PAGE rook TIIE BHARLOTTETIHN GUARDIAN Iurlllui lhlll| (Iullllllfll ll III) w. cu n n, noun . u. nun-m, IJJ. l) A. Iluclvuuun, ILIJ. rrnsiuiiuii |.ieul_ n“ Plwultlel Iou-reiiiryi Lie I Edllur uuul Nuuu ‘llflflllls lullluro: llurnrll, ii.i A‘ hLllil ILIPTIUN u; n-ui Ill r, u. l. r year; 11.00 lol I noun ' Q01: lur ullo month $1.711 lur s uni-nun. w» m: urn muuu uy “Alll In uilmr rruvlnee- un-i u,s..\. iii-W pol you Hilliard!) “coldly: $3.170 IN!’ Iflfli "N" I'll‘ l Ifllllh Mk: nu- s lnonllll Th: (lllillltlllltllbvlll uuunliun may ho nun-mu u l-luiuiimg- Anna Justin, Tillie: uquun. New lurk; 01o Scull: sous Afirul‘), comer k rum Wuluunnu Bunion; ueironulllun {win Aun-uvy, I Poul Us. Ioulrrali J. Illa us" iiuy st, fin-unto; benu oiuuu Chum: Loigrlln Ulfuwut iii-lie‘. hom- blulld uuubury. 0mm Hub Tuinm .1 Shula, afoul-nun, h‘. If. “The Stro-rigzst Memory is Weaker Thin the Weakest Ink." ' \'l‘l'lfll.\\', AUGUST '14_.—_1_9l3 Patriot's Misrepresentation ;.il organ recently, in n leading ‘n-it- \\'ll>. "zippuri-ntly some mis- . rdiug the licderal arrange- if-llng soldiers 011 the farm. The to utll‘ contemporary, would be .\C ]ill\’ ziud allowance, plus the -l\\\&'ll 121.11 service [my and a inaxi- iiiiuu 01' t- ll‘ lflirs in the .\l:iritinic Provinces ~"\\lll(ll llll‘.lli> Zlll uiiioiiiit paid by the farmer 0f than a ilollzii" zind a lialf a. day 0r BPPFOIKI- \' . 1v tlu irs for the month." Premier _l--11i-.~, in zui interview in The Guardian, u.» -u<‘ii proposal had been made to .-_.--,~ of .\griciiliiii"c; that tl1e federal il:\\'ll ll niiiiiiiiiiii payment of $300 by ililln‘ board and lodging, for every “luv-l under the scheme. 11.11 til it< IIIiSSIZlICIlIQIIt has appeared in lll; 1.. 1 l orgitii, which leaves its readers under tlic ii >1" s-ion that the scheme turned (juwn by Premier Jones was for the employment of soldiers at forty dollars a month. Why it sec-ks thus to discredit its party leader in this Province we do no: know. Apparently it is more concerned with saving the face Of its federal friends. At any rate. here are the facts regard- ing rbe financial set up as now in operation in Nciv. Brunswick, reported by the 53in! 10h" flelcgraph Journal: _ “The pay iii the Maritimes for soldier-farm- ers has been set zit $3 a day. However, as the soldier is actually detailed, or ordered, to take up farm work, and is still receiving liisarmv pay mid dcpendenfs allowances and remains under army discipline and rights and privileges, he is not, paid the $3 directly. The employing farmer paysvthe $3 to Mr. Taylor s committee, and if it so happens that the, soldier's total army income is less than $3 a day the difference is paid the soldier-eventually, from the farmer's $3. While the soldier is ivorking for a. farmer the latter must provide board and lodging free of charge. A private soldier witha wife and a Cllll(l—-3h average case-earns about $3 l day imm ll“ army as it is." The Telegraph Journal reports that as yet therg have not been many mlls from farmers. "Ihq fact," it adds, fthere have been several fifty days lately, and the, farmer mus! pay S300 ides)! for the soldier helper ram or. shine, .18 be- ’ to be responsible in some degree for the owness pn the part of New Brunswick farm- as in applying for help." _' This substantiates Premier Jones’ statement. The Premier should now insist on his party or- gan publishing a retraction of its gross misre—. presentation, coupled with an explanation of the reasons for its attempt thus to knife him in the back. The High Cost of Hilter ' Ari American economist, Dr. Icon S. Well- rtone, has been whiling away an idle hour or two computing the cost to the world of Adolf Hitler. On his admittedly rough calculations, published in the American Magazine, he has put the figure at u thousand billions dollars. When economists start to string ciphers out like this -—$r,ooo,0o0,o0o,ooo—figures lose their mean" ing. But reduce the figures to terms we under- stand, as Dr. Wellstonc did, and we begin tn get a glimmer of what the cost of this man has been to ibis world of ours. The equivalent of the nioney- spent in ridding the world of Hitler, including all the war dani- age, would buy every family in this worldia $5.000 home. It would provide a four-year college education for 500,000,000 young men and women. It would build a million dollar hospital for every community of 2,000 0r more people the ivorld over. I1: would pay for the iviiiiiiiiiii school education of 400,000,000 chil- dren for 25 years. It would build 25,000,000 Iiilcs of four-lane cement highways. Yet the-c figures do not begin to provide us with an estimate of our folly in allowing this nizin to plunge us into this dreadful conflict. Tlicri- :11".- lllhllllfllllll items which no such corn- putiiliuu c1111 lllClllllC. .\lilli01is of decent men and iiuuicii have paid with their lives for the (‘Xl§lL‘llC" of this iiiziii mid his regime. If he had bwu Clllsllvtl zit the licgiiiuing, these people would he giliw tudziv. lluw c2111 their loss to the ivurlil lIC lrxiiislzitvil iii dollars 611d (CHIS? (llwl/tllsl)‘. it w 1'1 ll(. ll we can only get our cliildrui 1.1 uiiils-rstziiid the cxtciit nf our folly, liclllilpn ‘.ll’_\' will llk‘ l".>ll'.'llllC(l from making the $411110 llll~llll\t .' ‘.- hence. Far111t:rs_\ViII Be Heard From lu ' 'll~L‘ll\~li'll of the recent Ontario pro- viuriril ( i411] .1111‘ zi-pci-t of the results has had litil- 11o '| l!.'it is. says lllC Globe and Nlail, llllll tl l'll‘lllt‘l'.- 411' lliiil pruviiice have been do" lll'_Y viilli‘ Tvhllllll" ihi-iiisx-lvcs. The farmer, (“i r111 n! i-l t '1 u time, is in 111:11i\' \\‘£l\'S the must r1l"l|l.\‘i iii ‘Ill IHUH. lle ll.‘l\" little organ ii i311 ‘ l|!'.~.~lll'(‘ '_'i'1-ii]i\', Illlll the result is that ' tiii-liiiil Jl\l'l('. . llll" fziriiirr is $ll'T-\\‘lllfl marked signs of being: icil up \\'llll tlic honeyed words poured iiut for liiiu iiitliuiu :u1\' action. llc Slinwcrl "hat, though Mr. Nixon was a farmer; that W35 not enough. There had to be something of a practical nature done for the farmer. Much of the support gained by the Progres- sive Conservatives came from the rural areas. And Mr. John Bracken, who for two decades had been the spokesman of the Western farmer, and who now holds the important post of nat- ional leader of the Progressive Conservative Party, has brought that trend to public attention. At Regina Mr. Bracken issued a statement ou the Ontario election. In the statement he ex- presses his pleasure at the success gained by Mr. Drew, his Ontario lieutenant, and made two important points about the balloting. He said that the result “confirm: the commonly held opinion that the political parties of today must serve in accordance with today's appreciation of the common man's problems" The second, and equally important, point made is this: "I am delighted with the response the Progressive Conservative candidates receiv- ed from the rural ridings. The farmers are the forgotten men of Canada. but they will be heard from in the future." - EDITORIAL NOTES- We have got safely over the last “Friday 13th" for another year. iii‘ It is all over today—including the lbodi‘. A glorious time was had by all. U I I I Single women in Britain between the ages of 919 and 3! are liable to conscription for the women's auxiliary forces, but may elect to go into certain specified jobs in industry. =1- :- u- a In the Royal Ordnance Factories in Britain, where guns, shells and explosives are made, 60 per cent of the workers are women. I I I I Tomorrow will be an appropriate time to re- turn thanks publicly to the Giver of all Good Gifts, including good weather for Old Home Week. a o n- u Canada appears to be united in one thing-a desire to repudiate and be rid of the Mackenzie King Govcmment. There, unit-y ends. The protest expresses itself in all directions, reveal- ing a. degree of schism which must raise disquiet in all minds, whatever their political affiliation. n- u u in In Selkirk, where Hon. Joseph Thorson took .1 majority of 4,000 in i935 and raised it to 5,000 for the Liberals in 1940, the Government of which he was lately a member has been routed by considerably more than two to one. The Government man loses his deposit. l i i ~I Not before time. Sir Cecil Hurst, president of the Permanent Court of International Jus- tice, British Member of the United Nations Commission for the investigation 0f War Crimes. has declared: “After this war there must be introduced some effective machinery for supporting the vigor of international law." v- : u a Alfred William Pollard, English literary cri- tic and bibliographcr, born this date, 1859; keep- er of printed books in the British Museum; sec- retary of the Biographical Society; in Great War was primarily responsible for the safe keep- ing of the innumerable previous volumes in the possession of the British Nation; his works include: “Early Illustrated Books", "Italian Book Illustration", "Old Picture Books”, "An Essay on Colophons", "Shakespeare's Folios and Quartos”, “Fine Books”, “Italian Book- Illustrations and Early Printing,” “Two Broth- ers", “Shakespeare's Fight With the Pirates"; also edited and published "English Miracle Plays", Herrick, Chaucer, etc. q mi u a “We are determined to keep ourselves in a. position to retaliate effectively if gas is used ny the enemy," was the confident declaration at a press conference by Sir John Anderson, Lord President of the Privy Council in the United -Kingd0m and famous in this war for his dire:- tion of the defence of Britain against the Blitz and originator of the renowned "Anderson air- raid shelter," who is accompanying Mr. Chur- chill on his visit here. The British people, Sir John admitted, were taking more holidays this yea: than before because of the greatly improv- cd war situation. He said the Government did not discourage tfnis but it was trying to ease the strain on transportation facilities by urging the people to spend their holidays at home, as far as possible. There was really no let up in war production, though, and there were practically uo strikes. The number of strikes, he said, was far below the level of*the last war. u n- t If u Federal election were to be held tomor- row, the result might be a Parliament of par- ticles rather than parties. Quebec, a motley group of irolationists, not necessarily united among themselves. Ontario and the west split between Progressive Conservatives and C.C.F., with the former dgminating the east but the latter gaining strength as it nears the Pacific. Liberals, a. fragment. Communists, who have twice in the last week demonstrated how ef- fective is their- strategy of spending all their effort and money upon a limited objective, might return a handful strategically distributed. Social Credit would perhaps hold Alberta, just to add another incompatible element to the gen- eral mass. Who than cpuld farm a Government? A new postal service to expedite the handling of mail posted in Canada and addressed to of- ficers and men serving on foreign-going mer- chant ships, is announced by Mr. Arthur Randles. Director of Merchant Seamen. The mail will he cleared through Montreal and should be addressed: Name of the person Name of ship, (T-O Post Office Box 9000, Montreal, RQ. Mr. Randles said the arrangement was made in an endeavor to give further service to sea- men and was made possible through the co-op- cration of Canadian postal authorities. naval‘ pnslal services and the British Ministry of Waif Transport. ___,.s_._.fnunnu-uu__ Ilotas By The Way Charla Limb thought u knock at the door the most interesting of all sounds. Modems are more ln- terested in hearing themselves knock the neighbors-The Albertan, Caliary. - No one believes that the Qulsllnn dying all over occupied Europe are dying natural deaths, unless dying by pistol or knlveg constitutes no.- flififll death. -Nlagura Falls Re- v ew ~ Premier T010 o! Japan says he's firmly convinced that Japan will win the war and establish its now Greater Asia. Well at least Tojo is talking. That's more than you can any for Adolf and Benito. -—BuffaIo Courler-Ibmreu. It taken seven pounds of corn to make | pound of pork on the hoof. But you can make 288 muffins from seven pounds of corn. The lesson 1m this ls that civilians must eat more train and vegetable prod less moot. The idea is w substitute for Indirect consumption tn the form of meet. —Vanc0uver sun. Nobody looks Iorwnrvl to the coming of winter, but it will be s. relief, once thesg present hot: days ago over t0 be able tio flrlends on the street. Now the trick is difficult, if not, impossible, owing to tho fact that so many of them wear weird black 8088195, ostensibly u rrotectlon from the sun, but actu- ally 1m effective a disguise as false eydirows and a green beard. — Brannon-d mposft . fl 0 6.’ What American logic foo often 1s like was admirably illustrated by two recent news ibems ln the daily press. One relates that the stud- ents 1n Idaho schools are to be taught the evils of liquor drinking, and that the money for this teach- ing is to be provided by a tax on hard liquors. The other informed Liberty ship, named "Billy Sunday.” has been duly launched and christened with a bottle of champaigne in accordance with custom. - San Funnels-co Argonaut. Ii fakes l lot of fuel all lo make u little gasoline. Every gallon of gasoline burned on the roads there- fore means several less gallons of fuel oll available for commercial use Ln the manufacture of gas. For some time now statements have been made that some drivers have a-D- plfed for and received categories higher than those to which they are justly entitled. It ls known that gris- line ls occasionally obtained on the ration book of another person, and that there is traffic in loose cou- pons. All these things help to cut down the supply of fuel oll. —Klng- sbon Whig-Standard. According to tho United Kingdom o! protective foods increased fifty per cent. in the period between this war and the Great. War. As .1 re- sult gross nutritional diseases which were prevalent 1n industrial towns have disappeared almost completely. Infant mortality ratie and tuber- culosis which are affected by nutri- tion habits fell about fifty per cent in the same period. An interesting sldellizht. on the increased consump- tion of e88. mllk, fruits and vege- tables is that British school child- ren are leaving school between two and three inches taller than their parents did at the same age. - Wfnnlpeg Tribune. A hansom cab, newly painted with yellow wheels and shafts riud driven by an elderly man in a fresh grey blllycock, has been seen of rc- cent. weeks in the streets oi the city of London. Cab and calzby are be- lieved w be the last survivors of Imuionb hafisom-cab era, but they have not been brought out of their retirement. and tltlvated up merely to amuse American soldiers. Some months ago Sir Edward Wllshriw, the chairman of Cable and Wire- less Ltd, laid up his car and hunt- ed London for u hansom cab in which he could pay his business calls. He now owns the only hun- som cab on the street o! London and the best-looking cab seen ln Lon- ‘don for years. —Manchesticr Guard- an. A Iew dlys no newspapers car- ried an item which suggested that the German; had withdrawn some 0f thler submarines from the At- lantic 1n order to supply power and communications in areas which had been dammed by air raids, says Electrical News and Engineering. It was recalled that. during a. strike in England some years ago, submarines were used to provide communica- tions and supply power to keep large meat refrigerators in opera- tion. It may not be generally realiz- ed Just, how much power ls gen- erated by Diesel-electric surface ships and 1n that connection it is lntereetine w Iwle that the West- lflflhotise l‘ _,_ ny announced some ttmq ago that OM17; B. A. ships built or under construction ln 1942 developed ovoi- 6.000.0oo h. p. —Ex- change. ___- Television vvfll be ready for every family's use “immediately after the war," according w Ralph R. Beat, research director for the Radio Cor- poration of America. Home receiv- ing sets in any desired size with "screens" from six to 24 inches in width will be available to purchas- ers. Mr. Heal said “within the shortest space of time required to re-convert the radio manufacturing Industry from war w pence produc- tion." "Unquestlomubly, television reoefvlitg sets will be within the range of the average pocketbook," Mr. Bea! continued, "and we expect to be able to do a good job of pro- Qrammfng without. too many awk- Wlfd Brvwlfll Dllmi." Ho added that the "fmponderab1es‘ ‘of labor and raw material costs In the post-war period made ft impractical to name this time. Mr vatfon from a scientist concerning the Imminent nation-wide launchlg of the new vision receiving sets now are in use. rug _ GHARLMTETYIWN GUARDIAN Information Office the consumpzion l“ raised all over the the price range of ieeelvlng sets at Land . Beaks remarks were Marslifleld. If mlln from Charlotte- the first statetments without reser- town. 5f rnlle caution; natural mam“ Fronlfng on llfllsborougb l‘. commemlm ntermlmnemi d", _ Will sell In hm different loll ll which has lieen disputed pnro laiid {umga f" Punhnf" con for a. decade. About 5,000 tele- "m" o’: u, M Some God Laughed (Btruthers Burt in the Hominy Review of terature What a. flntast cinmie Mbbell is! Gnome-like. goblin-like. goose- Ilke: red-eyed and hlssfn . Try saylnz these out-loud, and LBSUIGOCIIIIE, Goebbels, Hitler, and ess - History has ii. strange sense o! caricature and of st a8 , h a major historian, What bet .er name, could be ound Caesar, or for Napoleon than Nin- oleon? The short. sharp, predatory consonants and vowels of the first the oratund, pompous, but dignified and t vowels and conson- ants of the latter. And what could be more - ct for weasel-Iiearted ti-u tors than Qulsllnz? While even Charles Dickens, genius ‘of nomenclature, could have hit upon nothln more apt for the greatest and mos vocal liar the world has ever seen. nat- gerxal and self-taught, than Goeb- S some god must have ' ‘ ’ iii. g I‘ g g Q THE HORTON ACADEMY 0F llCllDlA UNIVERSITY A "llndll" M0301 (wad us». "you... nib»- .131» Iduaulol. Glrla radio in nddluoo u! School d llouaolusld Imunilal old Ifuu Ali- _' AUr-‘ITST ,4 1 ACADIA UNIVERSITY WOLFVILLE. NOVA BCOTIA rouimm ma Graduate! gym-landing to doqrool cl M.A., M3,," “Mug "swan: luuuzee" r ‘"- "e er»- iu- Bpocézlnocliplra-rool ludlnq lo “llouorf uud “Advanced can,“ . Ono- bpoclul uourlo in Education for qraduufun in A", n“ " iioffqslshqllllil°fifil.l'il"'alilfflo?i'l“miell.lf°““°' °l j Thus-your couno loading f0 a lfcoutiulo In Mulls. ‘Hubs-you couroo loading lo a certificate in Secrolariul Selene‘, ,' “TJZIT.li’..‘§1"s.='§e.'l"i'.'§i'§1??blfifllfffichliimfililifllf ' Two-you- qauno Ioadlnq lo diploma in Houuhold Ecouomlu, ' ‘_' Pro-Medial. Pro-Dental. Pro-luv and Pro-Nunlnq can"... Gallup Poll “Error” (Toronto Telegram) ts o! the Gallup Poll to pat. itself on the buck for the accuracy of what; 1t calla its "modern Public opinion samiplfn " an of the build-up in when suc polls 1n- duiifi in an effort to mesmertae the pub c into accepting them B5 1n- raillbie within a narrow mB-rizln o! error. If the Gallup Poll ls a lflvved to do the figuring it can be count- ed upon to make out a falrly good case for itself. but its figuring must be taken with a pinch of salt. ‘Twenty-four hours before the el- ectiun it had announced that nub- llc opinion was divided as follows: C C. F‘. , - - - -- 6 percent. Pro. Con. — - - l3 Perflenl- Liberals — -— — — 31 percent. On this basis. the da aft-er the election, it announced b anrily that it had predicted the actual outcome of the popular vote with a. maxi- mum error of only 3.7 per Cent. and with an average error of only 2.5 percent. is claim may be tested by looking at. the Canadian been as follows: C. c. F. - - - 31.02 percent. Pro Cons. -— -— 3592- percent. Liberals —- — - 30.73 percent, The Gallup Poll showed that the C. C. F‘. would get 3 percent. more of the popular votie than the Pro- gressive Conservatives. The actual voting gave the Progressive Con- servatives 4.90 r cent. more than the C. C. F. ere ls, therefore, a maximum error of 7.90 percent. in the relative standing of these two parties, a fairly healthy error in any way of figuring. It was an er- ror of such magnitude us t0 com- otely reverse the positions of the two leading parties and to fender absurd the Gallup Polls that if. had predicted "the actual Outcome 0t‘ the popular vote." RespiitUeUAU-llistake (Sydney Post-Record) The Allies have discovered that. they probably were the victims of a too-generous spirit toivaid a tot- tering foe when they granted Italy a respite to enable her to ut her political house ln order, a ter the tall of Mussolini. It had been thought that Mar- shall Baclogllo, who was appointed to the Premiership of Italy, would be amenable to reason and would adopt n course that. would spare his country the bloodshed and des- truction inseparable from all-out invasion. Consequently, the Allies reduced the violence of their attack ln order that the new regime mlkhl- iirivc time to re-adjust. the nation's affairs and make an acceptable plea for eace. The Al led procedure seems to have been a mistake. Badogollo has taken advantage of the respite t0 repair the shattered defences of Italy. in order that they may prove more formidable than they were. It is suspected that the re- vamped government ls decidedly ro-German and determined to ic- ect the formula of "unconditional surrender" offered by Britain and the United States. Evidently it was an errorto halt the uttrick which now will nflve t0 be resumed under conditions that yilll involve new risks and dllflellll- es. Certain elements within Italy. undoubtedly under German tute- lage, are decliilmlng lotidly about the failure of the Allies to offer concessions as an incentive to drop out of the war. They argue that Press figures for the actual vote. h t); h ts the de- They show the standing to have Egg 5,. $12,: 5,? Ame; u. ning to take Medicine, o DR MOUNT ALLISON UNIVERSITY; SACKVILLE, NEW BRUNSWICK 1943-44 SESSION BEGINS SEPTEMBER 29th “ Residence opens September 27. Courses given in Arts, Science, Engineering, Home Economics, Music, Fine Arts, Handicrafts, Commerce, Teacher Training. preparing for Law, Medicine, Theology and Dentistry. GOVERNMENT LOANS avail- able for selected students plan- Science and Engineering. Write Today for Complete University Calendar ll” Blmé km“ “*8; "ulféllinfil ""“.l."°£'.'a‘.’2lE.":‘.§::f.‘° "" ,mmo,. “m; m, “Rim”, e oo rman g s. on may, . y 5mm bette . $11K‘ allowfhi’ Zllulfifilm. (if mfifilofiqliiffflmsfil riicunvir - nxcmnrr OYMNASIUM mo SWIMMING a a y oouuu " ‘ ' f- VOglblflBe-YY I suggest s. further GounLludiuu. For lnformntlon Apply to the Rosin-u. -. word, onoma 1c and exact, o complete 1n all ts necessary noun-H. adjectives, adverbs and verbs. tens- esuand casg. ' n n v A goebbeler; a gdebbel." i ‘I Lectures begin October 1 Also courses MILITARY TRAINING - Al] studentsphysically fit take train- 1r: ing in the C.0.T.C. or U.A.T,(;, ' during the year. Dentistry, . G. J. TRUEMAN, President MOUNT ALLISON UNIVERSITY, SACKVILLE, NEW BRUNSWICK strained their attack because they desired to spare Italian lives and p rty. They can now so forWB-rd‘ wlffi a. clear conscience. For Foot Ailments CONSULT I l l H. J. A. BROWN. D.P GIIIRUPUDIST H3 Great George Street CIIARLOTTETOWN. P.E.l. How Are l Your Eyes?“ hlvfn — hea aches. sure‘ l If you no 1111101011! _ llrl " eyes or din . specialist. Al your lei-vice wfib YOII: Protection is a Natural Iiiisiin‘ Hardy pioneers faced the primitive perils of vast and unknown land. Protective measures were.‘ stinctive but experience was essential to survival, Pioneering in the modern world cannot su without the added experience of various business} professional services. ~ With over seventy years experience in him all lines of Insurance Protection, we are glad to be what service we can to those having problems to s without obligation. HYNIIMAN & co. LlMlTEll Insurance Since 187i Offices: Charlottetown, Suinmerside, Mon i . Thorns McAvlnn. (LLJL-Speclal Representative at Ch‘! Allison l‘. McLean, mum-District Manager at summer“ Earle S. Jcffu-lteprenentslfvo as 01¢"!- Cyrus A. R. Shaw-Representative It Mnnlflllle- Peter G. McEachern-Representntlve It Viv-WY"- F. L. MacNutt-Representatlvo at l!!- James Hughes-Supervisor, Charlottetown. i 6f experience and u ' refrapllnl service. Cull In and discuss your difficulties. Write nr uhono for G. F. l-Iutcheson AND sou a G F. HUTCHESON M‘ n»; J15» o»: 11w“ a ; W. E. BENTLEY. K. C. J. A. BENTLEY. K. O. i- appointments- I. 0. IIUTCIIESON Professional Cards McLeod f? Bentley P Barristers and Attorneys-n- Low E. R. Brow &Sc i Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sicko‘, and Plate Glass lnsarance= at Lowest Rate Agent at Summer-side, D. 0. Stewart Charlottetown . 144 Richmond St. MONEY T0 LOAN Prince Street the nation could not have Peace because the Germans would attuc rnatum. Evidently, the Italians. with traditional Latin instinct for a. bribe, are tirylu to wheedle ad- vantages throug a bluff of cori- tfnued resistance. It is not. likely that the Allies will haggle much longer over this 0on- temptible bargain. The bombard- ment ought. to have been maln- mfned until the white this was count: . It ll only a. matter of time ui-i ll Italy Drive out QCHE 5 C» i’ FOR SALE r ' I u r m A in "m 1%". E1315. o Sfluolceril" at from 8t. Peter's k it If lt submitted to me Allied ultl- i MOI’ f8" and Gunman" ll. F. AROIIIBALD Chartered Accountant; Intern Trust Building Charlottetown u. F. McPhee B.A., K.C. IIABBfiIIiIAlRYSOEFCITOI “h! B!" C‘ rhmetown BELL 8. MATHIESON MONEY T0 LOAN Olmemn Blorokm nahuloltelown PALMER 6. HASLAM slitllfl‘: " ‘" "'* '* WIII be sold wllh or without "0? Ono 0i of l6 Acres with bulld- 50 um without most of them within the range of brhlldlngs. Good house and out mlldlnfl. New York transmitters. and a good mun scattered throughout. Calf- f I.—- Pfotou Advocate. 8-5-91. f '. HARRY SCOTT Ml ' J. S. TAYLOR . OPTOMETRIST I GLISSESNDFITTED Comer Kent and Oeen in .. . . . . , h Office 1956 Phone llesldsnu I018 nhflelll, r. It. n. “COMPLETEt .1.” . . Qn-q-vwmspiih . 1-...- .1- Max Factor ' Color Harmon Make-Up no; Powder — 75° “ml Llpsllck Refills 601‘- Rouge Refills - 60c 11111:] my Slrln Cfllm 15c In" INSURANCE SERVICE ” W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Phone 540-541 Astringent ‘ATTENTION SWINE imiiiiliill no - worm g, elm! 2m:if.l'.on"lll.iemrii:rli¢l' i 1 “A05 p"; - WORN TONIC POWDER’ It will thoroushl! ll traces 0| ‘Wm’ a ‘rova the heal "l on]. (ilven Y" ‘ Moll 0rflil:ununn_