BABBISTER. SOLICITOR. ETO. Olllce: 9O Great George Street . Money to Lom Collecllm PAN-CAKE MA K*E- U P A new kind of make-up created by Mu Factorillollywood... it seems to create a new com- plexion . . . it imparts avelvcly- smooth, youthful look .1. z it ‘ ’""" M“ ‘.'.".’i..i‘.'.'.".'i.°‘;§: i EYES EXAMINEB U for hourswit out AND cpowdenng. _ GLASSES FITTED J. S. TA YL OR OPTOMETRIST New Location Corner Kent. and Queen Sts. 0 posltc Rlx‘s Griicerv I Even ngs by Annolntments cunuvwoov Phone Residence I013 FECQ ‘Powder 75o and $1.35 Foundation Cream Max Factor H. F. McPhee B.A.,K.C_. NOTARY 8w. BARRISTEII. SOLICITOR lllley Building Charlottetown PALMER 8i HASLAM A. J. HASLAM. a. A. u. n. BARRISTE ETC. Bank of Nova Sco la Chfl-mltfll C ottetnwn. P. E- l MONEY. To LOAN Phone 85 l‘. 0. B0! ll MONEY T0 LOAN Cameron Bigot A t. l II I B ll O lug‘ _ _ - - - l- Eliloti nntlRSA-fib lll L l l ._"§'.“_ P: l _ lactic and $1.00 Min Factor Ron e Refill! — 60c Max Factor ere s n _"T_"i"i'°l _ 1mi- 15c and $1.35 TllE TWO MASS 149 Great George Street MAIL ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION. NOTICE We announce the return from mllllnry service overseas 0! Major T. B. Rogers, V. D., vvlio nannies Ills posltlon as Director nnd Manager ol W. K. " ,, Agencies, Ltd. Hr. Horton Dew, who in so cnpobly meted In this 0111M“! fllncohfloptomber 1st, 1980, vvlll contlnue vvlt-li us ns Director and ssls nt M: w . t We vvlsh to express to mu- mlllly lrlonds and customers our grateful appreciation toi- the continuance of their business null trust that In the your: to coma vvo vvlll always b0 worthy 0f "ll! confidence. Complete Insurance Service. W. It. 306E115 AGENCIES, LTD» Currie llulltllnt!» |'i.;.,-l,~yl,.y,,...._ Penn. oi. the sea, on time, peril of fire, lightning, fa"- lng aircraft, of automobiles, of accident, of sicknesl, of war. In our modern life we are surrounded by Peril!» and that is why we employ the system of lnsuranw to protect us financially. We are ln a position to provide a complete inept‘- ance service, and welcome your inquiries for adv cc and information. No obligation. llYlllllMll &- G0. . LIMITED Insurance service since 1872 Offices: Charlottetown — Summcrslde — Montafl" Help maintain the supply lines so vital to victory. Charlottetown - nd BUY i VICTOR Y BONDS ji-ijf-"u-