PAGE FOUR TIIE BIIAIILIITTETUIIII IIIIAIIIIAII teract the distinctly baddmprcssion caused some of their acts. Mornlng Qnlly (Founded In 1881) President: um. CoL w. oil's-m s. mum Vtee- ent: J. B. Burnett, IJJ. Secretary: Lieut. Col. D. A. Mulilnnon. 0-5-0- Edltor and Director: .I. B. Burnett. Managing “we l; to . F Ii Wlk and LttiuLlnnA. Iifimiii, Ecnfvii. ioi» iiiivs i “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Thu-n the Weakest Ink." s“1‘l“_°:‘!-.£°_T--!‘-l?“__ Farm Production Despite the onslaughts of unfavourable wea- ther and plant iliseases and pests, and a shortage of fillfilCli-ITOOIB" in the field, the farmers of Canada have completed a remarkably good cam- paign on the agricultural front during the sea- The monthly letter of the Royal son of i943. Bank of Canada for October points out that al- though conditions do not compare with thOse of the llfflCiftllllg season and the record yields of many crops wcrc not equalled, production on the ivholc has been satisfactory. The Cqllgldiqnl {Qvover of wheat at the be- ginning of the prcscnt crop year was 60I_mil- lion bughgh, making the total supply available for the 1043-44 crop year 870 million bushels. It is zinticipziteil that larger quantities than usual are being used for feed and Canadian consump- tion of wheat in the crop year is estimated at 170 llIIlIlOll bushels, compared with normal local consumption of 100 million. The impressive record of livestock production in Canada is indicated by the situation in re- gard to bacon and other pork products. Can- adian farmers are this year supplying Great Bri- tain with 85 pcr cent of its bacon requirements, while prior to the war Canada rarely supplied more than 2o per ccnt. Since i939 Canada has exported to Great Britain over 2 billion pounds of bacon and other pork products, an amount in excegg of our total baron and pork exports dur- irig the :0 years, ioio to i939, This volume of ghipmcnts represents 17,000,000 hogs. Education iiig the Quebec Association of Pro- hers in Blontreal the other day, Mr. Gordon tiraydou, leader of the Oppositiondn the llouse of Conimrins, made an arresting point. lle said education in future must place "greater emphasis upon the teaching of civics, the responsibilities of individuals in the state as well as statcsnianship and the operation of dc- mocratic machineiv in general. so that when vouth reaches its majority it will be equipped to exercise its treasured franchise intelligently. If democracy is worth fighting for, it should be worth training for." But -- Nlr. (iraydon emphasized —— training along technical and vocational linesis not enough. “A nation in which everybody was trained ‘and nobody educated could never become a great na- tion," he said, thereby coining an epigram which goes to the root of the controversy between the apostles of scientific culture and the “human- ities." It is interesting t0 note that while .\Ir. Gray- don was emphasizing this in Montreal, Premier Drew, speaking in his capacity of Ontario's Min- ister of liduczitioii, was iiiiilcrliiiiiig it in Ottawa. "\\'e fall short of the basic requirements of education," said Prriiiici- llrew, “if we do not teach voiith how to live and do not encourage an undersiziiiiliiig of the purpose of life . .' The wcll-stiickeil brain which understands the basic truths ot life is the best antidote for juvenile delinquency; as it is the best prepara- tion for citizenship. Uur way of life must be based rin these coiicepts-—obligatioi1 of citizens to each vither and to the country-and accept- lnce of ordered discipline. Appreciation of the principle of the Sermon uii the illouilt i5 a 11¢- q-Qfrv, {or Canada is a Christian democracy." Air Control At the cumin; parlc " in London. which Prime .\lini.~;tci‘ King may attend, it is expect- ed that spoltcsiiicn for the two conimonwealths will strongly‘ urge iiitrriizitional control of post- war air opt-riuioiis. 'l'h:'_v are likely to insist upon that control inchidiiig such important fea- tures as ihc right to zuirlit the international body and the obligation to lgive atleqttate publicity to the results of lllt- audits. This will be sought as safcgiiavil against what iiiight be unfair trade ’.riii~h officials said to fear u a |)l'.‘lt‘llCL'~. HR‘ subsidy l'.'l\"" .iiid they I)I'iI\'\'\I that audit zinil pub- licity ivoiilil ssrvv as t-fft-rtivi- checks. Then to |tl't'\\'lll ciit-tliriini cniiilit-litiini zillocrititin of ter- ritorv or .'illot-:iiiiiii of traffic or both may be urged. Canada, incitlentzilly, is doing a real ser- vice the -e d: to the troops overseas through the 'l‘rans~.\tl:iiitit~ air st vice carrying mail as well as govt-riiiiiciii officials. This service will cer- tainly he expnildctl after lilt‘ ivar. .~\t presen: the service has Jichirvcrl an average of a little more than a plane a wet-k and the plane has carried e:i-t\\.'irrl as llll|t‘ll as 7,000 pounds of mails di-siint-il for Canadas armed forces across the ocean. Horror In Hamburg Fantastic stories iii tl_ie effect of fire-bumb- ing in llainhiirg have come out of Switzerland. They tell of great fires taking oxygen out of the air, causing what must have been if the reports are to be believed. a veritable hell in which uo human being could live. They tell, too. of people in shelters bring l'(‘(IllC(‘(I to zishcs by the intense "neat of the fires. Altogether, it is a horrible pic- ture that is painted. Let us. not put too miieli faith in such stories, suggests an excluiiige. 'l'he scientific basis for ni:iii_v of tlit‘ rvpoi-tcd phenomena seems vague indccd. hi fact, the ivhole thing bears many of , - EDITORIAL NOTES - "half. wry 0i a a u Commissioner to be Mr. Robert Forsytll. K- lawn. a a e u ences of opinion, and no differences of opini dust. i i U I years at sea; has multitude of plays to his cr dit, including “The First Man," "The Half)’ Ape,” “The Great God Brown," “Lazarus Laughed", "Mourning Becomes Electra”: “All victory ends in the defeat of death. That's sur But does defeat That's what I wonder." ii- ii- i 1 crats. But what can they do about it? It is past few years, without any permanent ill ef feets. The loyal observance of this policy is es scntial to the maintainance of economic coiidi tions capable of preserving harmony and inter nal peace. Perhaps the Senator's successors n merely realizing they must be put up with “f0 the duration." a a is n- A 20 per cent gain in Canada’s national in come during the first eight months of llllS‘ yea. as compared with the same period of I942 l5 Y5 ported by the Dominion Bureau of The coiziparative figures and $4. $744,io3,ooo against $749,969,000 in the pre ceding month," the Bureau said. "In August tional income over the early period of i942. ing an accelerating influence." U 4 l III Relaxing air spotting. The volunteer civilian portion of the United States aircraft ivarning net has been virtually eliminated except as a has ordered most of it placed simply on an “alert" status as a manpower conservation measure. Instead of operating 24 hours a day, the ap- proximately 7,500 observation posts of the air- craft “spotters" and the 43 filter, centres along the east, west, andgulf coasts and the Canadian border will be manned only a few hours one day a week, to keep the organization together and prepared to return to full time duties at a moment's notice. Approximately 600,000 incin- bers of the Ground Observer Corps and the Air- craft Warning Corps are affected by the (lecis- ion, which GQIIII . H. Arnold says was made in the assumption of a "calculated" risk of cu- emy air attack, and which President Roosevelt warned the public “not‘to interpret as a de- mobilization of civilian defence." a w n- n Although Prime hfinister Ciirtiii has declar- ed that Australia is no longer in danger of in» vasion, this does not mean that the armed forces can be reduced. Nevertheless, the authorities are prepared to go considerably further than they have dared hitherto to release llI3ll|)O\\'t‘l' for the farms to produce more food for Britain. .\lan- poiver officials are combing and recnmbing the civilian manpower for more labor and lads be- tween 18 and 19 whom the law regards as to-ti ymiiig for service in the front line are being formed into a mobile tinit to meet seasonal dc- inands for labor. Butter has bacn rationed to 8 ozs. a week per head and a special department is concentrating on lifting farm production. One factory has been switched from war to farm ina- cliinery production, and the New South Wales Government is advancing £100,000 free of in- terest to back mechanisation of dairies on the rich coastal lands, and the prouction of fodder crops where farmers have been depending on pastures alone. C i II 1 "I think I've had my fling at politics," Mr. Mitchell Hepburn is quoted as saying last week, "but I'll be out fighting for Mr. Bracken at the next election, make no mistake about that." bilaybe that won't be so good for Mr. Bracken, says Ottawa journal, if one were to judge by what happened to Hon. Arthur Mcighen. Mr. Hepburn came out to support Mr. Meighen in the by-election in South York last year, and Mr. hfcighen was defeated. Mr. Hepburn went on to say last week: "I'll support whoever may be Conservative candidate in this riding. Every farmer I know is behind Mr. Bracken. He'll be a really Progressive Conservative and will have a businesslike administration." These words are illustrative, we think, of the fact that Mr. Bracken is a big factor in the political sit- uation. Mr. Mitchell Hepburn whatever -his the earmarks of the most subtle Nazi propaganda and Switzerland is not beyond suspicion as an outlet for such inspired material. The story could easily llt‘ made the basis for "atrocity" . charges against the United Nations, and the Ger,- veiidetta against Mr. Mackenzie King, is a mighty shrewd mad; and also, we cheerfully ad- mit, although we had had frequent objections to him politically, he is a virile and patriotic Can- adian, ‘ -<.,_ The better half of the "brown month” gone and harvest won; now for the "Speed the Vic- An official investigation into the irregulari- ties at Cartier by-election has been ordered, the law officer of the Department of Justice, Ot- There can.be no controversy without differ- without some thought given to the subject under discussion; that's why “ycs" men are anathema in goverments, councils or any other organiza- tions where brains eount for more than saw- Eugene Gladstone O'Neill, American draina- tic author, born in New York this date i888; educated at Princeton and Harvard; spent two end in the victory of death? Most business men will sympathize _with Seli- ator Duff in his worries over supplying mult- itudiuous details to the various war time bureau- war necessity to keep things stable at home. De- spite its imperfection, the restricted or directed economy policy of the Prices Board has helped Canada through the growing difficulties of the the fish business in Nova Scotia will find the regulations less irksome and bothersome by Statistics. were 355.845.000.000 869,000,000. “The total for August was i942, the standing was $634.i64.000- The iiidsx on the base of 1935-39, rose from i865 in Aug: ust last year to 218.9 in the same month ot 1943." “The expanding demand for war sup- plies is the main influence in the rise of the na- The advance in the production of munitions, the heavy export trade and the deficit financing of the Dominion Govenment are regarded as hav- ieserve for emergency use. The War Department s ' » THE CI-IARLOT’I’E'I‘OWN nuns need u much of that as possible, to coun- GUARDIAN at urn um u - "" ""“".......,." "" "' ~ call that therdirorln Ard- "J." ‘It liking-u.“ T ii-xrctleil to 91:0!!!’ the teiltlie will: duel-mun and: MI l" ll . . ‘ill-W "a" Inwgllrlugfllelaitlfilffeflll. c ‘ """'-""" Klng 0hr‘ C‘: ILIBL would send tm the 9" Sicily paper correspondent In blood plasma. s he subject of board for it; say that plasma ts outstanding medical dlscov this war." Thls will be o! cl lll.-_ f tt.wouidn0be"mltt- xxpoonogiwnpan c“ “y 3m" U" Inwnixon *' evutelviflllflfl! 0n -Babet.to Deutsoll- vvharf st. 00d Islands —i_i——_l In m, num- w" ||| w; hm“, 2. A telephone 0n the wharf Ivpld ex: them to look for n road like have American soldiers ever had to '11"! W?“ "l “l9 “Tl/fl: ll! l- conleml wlll, ,0 many o; m, pm. to when he refers. tn via 0 I m. ltr, e00. tively flendlsh force of nature. In m“ "l" “llllflld m‘ m’ pagan], e‘ practically every skirmish waged by ‘i; A lellgphgnetlylpmu“ wlll“ would our fighting men since this war be- be preferable w the one we now can they have had to fight in con- have l“ Emmi, ham, where “"1"” °l “ma” "ml “I'm "I" there Is always someone. wlbhln imonranci: or Till Ilium! equal the worst flights of Dante's “ll m mm", “mel- d; SCHOOL e_ imagination. —Datly Oklahoman. days. was offered a contract Henry IPord to handle all sales Piord cars east of The store turned because it didn't believe the a contraption would ever sell determined not to miss the boat second time, it. sell and deliver News. “lack... 50y an lsh au even ln the m izle be tented. The ell, perha understan the world the value its citizens and ls making extensl use of posters to for holidays at; home, only saves transport, it keeps public In fit condition gin so that the sacrifices cal war may be accepted wt ottc grace l : contented people are more l- ding body of lLs kind l‘ --Montreal Gazette. The war effort tn Great Brita h . icles are no longer being made. purch on such goods as ttier trunks and ba glass and jewelry. inks are unobtalnable. cosmetics and perfumes drastically reduced. Spor tions and horse races severely restricted. S1 2:! has been entirely aband Rasollnc is obtai motoring. Through personal ex ence everyone knows that the is one tn which they cannot a taking piirt. --Toront4> Star, Nlllhllll ls so certain the war as this constant oned. troops attend to ivgmerals and m t0 be done. whl the issues whtc wlll descend upon us Bllnfs fall silerlit- This pos -war robe s first in p m' pm dlvldual except forested as it c 0f the plan to the competition which is certain lug th . ‘I'm; ldell tactlclans ls to get o preparations while the es the attention and ting tons not as of th the whose position tlvvi undermine. __w= _Tlie ald of the ‘ulilfll China Re iiiiis llgbvihcctentogivcn m Kw “g refugees from Hung Canton making their Among been given are m born in Canton in 1938 tn refugee camp 5unngfted b‘. churches. Chins Is full ofnv firs» but’ qliridrunlets have not itown before lllIlO China. Th .e ‘ urobnblv the P; u l first "quads" in peso hlstorv iintl litefllnps the quads hi all Aszii. The {mgr there ls no word for " the Chinese spoken liiin no‘ symbol for "quads Chinese written 1n deuce of this f. .t Tl " ' B" 710w four yeriairs of ‘enggquags boys a-nd two girls. ' ts one of those many China who live by China at War ' When Professor El Paul Springs Inst yea tlngutslied guest a James Schnozzola day the man said Professor Einstein vlolln with him. I mlBht accompany ht for n while." there followed incongruous duet in the history o music. "I don't fessed Jimmie. a really terrlbl fessor gave mg a done lt: on purpose thought. he said. thri ln l". another (IIS Durante. On -" A! an after fessor Einstein is fully three times to the awry o the employer who told his were ask you never to use tn ence- One of them ts "l the other ls ‘swelll’ "Okay doke. answered the secretary. "What the two words" . "Tel me, Proteus she said with deadly serlousn ls this mathematics racket rel l on the level? —Cer¢ In 8n nvvleI - New that inllkwecd t: worth three cents a pound we suppose that the stuff will become pus , a its soil. choosy About fertilizers sucepttbls to ’ ts. -Peter miner. ‘it. mm’ of Denmnrk celebrated his birthday. some- ~ how It seems doubtful that Adolf tlnl this h —S kntiiibswgitqr Cree ear. as Phoenix. y n Anny doctors talking t0 n newl- "Wrlte lots about it; go clear over- H‘? interest to the public generally and to blood dtul They are telling n lwry In ChI- t cago now about a large New York department store which tn the early the Mississippi. the offer down “I'd _ 5c- cording to the story —and so now. _ ls stocking up with prefabricated houses which it wlll ln boxes-Chicago All work and no play may make but it can make Jack a dull d Jlll B. dull girl. The Brit;- thorities recognize this truth ldst of a world strug- relled upon than the discon- Iondon County Coun- H ps the most efficient and . has officially recognized of healthy pastime for advertise its plans This not the d humour, led for by th patrl- th daylight during the fall nlontihs IS another reason, but. the instructions Fuel as eliminated the luxury trades. ‘lldlll! 139w‘- eXllensive clothing and luxury ort- ase tax 0f 100 percent on the wholesale price has been imposed sllk dresses, lea- RS. fur coats, cut; Pure silk stock- tlng func- have been way racing 5 No y that we can now h hat little remains le we concentrate t. the program, is, with m- l . ~.~.'.°"r‘“la.'§ pill"; the rd" a thousands f tn e K0“; "n5 the first way along very sorry that he does not own a \Vai,efwa_vs cranberry bed and ls thus deprived In e quauriip- thls D. been iii-z the wonders ‘ uads" are IO lheilflamlllv aITI smttll ma? l‘ the nsteln vlslted l’, kln t his hotel was tiger called Jimmie and told him you m at the plano Jimmie agreed, and possibly the most, play so good," con- "EWFY time I made e mistake the Pro- hurt look like I '"I'he Professor mflde Plenty of mistakes tool" Pro- fasclnated by American slang. He listened care. tary. “There are two words I must SILENCE Illl SW on nld: the of providing ti ugh. LNI-Ie by of Ml’ . 09905 reac It m entrance . would be t0 “New i» rene- and Oc He had to Ottawa VG are»; 1n of the We A CAVENDI yflll‘ s uperlor to do so. hlldlsh. just asked who e palgn, and surely h "Member the g5" 85ft’?! f r a roa ave a en rcm ace. "pp Cffleh: lived tn Cavendish since I was born 1181f mllllo up to the present. time dlsln- can't see that, tt ls anfilihlndg lrifms to be. It is part low other parts of our lan . get n head start tn people are diligent workers for pflllflcg] control kind. and they repair their drive- to develop follow- ways every year. and often three t h be Tléfi Iélberal fipvg n with their 6111mm a‘ "I °° "W m n ‘val- cngrns- gocd roads to their own establish- enamles ments to even notice the terrible of those now p, chflfge o; Bl-lalrs eonditicn of the roads to the Na- tional Park, let. alone considering E te servatlves. “Member s" informs d to vtslt ' 9 pied gull- of a visit from whom help There were two cranberry beds tn part of Cavendish owned by Mr. Webb the understand the one owned by Mr. and- Webb was dug up rcot and vine by the gov ernment, 'Member" calls lberal", and weeds Clil- where once this bed oiilv g t: ut: by the ° Efor E Iilll‘ . about two f well what lerals 0H8 f .5088, and ssventee thl "Mom w. Army does ed w .. I plfllllllll would like hlm what method f ed tzhe conel 1. The . n te that he was rlvtng there tn Home advises "a connections at. caribou as belni! 630 e naive. We want hlm and the virgin: to understand it. ls not ex- pense that ls prevention this 1m‘ provement. llgulpmen need for "ship tto ls lavlns 1d te termln h a proper decision as to when lllht be that the sllblect tihe travelling public would kno two trig‘): dpy made 1n MEY- Jilnfi r. repared under the instructions o! he Fuel Controller. Experience h“ hown that: day during e tra NORTIIUMBERLAND FERRIES LTD. SH FARMER REPLIES Slr,- more appeared _s re 1v 1n aper to "PurmerT let er by one w o signed himself “A Member of His Majesty's Forces . There eems to be many things this very et. Firs . that when a certain ln- nable for pleasure divtdual ls addreued, it; ls counted Pfll- rude for another person l0 r991)‘ wit; before the one addressed has time vo m states that my writing was c If so l-i t0 prolong Premier Jo feel sure Premier Jones is n man will stand by the statements e made during the election cam- See helr “hon-est. rights." the times a year. of 00d crop cf berries. so he must; plan to vlslt th quads" tn Jeremiah Simpson, ‘Illflfle and s the e "till-Wee is evi- Riv plendtd large brcl and under his "6 h“ Sllplllled folks from French er to Rustlco an with the berries th received halt of wh Now, through the machinations of "good old Liberals" this bed is being run over and the Liberals carry off berries not by the basket berries are trumped and lost. as they do how jtgiey should be than the conservatives ind ber of ills Majesty's Forces" been if the-men who are clefe our country had not been their rights. As this great personage down from his plnmwle of wl "Port fallen Cavendish. inform him and Conservative; and we be- to Hts Majesty's Force. whose nut. for our brave la to gtv: can to provide me ousy. and b ded. this we work n hours a day and never nk of going on strlke or looking for s government job. bei- of Hts Majesty's Forc- lnforvnl us that our Reserve . Now. hum of "sir-cosh from Buy View 7 nicely. ls verta keep nut 0f the woop rsutms vim "W" 5l,.___“.|n_ m ‘m, Q1 presslns duties, we feel called on w for a moment and review Mr- Horne‘: letter In ' l h nit-Ion llvbeihlru liiifmf“ bllca volu- issue 321110 0 ocll can l rie on the Wharf DQTSOD . to co arl al and enaible hlm to un to attempt 8n This is sometime th of real benefit, and as- of the public to Install In MY- tias been w why there were OHlY better direct lit; Inquiry where the schedule is two round trips P" this period can handle The shorter Deflml 01 Controller 1s the de- arc. sir. etea rson has not learned as e must consider nes’ speech childish. I a clvll question. and I being a. faiencr. he wlll that farmers receive of I-Its Majesty's Forc- Cavencllsh people I have and I be. The and driveways of the Con- of H‘; Majesty's Forc- us that he had plann- thls low ctmmunlty on October. "Partner" ts this gentleman. and Mr. Simpson. I that this good old if‘! growing 5UP!) led 9. "The e one owned by Mr. which ls a d New Glasgow ey needed. They at they picked. bagful and they return more. Half of the into the ground not understand ckcd. Liberals only had cent. more votes "Mem- knows have ndlng denied per the results would looks sdom 1 might that we are both Lib- Greatest ls to provide food and lasstes over- every dollar we dlcni one for our To accomplish from fifteen to not ask for ‘all-cushion- we have never Ioned roads". but this applies to the road .to RuIMco verv the rut: and hiizh cul- a traveller tn the air III-SQ ta.- to explain by figuring tie reach- that- l ht. l3." fir... unable w get after ur- trnportan to I012"; child In t Slwh as “'9 nations “HEC- do and the mixed lllht wind-hello Balls that move of night. 11f. T or: settled. This Sunday School of. fers heart conversion and Ohrls- tian education m the youth of our A questionnaire was sent. to ft!- teen hundred preachers a them the aizc of their conversion. The averaae was twelve. We are told that seventeen million child- ren tn America have been dented the advantage of Sunday School. Think of it. The President of the American Publtcttv Bureau whose nttice is ln New York wrote Pre- sident. Roosevelt reizardtnz the rnventeen million who never at- tended Sunelav School. He replied: "I wlsh we mlzht have tn thll nountriv n rteneral revlval of rell- gion, a rededicatlon of the Ameri- can people heart and soul to snlrltunl thlntzs. To this end I wlsh that every American ohlld mlzht be enrolled in n. Sundav School." From the little room tn the old church butldinir and Sum-lav School in P. E. Island-thousands have made their ivay home t0 Heaven and from its many pupils came the Christian fathers and mothers who have ztven us our Christian herltazs Judie Faucett. of Brooklyn. New York, says that out of twenty. seven hundred boys brought be- fore his court not one was a Sun- day School punt. . vhfi cnts of this child keep her In Sundav School? for Sunday School zlrls do not come to see me." The Sunclnv School aowl the seed. 1t Drovldes revival material. Sixty-thousand churches In our countrv din not have a convert last year. Nine thousand churches have had to close their doors. (No Sunday School materjnl to work on.) Thin. ls not surprising with no many humans _— the churches with lts izushv “all right" phflqg- gghy on the decline -- and doom- Edgar Hoover. Chief of the Fe eral Bureau of Investigation, said concerning crlme among boys and zlrls. “The arrests of teenauze bovs and elrls ls staggering, For years we have listened to quack theor- ts and preached that control and were bad for chlldren. Our vouniz criminals committeed one and a _ n major crimes last tear‘ and continued. "better start 8 few more Sunday Schools" A teacher in one of Los Anizeles’ nubllc schools tells us th of the mothers of over azaln. while the mothers at- card parties and smokes cigarettes for hours at a time. The chlldren of this tvpe of mothers will be found nmoniz the criminals of our lands. Surely this condition tends to- wn fall of our oom- wards the do ink generation. We praise God for the mllllom °‘ éflfilllnl°iili"ufififla’élhlii and elsewhere and for the mtlltons ren enrolled in the S - clay School Help us to see our To‘. sponslbllltv In helplniz to evanizel. lze those underprivileged boys and ll l5 who have never been en- rolled tn a Sunday School. - am. Sir. etc. MAY EATON. 304 South Marengo, - Puss. Calif. ______________ SOMERVILLE CO-PILOT WOUNDED WIIEN ‘FORT DOWNED IN CHANNEL (Somervlltg Exch ) U. s. Army Eighth A r Station. England;- It look for the Eighth Alr Force Flytn FDIIICZS "Hot Rocks" when fl knocked out: one engine and threw the bcmber out of formation, where libcke-Wulfs were waiting for stray bombers to be knocked out of line. It ended happily. however, wit); an Alr Sea rescue In the channel qftgf a bit of clever piluthg and fast shgcttng. ncl none was more ha about the successful coneluslonppbf the fair than Lieut. Harvey A. pint], Z2. of B8 Liberty avenue. co-pllot 0f the "Hot Rocks." when the “Hot Rocks" fell‘out of formation. two I-“ocke-Wulfa came slashing ln. Twin fifty call- bre guns of the bomber answered the attacks and pitched one fight- er out of the sky In a fierce ex- change of gunfire. The other enemy plain.- raced off with tho Spitfires li-i close pursuit. The "Ho; Racks“ ditched ln the channel and all hands were rescued bv -t,he British Air-sea Rescue service. In the enzaizement Lleut, Pm] was wounded. He has been award- ed the Purple Heart. flout. Paul ls the son of Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Paul. I-Ie was grad- uated from Bemervllle I-Ilgh school with the class of i939 and attended Burdett. Collette. He enlisted tn the Army Atr Forces In July of stteneae WéI/élus you Is like the fl-llll? mile of a. child ween. in Mm" 00h’ 91:“ rgllllfid‘ wonder 0f VIM The soft, slow-breaching mlflklo 01 SLIOIICZQSW-ILII you ts like a kind de- o; mom Iitiiiuncianiiour and the 6n- mw iuuwiivg; ciiiihdmenia Mmn Undermtetien $021113“ 0f some blue- Or like one held upon the undo ll e" rolls out. Of bee. ancl skywiaendshroudl the for. darkly on the e040 Bin-The Sunday School Ia lin- could get Information portant because tbs, Bible Whlvh the formative years of his his ls when their destinies Dsudo-sycholilglst; I who B days. AIII half the furnlce wt or- dlna bull ch thrift and the Ian homel- Offices: Insured Against llepreiiiiitfi Life Insurance Is the choicest investment t0 meet. the greatest emergency. LIIIIII you have depreclates when y quires cash except Life Insurance, preelnten In value and provides cash. Th0 Ghent-West Llfo Mostly every. on ille and re- whleh ap- lathe champion of guardian 0f thousands of Canaq. Consult your nearest Agent or wrlte Prince Edward Island Branch Office. i IIYIIIIIMI 8i 00. LIMITED PROVINCIAL MANAGERS Charlottetown, Suininerslde, Mon Lagug SPEED THE VICTORY ' BUY WAR LOAN BONDS sonar. Schedule: Ch'Town. Phone Airport. AIRWAYS l "ro AND FROM 0harliittotown-Sumiiiiirsiilo-Moncton MAKES AIR AND TRAIN co MONCTON FOR MONTREAL - TON (Boston by air only on Sun ICE NNECTIONS AT HALIFAX - BOS- days). 12:30 P. M- Lv. CWTown-Ar. 5:45 P. M. 12:55 P. M. Ar. S'Sldo.s-Lv. 5:25 P- M. 1 :05 P- M. Lv. S'SIde.—Ar. 5:15 P. M. 1:35 P. M. Ar. Moncton-Lv. 4:40 P. M. PLEASE MAKE YOUR RESERVA TIONS EARLY 540—W-K. Rogers Agency: 2061 S‘$ld0. Phone 592 or 299 TIIE IMIIITIIIE BEIITIIIIL uiiiirrii w VIA WOOD ISLANDS ‘The Conneetln . in WIIl Leave Wood Islands 10.00 A. u. us P. M. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND - NOVA SCOTIA FERRY SERVICE , P. E. I. — CARIBOU, N. I. M. V. "PRINCE NOVA” g Llnk Between Thou Provtneel" AILI-BUNDAII uvonunnn) éiétlfiffi-é-“tflfl: a'l.°.t.l‘fiF.-"§2.°°a“._"" "'“‘ Will Ileave Caribou ' LUNCHES SERVED NURTHUMUERLAND FERRIES, LIMITED OIIAILOTTITOIN. P. l. l. Paul II s. nntlve of Kingston, P.E.l’., and a nephew of Mr. Albert Paul, rookfleld. Ch}. These Coal Tips U00 Bdeh ln Inrnnoo the early fall and “COMPLETE INSURANCE I SERVIC ” W. It. ROGERS Agencies l.til. Plm 540-541 1942 and tcok his nllot training st Maxwell Field. Alta. l-Ie has a brother. Murrnv Paul. who ls a chief Petlv Officer, 2/0. overseas with the Sen. ee the. 8o we would not B a. , Lleut. Paul's father, Mr. Nicholas l How Are Your Eyes‘? n" Pa.“ 1230M"; one 0r illninun — consult n epenlalln. Oat! In and llfflcnltla. Write 0r n onenf: nppotnhneatl- _ 6. F. llutchosoii AND SON I‘. G. IIUTOIIISON O. I’. IIITOIIIEON MACS’ HAIR _ RESTORER ..A dellontelykperlnmod PN- pnrntlon w h restore!- henl and benntttleu the hntr. Beltane Grey 0f linen Ill!‘ l0 Ill orl II llil-GO whether- Blmk, rown, Ind Ir Auburn. Promotes n new and I119!‘- growth when the hltr ll and In reinnrlinnl In preventing clandrn III destroying pariultln hill’ Inst follow the 41'9"’ tang anrofnlla vigmiml. amend n e Trim 000 per bottle. -—_.._ MACS ' PERFECT WORM POWDER! and effective. y children. pack o. l I Ell ‘I Jr.’ minim LARIISPUI LOTION my nnnnteu 0r fcutmvlne 10's. lllullll ‘lair '1' "wit? ti? i 0f Ir Mall Orders Given "Milli ALUMNI TIIE m0 inns ‘in Greet 600m "N"