l. "who w." east; roux TllE CHAR L0 TTETUWN GUARDIAN Morning Daily (Foundod in I881) President: maul. Col. W. Ullfllcl l- MOI-IN Vice President: J. B. Burnett, IJJ. Senrrtary: Lieut Col. l). A Mllvlilllllflil- 9-5-0- Edir-i mid Managing Director. .l lt- Bumol-L FJJ. Associate Editors: Frank wniiter um Ian A. Burn“! SUBSCRLFIION BATE! a; iuim m r.u.i., $4.00 per year. um m Ii will“ $1.25 for 3 months; 50o for one month can Delivery $5.00 per year; 53-00 l0! 6 mlllllll $1.75 for 3 months; 60o for one Month. By Mail to other Provinces and U. S. A. $5410 P” I5" satuniay Weekly: $2.00 per year; 81-00 l" ll INFINI- 500 for I month: The Charlottetown Guardian may ho Obtllnod ll llutullug’: huwu Agent-y, Timur Squuu, NII Yorlu 01C lluulll Ne“: "Agency, Corner llllll lnfl Wllhlflllul Bantam; iitizrinit-iiian m" Annoy. I34}! PM! it. ulllllfvllli J. Flnu, 3Q! llny 5L, Ton-unto; bu" Ulnld. Clmteuu Laurlnr, Onuwai fliolfo’: Now: Stand. Budbilfi. Out; lliib ‘robin-co Sllnp. illanutnn N. 5.; ‘ “The Strongest Memory la Weaker than flu Weakest Ink." WEDNESDAY. APRIL 15. 1942. Amazing Achievement r\ccorthiig Lu iiiioriiizitioit rcccivcd by the Sov- iet litiibtissy" tit Wtishingtoitp the entire body of Rllsfiigll 5ui(lf[]{§ i5 pursuing its studies with uri- usuni “it alltl tlcit-rmintitiotis tindndisplaylflg high cutiscfi-iitilumic-s and (lisciplitie. I Swell! cxhutiiiizttttltis wvrc attctidctl Mill‘ gratifying re’ stilts and sllOW that the tntiyority“ of studciits pzt"ctl with tiizirits of “good and excellent 1c Nazis have frequently boasted that many o; ]\'u.,,_1‘_.- L-iiilugtrs and seats of lcztrnitig llilyfi bucu "ivipttl i iii thc fztcc of the carih," and its educatiutuil _~ lll uttcrly dcnioralizcd as a con- sequence. Sutli, howcvcr, is not the case. Just a! war plants were evacuated and moved to point! far lit-hind tho fighting llllCS, so have universities any >gltilfll§ .\ largo industrial institute at Kiev ...i all etiuipincnt to Tashlcctfi. i s ircrc rcsuiucd under the direction ial professors and instructors. The 13,5“, ifldcs-‘a and Kharkov; and l iiniiibt-r ii uthci- zicadciiiic csablislimciits, were lll\'L‘\\'l-1Z cvictiztttvl and iuovctl to tlisiriClS Wlifife tltcy" are carrying on successfully in their new homes. _ _ _ Nor only is Russia's youth continuing its nor- ma; “unit-s bu; i11;i1i_\' of thc students atcmak- iii; itiipurztitit ci-tttribtttioiis to their country s war effort by aiding the professors with research trot-k. The scientific departments have been par- ticularly ltclpftil in evolving new types of wea- proviiig nicchzttiical cqtiipiiicnt and cn- lll(‘ pnithtvtii-n of raw materials. More wciuy vital war-time problems have been solved in the libraries and laboratories of Lenin- grad alone. _ .\lr, Q. Kaftzuitiv, Chairman of the All-Uiilvn Ctiilll lice for llighcr Schools in Russia, states: ‘*1').\_.-pEtc the cxiqcitcics of war-time, the in- lcllfCllllll lift- contiiittcs in our country. Theatres, niusctitits, exhibitions and libraries arc open, new buults arc yiulilislictl and concerts are held. Our iipiiiivcs shall cruitiiittc to turn out scholars, tt-achcrs, historians and literary iucu for our Ciiillllf)": cultural forces" This is an amazing achievement in face of the all-out war effort the Russian people are making. Hoarding Applies To Everything Mr. Donald Gordon, head of the Price Control Board, has rightly condemned the purchase of any kind of goods beyond oiic's current needs. If hoardiig bccotiics more serious, the gross un- fairness in the distribution of consumers’ goods will necessitate the adoption of the rationing system. Hoarding is buying things in advance of one’! needs, in expectation of a serious shortage and with the intention of allowing othqr people, not the boarder, to suffcr from that shortagc- People with limited means cannot afford to buy up much ln advance. If people with more money do it, they take a selfish advantage of their position. Many pCOplc forget this, and they also forget that hoarding applies to cverything. They would not think of hoarding flour or sugar, but it does not seem to occur to them that then in the same objection to hoarding clothing, shoe: or hurd- warc, and the sharp increase in retail sale: in recent months, over the same month: last year, indicates that much hoarding of this kind in going on. People who would buy in advance from ordinary prudcncc, apparently do not think what it involvcs now_ If it has any meaning at all, it is that the buycr is trying to protect him- self at the certain disadvantage of someone else. Ruthless Fanatics Propagandists here as elsewhere have been lt- tempting to build up an idealistic character to the Japs to dclude the unwary and justify their actual frightfulncss. “There still seems to be an idea," writes Mr. William Plomcr, in a letter t0 The Times, “as pfcvalcfit as it is vague, that the Japanese nation is largely guided in its actions by In ancient and lofty code of chivalry called Bushido. "It is true that in thc Middlc Ages the Samurai, or military class, had standards of hon- our and coiirvtitioiis of behaviour, btit it is time- ly to l'(‘Cllll tli:it thc ltitc llttsil llall Chamberlain. fortiicrly limcrittis Professor of Japanese and Philolog_v in tlic lmpcrial University in Tokyo, clrcw ZltlPlllltlll, so long ago as i012 (in a pamph- lct latcr rt-priiiictl as an appendix to his ‘Things jztiiaiicsv’), to the fact ‘the vcry word Bushido tippczii-s in no tlit~iitiii:trj,', native or foreign, before tht- _\'l‘llf' moo. (‘hivzilroits individuals of course vxi-lt-tl ll] Japan as in all countries at every per- iod; luu liiidiiilu. as an institution or a code of l'llll‘>, ll.i~ tI<'\‘t‘t' l'.\‘l*l(‘ll.‘ The ttccotitits given of i', lll‘ \llil, hail ll('('ll fabricated for foreign cott- winiptloii, as p;|i't in’ the prnyntgziiitla of ivhat he inllvl ‘ll-i iii-u‘ lil]h'lll".\l‘ rt-ligiun of loyalty and i. 'Ii‘:itl‘ m. From .-i ri-rlziiii pt-iiif of vicw, llf‘ (‘Oll- vUl ‘rt-ll. _l:ip Ill could llf‘ coiigrnttibafcd mi its new ~' Ill. 'I ill‘ >l.'l|>.‘llll‘~‘(’ arr! imlliiitg if_ not t'lt'\‘t'i'. Jlllll th -ir (‘ll‘\'(‘l‘li('$S has been abund- autlr >-lliI\\'!i l)\ il|"lt' sticccss iii duping foreign- t-rs about thcii ail-pt-rvzitliiig higli-mindctlncss and lli~. l in exploiting foreign sentimentality about their beautiful country and its institutions. It is high time for its to understand that in those who now control japan we arc faring totalitarian fanatics guided less by the extiltcd principles they profess than by ruthless ambition for their race." Mr. Ha nson Commended The Canadian army gasoline cottscrvation plan announced last week is an illustration of the value of having an alert opposition in the House of Commons. This is the opinion expressed by the Winnipeg Free Press (Liberal) whiclt adds: “In the closing days of the winter session Hon. R. B. Hanson, the Conscrvativc House leader, called the attention of the Government to what hc described as widespread wastage of gasoline and rubbcr by the army. He urged that the army should lcad in the conservation of these vital war commodities. Some of the points raised by Mr. Hanson were that officers tended more and more to ride every- where in station wagns and in tltc Canadian army nobody walked but the privates. Cars were used to transport officers from office to office and around parade grounds. He mentioned the habit of leaving engines running and the use of big trucks to haul small loads. “The army" concludes tht- Free Press, "is obviously taking gasoline and rubber conserva- tion seriously. Mr. Hansons constructive critic- ism is paying good dividends." -. EDITORIAL NOTES - Thc S. S. Titanic was \\'I'€Cl\'€d this date 19x2, causing the loss of 825 passengers and 673 of the crcw—thc greatest disttstcr at scat for 50 ycztri and tiutil the Grcat War 1914-18. Ill Ii 1U! IF There is to be no Canadian Embassy at Wash- ington, as stiggcstcd in a press bulletin from Ot- tawa- The Prime Minister announces that the Government is not considcriniig the raising of the Canadian Lcgation to an Embassy. r x n- n: The Ottawa Government has appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada to decide ivhcthcr it is “llllllfl the powers of Ottawa City Council to lcvy rates on property owucd respectively by the Government of France, U. S. A. Brazil, Aus- tralia. and Britain occupied as lcgations. w it v v In Ottawa the wcck ending Stiturday was the heaviest for recruiting for IO tuontlis; this is zil- lcged to be due to two factors (i), the new order forbidding employers to employ men between the ages of t7 and 45, and (2) the recent ivar news showing the necessity for more mcn. Per- haps the prospective victory of "ycs" in the pleb- iscite may have had something to do with it. :- n- n: 4 An ordcr-in-Council. under the \Var Measures Act, has been issued making it a criminal offence to carry milk, cream, etc. in any can or other vcsscl unmarked by the distributor's name, and ti further offence for any one other than the own- cr to obliterate the name or to retain the can or vessel in his possession or to use it for other ptir- poscs than that for ivhich it was intended. In other words vcndors must have their names on their cans or bottles, and no other oiic may use thcin or retain them intheir possesson. n: n- : n- Capt_ A. Adam of Montreal Fire Brigade is organizing the Canadian Corps of Civilian Fire- Fightcrs,_spousorcd by the Federal Govcriitnciit for the purpose of aiding the Mother Country in battling “blitz" fires. All able bodied men be- tween thc age of 2t and 50 are eligible. Although riot a military unit, Government pay will be similar to Army scale, with the saute allowances for the armies and dependents as given Canada‘s fighting men. , c a u a In clays not so long since Canadian and Am- erican bills and coins were unnegotiablc in the West Indies, while English money was (and still il) current coin of the realm. Now from Port of Spain, Trinidad’: capital comes the announce- ment that Canadian dimes and nicklcs have bc- come legal tender. The government is empower- ed to import Canadian coinage in these denomin- ations to maintain the supply of small currency. The Canadian coins will be valued at par. The regulation i: believed necessitated by a. shortage of English silver coins brought on by heavy de- mand locally. Sterling coinage; has bccn the basis of Trinidad’: curifncy up till the present. Councillor Albert Mackinnon has the courage of his convictions and has put into action what others have been “thinking" ought to be done. In time: of peace a curfew ntay not appcal to many, but in our life and death struggle “needs mun when the devil drives." It is to be hoped the curfew age limit will make it necessary for the youngsters to be accompanied by their par- ent: or guardians if out of doors after the cur- few hour. Which reminds us there might very well be a curfew in certain respects for grown- ups as Wtll‘ If the parents be not at home at a decent hour of night how long will the children bear the restraint? For the duration, no function should be permitted to be carried on beyond midnight, and preferably 1i P. M. In England no restaurants or hotels arc permitted now to serve food of any kind after 8 P. M. except to bona fidc residents or night workers. Could not a similar restriction be imposed here? r r i: m The United States Government will not let Great Britain “run out of dollars in any way that would interfere with the war effort," it is of- ficially announced: The treasury is watching the English balance of payments with the United States but Britain still has ample dollar re- sources with which to do business. Great Britain, as part of the lOss of British blalaya, lost a credit itcin in her balance of payments with U. S. A. ivnrih from $200,000,000 to $300,000,000 pcr year. 'l‘hc cffcct (if this. howcvi-r, has not yet liecii ft-ll. Ilp to tlztlc. it is lcaructl, shipments f0 Grvat llritaiu iiiitlcr, the lease-lend act have fotallctl only $i..i0n,mi0,0oo. This tviiuparcs with Fzftrirxoooxxx) of prc-lcasc-lciirl sliipiiit-iits for which Britain paid with her own Ifiiitctl States dollars. rm: _ QHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN NOTES B_Y TIIE WAY The Gcrlnau army, Bcrlln an- nounces, has survived the r ors of the Russian winter cud wll the heat the Bolshles are handing ‘em. - Windsor Star. Elimination of the two-punts suit in the government‘: iccently announced men's clothing restric- tions does not appear to be xv- oelvmg n very good tto across Canada. Men who ave found that a sultooat and ves: will Marty always outwear one pair of pants are finding it hard to sec any economy of material tn this restriction. - Port Arthur News Chronicle. In a realistic approach to the tire conservation schemes, the American Autcmcbllc Association worked out statistics to bring home m motorists how mum vital- l needed rubber their simple Journeys cost the war effort. Their rest showed that every 40 miles of travel scours an ounce of rubber off every tire and every 600 miles of travel removes a und of rubber from each tire. Th is the first, time that motorists have bccn informed of the mile cost. of rubber 1n motor travel. _ Boston Post. Broadcast on the Jnpunelo rudlo by Dr. Tsuneklch, Kom-akl of the Imperial University: “It Ls ob- viously reasonable for us to teiim cries an eastern Asia Europe recognizes Australia a: 8 part of Asia Africa ls also part of Asia In ancient Greece it was considered a part of Asia. and the Mediterranean was also so considered by Alexander the Great. As you will note 0n the map, Europe 15 only a part of Asia. In northern Europe there ls Asiatic blood flowing thick in the veins of the inhabitants. The Pa- cific Ocean is an Asian sea The Indian Oceah must also b: i1 sea for Asia. The Atlantic mean is also part of Asia. There an n0 seven seas. but only one sea PX- iststand it l5 connected to Japan. All the ocean is to be recognized as the great Japan Sea.’ Much has been written about the financial progress cif the Can adlan National Railways during the past year, but we would like to draw attention to a few words in the railway report dealing \vith_ the railroads. We read: "The relations bet-ween management and the cm- ployes are excellent." The MPO“ could have added that thc rela- tions between the erniploinsa and the public are also excellent. The staff of the C N.R has a high reputation for courteous. service- Mcn on the trains and in the of- fices try to please the people and do their best to make travel a plea- sure. They anticipate the wants o! the passengers and end/savor to satisfy every reasonable request. that is made. Also. they do l! With s, smile. Usually the public ac- cepts this courteous service as part of the Beneral routine. Now and again ft does no harm to let the railwaymcn know their courtesy ls appreciated by the people Windsor Star. A year ago Hitler demanded ac- cess to the Black Sea through the Dardanelles, but Turkey refuscd— and the Nazis dld not strike at. Tur- kish territory, but, instead, attack- ed Russia. But now German PIYS- sure on Ankara is on again-with reported demands that mite "tre- way to the Middle East be opcflfd Will Tuitkey yield-or fight? ‘Hie answer may not be long in com- ing. However. the Middle Eastern picture Ls colored by ti. maze of ominous and conflicting reports. Bulgaria appears to be Willing deeper into the AIXIS, Runiatiia is said to be angry W‘ll‘l Hungary over the age-old question of Trans- ylvania The Yugoslav guerrillas are making new assaults on Ger- man communication lines. Gert- cral Rommel. Nazi commander iri the Middle East, 15 ln Berlin cook- ing up plans f_or the imimudmg Gctzrian offensive in Afrzca Arid high-ranking Nazi war chiefs have arrived in Turkey. The "nerve olf- fensive" of the I-Iun is in full swing-cart lhe gun offensive be far behind? - Strattfotd Belmon- Herald. Tho “revolutionary army” le- gend is a dangerous legend. Does any person with tucperlenoe o! ac- tual vvarfarc reall believe that Rommel’; men, w en they fottrud themselves surrounded and ‘t be- came obvious that their enemies possessed overwhelming" air-super- orit , really confronted themselves by that tho ht that they were fighting for e New Order or that they were selling their lives for the Fuki-rer, mlchsmarschall Goerln . Herr Himmler beta? They u... lit. nothing of the sort. The were fighting for the honor of e German coupl- ed with the additional inducement mat 1f they retreated unnecessar- 11y they would be shot. Did the men who surrounded the Germans at Staraya Russia really inspire themselves, as they slipped through the darkness upon their skis, with the truculecit portrait of Stalin? Not 1n the least. Tb thought only: of surrounding the rmans wit. gm skill and courage than heir enemies possessed. And dfd the men who swayed down upon Bruxheivai dtci ‘the tIrIIIOOIlIlBUY. really cons er Y e compara ve merits of mum Churchill and Stafford Orlpps? Again not in the least. Battles an not won by sociology, still lcu are they won by excum: they are won by dilscl- plne, skill, cfiiffdence and cour- age. - Harold Nicolson, M. P., in London Spectator. What In n lock-gate? The M. Nazaiic raid has provoked the question from many readers, who think of lock-gates in terms of the alien at the Rideau Canal chute nto the Ottawa river, and vnndcrs what they have to do with s acc- poi-t, Drniw up a chair and we'll explain: At 5t. Nnznfre there l: a heavy tidal action dve to the shallow water and slow falling a-vvay of land ships may (‘oat into dock at. 5t. Namire at high tide. but at low tide they would be left high and dry. leaning on their sides. To enable 24-hour use of teiminult facilities a. huge harbor are; of st Napalm has been made into one imnTeiise lock, with lock- zates at. the entrances b0 the sen. Thus ships may float. fn at hliih tide. and the water la held in the harbor until the ncxt hlvh tide, enabling loading and unloading Dcsf-ritcllcn of these lock-gain cripples the port's activities until sud! time as they can be mpalwd -—t>°rhai~= n month or mow. THO lc-ttdrd destroyer was surk across this harbor mouth. but lls debris mav be cleared awry in shorter order The fhlrd type of dramatic dOllg was destruction of harbor s nd Doctor Goeb- w The Battle I! CLYDE A. Alocllhd Inca Si!!! Wrlhr The battle c-f H/lllill. “Milli 11°" In its tout month, lunft much mom than belun. Naturally. flown hove emerged ln the summer. fall Ind winter cnmrifi which will be elements of e f decision. but they arc so numerous, complex or obscured that rio mm. even with ncceu to the fullest facts and figures on each side, could hope b0 use“ them precisely. The safest concltulfm f0 drawn from the evtdenco of day- w-day rapes-ta. from considerations of the battle llno n; it: l; known to be drawn and from the topo- graphy of the immense front and the weather to c'me are:- 1. Germany still la in fair posi- tion for an offensive wwm-d the brlme object-Ive, the oll fields of the Caucasus. 2. Russia, on the other hand, bv her winter counter-offenalve-whfch saved Moscow-mas carved central- front sallents which m1 ht be de- veloped as a wide flan In; attack to counter balance the German threat to the Caucasus. 3. Neither side now holds the position necessary for the knock- out blow. 4. The war still f; being fought tn a zone largely of Hitler's own choice, although his army dis- positions ln that area doubtless are far from what he wou‘d like- thanks a aln to the surprise count- cr-offens ve power of the Red army, 5. By the same token. Russia is fighting a war of self-defence on her home soil with the benefits of morale which such n fight genders. 6. British and American aid ln material is reaching Russia 1n an in June the footing iviit enough for all combat on most: of the front. increasing stream whl'e the at- tention cf London and wasirngton has been repeatedly dtrwted to Russia's wish that the British and Scale yam-g Mtg-n 1s the southprn 013811 ll 86001"! front, where the nearly all the Ukraine still ln the":- 4 ciieti-‘matn offensive effort American armies European front. . important undis- closed action in the Rusflan-Ger- man equation i5 the industrial capacltv of the two belltverents and the help they can draw from Allies. poln ' ' ’ the drive toward the Caticaszts. Russia ls kxrwn to have devoted a large proportion of her Nation- al Income for manv years to milL tary poductlon. As much as six years ago she was appropriating as much as $6,000,000.000 gdd un- b; industrial lierrltrry Germans have clung Kharkov, Stallno and Taganroz. we are about to eat, thank God and Of Russia FAI-NSWOBTH nudl for military WWO"!- ‘l1! undoubtedly ti» been l"- areaaeq many time: durlnz u" Period cf ltenslon before and lime the war. She must rank 01°55)’ wit]; Gormtmy, Bzltaln and "N! Unftod Sill-cl in the Amount- 0! mmiey devoted to was urPWBB- ‘Ibo-question of miss a‘: infill"- ifsi capacity is impondmblo. I! or not other reason. because 0f he fact that a crest chunk of her remains 1n German hands. This consideration. in burn. l! qualified by the trlnspluXlI-lfll 0f Industries closer to the Unis and beyond which started before the war and. which. ln some cases. W" carried out. just ahead of Liermfll invasion. Germany is uenernilv Bubiwlcd to have achieved, despite the 1n- creaalng severity of R.A.II'. raid! on ner war Industries. a normal capacity for replacement. 6f tho tremendous material losses on the Russian front. Al‘ the offensive tmrl counter- offenslvc actions ln Russia to 6MB. they have consumed vast o! men and quantities of amount to manoeuvres by for the best qttalnablo for the strilizgie in prol- as winter recedes. full clash of men and mach- ines, not possible during the winter months. when the Russian; made their finest. showing. ror in earlv spring. will follow winter's retreat —the front reopening to maximum action sector by sector as the snow and lce melt. away. the rivers re- m- turn to nfnnal and the tn'ld hartl~ ens under the Warming sun. Bv the middle of Mav 0r early be st-Pfd manner of land The first area to he flt for full Germans, with the cuss. the so far to Notwithstanding {br’B. Feminine ‘Eb: NIIETTE You'll oxporlonco u ncl Iona o! satisfaction when you buy this sol-know- lnq ll l: "Cunuddl Plant Sllvurplcto". , Q W.»W. Wellner Ltd. 1868 Charlottetown, P. E. I. Jewelers Since T WELLNER‘ I t’s the . APRIL 15,1942 Favorite CREDIT TERM Slight Garrying Charge WAR GRACE BEFORE MEAT LONDON. — (OP) - “For what to mention the principal ,1" HID-tiff the British Fleet," said J. s, Bland, It ls slmlflcant that the lans were unable t". dislodge the enemv from these positions des- pite the fine showing made on the Central flout. Malta's Purgatory (Exchange) The British Island of Malta ln the Mediterranean has been bomb- ed for the two thousandth time. Probably other fortifications have been shelled more frequently in wars, but never has a single spot. pleen bombed so oftzen and so heav- y. Because Malta is near to Sicily, the Italians thought they could bomb it into submission wlilzout any trouble. They set to work to do so the hour they entered the war. Their puny attacks were mere pin- prlcks and they lost so heavily that bombing Malta became dtstastefut Yet their Stefanl news service daily sent out report; of the fleets ul Italian aircraft bombing Malta. If those reports were true. Malta should have been ground into the dust, The reports were not. true, for the fleets of aircraft seldom numbered more than three or five. This hardly seemed credible at the time, but. 1t was vouched for by a Winnipeg lad who was then flying a Short boat in the Mediterranean. The resistance Malta put; up a- gainst the bombing by the Italians. soon proved that it was nmonz the best fortified islands in the world. Then the Germans, around their invasion of Greece. took a hand 'I‘iiey started sending fleets to un- load heavy bombs on the island tmd its port_of Valegta. With a short lapse while the Germans bare bomb- lng the troops tn Russia. intensified‘ at a cks from the ulr has been kepv. llp over Malta. The courage and effectiveness of the defence of Malta has exacted triheard-of endurance. It: Ls a trib- uic to a. little island people who were honeycombed with Italian pm. PB-zandc and espionage till the start of the war. It la a. tribute to the "MD! on the ground who defend the island and its capital. and to the alr force members who have taken off time after time each day to meet and drive off the serial at- tackers. Thelr tin-operative valor hu uved the one hue which ham- pag m: nuance for act-mini and l" P009: and equipment meant reinforce the Axis forces in Libya. THE JOURNEY Youth cried to mo, “Linger awhile beneath the flower- lng tree Betalled so red, red u the heart's wound! Liston with lifted brow To thcboggen llnnet merry upon the The shadows are short. the dl-v has scarcely nooned. Who knows but. never in all the years ahead Will the bira beétaite u gay or the llxh u r Llnicrpnwerve time-all Time l: oun, Said Youth. Ah. sing. sweet. Honey-tipped. and stlver-throntcd chest! We have all Time, but. not on hour to waste Older u we grow. The suneller, the ndlier we know A thirsty and A laundry need of u . One day Ls all too short 1n which ‘PM day's loumw lvlnz whltc And this same div. this day of mi and rain Comes not again. —Audrc‘y Alexandr; Brown ln lnnlpellfi-ee Press. faclllLle-I warehouses and cranes, and des ction of the pumping station of the [rent drydcd; the largssf. drydook on the marten coast. It la the work that. is expected to be l thorn in the enemy's side for l Year. — Ottawa Joumnl. latter piece of ts the Germans might use in Chairman Traders Association. durlng grace at Russ. tm association luncheon. of the Allied Brewery -—-_____ CUT SENTENCE LONDON, (GP) — A sentence of slx month l tso 1 B cher Willsiani‘ pémllh a“ n“ m’ horseflesh overprtce and selling 1t: for selling l" Pfemlse‘ “he” other mm was -~ on sale was reduced to three months WORI lS OF (‘H A LLENGF “Never before have we been c.1611 "Don for such a pro- digious effort. Never before have we had so little time ln which to do so much." _ Hanklln D, Roosevelt, Presld. ent of the United States. -—————-—-§_._ i “COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVIC ” W. K. ROGERS Agencies , Ltd. Phone 540-541 ilflill i ARIZ YOU TROUBLE!) WITH LUMBAGO on SURE BACK ‘I l! m, we hnva one of the but remedies to offer namely. BACKRPFF TABLETS A remedy for 8w: the Lumbngo, Urinary Troubles. Neurltll, Joint Muscular 5nd other form: of Bheumntcm which ordlnnry treatments full to reach. Prlcu 50 cents per box. MACB- mun £56k“ A delicately perfumed pre- paration which restores. atrengthenn llld heantlfleu the a ifwin restore Grey nu: c» It: orlllnll color. Promotes a new and m r- lor growth when tho h In falling sud in fill In preventing dandruff and EVANS HTOMACII ’ MIXTURE A very effective mum of ..i- obtaining relic! from dfcnrden of the digestive organs. which are attended by cu. hud- lnlle, heartburn, pain and a noun of pressure below the Iigort. Recommended for In- itiation. Dru 8.1m l. much an I stomach t troubles. Price 85 cont: pct some. WE TWO MACS H9 Grut George Street Q Mall Orders Given Prompt ' by an appeals committee. _._ -___—--. PIGEONS m mp1,; NEW DELHI — C ._ dlan government HfISPTSSUGf-‘lrflilel gfgéori? uiiilerphebglrlitnltuée a by a district magistrate. m!“ ____________ MILLIONS IN SALVAGE LONDON, (OP) — Brltaltfs . vage collection between Nov 1, and. Jan. 31 1942. was worth sbcul $25,000,000, including 509,459 tons of waste pa r, 507,922 tons of sci-r metal, 1 .056 ton of bones, and 251. 908 tons of kitchen waste. ’i Commencing March 30th, 1942, and a; NOTICE Highways Closed To Motor llehicles ii- until furthe notice all highways in this Province are closed for moto vehicle traffic, except in such cases where the total weight of vehicle and load does not exceed 5.000 pounds. Anyone driving on provincial highways contrary to fhi order shall be dully prosecuted. Dated the 27th day of March, A. D 1942. By order, 0. W. CAMPBELL, Acting Clerk of the Executive Council L 1331-3-30- m. W. f. 144 Richmond St. Plenty of people would told they could not ob- tain their usual sum“? of Hickey’s Black Twist Manufactured B! ll Ill KEY and IIIBIIULSOI TDBMHZO 00. LIMITED C HARLOTTETOWN Attention. f surprised, startled and cultiv- cerned if they were sudden TE. R. Brow&Son l Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Class Insurance l at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown WERE? YOU EVER DUMBFOUNDED 2 be