-: g.” neg-yew J- r,,_,:'_.¢_-.»,¢,¢>_ ti???“ ...__._..___ ..-»»..s._ nh-(ru-JHI-nu wvwnntsu rrnfififl fifii/T“? "Z751 5-‘, l -' - ”'>*'-> ~13. wit-wanin- moi". rot": lhE forecast for the present fiscal year is more than double that; and the reason is lhfl Kfmflllb’ cmtrttotrrtowu a u Ann m1 strength or m at» Muflllll: luilv tl-uunded 1n I357) Prgytdi’!!! Lzi-ut. (ol. \\' (‘hester S n11- Yhhlklflll, J R. Burnett. F-J-l sgurrlary Livut. Lul. U A. MacKInnOn 1.1.5.0. Edlmr and Slalnzlng Director J R. Burnett, FJJ. Associate Euiiun trunk Walker and lflll A Emma‘ st 1w ltll"f‘l0.\ RATES i; Mail m l‘ L |_ stun |1.'r war $1.5" for 6 mom"! 51.2.1 n11 :: tit-mills sm- fur one menth- (‘in |)t'l-\ll\ -_,.-.| |)l'f year sfuu for o monthl- 5 fur f ttinnttis. anil l S. .-\ $5.00 P" "u- pa, war, $1.00 for 6 month! a... lnr l} mnnlfis. illlllftl-H \\= t-i-m '_ij,1i-i,it!.t~,\’ qxl-nioriy isT dleaker Ullll flu llkvtlvesl Ink. "i111 i: 111i". ,' ».= A [i,‘-,v|;:;l~ Tilt)“ TH Hitler v ' , ,1 - t" ‘on y:=' off v‘ , , \ ' ' ’ g‘ 1:12 t-t Flattili ,. l ~. i - - 1 . run \n'illng nnqlq r ~ 1' 1 ',.l“\. . .i....t. .1. .- \ 1 o _ ‘ ~ '11P scat of a p, . c 1 ~ ,. . ti: sottj Pa-‘i . ' :' $111: 0t the I . ‘ 1 ‘ - 1 , '~ iianil about 7F . m . asicrn c, transatlantic rt _. 1 ~ .1 air base on 1 - - ‘f ‘ ' Tlte island ‘,_ l 11- = of the l e 5 ' o lnses men- ,‘ ilie agrecitieut , ‘i ‘ Xlackenvie 1c ~ _ ‘ , i""\\‘-’\'('l- niav hf‘ ._ wt? l l-IYS. ; . fur : certainly p xection is f" ,. \>‘A5) .\lriri- l ' ' ‘ » . ‘~~ - 11-»: in anv- ,. "l3 the British l '1 on of tltc '1‘ the agree- ,» "21"." The t, 1 -.l:c aqrcc-itieut ;~ . 1 new order in powers ivhich . be so marshalled _ ivill . and it - the .-\m- whom we .. 1»o=l:€o11 in our . o-"xntiittitv of in- f ~ "l our pride 172.10 ;- a, ... C - ' enthus.. stic. The o. ' or Roo=evr=lt's lw. \\'il‘.l<ie. has been t. \ ~ :7 " ~ i v1 conciurline the .14. ‘u; i r riviiication hy tire ' r to L’. S. Attorney G ‘teie was both auth- PresidenUs action. . ‘tide of the acquis- '-i-~:1 of the Imiisiatia iluring a European '~ _ ed by treaty. :~ "ti" 1 i Nlarth 3, 1833, Con- ' 1:. ~1 the Secretary of the ., it‘ naval vessels, but ‘ ~11" a right in the President ‘t ." ln any case, the agree- nif/i. Discussion on its continue for months, rifi-h .\'avv will gain “.43 conswuwval n» ~ ~ hut ‘t: ‘ ‘ t thK '~ 1 " ile-trover fleet, and the TI. ‘ s _ of air and naval bases of g - r tic importance. The \\'nr Loan Campaign (",..\~ members united \-@,,,.,~1,__ ' JQCDH-ll \\'.'1r jinn" m, 1 '<-. ldllillttf‘ Minister 114,-‘,- - ‘ '11 a speech which “H, 1,;- _ ,. -, 1111b lltlltlWlllli through- ,,,,, r < qit-rilwrs took up the 5p,“ ' ,, ,.~ it gathering. This method of 1-1 1',‘ -l i ]t'li']1"r<' and ticcessitv of the 11111.1‘ lowrt d1 wild luwvt- effective. The fir~t war t-r-np iKTlllWl fa q l:1'in.1r\'. was for $JO<MOOOJWYJ m. ,,,, .._ ~ "illll hv $00,000,000, The ,',' .=,,. .1‘ i‘, ~ , .111 l1 m will be ltsiwccn _<_-\-,,_,. .1. l ;I;1,1wi>n_i)t;(). - . -' d mirlriil <pccch of yestcrday' ,. ,_ ,1 1- ,1 l hc lltiil, I. l,. Ralston. Mi"- .. |~ - it ‘,' -'r~»l_ l-injjland, he dc- .‘- "_ i‘ » ~ 3;». of Tviirth .\mi-ricttn dw- v‘. 1 ‘ 1!". to put everytltinq 7 1 . 1 w ~ r line, llc asked for "an ll‘, ' 1 ~-! 1o the loan. and i, . ,. » . - 1,‘. 13,7. Jpiuld ht‘ furth- .~ - ' ,1, ,», 1.. -;'-1 1111-11- 1111s forecast (by V" l‘ " t ' : '1' I-'iti~i-~~ Tli-iistert "n PXltPfliiILlI.» UT mzi- ttidlioti iluliars a day. Th0 104 and tiic incnaszttg output of essential war ma- tcizals. ‘ .‘\llll)llfl other ittiprcssive facts Clifidvb)‘ the Blinister was construction work in erecting and ‘enlarging 100 major plaitts involving_ more Him, $111_:,c>oo,ooo; the amiual output of these ltllllll> would run to 53111000000. Again: for lite first vvar oi the war it ltad been planncrl 1o Spend $S$.ooo,ooo on the air service. For the present fi-cal vear tlte estimates were $140.- ooopoO and the ant-unit would probably reach fimmcxmmtwxv. lixpcttilitiires in other directions Civfffistintliliflflh’ impressive. .- i< the kftid of talk the people of Canada will appreciate, It means that after innumerable and incredible delays, (ianadrfs war effort is at lIt-t being latmchcrl on a scale commensurate with our intiwrtaitce in the British Common- ' and the llfiffllll need in the Rlother Coun- tor our ivholt-hearterl Cfi-Opfifillifill. The Cottservative leader, lion. .\Ir. Hanson. a tuade a strong appeal. "Your wealth and ~ " h ivarttv-tl from tdttawa, “will be re the ileuing wind if llitlcrism he ifctorioits." Canada today, he em- phasized, “stands at the cross roads of history. ; ffer much travail, much delay and hesitation, l am glad ti think Canarla is, at last, getting '- » "r r' '1 war stride. \\'e have a goodly army reparation. Our gallant lads will not fail llut their preparation, their training, their their equipment and we ' 1v r" l ind-t assuredlv we shall not fail them." '~" in a itnz-lit-ll. is what the war loan is lkcntier Czimplvell. in his address before (iharfiattctovvn service clubs yesterday; gave a clear-cut explanation of why the ntoney is being rrsr-d in this particular ivav. (lther speakers "~11: (iamtila 1l1'.'ll[ with other aspects of the stzoti. Altogether, there was a veritable span: spcech-tnalv-itig. ilesigitcrl to get the campaign atvav to a flving start. The cause fullv itistifies tire effort. and there is good reason ‘to. predict ill“ it will S“ "Wet the I00" and with credit to - ebiroitiat mores - .\lt"=t of our =umencr guests have departed, and rnw we tttizst settle down to Fall and Winter TF-tliittc. U i l I The grain crop. like the hay, has for the most 03ft been harvesicd ivfthout the interference of rain. I I W I Beach Crrovc- will make an excellent training centre for recruits. like the Airport not too near or too far front the city. i I i i .\l:tlta caoturel hv the llritidt from the French this date, tRoo, and in 1914. hv the treaty of Paris was rccogtiizetl as part of the llritish limpire. l l‘ i i llon. .\lr. llansoti struck the right note at the Caitailiait Yaricnal l-ixhilvitiott when lie cle- prccatctl the boasting of our new and desirable Y. S. .\. aiiqntneitt at the expense of the onlv counlrv in the world which is fighting to safe- Qiiartl us as ivcll as our tieiglilwonr. lt wa: un- ' d. (hut coming to him» for llon. .\lr. llan-‘ ~11‘ to rci-"r in <uch dcdihcratc mid caustic terms- to Prime Klinistcr Mackenzie King's past record l as aerfinst the single-handed accomplishments of l the llothcr Cotintrv. i i i i The lttzerttatioual llu-"iness Klachiites Corpora- tion has assembled a collection of pictures re- presenting Canada and Newfoundland. Prince Fdwaril l=l7tnd is represented hv a landscape. "Xliwrning Shadows," and in a catalogue con- itt: reproductions this is what is said: John B. T avlor, a itativc son of Prince lidward lsland. received his formal training in three different places: in New York City tinder Frank Vincent dti .\lond: Charlottetown where he was instruct- ed bv airs. Don Crass; and Margaret’, Cape Fire-ton Island, where he attended .\Ir. Du .\lond's summer classes in landscape painting. l-le. delights in presenting scenes of his homc province." llillii The Labor Day holiday closed one of the heaviest passenger travel weeks tlzat has been experienced by the Canadian National Railways in Moncton since I921, according to Mr. R. _l. S. Weathcrston, general passenger agent. Oiit- going travel front .\l0t'lClOt1 showed the largest ticket sales since that year, even exceeding the boom period immediately preceding the depres- sion of I929, he stated. The Ocean Limited west bound left Moncton in two sections with t2 sleeping cars. Travel was made up of holiday traffic and summer vacationists returning to Central Canada for school opening. _ u u a There ll I boom town, on an island biefween the spillwav and the Grand River Dam of North- eastern Oklahomak $22.75o,000 hydro-electric project that believes in mirth and social uplift. It has put up some signs to pep up its fun re- putation. The signs include (complete with di- rcction markers and mileage): “Sing all you ivant until four o'clock in the morning. After that go to Sing Sing Prison, Singapore, Echo Lake or Yell County, Arkansas." “Dimey, where fun begins, has outlawed gloom. If you want to crv, gripe or wail, go to Dismal Swamp, Wet-ping Water, Stinkiitg Springs, Dead Man's Gulch or Devil's Island." a m n n There was a very pronounced increase in the number of ntarriages registered in Canada in _|uly in 67 cities and towns having 10,000 popu- lation and over. It was the largest increase in am- month since the warbegan last September. ln September last vear the number of marirages was 7.000. an increase of 68 1-2 per cent over the number in September 1938; in July there was an increase of 134 1-2 per cent. The folloiv- ing were the marriages month hy month since the war began, with the figures of the year be- fore in brackets: September 7,966 (4,729); Oct- ober 7,297 (4.607); November 5,037 (3.419); December 4.067 (3.158); January 3,547 (2,- 304)! February 3,052 (2.314): March 3.10.2 (MP1); ,\pfil 4.011 (2.031): May 4.635 (3.- aort: lime 7-310 (+981): July 10.287 (4.- NDTES BY THE WAY Germany missed a good deal when Norway “as captured for virtually tJe whole of the Norwe- gian merchant marine, totalling 4.600.000 tors. ts tn British hands and all of the gold reserve $100,- 000,000 Ls in safe storage ‘in Can- ada or the United states - fish that Hitler ntitst admit zot away from hzm, -- Niazara Falls Review. The village of Plantagenet in Eastern Ontario has been ener- getic in refcrestation work for tnany years. It has one of the firs: demonstration plantations set out in tlte province. This year the village has acquired several acres of land to protect the property which supplies the village with water and as an added safeguard 25,000 trees have been planted on the area this Spring. - Exchange. A soldier , who was evacuated from Dunkirk. returned to tits camp after leave and fcund 30 letters awaiting him. Most were from his sweetheart. All the letters had been to France or Bruin. The first before Hitler marched into Belgium/The soldier had travelled far into Belgium, was among the last to leave Dunkirk, was sent to a camp in the west of England, and later trattsfe ‘ another camp, but tti l lowed and finally 11a London Times Husbands are not privileged to take their respective wives across their knees and administer staaiiks on a. certain uritiattied bit: sititabie place. Croavti Attorney Jatnes s Allan, KC, 1711s a Windsor court. Having saicl that, can Mr. Allan tell us who is to do 1:, provided it needs doing? — Windsor Star. Tnduy- Catiada has done much towards cotiscrvutioti anti reforesta- llGfl, while in the Utzzteti S!" 200,000 004) acres cf fLlliOflftllY 0'.\ - ed and éidlfll‘.1lS{€‘1'C(l foxes is . v v _ land in :lgflZ——&1ClUf‘Lfl}‘ ntore titan 1T6 000,000 acfcs, of" marly 10 percent. of their total area. We are on the way, by 1.11mi; thought and blan- miig, to rc :11 the ttealin we sqnatttittecl. By tirtitiee for the "c in the irres- Lclc-Telcgrajoa. doing so, we m future and cm. ent. - Quebec The aged Petain, who passed the Worici War uric. l‘ a brass hat at. hcadquartct, is about to unload guilt on the 1D1ll(l€".> of Drilanigr, who spent four ytars scrambling in the mud ct the Ciiaittpatgit as a sergeant. The ozly Laval, iaolitical acrobat who failed to serve in the army in 1914-1018. is t Judge the patriotism of Ii.“ c , am, 11-110 lrled. tco late. to l‘ Frittice ‘to reality. We are too 1 om ETQHCQ to judge acrutaituy" may be itiacle ugaiiisc Dzilatlier, Whatever effort mav be tnacl.‘ to load upon him the guilt far 11m "vvar and France's titiivizfa the l1!'g_ cm "995 f9!‘ 11 is clear. If France is to be i Cél USE iilL‘ llC‘\\' Petaiti-Laval Ciovtinti . it 11111,; be taught that 1M lo. " lender‘; $1111? tnpetetit, aria if pc _ __ Qyuqm; Like something nut of thr- Inn; ago is 1h: Ll‘ .il lfiiiC 1119113‘ for \\'.'.l .. Nellie Tav 00 Ross, D.i'cctoi' ttte _\- ', and other officials travejv-ci :11: iveek to Ptiiltuieiplita. I; i tiic- "trial o! ‘the 001115;," a eereinr - that gas back to 1192 in tin. < 111:1) nitcl fll‘\l‘,‘v' cettiiira-s ii: 1.1‘ ' taw i';~_ Gillies 111.1: 11o 2 silver CQaH iii every Nations thiee *1 e for test bv msszon to deta- '~ a the " fineness. s yr 80,000 CCZL‘. in " for a receptable ncu kept iii the Clwflcl of the .x in Westmmister 555?)‘. Ltmdon.-—Cliri.stlan Science- Monitor. A good many n! 11m boys who have etilistcd in the army or air fozce drop into our office from time to time while home cm leave._ We are always struck oy trie difference wrougat by weeks 0f army or air fsice FOUIZUC. It is not all iii the uniform. 1t is in their carrlitgc. in the purpasa- lul “'11? 1110i‘ ualk, in the tipiiitcd chin and squared shoulders, '1'[1¢1g is a different look in their cyes too, a look of pride and selfrespect 52d (TEICFITHXIILIICIT. The piivsiczfl dance l5‘ fmtneciiiitelyt nppnrz-ijy, ,1, amost (}\C1‘_\' mztn ivno has Joined the ranks, but tticrc- is more to it tzian that, It Ls the invvtird ciiangc that really counts, These boys have B 10b to do, the biggest job anyone could be called upon to do, and they B"? Tend)‘, Wlllmk and uflXlOllS l0 8%, Bl li- TINY have found tn U"? X11183 éflfvice an otiportzttikv to work out. their dQSllffY. They are men made-over, mi-ii mborn. A utilform has given them a chance to find themselves. — Cornwall Standard-Freeholder. The ‘mines pf Northern Ontario are doing Lneir part t.)\\'a1'(,15 [he “T951118 0f the war and to provide the gold. so necessary to build up Ivreiim exchange tn ‘the United States. some of the mines are suc- rlflclrig their life expectancy. As an indication of the mining 1n- dustfyls contribution to theiEm- Dire. the following DRUPCS are wort examining: Since the first of the year the gold mines of Northern Ontario have produced $60,274,145; In the month of May this year the production was $10,093,750; In June this figure had climbed to $10,327,- 306, an increase of $234,000 in one month; Today. with the nation at war, the nation and the Empire 01m DRY tribute once again to the spirit and foresight of m; Norm Timmlnfivs. the J. P. Bickells the Benny Hollingers and the others who trekked into the Porcupine and laid the foundation for the industry that. exists there today.- North Bay Nugget. A very Important and necen- sary task has been handed to Mr. D. B. Rogers, editor of the Regina Lender-Post, by Hon. J. G. Gar- diner. Minister of War services f-n the Federal Cabinet. He wzll make an immediate investigation, and report on the releasing of Oovemment information to the public 1n preparation for the co- ordinating of all existing public information services dealing with war matters under the depart- ment. recently placed In Mr. Gar- diner‘; hands. Mr. Rogers fa well qualified for work which has been assigned to him. He ls a. working newspnperman of wide experience, who has a firm grasp of the os- nentlals. not nnly of news values. bu‘. of the metrods of assembling’, and dtstributltiz tt. Hts report will, 38s) - --.~ therefore, be of great. value to the Mfr» r . rn1_:_ cnagisorrizrown m GUARDIAN Navy Ways (Special To The GIllrflll-Bl PIPING 111M OVER THE SID! - r 1 Naval tradition i5 that QfAPBEIIYKOSSIIIOI officer! "V" m‘ sidt‘. ‘Iinis tuSWm_ °F13mawd o‘ Llizubefhan days vhvn Wlsmflm,‘ distinction at arrual and dBPR w received g, IBDIBIQ Of ‘rumpeu; Getting aboard a shin at ranch“. the eighteenth century W85 n0 51m‘ pie task at .ea.st. for the corDuleiit. the gouty. the aged 0r ‘he, Pelsg“ who wished to Dre-WT" wnsldera’ ‘e dignity. The rODB-dhtjder had an awkward vvav of swlnglnk 50 ma‘ a clumsy cumber- founchhiniself dalm- linz between the ship! 515° and ‘he twisted ladder. To save P9150115 F‘ note from pitlciii embarrassriien-s of this kind. t became the FM fr’ hoist up and fer, dOWn in a Boa.- 5\\‘8.if1'S_Ch0Lt‘ all important guess and visitinz senior officers Wbae this slow procedure was takini place the trumpelers were req-‘F-‘ed to cease blow: 1;. so ‘that the awai- MVZHIS could us: their clues w AME the slknais fur commencing to hoist and to slack away- It. ETBdUQ-‘Y became LhB practice for the trum- peters to ulav no part in m! Q9??- mony ar- ail and for the boatswairis to make a 10m: molar-r at the ino- ment when the chair B91968"? ribove or disappeared beiow the bui- warks. Th r in ‘ of boatswauis DIDES Ls unknov the earliest me- gieval recofd; 59613!‘ ofhgflifiils! eing supple vvi ‘ ! ' ment, and tt is believed to have been derived from the sailors of classical times. Fur Trade Centre Shifting (Globe and Mail) There aupears to be no limit to the consequences of thepresent war. Among these isa shifting of yvorid centres for various lines 0f inter- natioiial trade. For example the iuz- business. Landon has been re- cognized as the centre of the fur trade of the world Now, accord- in: to an article in the London ‘Times, New York presents a finite challenge to U125 position. Itistztiices are ziven. An import- ant section of the fur trade lS_ 1n Persian lamb, which came mainly, from Afszltanisuiit, Southwest Afrieal and Persia. "FOHHCflv London wasl the centre of this branch of the‘ trade. but since the war _started the Afghan Government, instead _uf sending to Landon, were shipping‘ their furs direct to the United States through Indian ports " The Afghan Government's representative in London has been transferred to New York, _ Southwest African Persian lamb fur came first to London and was exported to New York; but. um" it. is beginning to be sent. direct. "On top of this." says a London mer- chant. quoted, “the Hitdsorfs Bay‘ Companv has decided to hold M10- tioim in New York: they had sent 1vt1t"e;se11ta1ives there from London had advertised in AIIIBYWMI mum's that they would hold s there next month." B . 1914 Chitiese fut-s found their chief market in London. but when the Great, War broke out Am- ericans took over the marlrk. It was tlioiisht in London that when the war ended this trade “Kin be, rr-saitietl. but. it never was. Ans-l tralian rabbit skins new also are gains: direct to Anterica. Naturally. during a war of such IIIEIQKTlKLXClC, New York presents ad- vantaees over London a5 a centre of world trade in many commodities.‘ The United States citv is unmolest- ca, while the British metropolis is tinder constant enemy attack. 1f this cauld be regarded as a temtXJf- arv loss of trade it would be bad! once a citv becomes recognized as a ivorld traditiz point for any spe- cial artice it is likely to retain the‘ acivtiiitage. at least until some other tiphcaval occurs. ! Canada has been for centurtesl one of the world's greatest fur pro- ducers. The fur trade is nter-, wcven with the early struggles and‘ the romance of this country's oc- cnnazzcti and development. A wealth l of literature has its origin in the, competition between rival com-i patties. and the "coureurs de bots"- were among the most picturesque‘ figures of earlv ur-tradin days, l A century ngo value of tae export trade in Canadian furs that of anv other product. Now-- atlays extensive fur-farming dug-l titents the supply’. Landon always ins been a thief buyer of these furs. Last vcar the value of total exports from Canada was $141700.- 000. Even before the war the trend oi this export trade was significant. In 1933 Britain took three times morefurs than the United States; in 1934-35 twice 11s much but. in 1937 onlv $10,000,000 worth. as com- pared with 87.000000 worth sent. to the United States. Britain for ed ivell out in front. 1n 1939, buy ng| $8,307.30‘! worth of undressed furs from Canada. as against the United States purchases of $4,5l4,183 In manv ways war inflicts its penalties. and evidently one of these which Britain must suffer is loss of 115 position as centre of the world's fur trade. Should-as L; feared - this centre be changed to New York ll. means, as the T111185 article says, "the loss of valuable American dollars needed for buying muni- tions and other war necessaries." With characteristic philosophy Britain will regard thLs potential loss 5.5 among the fortunes of war. and proceed to meet 1t. 1n other ways Because of long experience nntl natural abtlftv the London mer- chant. ts about. the keenest in the universe; and just. as "ThereTl Al- ways Be An lllngland", so will Lon- don regatn her place a; the world‘! greatest trading centre. DR. MAUDE ABBOTT DIES AT MONTREAL MONTREAL, Sept. 4-171‘. Maude E. S. Abbott, internationally known authorftv on cardiac ailments, died in Montreal Neurological Institute Monday after an illness of three months. she was 71. A pioneer woman student of Mc- Gtll University who became one of the best-known members of its staff until her retirement. in 1935. . Abbott was known throughout most of the medical centru o: the world. she we.‘ the author of numerous article-s and books, covet-in her re- search work 1n wnnect on with heart. ailments. Besides her teaching and writing, . Abbott; was for many years curator of the “ museum at McGill and was until the time of her death, secretary of the Inter- national Association of Medical Museums. _..- - DECORATE WITH MINT For eye appeal and added flavor, decorate m], frosty gluaea of sparking ginger ale with sprig: of fresh rnlnt. Government tn the plans which ff has tn mind for the consolidating of resent publicity services. erpe- cialy these which den] with mat- ters related to the national war effort. - Twlegnph Journal. exceeded 5 ,gi'eatest have ever come, there still d9‘ | arises that deternitiiittiott. that. bull- , dog “Twelve O'clock And Ali's Well!” (Prom " The Constitution". Atlanta, Ga.) There must be today, millions of l spirits that. walk, bravely, across me length and breadth of beleagu- ered Britain, The spirits of those, men of the ancient race who 88" to her the greatness that ls know- ing miraculous resurEEflf-‘e- #15. 01169 tnore, the fate of human liberty 1s l laid upon her hands and hearts and courage. It. 1a good to think that. those spirits, Walk the svatctunen of the night. carrylns their lanterns to 118m the dark hours and crying, a.s_they "walk. “Pvvelve o'clock and ails well. Alls well with Britain, as her sons and daughters stand. undaunted, B. final rampart. to the ruthless foe. AlYs well because the tongue of Chaucer, of stiakespctire, of Mil- ton, uf Keats. of stiellcy of hip- ling, 0f Tennyson, of Barrie, of the King James translation. of the Scriptures. can never be the ton- gue of an enslaved race. All‘: well because the blood of Frobisher, of Drake, of Raleigh, of Cromwell, of Wellington, of Nef- son, of the millions of 118111018 111911 who have died to keep Britain free. can never course tnrougti the veins of an enslaved people. . . . . among ancient Ali's Well because the passion for human liberty and human rights that inspired the itieii of Runny- mede, that set nflanie the hearts‘ of men who dared their all that tyranny should be crushed, that forced British democracy ever to march oii,side by side and stepyby step with the growth of empire, can never be quenched under the oppression of any itiastet- All‘s well in Britain because the common, people are aroused, be- cause from the ordinary, average people, from whom England's} stubborncss. able spirit \\'llfCl1 slaved The wisest seers among men can- not say what yet is to conic. But this all men tnay know: There is a very lovely heart of civilization and of freedom threatened by an, obscene force. an indecetit return,’ savagerj: sparked by unmoral am- bition, The SllLiC/AV today lies over an ancient and a noble land. It darkens the graves of poets and plIlISSODhGYS and mar ‘rs. It. hangs. threatening, over the very birth- place of human liberty and human that uneonqucr- cannot live en- per pound SEPTEMBER 5. 1940 Maritime tea drinkers km, their tea and they know there‘; splendid satisfaction in MORSE'5 STANDARD TEA — and special value at 65 cents a pound._ It vac us‘ VERY special value, ln fact, and Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis 144 Richmond St. <€ ____i__q ER. Br0w&S n Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Charlottetown vice, Atlantic Region, Canadian N; ttonal Railways is aiinotrizcc-d m circular issued by W. E. Robim Regional General Sllflflintendq of Transportation, which also at, nounres his successor, Charles '- Rand, the appointment being q fectlve from the fin! of the mm not buried 1 Their ilcsti was "Tell the crows We have died you" Tbeirt . Ev the bridze é How can ferities? You served fitlly, FROM THE CHINESE. c. 124 B. C. 'I‘hev fought south of the Castle, Thev died north of The-v died in the moors and were caiiof be purled. Crows, how can out" bodies escape .. The waters flowed deeD Andlthé: rushes in the p001 were, car The riders fought and were shin; "s - ivniider tiefzhiiig. there was u house, was it souzn. was if north? The harvest was never gathered, we rtive vou your 0f- Yhlll’ Thotiiln all in vain. Mr. Gorbell was bot-n in Balm; on August 24, 1875 and commen ». his railway career as a tnessenge in the engineering department 1 the railway at Moncton on Ju 1, 1890. In December of the rim year he transferred to the car mile age office as a clerk and 1n Apr 1903 was appointed chief clerk; 1 November 1915 he was made c service agent. January 1915, car tie countant, and on October i, 11m Sitperintendent. of car service. H successor, Charles W. Rand tvr born at Moncton c/ri May i2, :: and entered the service of the rail way as a clerk in the genera‘. man. ageris office at. Morqtoti on Ocfiebe l. 1906. In July 1915 he was mad assistant chief clerk and 0n ifarch 1. 1923. chief clerk. During the East great war he was on active mill- tnry service overseas from Slay l, 1916. to November 22, 1918, 0 the wall. the food of crows. _vve are not afraid; in the moors aim Prince f 111th- ‘ i ‘a Idlers; “""’-’@wF‘ ~ 4s- pmgre5s_ Iyéglfllf of tot. idlfllf-UIISO h . . 1 r service shuil flUl. 1e forgotten. ,, i - R t swoop upon the htmible cots and And atbillllifi!‘ W,“ Cid no; rgrum, quiet hills, -, " _ d _ ’_ ' ' _ ] -Tl'f!-flSl3l£d by Arthur Waley. ‘I A flilfakiilir fllllyglftllizei, , we on this m» on uwv-_ one _-__--_- gggeflhen, ,,,,,, ,,.,...11i, .1. of the one factor that mtist, 1n the flow AAIERIC, 5' CONFEDERATE 0 ha“, -‘ final accounting. decide the issue, LEADER WON Ills BILDE ' T (‘My That, 1s, the spirit of a people T ' ifrAlllvuilbnTTSoglflilC-IIXAL awakened and determined. There The manncr in which Gen. Na- l‘ L _ . must be a ntarvcllous story, being than Bernard Forrest, famous v d sup , told on the pages of history, in ‘Confederate cavalrv leader. dur- i Pnlnwleihltvhflflftfualzlhdiris Britain today. The spectacle of a l ing the American Civil War, met ggfllggrmznd is rcmukamy people arising as one. to defend to Mar‘. __\1Cl1l‘l0flte1>_\-, who _ became “emf”! preventing mlmrfluf death the land they hold so dear, his wife, ivculd do credit to a and desuoyin“ parhim. 1mg,- tnust be a tremendous thing to story-book’ rcmance. Wlieti FOTTGSu kmelm Jus"m||ow¢he,1ir¢¢. . watch, was a galiaiit jvoting editor, twen- “on; cal-Hum, and yuu wLl Even Hitler has been awed. ‘Nhat iy-IIVS Sfiflllidvld. 11° “'35 gill MPH“ be amazed at. the results. , . . . - = - B _ , _ 2:12;: ll‘;°’li£?l.‘l§1?."...§“‘l-1.l1i.£li2 2.15;: .- i complaint that: "iiome guards" can ,1 11111011030 Sfcitl; U190? “W311? '\'-'_E» PRIL n L be only violators of the code of young women therein, he offered GASSY STOMACHS war. to be shot against a u-all when captured? The world has never wit.- appeal by this man. to any code of war. He, and Germany, of all races, ltiive most ruthlessly and heartless- ly scorned the codes of war, 0f- honot", of ltuntanity, of humati de- cency, wherever it served their foul purpose. Hitler catinot conquer Britain. We know the history and the spirit; l and the meaning of British civiliza- tion. we who know the courage that arms her people, we ivho know tne love of country that fills their souls, know that no invader can stay alive on English soil so long as one Engllshntitii remains alive to strike n blow for freedom. There can be but cite outcome , when the British people have arisen. moved by a single impulse, to defend This royal throne of kings, this sceptred isle, This ettkh of majestyt, this sent of nrs, ' This other Eden. deml-paradise: This fortress, built. by Nature for herself, Against Infection and the hand u! viar, This happy breed of men, this little w rld ‘ 0 t This precious stone set. in the sl1- t ver sea, which serves it 1n the office of a wall Or as a moat defensive to a house- Against the envy of less happier lands- This blessed plot, this earth, this ' realm, ' This England. O I O I The vultures gather, but still the spirit of the ancient watchman walks in England and still his, brave voice reassures, l “Twelve o'clock, ima 2111's wclll"; his services to groutid. atid the driver to the tvhcel and finally‘ the car- riage catnc out of the mud. two men on riorse- back sat. idly by vvithcut offering Meanwhile. their assistance. titiis Commercial Appeal,” Forrest became so infuriated that. he ord- ered them away a thrashing they tvctitd not soon forget. When the young women thanked b im, he asked I The offer was accepted enough, but experience shows thaqnessed such absurd effrontcry as an I and, after they we“; 55p; pun-as; carry them :0 tit"; REL|E\ED Every person who is lrmlh- led with gas in the stomaih and bowls should get- u bottle of Dr. Evan's Stomach Mlv- lurc and see how quit-knit will relieve all distressing , symptoms _ ‘ Dr. Evans Stomach Mixture. ' taken at maal times, not only‘ prevents nll lmd effects from gas. but it remotes the func- . tlunal actlv ty of the stomach. assist digestion and iitipfm" i the appetite. i DON'T DELAY ORDER put their shoulder says "The Mem- xciifiiii] " ‘T? , tinder penalty of -/// permission to call. and stiortlv after that unusual YOUR. BOTTLE TODAY meeting Mary Montgomery be- PRICE 85c 1!, crime ys;ficrrest.u_ ‘It LADIES ; - H, Whv not call and scruff?!‘ , Q N_ Car Servlce v stock of mm Filrlflr s uev Supt. Retires After Long Service MONCTON, N. 13.. Sept. tcr a service of over half a century, the retirement of Alfred P. Gor- Supertntendent. of Car Ser- bell, , Beauty Aids and lake ndvnnl- ,l y/ age of the tremendous (fro? l ln the price of these WWW?"- l Never before has the price l been so low In Canada. l 2 Now ls your chance tn Bu." 1 w DON'T DELAY. ‘ _\\\ ALA """ THE rwo mics {£2 "’;%%III6/ BUY ' WAR SAVINGS , _;., sumn V- ' E. T. VE- w HIGGS o» c0. t); 10c Per Fig STRAIGHT EVERYWHERE IN PRINCE E DWA RD ISLAND LIKE THE PAPER l ON THE WALL l That's the way our Tobacco fits the taste of ma"?- many Islanders.- That ls why It keeps its place in th¢ ‘ llst of best selling Island products. HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST Manufactured By IIIBKEY 8t NICHOLSON TOBACCO CO» LTD, CHARLOTTETOWN