.... now-om‘ S”? uqmhsihg“) .. ,,. i» v roux TIIE B llAlI LIITTETIIWII GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Founded In i887) President: Lleul». Col. W. Chelter S. McLisre Vloe President: J. B. Burnett, i-‘JJ. _ secretary: Llent. Col. D. A. Mooifilnnon, 0-8-0. Editor and Mllllflll] Director, J. L. Burnett, l-XJJ.‘ Associate Editors: Frank Walker and 1m A. III!!!" GUBSQJPTION RATES m. B Moll In ELL, $6.00 pee your; $2.50 for 6 moot , $1.25 Ior l months; 50o for one month City Deliver! 81-00 r 1w: 51-00 I" 6 ""0"" $1.75 for I mon l: 60o (Brat? gait" u“ Mali t-h Pr In d .‘ - gdturdnyuevgekfyrr sziitio f:- 51-00 for 0 mum'- Wo for I non s The Charlottetown Gunrdlnn mu be 0011111"! If Hotalllng‘! News Arenoy. fines Snow- N" Y0"- Old South News Agency, Corner Milk end Washintlfln Boston; Metropolitan News Alfl-‘wy. 13'"? P"! 5F- Montreal‘, J. Fine an Bay st. Toronto; M“: $1M"!- Cisatean Lnnrler, Ottawa; Welles hewsvsllmi 5m" bury Ont; iiuh Tobacco Shop. Monoton h. B- _"Tl|o Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink.‘ uonnav, ocronm so, isiiz The Lobster Season Lobster catch decreased by three-quarters of a triillion pounds or so during the "spring" scu- son in the Maritime Provinces and the Magdalen 151311115, say; the Fisheries IVrws Bulletin,‘ but, neverthclcss, the pack of canned lobster put up was nearly 1,000 cascs greater than the output m tllc C\7f'I"I‘>])()ll(llllg ‘.11 season and tutlllltcll _L{).l"'l_' cases. That is another way of Saving. 0t course, that an increased percentage of the '42 catch went into eans——6l per will. ll wmlmled with a trifle over 57 per cent in the '41 spring season. Total catch for the season was 16,272,300 pounds, as shown by unrovisod statistics com- piled by the Dominion Deperhnerit of Fisheries, as againlt 17,oa4,6oo pounds s your lgb. Ad- verse weather conditions in some of the areas qnmblflcd with reduced manpower to pull down the landings. There arc different legal lobster fishing seasons, of course, on different parts of the Atlantic coast, the lobster-producing area of the Dominion, and the “fall" season is now in progress in l number of districts and will continue until (Jctober 5. Later on, at mid-No- vember, the season will open in still other areas but it is only in the so-called ‘Spring’ and "fall" seasons that lobster canning takes place. Afthnugh total cannery pack showed net in- crtnsc during the '42 spring season. the crcdit for the gain belongs to the Prince Edward Is- land and New Brunswick areas where lobster- ing was in progress st that time. The New Brunswick pack, almOSt 7.700 cases, was 2,115 cases greater than a year ago and the Island pack mcrvrr-ctl by 1,300 cases. Nova Scotin produced much the largest quantity of canned lobster, but, even at that, its pack of 21,670 cases was smaller by 1,900 and more cases than the '41 spring output. The Magdalen Islam! (‘-'lf111€1'1t’S tiroduccd 4,055 cases. or about 500 fcwcr than in ‘41. A couple of hundred cases were also packed in mainland areas of Quebec but are not taken into account in the 49,666 case total given above. lucftlciitallv, it is noted that Prince Edward Island's lobster fishery is the largest singc contributor in dollar value as shown by the Provinces fisheries returns in 1941, lobsters as marketed bringing a marketed return of more gligm .<_I0<><1_cn>rw_ Conserving Fuel Dr. Levcrett D. Bristol, Director of Public Health of .\'<~w' York City, has issued ,1 report ou the question uf winter heating which is c-f gctierzil IZlItTCSI. l-le urges that persons who arc sensitive to cold take cold baths of short duration to develop resistance to chills. He favours the wearing of sweaters and warmer cltitlvhg m homes wixeu less fuel is being burn- ed 11ml says no luivui should result, as the body is quite capable of adjusting itself to tempera- tures at least ten degrees below that considered the standard for dwellings. He recommends a temperature of 50 degrees for lwtlrmnns at night and says that this imlccs for good health and builds up resistance to germs. Draughts in bedrooms froth open windows should be avoid- ed, where possible. Children under four years require at least 7O degrees 0f heat; persons over 6F WINS of age should have from 7o to 74 <l¢_ grccs. The greut majority of other persons, however, can comfortably endure lower tem- peratures. His rules to save fuel and keep healthy arc: Fat right, go to bed early, wear heavier clothes and get plenty of outdoor ex- ercist‘. l1 :1l><> makes for sound slccji to pull down the window shades and darken the 11mm. Every householder in Canada should be con- Ccrttcrl zilwiut hent conservation this winter. ECON- omy in use of fur-l i< one way of hcljling altmg {he War offurt. More Procrastination The delay in appointing Catiatliart ministers t0 111111.. and flit-sin strikes (Iifllflt lk-xtcr, ()1- tawxi Ctlfftfiltlllflvlll of the “finuipcg lircc Press (Liberal) as being most unfortunate. Isle writes: The agreement to exchange ministers with China was reached in August, 1941. In due course the government of (bum acted on the agrcctncut and lI1Illl(‘(l Lui Shih Shun 21s minis- ter to Canada. I~Ie arrived and began his work last February. So far as the record goes, the government lost sight of the Chinese lcgation from the time the agreement wtns signed until August 1, 1M2, when .\Ir. King, in answering a question in Par- liament, said that he hoped to name the min- ister very shortly. He would get at it "as soon as Parliament adjourned." 'l"\vo and a half flonths have passed since then. With respects to Russia, the record is snmc- what bcttcr, but still the tlclny is surprising. On Feb. 5, 1042, Mr. King told Parliament that an agreement had been signed \vith Russia pro- viding for an exchange of consular FPp1'(‘S('1llfI- fives, On May 11, Mr, King said that the ap- pointment would be made "as soon as possible." On june 11, he told Parliament that a new agreement calling for an exchange of lflgflllfitlfi had been signed. On july 14, Mr. King was asked when he expected to make the llj1p0lfli- (l merit to Moscow. He replied: “I hope before ll"? End 0f the 5655011 t0 be able to announce an appointment. I may not be successful, but I hope to be able to do so." On August 1, the question was repeated and Mr. King replied that as soon as Parliament adjourned, “I hope to have an opportunity of continuing SOmc cou- vcrsations I have had already with different per- sons COnCerning Canada’s representation in the Soviet Union and I am hoping to be able to make an announcement very 5h0rtly;and that applies u» our representation in China 11s u-cll." Parlia- ment adjourned on that very day but, at this writing, 76 days have passed without an an- nouncement. It is fairly well known that the long delay in making these appointmctits has been resented by guvcr11111c11ts who feel they have l)['\_'ll slightctl The explanation, no doubt, is that the Prime Minister is heavily over-worked and cannot find the time to attend to all the duties which devolve upon him. The remedy 111051 commonly PFUIIUSULI is ihzt: he should amend the Extermil .\ff:1irs .\ct t0 enable 1t svpnrute miui~trv to be set up. The work devolving on this ‘depart- rncut has definitely pASSCCI the point where it can be regarded as an appendage to the Primr- Bliui-tvfs office. — EDITORIAL NOTES— lizive _v~u bought your Yictorv Rom‘. vet? x v at v ' ' \\‘h;u would savings accounts or crtwlzt b): worth were the I\az1s to settle in Ottawa? l U l Out of 33,000,000 people in Great Hritniti betllicen 14 3nd 65. 0V9? 23._~',O0,<)\X? mcn 11nd wt» men’ have been mobilized for full-time llililt)ll_'|l service of some form. I U i U A valuable torque, or necklct, of elcctrum~ nn ancient alloy of gold and silver—found in a X rulk llClfl and thought rit first to be a brass do '1' im-tckcr, was adjudged to be trrusurc trove by a jiffy at an inquest at Bawsev, King's Lynn, Iinglunrl. The torque is of pre-Roxuan age, dating back to $0 or 100 BC. 1F i! I! i‘ .\Il.~5 (i. II. Ilaumgzirtcr wriics thus to Tllc Tiimcs. Luv-iii 1r "As a tribute 1o our splendzd Merchant Navy, and to those who guard our convoys, I am w ' Ing to tcll you that out of o8 nuxrlkred leucz. received (luring the lust 1S mo? s from my brother in Ciruiztvlu only one has failed to arrive, while the sequence of an almost equal number of my own to him is complete." U U I * Public men "dcsccratcd" the Sabbath 5o years _.' much :15 they are (loing it today". Sun- _ . Hvt. 180).’, Mr, Alexander llrll, the in- ventor, spoke into the tuoutltjiiece in New York to his cousin, Mr. William Itl. Hubbard, in Chicago, after which Mayor “fashburne, of Chicago, exchanged words with blayor (iiffllll of New York. tjnthcrcd at each end of the long telephone lme were civic leaders, ncwspapcrmcn and others, who marvcllcd that the human voice could be heard over wires covering 950 miles. l! U Since the start 0f the wnr R..‘\.F. fighter pi- luls hzivc shot down in daylight more than 4,000 enemy aircraft, and a further 700 have been destroyed at night. In cross-Channel sweeps carried out during the third year of war the I\’..~\.F, (lcstroyed more than 600 enemy} aircraft, while almost 400 more German aircraft were shot down in other day and night actions in the west. The R.A.F.'s fighter losses during thc third year were less than 700, which is about two to every three of the enemy's, in spite of the frict that most of the fighting was our cncuiy-occupicd territory. I # I l Who are the "some people" Naval Minister Angus Macdonald referred to at Vancouver as being responsible for the scmi-tlcfcuceless con- dition of the St. Lawrence today"? ls it not uu- likcly he was referring to his revered chief, Prime Minister King and his Quebec following in the Cabinet and Parliament.‘ Speaking at the opening of Canada's new Naval College at Ilsquzuualt, he said: "The St. I.:1\vr1:11cc is only one of many coastal waters adjoining Canada and we can't put the whole Canadian navy in that locality. We are doing the best we ca11 with the ships we have. If some people bud bccu more nztval-niiiidt-rl iu yicruzs llllwl. we itiight have had more Sl1ip5 to do thc job with today." s- » s- a It is just as wcll to bear in mind what the war in the Pacific implies. japan launched her war effort with a large rqwrve of oil, a large part of which was purchascil in the Ihiifcd Shift-s. its u\\'11 resources arc relatively sitmll, the pro- duction of the Sakhalin Island. lmlf of which is owned by japan and half by Soviet Russia. (lffitinl buffed States .\'nv_v cstunulvs wvrt- tlmt japan hnrl a fucl reserve of two years for i101’ \\'£I1‘ michinc. lritish CnlllllfllCa wcrc 111211 IIIL‘ supply was ample for only 18 months. One of the prime objectives in Japan's southwest Pacific drive was the 60,000,000 barrels a year production of the Netherlands Iiast Indies. For more than 1O years japan hurl bci-n itifiltrritiug llllS arch, buying oil rights wherever possible. Today japan holds this oil-producing area in addition to the oil fields of Burma which be- fore thc conquest produced 8000.000 barrels a yvflf. s1 4 w a- Viscount Sankey, Lord Chancellor of England, I929 to 1940, when he was succeeded by Lord Simon, born this date, 1866; educated at Ox- ford; called to the bar 13412; took silk, 10001111)- poiuted judge of the Kiugk Hench Im-ition 1914; l-orfl Justice of Appeal, 1938; Lord Lfhrm- ccllor in 1929; appointment to this high office Bfiflituvlhi: unique in so far as he was never clectcd a member of pnrlimtictit; was only rzus- Hl to 171v pvcrnut- as :1 Iiaruu in 102R whvu tuzulc lvml 111' .\pp<-:1l, 11ml r:1i~cd m .1 Viscouutry rm bring mzvrlv Lord Chancellor :1 year later; hpm: from his judicial duties, the only public work llc Flt/l “'71s as chairman of the (foal luduslrv Ctulltlllsuriti in 10m, llrili~l1 member of lht- Wrnnuiviit (hurt of Arbitration at the llngtw, VIN‘? 1l‘.'1i1'1t17t11 0f the l7('(l(‘1'.'1l 51111011111 (pm- mittce of the Indian Round ‘lhblc ("unfm-ciitru, I03". flurl rhriirmnu of the lllll>1‘l'l.'lI I\if‘l."llll)])\ . (Rnunuttvr of the lmpirial tlmfotcuv.» .11 ()1- fawa, 1930. FHE Cl-lARisuilririyyvN GUARDIAN NOTES BY TIIE WAY We always had l lood deal of bjlilpzillil)‘ WiI-Il lheucicre melee: m lilo days o1 siruggie, for he was a 111.111 o1 ability auu had sontetmng to say. He was that) u good Janina.- ist 1.11 the days when he worked tor the diufy press. But of recent. years he has xrown waspisti and, sour of temper, with a miriency vo discuss prc-bvienis of WJiLh hi9 kmws little tkcause he remains 11.11111101111- ed. Stately lu: hau no b-isiziuss 111 Canuuu tall-IL coded for we kind of ccunmcub of wiucu he delivered Iulllsell. Even if he had been en- tirely right. in ail he sold. Carmela woe not the proper place In which to say It, and hLs fellow-country- m-sn \\'1.l n01. COIIQCIIIII 111a Canadian ucvtrumenu 101" conuuanumg him ",0 kesp 111's tongues-till, as 19118 "-5 he remains 0.11 K1115 $011 which l8 alien to him_ Mr. D1"e1.ser’s wngue ties uwoed become on unruly mem- ber; 45,11 Franctsco Argonaut, 'l‘hero are mnuy straight stretches of runway uack ill the more than 23,51» miles of Lnes operated by the Canadian National RflU-WQYB. m9 longest being on a branch 11M 111 Western Canada. This uwgem 00m" nirnccs near Camrcse and ends at Alfniice, A1111, a distance o1 a] 6 m ~_ 1h sxecnd ILJCE, lUlfihlllg 55.45 miles, is a pace of Central Region main lme track bctwfirl Komoka and Chavnam, Ont. NPXI L! " cu of main 1111c track 1n the “e cru Region which Illeasulcs 4t; i) m: , b tug cu the PC1118 0i 131.. Cm ‘M. 1 [mun .1 ifllll Cu:- arm 1o Just “us: c1 Afc-Yllvv. 519‘- iast of Kent JIlllClluil t-o west of Chcthnm, N. 8., 30 29 miles, is we lcrrgest Oanudmi Notional tang- ent. m. z-‘ue Atlantic Rfitélfm- Q11 l1 lme iunnmg from Durand to Grand Rflplds, Ml(‘ll._ then- is a Slmlglli piece of track of LE8 o3 miles, which 15 the longest umgcm on lines op- emwd by t,“ Canadian National Railways 111 flle Ulliifd 5994“ Canadian Natfonaf RBMWWWB Bul- 1 A Ciuuuliun lam-e corporal from Montreal was kiiuug time by lean- ing against. a shop window watch- 111g the sheiiieltf Town Hall clock. 119 bold me he had sewed in H0118 Kong, singnpokz and Australw. zmd ls now sev 41g a; much 0f E118- lzllld fl) he um, 11c came from 31011110111 ‘.1 wide opcn town," and thought, Slttfffeld should have cfnenlg; opui on Sgmxiays. Shef- fields ware very frcndly, but t-hi! dxi no;- untum-ly make up for t-he (ire-m o: Sunday I met. thrce R1116 1 . lirlillflllg frcm Quebec. ‘l‘:1c_\' knew lltt-le English and had to pick their words carefully" as they spake. "Nice place," said one. "sure nice place,” put In another with o laugh. "Plenty quiet on S1111- days, No pictures. Soldier no where 10 go e p: pub. Setter not bust Sundry .1 ould naive fun. Lot to do Suucliu in Qustcc." A young Can- adian soldier to whcm I spoke was very enthusiastic. "Shcffieldls a darn gocd place," he said. “Ihere are the beszi looking women In England here. But. they don't give you much choice of. “he” V) B0 Sundays "-— Sheffield Ttligruph. A trade paper report/s that a Can- adian manufacturing company has recently increased 115 office space by the erection of a, new two- s10 c buildzng. 50 to 26 feet, “In- Cl‘ u; amzuiit cf dcvoil work," states the llélpCfl, “In comiecticn “u, Qovcuquimnf regulations en- larged ‘uhe Skiff to such size that. additional space becanue a necess- ity.” The story illustrates hcvw much more p: ductive cf employ- mrnt 1111.5 war i s been than t-lie suugrlc of 1914-18 1n that war manufacturers had to extend their fncioifes, but no great additions were required for office space. when new help was hired 1n the office, it. was because increased prcduc- lkL-Il. had cnlxd for mcne 1901190‘ WDIK, Noav tho patxr work 1n- cmes/es without much reference to oducticm; even the simple act of mg a. new clerk may demand the filling out of half a. dozen forms and the writing of two or tluec letters, National Selective ‘~=rs may render the sccuruig of extra help more diffi- cult, Nothing has come from high- e-r isuzuoritfes to indicate that extra office employee would be made urmeoessoiy. -'I‘he Priritxd Word. It took some explaining by the mnnagcmcnt, of a downtown Nor- folk 1W1.) drug store to prevent n Limes-toned walkout of waitresses. The girls rwented an advertisement Sfiflltlflg “homely” girls for employ- ment tn ‘who store. They decided to stay, however, when the manage- ment. (‘XDIKLIIIQG it was all due to a. typographical error. ‘The word should have been "comely." —Ecli- tor and Publisher. Here is n- story from s recent ls- suc of the Gilbert Plains Maple Lvhf which we think you'll lzkz. ‘We have n boy in town who ltns eirctrd his own flncpsle, and each Htcrnfng he puts a llt:lc flag on ft; nftcrwardc he stands at attention 11nd In tho strong boy-soprano vcice lets 1Z0 with God Save the K‘ His fat} r is In the A11 1- 1cc." "fut. litiie 1nd with his own qrrivufe ritunf every morning is desperately serious about. this war Business. Aire the rest of us equally 90110115? Winnipeg Tribune. If the true-to-type Engllshman realized that we Welsh are descend- art: of the Ancient Britons and that they were merely the offshoots of river piratcs perhaps th would tihfnk more before they spo e. In- cldentally 1,1 every man went back b; the cou-ntiry of his father there would be no English stock here. as they would all be In Geflnimy um- dov the cursctl Swastika, whilst we would stfll he In Emglztnd, which to ue lo shill ‘Mae Hem Wlaid fy Nhadau" fl. e., The Lend of 0111' Fathers) As to the term "for- eigner." the boot should be on the other foot, 11s it ls the Englishman thnf is of foreim (CrOITIIfITIICl drs- ceht mid not us. We are Celts rmd 100 per cent British, for which we thank Gcd, We are 1n our right place every-where we go In Bri- tain. because we were here fl t A Welshman in Birmingham We hope, before this mighty con- flict. draws to a close, to have the .1111» saying "so soar-y" with feel- fng, ~rDotmft News). all. If as the saying Is "Those whom lltn gods would destroy, they first make mad" then German leaders mzlnv are giving cvldmce they are dawned to be destroyed. For their nclirms, (threats and declarations of ri-criil. weeks have been so illogical. toting. 30 disjointed that , t. asrnt n picture cf Instabil- 1w marl fear. German leaders have the Jitters, Amdon lllrce ma. a genial . R. Conductor, who fins held nasxtion over thirty years. r'mc I11 c cf sucli t‘ the hluidlc- East was the s two memorable evuits during the very tallts, coils on kings, conferences with politicians, soldiers and more .1 time while away ing front formal lounge suit Instead of striped pants and tall cctu. of tra- dition. He managed to impart to ncarlv mcsphere of motivated by the sheer nrc. ass ty dark as t0 Willkiefls. cf the Office of W11" Information. savinei Somebody might b» trying to sell PUBLIC FORUM Illa column lo ops; III In nonunion by eors-enpondeuls el qioltlunn ol Interest. The Charlottetown Gnutllnn dose not menus: , ersdwtli lbs opinion d owrnnonllonln. TRIBUTE TO FORMER ISLANDER SLr:— Having been entertained a; the home of another “Down Easter“ 1t Rive; one fl thrill to write to their heme-town jiapcr of 111111111» 1' gut-ccssful "Herring chok- er"-—f1'om the Maritime; - or Is that "fishy" cognomeu given to natives of the Islflltd-JTIDOG Ed'- wmcl Island —"what other Island 15 Ihc-ie?" ' Mrs, ftzxlph came to Winnipeg In 1903 uud wtrlzvd here as 11 stenc- grnplicir .11 ilu- 111w office of J.A M. Afkens, before he was Lfeut. Gov- ernor of lvfnnltoba-fliere W85 l stuff of 36 fn the office, Including E H. Coleman-who Inter became Under Secretary of State for Can- ada-untl C K Newcombc-"tvho later was hehti of the Pension B3:11'(I.—H;110lcl Alkens, and C. P. Fullerton. M15. Ralf‘ also worked three yous In a .\v office In Melville, Sosk, and while ln Melville she mefi the one 111211 whom she chose above all ofhvrs. Walter J. Ralph . iful courteous C. N. that T7103’ lmve a beautiful home on Shefburn Street ln \V‘nnl11e<z and Mrs. Ralph h to everyone 1f. (‘lltl("ll‘t‘.’l herself _ _ 1 she has “Kiutipi-L! L; proud Mrs Rah ‘s ihflme was formerly E nsc iff, P.E.1., Illlfl she clfnszs, "ll-h loving.’ memcrles, to her native land. I am. Slr. etc. If. (‘OWPTON I Lee Court, llvlfllllllf‘: Debunking Mr.Willkie (Rank Gcrvael In Oolllefls) Wcxidcil Wiilklcs rcccut v it to 0nd of ma: T0 re: m: ram e Only the weak of spirit — the wishful lhlnkerl Q It's time for everyone to look up and ahead-end the sooner the better. The armed forces make the sacrifices-those who cannot go to war must WORK 0 SAVE ' I-END VIIITIIRY IBIIIIS Buy Bonds now-and keep them.- Buy them with your savings. Buy them out of weekly earnings. If desired payment may be made by instalments; You are cordially invited to use the services of this Bank's branches. The of NOVA SCOTIA diplomats and diplomats. the cotfespond- and longer than n: BI‘_ from the fictit- Short as it wa r1 He sassed the censors, mode diplomatic calls '1n a the sacred (Wffyililflq he did mi m- clambake. Censor- of keeping‘ Berlin 111 the views about uolit-lcal and military affairs In the Nlldtlls‘ East, rvenfty‘. clrtnlls cf his lTCm bucmmi; kurwn. This nrtue Ls an attempt to sup- py scme of those mfsslfig detalls. He did sortie good but he also broke a frw tmnces The darn- flge occurred despite the pr-rsence in his crulst- cvfw of .l m. Ear-hrs, soft-spoken rviprrrtien 11110 no": L‘ o former n is 1111 offlcin Joe was the ccrsclercc of the party, a small voice which kept "Be careful, Werdclll Americans did realize 1t He ortwlnlnco that. 111.: mission was partly to bring’ fl lvfttldle Elsi to 111v zflflntltn cf .110 Auwi- lean 11001110. 11nd rv.r_\l1rtIi~ 011cm". ed. A press vet» 11w of tnuny battles with certs in 111:1. em mid (7~r.tr,i‘ ~rp~ th:u m- FROM: ADONAIS (To Keats) . . Go w RoTne. which u U10 chm sepul Oh. not of him, but of our joy: ‘tfs nought ngcs, umpires, and religious there U0 buried In wrought, Pbr such as he can lend, — they borrow not. Glory from those who made the world their prey; And he 1s gathered to the kings of the ravage they have ought. Who wngiu contention with their time's decoy. And of the post are all that cnnnor ‘pass away. Go thou to RDIIIPr-‘HI; once the Paradise. The EfflYf‘. the city. nud the wfltfor- nr-ss: And wm 1e its tvrrcks like shattered mountains rise. The flowering weeds, and fragrant census dress The bones of Desolation?» naked- noss. Pass. tllll the Spirit of the snot shnll m Thy footsteps to a slope of green access, Where. liko nu fnfnuffiq smile. over the don A light cf laughing flowers nlourz the Ilrnss is sDrend. , ~Perev Bysslie Shelley, after a battlefront _ fell near enough fcr him the columns and to hear them burst. Reporters at. the large assembly which General Montgomery for gteff conferences. close and quiet. The first question was: k' how do S011 him NLr. W desert?" Al; though the question had re- some lc ased "The battle (lived Into his speech: which has Just. been won ls ‘Der- haps one 0f the mcst It is comparable history. x N \\'.l(‘1l ' Batty. of the Nile destroycd the French fleet. 15 saved. The threat Valley has beep Ientovcdl” conditioned to Correspondents. _ Vlffllfllll. ren- understntesnents by new"; to get out.” After that Wtllkfe went. to the desert. In a United States Army catch-as-catch-can dzdnu make B. , sclditr, 11111 _ ‘l mzndc-d that, had he stuck to IIIS strictly amateur role 1111 authority on the higher strategy vlslf. l0 the few bombs very n. obctiy few hours’ where a of dust in a. 1e, a sent-ct m" a hm Oi gull‘ “Tim” “mt crs i) ~11 1rd at Willkie Thvv ' yo“ 5;, fir,‘ . l-fllliinlbir y“: l5 Isindfftl‘ lizniuvn tlhered been a a Brush lruttrizvirl and tn": are bat/UP going m, at an Th“ kw.” J10 bfisses hi1‘? ’ ' ‘he enemy attacked Angus‘, . 3 ut this was Se te-mbfr 5 Here It wasnt so much what Wlilkio was newkfio,‘ perishable said 11s the; manner In zvltlch he Stu“ They rushed 111701151), 5M‘ n" “o, g“ m“, “s on typevmters; dospntch riders tcok that. tlieuvn: was pro" .t.1 over. 1t to Dre-gs hgndqnflflflfj; bu! n1] tho. H1t.er was uckcz! \Vl.lkle m vain ‘vntkio hm, nub? dd gfneratcri an atmosphmo of op- he “flpcrtfimp o; (m. ‘mp3,. ilmlsqn that (‘Qlliflllllg-(l t0 brighten kgvpt had been 5H,“! b“, (M, life in Cairo long alvr he left. Sal-vane“ profess hm begun 10m; *;,.*e..::::z"°.1“.. More e. s . . defeat, there still was dmige!‘ to sun the threat to Elglpt Ninaimd Flgvpt. and the Middle East i?‘ Later, a‘. ansllu 1- pres confer- ctice, Willkie, 111.1112,’ words on words, reached even greater heights of optimism someone asked hdm whet-hot the foIks of home PPflllHfl the Import. the United Natfms of hnkluzi: the Middle East and, in t1 Inter phase of the War, 0f using l? as n splurg- board for an attack agiinst, P8 and the Balkans. Here, Wfllkfe struck o, blow for democ. rtwy. He said he didn't believe N E W I. O W E R P R I C E 5 Edison Mazda 6O watt, 4O wutt and 25 wcll lumps an reduced in prlto from 10¢ ouch M I5¢ EACH. uniform. gccd.l0ck1ng wculd have ~11 k1‘-1\\' 85 He became they front It was hot. dtclsive fn to the last days of August and early SPDhember The first, 0f 601111543, Established IQ32—-OvoraCer1l0ry oliervlco “'19s, the defeat. of Rommel’; Airike Kozps The m“) e\lcnt$i->we ylcjorlous Branches In Prince Edward Island lmtgig 311,11 wgjkigs n1~;~,\._q1_,<o_ Clinrlotlelmvn Ollioury Alllil"! 519"“ illfldfd 5Q Qlgsqfy may, they be_ Keusington Summerslde Montafillt! vlflml“ came confused. The newspaper .. H — rr " " * 20y? hapdltyr r1133? tyne‘ w (Kn-er me >__ V ,. M. -_.. ____ .. .. . .___.._. _ 4; us even core t teie <1 . . w ; , ~ 1 ' b, m ‘ed until 11110 the S-itcfvitl, and thcwiciiiiigre glffffifzicaxiishtiiftifié ‘ltienedigil lxtrdiiitudliisufhrianleg (‘llfIle€!'O‘WU‘€ de- bllbl‘ with the iccotitl. The mmmwd about up; 5mm m; s11‘ vvd or chased out of Egypt - t was cramuted W131 sftite- .. t, . m Wmk p uivnnkb.‘ 1;. “a, mm '» lme ms‘ ‘ niplimls’ I dldgt’ tliiiik so 1w belzcvle the ‘W ie had the CQYI-‘OTS 0" I “Ccklfill P314195. BIJPPB-Tflmcs he- 05115313 ought 1o permit, more s/pot. They were obliged to choose fore still and movie cameras, radio between pruning his utterance down to reasonable terms (there- by risldnr offending him) or a1- fcwfng erlIn to get valuable propaganda material, bcause Ber- wcll 11s the British m t what had happened in the (,0 rt wasn't cxaotiy comparable to Nelson's victory. If the British censors had el- Icwru, \Villkf-c's statement to 80 tut, Berlin could have assumed zhat, the statement came directly 2:111 Eiztisli officers who had c0111- ductcd him to the front. And Got-bb-"ls would have had o llfefll chuckle. The rest of the press conference wrnt, like this: A correspondent k"! "were you bombed. ‘I Willkt _v:.=_ yes, I Wm bandied." "was l‘. high-level bcmblnlt. Mr. Wfllkfe?" "Yo; but vowve got to expect that sort oIII-lllflll." yr ._, He to see raised met tent uses “W011, like our Willkle to tl e " Em t 7': I7 Nile Drive ouIAC 1 Once again Edison Mazda Lamps hpve been reduced In price. Today these economical, efficient, dependable lumps, in the 60 we", 40 watt and 25 watt sizes, cost you only 15¢ each-the lowest price In thelr historyl Si! HOW PRICES HAVE MIN IIIWCID PRICE WII 191B 19221928 I930 I935 I942 .95: .l5c (b0 well Suva power yo! light adequately by using thrifty, dependable Our uuzlt 2&3 Use WelIner’s LAY-AWAY om Plan! Fine 11111111111175 Three-diamond engfllll- ment. rim! Wm‘ W” diamond wed- $ 00. ding rlnn -— — ‘50 Exqulsil selling d flawlcsscdiomond. an a Authorized Credit W. W. WELLNER Limited Jewelers Since 186s‘ Professional Gard McLEOD 8. BENTLEY W. L. HENLEY, K. C. s. A. BENTLEY. x. c. Barristers sud Atwmeys-st- [Aw MONEY T0 LOAN 154 Prince Street i Morrellandllompany II. F. 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