pans FOUR tilt ciuiiioneiowii GUARDIAN oluinnli; Daily il-uunded m I881) President: ueut. Uul W Chute: 8. Mel-UN Hm-Prrsltlent: J. u. Burnett. F-J-l Secretary: laeul. llnl D. A Maclflnnon 0.8.0. Li iui min “winging Uircolur- J. ll. Hume“. FJ-l Q-auciale kidltuls. Flank Walker and LID A. BIKINI SI-BaLHIFIIUN RATES By sun in r. L L. u-W tw- ywi ill-W "I ' WNW- 3115 [or 3 muuuu; 50o fur on: mouth Cm Ueluu). 51.4w per year, $3M. to: t: month: $1.75 for J inunthl u; Mull in cannon and 11.: -L $5.00 pa: yen! iatuluay net-mi. v4.00 pa: year; $1.00 for d mouth; 5m: l0: I mouth-I- . The Churlulleluuu Guru-ulna mo; be obi-aloud ll 501mm‘; ha»! Agency, Inna liquors, New lurk; 0h: buulu aru- Again"). Lllfllfll Milli and Wulitugton. Iona-i Illslruplbllllall Auvlu Again-y, nuts P»! Us, luau-cull J Iluu, sol u“, i~i., roman»: haw- Slllnll, (IhllMu hour-or. Oltuuu; “ultra sous sir-nil, nullliury, Ontl llub Tobacco Illnp, llutirtuu. A. U-l Elton ltubrrnun, AIlllIIlIl-s N. Q- "The Strongcst Memory 4s Weaker than RM Weakest Ink." \\'lilJ.\'llSl).\Y. SEPT-l l0. 19H. A Sinister Record A clitiiwiu i~zi~vrvt<il by a subscriber, dated April, lgil-i, "tvs a rvveziliiig light on Gcriilau war nieviri‘ . i< 1i lflllllllltlll from an editorial ' llllit,‘ in the .\'ew York Tri- l‘t'.'lil>' as tiilllnvs: .l jaur; lICfHYC Vlirist 300,000 Ger- l‘_l'llllv'\‘ iiiurileriiig, burning, pillag- ‘ll. .\t .\ix-cii-l‘rtivctice they were . wool. Tlu-y slit-d for peace and v.‘ tiiPl iiivcr d» it :ig;iiu_ Sixty years _~;.»-~l..i t‘.~-:iii:iiis lll\'.'ltlC(l the jura 9x yvars lzitcr 400.000 12er- lllillls “lhlllttl ' li'r;':t~r_v llt'l\\'C’('l'l the lit-use and the lY-P. \ uvre bruit-ii. They swore they ivonlil l! \'<'l llll ii . 'ti. " ' tfhrist the Germans invad- i lllr‘ Rhine. Two hundred and i" tin-hi it“? ticriiituls invadctl f usre iivsttvtl. They swore they d» it again; twenty years later, an- '- iih-l a lllvru if ‘. ills. lir other iui -i~in an .lll‘l‘ defeat, another solemn Iiledge "iii \E‘l‘ i.” In .274 .-\. D. the Rhone basis was in . l by the Frermans; in 275 fllll'lllt"l~jt_‘l"ll liilltlcc: lrl 3171 Laiigrcs WZlS plll~ ace-l. The iiivstdeis were beaten and they swore "never again." In 351 they recotiquercd the let‘: hank Hi the Rhine; in 354 they devastated I,_\'iillS; in gii-o llesaiiciin; in 364 they invaded and plunils-rcil llelgitittl. lltfc.‘ is the chriiiioliigy of the stibsequent in- Vft<l1illSI 372, 3S1, 400, 4l0, 4t3, 800, 858, 978, r124, 1.31.), i513, 151i, i513, i536 i674, i675, 1707, lfiiS, 174;, i792, i793, i814, i8i5, i870, l\)l.l. '1'li§i"i_v-;lirec itivasions in a little over fif- ti-eii llllllfllTll _\'<“ll‘5, an average of one invasion cicry fifty years. \\llt‘llt’\tl' they were successful the Germans ct-li-lirtitcil with unspeakable atrocities. \Vhcn~ rvvr lll1‘_\i' wurc lit-iitcii they swore they would never (lil it zisrlitl. 'l his he liven their history, which the events at’ the ittisi tivii years bring out in sinister re- lief. Hitler's viii licxiti-iii of Germany's right to iiivtide pesto ful ll(*l_;‘llllt7l'5. to plunge the world into lilwiilslt-wl, is based on the centuries-old llllwWlllc" tflidl oi lillf (Jerintins as a superior race. It is the ftltllltlilllflll of the Nazi creed, which must lie crai ' ted before ally lasting peace can be llllltlt‘ ctiiic<'i\'alilc. Siipilzbergen The dt-spatclies reporting- the greatest oper- lnnn of (“llwll-l" ffirvcs in the war—-the seiz- ing of the Xorivegizm islands of Spitzbcrgcn~ are intlefirftc as to wlicthcr a Canadian gar- rison has lit-i ii left there. \\'liat i5 clear i5 that with the support of British and Norwegian detachments, tilnatlian troops made a sudden descent on the-c remote Arctic islands in a dawn zitulck, the ltuiiliiig parties being warmly greeted by the ptllilllilCC which included many Rtl-sian ll‘lll(’l'.<. The coal nlincs were seized and the civilian population evacuated. The Ger- lllillli, Itpjlllllfllll)’, were taken by surprise, and hiltl 1H1 l/Hiiks‘ ill the vicinity. Nothing la said as to the strategic importance of the Spn/liergi-n archipelago in view of the Rilssizui-(lt-rnian conflict, but this factor may have. bcen the ill-tt-riniiiing one in the landing cfiectwl by Ctniiiliaiis, The islands lie midwav bt-tucml tirteiilziii<l and Franz Josef Land, 500 miles oft the Xorivcgizm mainland and only 750 miles from the North Pole. They comprise West S]tll7ll!‘l‘;'t'!l, X1il'lll-l“..'|<t Ltlllil, Frlgg lglgmcL Jlzireitls l-lzitiil. Prince (iharles Forcland, the Wicliu i>l7llltl~', llope lfillllld and many smaller islands, with a total arva 0f some 25,000 square fllilvs. The shrirp PCRl€< ivliich gave Spitzbcrgen its ntiiiir- Yl-‘f’ lit u\i‘l' tlirvc and four thousand feet. 'l‘lie cliiiiati- is ninth-rater! by a warm North At- lantic drift, lvziviiiq an opt-n passage to the west- ern citust during most months. “lit-tit ii: llll‘ coldest iiiotlths of the ivintcr," 5.'i\' tln; Iiriqi-rlii/iiilii/iii ftriltninim. "a thaw may sci in for a liiiv days: hut on tllc other ltafld. giimv suiiictlllics, falls in july and August. Spring Clflllt"; tn lune; the snow becomes sat- iirau-tl ivith “all-r and disappears in places, and scurvy grass and tlu- polar willow open their buds. llv the Vlltl of juiic, the thermometer has and»! n. sin].- lii-lnir the freezing point at night; july, .\u_;u<t and September are the best fllrillllls. ln Stiptt-iiilior, however, autumn sets in on §l\l>l'(‘, and by tlic cud 0f the month pack- ict- i-iipiillv frcczcs into one solid mass." ]ii.,»,,,-,-,~,-,i 5,, igqfi, Spitzbergen was for a long time ri-garilcd as part of (ircctilatid. That itithfalig1lili~ traveller, llviiry Hudson, visited it iii Hit)‘, ,\l7lll_\' i-xpuilitions have since made llll’ l\l'lllil~' lll"ll' lri-l- for polar exploration. N -~.l lhl-tltl l?! r87.- .<<‘l out to wiiitvr i" _Q,,?,i/l¢, ,i with llll’ llllllllltill of zittctiipling in tlp- c-pi-iiig [ll nilvziiici‘ lmvllrilst lllf‘ Pole 0n _=t,-,l._-t,». lll‘,i\\ll by rt-iiiili-rr, llis party encounter- ed a Qlfltw til llll~iIil'llllll‘$I thcir ships wcrc be- set in lli~ ivc vvljv early in Mus-cl llay, prov- irious rain low, the rciudccr all made tlicir escape during a SIlOW-StOfm, and the idea of going north had to be abandoned in favor of exploring the ice-sheet covering North-East Laud. Th: Britannica records other misadven- turcs, one in i897 by llerr Andre who made a fatal balloon ascent from Danes Island with the intention of floating over the Pole. Speaking yesterday in the British House of Commons, Prinlc Minister Churchill referred to the Allied front as running now “in an irn- mense crescent from Spitzliergen in the Arctic Ocean to 'l‘ohruk in the western desert." He nladc no further reference to the Canadians’ achicvctiicut, but indicated that it was the in- tciition to "hold this front" and secure the sea roiltcs against attack !_ EDIIURIAI. NUIES -i “Facilis dcsccnsus Avcrno est,” we are told, when once you begin to g0 down hill. The City Council is a case in point; it i5 so concerned with pt-tty trifling little things that it allows great events, its reputation, and its lcadership to irretricitably stiffer. On Monday night, for in- stance, instead of asserting its leadership at the memorable first meeting of Provincial Mayors, 'it stayed at home bickering, and allowed Sum- fllcrSltlc to assume the leadership. a: iv i: it The City Council, by their decision in the po- lice disinis-al case, have rendered of non-effect that part of their charter constituting a. Police Coiiiiiiissi;iii._ From henceforth any or all of the decisions of the Commission with regard to dis- tiiissal may be subject to reviciv by the Council as a whole. In other \\'(ll'tlS, the responsibility of both “hiring and firing" rests with the Council. The effect of this 0n police discipline rciilziiiis to be dcliionstratcd. a a a a Stocks of raw cattle hides held by fanners, packers and dealers in Catiada. amounted 387,- 455 at the end of lulv coinparctl with 59min on the corresponding date last year. Calf and kip skins on hand totalled 536,875 compared with 644.661, goat and kid skins 106,538 compared with 4,190 and horse hides l4,l22 compared with 15,842. lliere wcre also 54.124 dozen sheep and laiiili skins lll store C(llll]lZ\l'\‘(l with 45.170 dozen a year ago. io- iu u u British farms are maintaining the production of milk to within l0 per cent of the record pro- duction of the two years preceding the war. The constuiiptioti of liquid milk has been largely in- creased by deliberate government action. 'l‘here was an increase 0f 20 ntillioil gallons iil the first year of the war, and if the [ircscnt rate of in- crease continues the incrczlsc in the second year will be more than another 10o million gallons. lt is anticipated that it will be possible to tiiain- tain this largely expanded wartime production. i: v v v Harvard College, now llilivcrsityi, founded this (late X639. It is the oldest, wealthiest and most important of American institutions of learning, situated three miles west of Boston. Nzitilctl after the Rcv. john llarvzirtl, a (fam- britlgc grzldtiatc, who dicd iii I653, leaving books and money for its establishment (at a placc call- ed Cambridge in honour of his old English Uni- versity) for the training of young men for the Puritan Alinistry. The constitution was gradu- ally changed in a liberal direction, and in 1866 it was freed from all sectarian tests, and cvcii the compulsory attendance of students at pray- ers was abolished. 4 n a n: Although shipments of cheese from New Zea- lalid to the United Kingdom set a record dur- ing the 1940-41 season, when they were 2o per cent above the previous season, the United Kingdom Government has contracted to purchase a greatly increased quantity in the current (1941-42) season and for the remaining years of the war, and one year tliercaltcr. Under an agreement reached in late June with the New Zealand Government, Britain will purchase up to l60,000 tons of cheese, which is about 50,000 tons more than shipped by New Zealatitl last sea- son_ 'I'lie cheese will be paid for ivhclher shipped or not for the coining season: in sub- sequent years payment will be lnadc on the basis of the quantity Shipped. a u n u Under amendments to the gasoline rationing regulations, effective July first last, private car owners in Austr al ia will be allowed only sufficient gasoline to drive a thousand miles a year, and no gas will bc allowed for drivc-yotlrsclf cars nor for [irivatc pleasure bfllllfi. Licences for commercial vehicles and industrial and farm machinery at the same time ivcre made subject to a reduction of t0 per cent. Still further restrictions, effective on Aug- ust t, reduce licences for farm vehicles by half and for commercial vcliiclcs by two-fifths, set the gasoline ration for taxis and tirivate-liire ve- hicles at 40 per cent and for tourist vehicles at 25 per cent of their original ration, atid allow omniliuscs and service cars to receive 85 per cent and farm and industrial machinery 5o pcr cent of their previous allowances of gasoline. iv 4 The 194i hog production for Canada as a whole is being tiiaintainetl at approximately the same record lcvcl as was achicvcrl in l940. The i941 spring pig crop is cstiinntcil at 99.5 p. c. of last year's crop, and the total number of hogs on farms at June I this year is estimated at 101.9 p. c. of the I940 total. In actual nuni- hcrs tlicrc were 5,994,000 hogs on farms at juuc l as compared with $382,000 a ycar earlier. and the record number of 6,117,000 at December i, i940. The 194i spring pig cmp totalled 5,047,- goo as compared with 5.073.200 last year. 'l‘h=r itutnbcr on farms at June I this year was as fol- _lows by provinces, with figures for 19.40 l!‘ ibrtickcts: Prince liwdnrd Island. 54.400 (41% 200); Nova Scntia, 46,500 (52,800); New lrunwrick, 77.500 (97,to0); Quebec, 797.8oo ((136,900); Ontario, 1,936,300 (l.r)q7.900). ltanimhn, 502,700 (408,700): Saskntclicivaii. 836.900 (79L,ooo)-, Alberta. 1,652,300 (i,37|,- loo); British Columbia, 88,800 _(83,to0)_, ‘A certain gentleman tn mint; did not, give hJs former gocd frtend ln Germany his favourlte mous- tache cup for a birthday present ttpzs lean-Christian Sctence Maill- r. don't hear the customer saying: haveW-Detrolt BTQg Press, A Conservative Party report from terest election. The reasm, of course, can get exalted because there l; no real battle. About the result there ls no questlon. The best the Con- servatives can do ls concentrate on, the proposition of electing an effec-, live Opposition. That ls somethmfl that has not existed tn Brltlsli Columbla for sqme years, Its ab-l sence surely ls no tau t of the Gov- ernment. —- Vancouver Sun. It. l: In the rural districts that,‘ one appreciates the value of good neighbors. The family “next door" may llve a mile away, but the rural dweller knows that they stand ready to lend a lielixng hazid tn any| emergency. They wlll be there to comfort. one in a bereavement, to‘ lend kindly aid tn the slck-room, to lend a willing hand at the saw-i tug bce or the harvest. One may iiotl have many friends or neighbors 1n‘ the country. but they are trled and true. The happiest moments of farm llfe are tlio-"e spent ln the czmpanv‘ of the folks from the next farm or‘ the next concession. A farmer once‘ explained his philosophy of life: "I have al\\a_vs lived ln the country. I hope to tile in the country. I have a good" farm. a contented familyl and goon neighbors, My nelghbors are my best frlends. l know that vriuctl I am tn laced they wlll help me. They have stood by mo in the past, and 1 have stood by them. I still have neighbors: wlll still have plenty." -- Stirling Neuw/lrgus. So many people are going "on munitions" these days that lt is not surprlsnig that then: slioulvl have been many radical change; in em- ploymezit. One of the most striking to come to my notice (writes a. correspondent! is that of a man who for nearly 30 years has pre- sided in a “key” position at time counter of a well-knoivn Liverpool snack bar. He Joined the film llS at boy well over 30 bars ago and has spent his EllLTt.‘ lie ministering to nlldday hilnger of commercial Liverpool. But the hands which all this time have caressed and straightened phtes of sandwiches and poured out gltFscs cf bitter ivlili a beautiful “liead" are now helping to turn out munitions of war. -- Liverpool Post. The post office rIEulng returned ll isn't I» Mil boom yet. You] chiefly lfes ln the fact; that nobody‘ em iloyee, and 1 found an old boat i ln case our bread went s ale-We THE CHAIQLQTTETOWN cuaiiolgu lttorss av TllE inn , l PUBLIC FORUM i ‘Ihla column In 091a It: in dluiunlon by oorrnpildolh O! qlutlolu or Insult. ‘Ila Ulurluttatown Gnu-flan docs In nooelalrlly ondum tn opinion ' u urnlpaldelhs t l l , a FISHING TRIP “I5 m" me 11105!’ ixpvniive YWI sin-Here ls a deacrlptlon of n labor-ate" with Germany- ll 5°ll°w5 lfhi ti. triad stew years ago to: dig l/ilizamlcht Rlver, between Halt Moon on the NIIXR. and Vlctorla complalns them ls llttle ln-i Bglestown, N3, a distance o! 65 in the coming PfDVlIW-lfll mugs 01- more, l Hazeu Carter, a rettred C.N.R.. an when we ballad the water out, hauled lt up 0n the bank and when ft drled we patched ft up. caulked ft wlth oakum and tar-red the seams, making lt watertight. We then nailed tree boards. two feet apart, (upright) on both sides and cwered the top with boards an drove a nail ln each end to keep them from sliding and we also but a railing all around. to keep any- thing from falling 011'. We had several large tln boxes with covers, lnto which. we put. our perlshable stuff such as tea, sugar. bread, cakes. ew.-We had a side of smok- one wlll clash-e to." ed back bacon. eggs. potatoes. but- ter, 10 pounds flmll‘, buckwheat meal. to make had a mlall tent. a zallon of kero- slne oll. a farmer's lantern and a chopplng axe to make tent pegs. Next. clay we satled down the rlver but dld not do any flshlng and tn the evening we nottoed a camp near the shore, so we tied up our boat and entered. There was a. notice tacked up. telling us to help countries all or which believed that ourselves to anythlng we wanted lbut we clld not touch any of their no one supplies a5 we had plenty of our ‘hem;- own. We turned on the radio, whtcI-i. we took with us and heard noises outszde the camp. but did not. ln-l d Okalahoma Clty; there was a >121’!!- Lindbergh In The Clear (Winnipeg Free Press) No man can W68‘ l mmlmlg“ such as that undertaken by Char- 1e; Lindbergh wlthout ftndlng it mire and more difficult t0 til-rims’! M, ma] objectives. In Hndberlt" use tails ls a llflttfmlnatlflhulh?! his fellow-countrymen should co- gmm this that he bellevesthe Null! n, good people-or at lcBSt r8 good as anybody 615k’- ln the “mm dand lt follows llkewlse that b0 belleves the Brlttsh Commonwealth and lts Allles are not so well ivorih tyfng up to as are the Nazis. llflzfle ho desires ardently. no mfltfll‘ will“, he may say to the control’? tho defeat of i116 All-l!!- All this Mr. mntzbersh made verv clear tn his speech last; week it flcanl; phrase tn lils address: “I have malntalned that; ft we at- tend properly to our own defence, no European or Aslailc power wlll dare attack us. and that if W6 "'- .. i» F;.’.t’.‘2.°‘é.';'f‘l‘.l“'l';ifl'.‘.§..°;f“;..‘l‘l2 i» i i- i» l t the Llnd- "m" “with ysliequeud- ahead. awn" "h l" ‘nmllllllent 1° P°““‘” bei-{eilm “Rig: icliie drawn belle! l T-ke adv-maze oflhhnfmmvdvrn. om“ c°'"‘°°"" "l ““°“"‘°‘ chili upiiie Uhlted States menu "vi "I! t" B" "w "In inn-Him WUGSTO" the fight pond“, “no one w,“ db yin‘); ally‘: wanted. Without obll n- - slre" to attack ft. But what ls the right. policy? That ls the question that must be asked. and ft ls not: one that Llntlbergh would find very easy to answer. for the world ls now littered with the ruln of SEPTEMBER 1o. 1941 ._ WORDS (m CHALLENGE l TIIOUGE u“ FOB A PBQpLE AT w“ "You cannot is war, The ,2‘;§,">,l_§* Ill]; of ener , n .- 2 once an? mliififif,“ lflls t - a» meats of imam)“; “If sen . o a o im! omyrh in future happiness -~_.____ U Rlghtnow you an pal yonnelhnd E XAMI NA I toil your family on nnollaar pay roll that will ulna over when your pay atop: oomlnq h}. No need to nave u ‘ to "m," "m s" meet b {l premiums. u a "flying up.‘ special uilget Policy featuring do- m‘ vezlfiayyit; cnudllford out of thin J M a env ope, a , F xlm I 02bit. lav: azlll-Islgdalgollflafqgglw “Pfflmmnsr wit? In only 86.15am BOB"!- An “Mmms P. r. i you on‘: even have to remember to Otflco noun: l0 to 2 wiilwn lmhy for fol er . ‘——~———-——§_\ explaining how you “ _ fl can gm 1h? pmlfilplu _ C‘ B! l‘ I Z2l;‘;....:i.i,'.' ° tiassy Stomachs “l! they followed the rlizht. pollcy would rleslre to attack! noon Consider tn» group o! rowers] vefllgrite. In the morning we foundltflfiwn 569°" the W1" t“ m? 05b‘ numerous bear tracks. which lndt-lBloc. Of these Norway and Den- cated that one or more of them had H"'\“l{_ Holland mm R-l-vtinvi lime ccme to listen to the music. . we caught some nlce trout. whloh we placed fn our trap which consist.- ln on each side. then tacked on three feet of screen wlre with an when we caught them. We were late ln erectfni: our tent that right and 1t was qulte dark when we thrtugh. We were awakened ln the night by something crawling over‘ and biting us. so we got up and lit the lantern rind soon found tIuel cau=e. we had set up the tent onl and ant, lull. Well we htld u» dress,' Dull up stakes and look for another lccatlcn where there were no ant hllls. We then turned rn the rado and on locking out. saw two deer qu:te clo=c to the tent llstenlng to the muslc, We snlied again the next day and caught scme more 530d slzcd trout. llutltll‘t‘(l_; ct stamps made nnflt by incciitlftliy bcnibs or bullied uliclcr ivreck.lgu. Many safes liav» been rc- rovvrntl from bcrnhecl buildings, and lu nearly a) r-f tllzm ivcrc cctsl of stamps. Heat had meltzcl the gum and joined sheets in cctiiiiact. and assess the value, A-cctm-n of 5 per cent is clnirietl 0n tiiie . value of the st rcpurchiiscd. Inland" revenue. CC labels aild playitlg cards rendering. His army had spent its mutiltrtns; it was cut off,‘ more massacre by the tanks and: dlVP-DCKIIDPTS, The reproach. has‘. The facts as now established showi that tn a sens: thls is truc. but. lt was not the King's fault. Twice on May 27-ln the mcmtng and at 5. tum-lie gave notlce of hls tntcn-l reached the French Government-s, failed to French and British Commands utlreless, and the repeated mes-i sages sent were not resolved. In‘ short. both sides are acqultted-thel King of any dercllctlon. and the! French and Brlt-lsh Commands of‘ any mls-statczilent. -— London spcc- ' tor. We have never found any rea- son for regarding Charles Llnd-l bergh as a political or any other klnd of philosopher. He knows enough to fly an airplane, and s‘ recent writci‘ Iias shown that he! has alwavs baen tilzhly cctnpe- lent in the art of festherlng his own nest. ‘He was also smart] enough to marry at rlch wtfe. But there ls no reason for thinking um tile ability to flv tn the afr,l or to look out» for number one, or the cleverness to marry a glrl who is not likely tn land one tn the poorhsilse. ls tantamount to being a great statesman. - San Francisco Argoiiaut. Italian troops are now ilolng police chores for Hitler tn Paland, relieving Germans for front-line service. Apparently Milssollnlls leg- lons are n:t trusted to stand up against the hard-hitting Rmslans- the Itallans’ record tn this war ls not one to lnsolrc confidence. —~ (Ottawu Journal ) Nearly 23.000 hundred-weights n! swordfish. tlicse flnc blg food (‘sh which carry their own weapon with them. were landed lMf year by Can- adlan llihermen from Nova Scotla waters. but where they came frm ls something elso agnln. Where those strain-bearers are spnwrit-d ts one of the questions which puzzle scientists. 1110 swordflsh, ls a blg, swift. powerful creature. gomefmes running several hundred pounds ln writzht. It. ls distinguished bv a “short. high dorsal f‘n and the flat ,swor<l whlch it thrusts out before ,tt. Actually. the sword ls a prolon- gnttcm of the law and the flsh ‘can use lt wlth zreat power. even drlvlng ft through the bottom of o ‘flshlniz boat. - Ffstiertes News Bullettn. A correspond-int writes n! an unusual fnoldent exnorfericed this =iirnmer when on hclklav tn North Wilcs. A crowd whR-h bad wither- ezl around a rmnll bov was bilylnz WYR; from hlm one penny each? The PMIS, wlilch had been wash- t") no by tfic "ca. were. ECCTNHPQ to local flrhu"cn. M?! o! the mrvn of was of w summer bcmb- ml two wr-Iilrs “revloiislv itcmeuliero at. least. 100 miles awav. As pen-tile were not too stir» of their niiallfy W11- crrv; were “clog boueht only me or two at a Hme. and tt was not “not jfllcl’ that ‘hev were d‘=cr.vered '~"r'-"et., Str~~<~elv enowzh. after lN-fr lvmz elrfft and biiffettnv. few WM“ ilucovered broken. — Llver- pcol Post. the night a cow moose and calf bards, but experts at headquarters’ - - q czttilil usuallv sopirate the slampsl h‘? mm t” m" radio‘ “Hon "ur way and struck numerous nsurrnic." antl cii- h, 1 , t, _ _ , ._ , , tertninnlant duzy Stfllt1p5,‘lll(‘dlClll€£ mg“; lubml boot’ ' “e d‘! “m have also been found Allwlliltiiiieellilii w“ siriklnz ‘C0 man-v . t value. - London Silnduv D..<pntch.l King L c-pold cf Belglucn for sur-, "J1", you hm “H” take """“'l~"* Old plricc as I am no better from ‘its Allies; the alternutlve was! been ‘lltll he did" not give HOHCC to.‘ .1 _i . _ -_ , n - the Fiench and Britsh CDllli'll.'lll(‘lS.§ taopireblznvfisiéicgrglnltgfigg m‘ “(m5- Bul 1115 "w-“Srlgesi lhlugl‘ lheYl full of chips and grass set ft on “ndrmgillsglsl fire, then placed t ln the rear of ~ ,tlio tent. leaving e ' The only mettum avallable warm“ and when they “i; (“SH (We alivays threw the small ones back in the river) A5 we had a large supply of worms. l fed sme to the trout. in cur trap daily. which SCOITHl to keep them iii good trim. As‘ we ivere tn no hurry we snityad where we were all next. day and m Next mornng we started again 1 sunken rrcks which caused our boat t to l-"nk lPdly but us we both had ivatrr. Hazen thong-ht I rocks and suimested that we chance places and lust as he had‘ gotten near the bow the hoat struck iintther one and he nearly went- oiserboard. He than said your pilot thiin you." When I turned the radio on that nlrtht We saw an unusually large ticrcuplnc llstenltlg and the next. No one latterly has blamed, . . PX- tigz-icnce 1 ttrnk that all wtltl im- lmfs are fcnd of music. I omitted to sav that every time we erecbed our tent lt. would be full of mus- iiultoes. so we ftllcd‘ iii-l old bucket f M35 We“. when thousands of them wguld fly ppeared we would put the flre cut, p ace the bucket outskle, close the flaps. when we could sleep tn ccmfort. We flslied the next day and wntlht some lame trout, than went ashore curly and put. up our tent, and‘ tn the evening we turned on the radio and On lookfng out, saw a large black bear going around ln a circle on tts hind paws and keep- ing time to the waltz called "Three O‘Clock th the Morning" and when the time elldcd. it walked off lnto the woods. A little later a jazz plece came on and the bear came back ‘thegeconrl tune but only listened a short time, tihen turned tn disgust, I think and walked away Lgaln. I was afterward told that a bear had escaped from a “lravelllng troupe" and this may have been the same one. anyway lt had a good ear for miislc. I think the boar she-wed good sense ln getting away from the sound of an. I have no use for eltlier an wouldn't be guqty o! cnllln ft muslc. It ls only a conglo- merat on of mind; made by diner. ent lnstruments. As We had caught all the trout we wanted, we thought. we woultl l? for some salmon, so we anchor-l e our boat near the raplds and l. attached n. Sllver Doctor fly to my, leader and the first cast I made hosked one and after a long tfme 1 tired it oul- and when 1 reeled 1t ln close to the boat Haven caught tt. by the gills and landed ft for me. Haven then said "I am going to try for lta mate" and sure enou h. ln s. short tlme lie lvrked a n ce large one and when he tired lt outi l returned the compliment andl landed it {or film. As our boat was half full of water, ft solved- the Problem of keeolng them alive until we; reached Bolestown. two days er. To anyone gotn for a week's flshlnz elther on lake or i-lver, I would recommend them to take one of these traps nlonii, as they wlll keep trout alive indefinitely. Of 00w‘!!! YOU would need a larger one for salmon. On arrfvtn at. Boleawwn we gave the boat to he man who hauled 0w‘ cqvlmnent. to the atatlon. where we boarded a train for Newcastle. and them-e homo to Moncton. where we dlwded our catch with mends. I am, Btr, etc., I. A. GILLIS Moncton, NB. R i BLINDNESS VAULTED OXFORD Enzland - (OP) —- J. F. Wilson. a blind man. has gradu- ated with honors ln turtmrudcnm from Oxford Untveriiltv. his paper! the best submitted ln many vears He has been unpainted naslataiit secretarv of the National Institute for the Bllnd. Maud‘! rcllevu when. - .- I been reduced to starved, -‘\1'°lc¢'~ wen‘ we “fled me next day and l prownccs of the Thlrtl Reich, and ltlio fifth. Sivetlen. ls rv ll(‘l\')l€S5 sat- ed of two discs o! wood about three PfllJY- The 0510 B100‘! Mtcmpl- l0 feet apart. with a narrow board set fvtd the ""l"hf "-o"'"\"' Wfls a (‘@- clarntlon of complete neutrality, coupled with a tletcrmliiathn to do owning o“ m” m PM m“ “m” mpiotlilng that micht HUGO!‘ the Nazis. They carrled ihls pollcy out with we", honestv and vlgor nntll they Wcflfl over-run. Consider the fate of the Domi- bfmi and. Balkan states. ‘Their pre- war oollcy was likewise one of neu- trality, tempered by their know- ledge that nld from the Western powers might be dlftlcult to get, and tempered also by an nbsurb be- lief that. their llnclent feuds w‘th their neighbors were more lmpor- tant to them than the rise of Eilron- can Pan-(‘rermanism Like the Poles ln 1938. trey thought- there m‘gt\t be coed flshlng In troubled waters. In "'0 end they were all sticcessfully hooked and landed by a fisherman wl'll more strength and sk‘ll than they. some ivere csiutzlit by fora-o of arms, others bv blackmail and menace. by the technique of Nazi WHY s. .4...“ ‘DO THEY DO IT 7 /‘ PAflAmu res (uicniiv amnion) )5 or; ...fali| chum vrltli cut-mica lnsuraticu Iuylnq Insurance at doubtful laeurlty In order to lava pumlum coat l: Ilka an aviator buylng a duledlvu purucliutu bo- euuu It‘: champ. l! ha‘: qolnq to need It at all, only tho but I: quad enough. l! In Inn‘! going lo and ll, why bother to carry It at all! Jldllll.‘ lmm an Inourcnu that you KNOW wlll be ro- “'uhl.|n>l.' III nll you all about ll. o v n1...» W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. ,AMERICAN NORTH Relieved ! Every perii n wl l led with (as Iiiulnsizmil-‘iilfil lllh and heartburn should try I bottle of "Dr. Evans Slum- HEAD omcll L | F E “i, lfnluxkullsl’ and m u" 2 I " 112 King8t..W.,Tnront-0.0nt. $5.5m", cvmélolfdslm ‘ll ll“ Dr. Evans St m- h i" taken at mi-til lllllldtlg, 0021:): Please lend m9 information about your lbeclal Budllat Policy to other with fro: Pocket Memo Budget E00 at. prevents bail ell-it f a h"! l4 llromotcsttth: fiiilnultiiiiil. ll actlvltv u! the stomach. u. tun slats digestion and lmpmm Name- A ddrinn _ u. LAPTIIORN a 1.. a. RTIGVLLN non gptlznnetlta Price 35¢ m Diem-Int llanann, ' 140 ltlrhnlonnl 8t. HOLLYWOOD? NEW TRU - COLOR LIPSTICK I AMAZING FEATURES l. Llfellkc red of mar tliiu 2. Non-drying but lmlelllile 3. Sale (or sensitive llns. l. illuminates "llustlcli llnu’ ‘ Price 75c and 51.35 We carry a complete my of Max Factor lkfllllv MCKI- atlons. Call and see them. SORE BACK ‘I If so we have one of the best. remedies to offer, namely BACK - RITE TABLETS Especially effective for tum. Inigo. sciatica. neuritls, miu~ oular and other form; 0| rheumatism svliii-h ordinary treatments fall to reach. Only 50 cent: ner bu. TllE TWO MACS The curt cold days. the blue and: ivlndv weather, of burning brushwocd a. frost. An orchard full of odors nflzht ls t ther. The fiiifiolllalggn stilbble Wlterfl Rh flower ls lost. ' A clear szreen sunset and l» Dllfi moon sltowlniz, t A sense of dawiilniz ends. like me‘ light ln the sky. i Autumn ts thle hound. that shrllll, mv heart ts fotr he; ztitllawxlnix. ti 149 Greut fleoriie Street ~ m . e n“: "53554, 5g?‘ ° " ~ lllllll Orflcrs Glven mart Attention. —Babette Deutsch.‘ QQO a n n I a n a u nlIlltllllltllutltllllltl I21 Illllfl I"" Q§DQUDUU g E. R. Brow & so. g Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness. and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summer-side. Lloyd LeWiB 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown touiomwmmuctctonctuonau iltltiiwmmw‘ COO‘.O§QQQQQCUQQ'Q§QQ§QQ‘QQ§QQQQ.QQ'_COOQOQOQM 4' ' ‘g Say to Your Grocer E Q Q Q I Want BRAHMIN UMNGE PEKUE TEll You will enjoy its sllfletl" quality AS DURABLE . AS AN OLD OAK That gives the reputation of our “Twist: in an nutshell. It has been "on the 8°‘ a long while and la stlll going strong. HlCKEY’S BLACK TWIST 10¢ Per Fig MANUFACTURED B_Y p IIIOKEY 8i NKMOLSON Tobacco Co. Ltd, Charlottetown