a ‘PAGE FOUR rm: CHARLOTTETOWbl scanning TNE l3 llAR LOTTETO WN, G llARll IAN llluruiiig Dally (Founded In 1887) President: Lieut. Col. W. Chester S. McLilro Hue President: J. R. Burnett, FJJ. Necrelury; I/icut. Col. D. A. Mzicliluuon. 0.8.0. Eilllor and Alan-aging Dlrector J. R. Burnett. FJJ. Associate Editors: l-‘rank Walker and [an A. Burnett SUBSCRIPTION RATES 3y Mall In P.FJ.1., $1.00 per year; $2.50 for I mouth: $1.25 for 3 months; 50o for on: month Clty Delivery $5.00 per year; $3.00 for 6 moat-bl $1.75 for 3 months By Hail In Canada and USA. $5.00 per year Saturday Weekly: $2.00 per year; $1.00 for I month; 50a for 8 mouth! This (‘liai-liitii-luivu Guardian may In obtained ll Ilutullng‘: Aun- Agency, Time: Square, New Ynrlq 01d Suiiili he“: .\,;.-ni~y, Corner llllli and Wuhlngton, Boston; hli-frtipiill n .\c\\ n Agency, 12-13 Peel 51.. hlunfrcul; J. l luv. .15! Hay Sh, Toronto; NQWI Sbllld, Clmleuu Luurli-r, Ullilflll; Wulfu’: News Stand, Bradbury, Ont: Hub rubric-co iiliup, Alonclun N. IL; Ellen Robertson Alnliersl, N. S. The Strongest illemory is Weaker than the llcalvest Ink." moxusv. SEPTEMBER. 2a, 1941. On \Varlime Economy v r 5" hints with regard to provliilll some tin l)‘ and n: l expcniliture in wartime are given in the lai- Fwlfuiiii of the Citizens Research liistiiuzc of t‘ da. The bulletin draws at- tcnifiiii s.» ire appeals which are being made to the pi: " t» I-uxtr thsir peacetime expenditures in or .. to c-uitriliiiic to defence outlays_ Part of lllvll‘ pcicctiine fiXlifilltlllllffii, it says, are con- lfilillliiillfi m provincial and municipal govern- iiivnxs and the rvly nay in which these can be is bv a riwliii l in provincial and municipal - . "(hie rczison that citizens cannot . i-itc as much as ihcy should to federal war exiictiiiiitircs is i‘~'it some provincial and munici- pal aiiiliiiriiii-s lIFl-l on their rights to maintain tiii-ir expciidiziircs zit PFC-WEI" levels or as near thcin as 1io<<ible." The bulh-tiii insists, and rightly so, that this is ‘o tiiiic for srlfishiloss, whether in high places or in low. Provincial and municipal govem- moms iiiii-"t not only gci out of the way of the fvcltmil lii~t\'x'l'lllllClll in raising revenue, etc., they must al-vi get out of the way of their employers, the tv-ople, iii ihcir diversions of resources from pcacciiine- to ivariiiiie activity. This is another way of saying ihxit unnecessary provincial taxa- tion cuts ilonn the fizilcral war revenue, and that is exactly iihrit happcns. The bulletin puts the zly whcn it says: “If it is unpatriotic e money on peace services tic rctreiichmciits in their case l1. '~-ns to \\'.'l~" and file to eff-mt ll Inn-spoil p -=c<~ t‘.‘(lll'llllillll'€, it is uupatriotic for prov muiiiifiiwzil governments to waste liioncy" or . El to rctrcncli.” __ Debts And Reparations ilnt- iii-ti» this l\"ll" has done has been to give dwrs a more realistic con- ion of dcbts and reparations alt struggle. Nothing could, i v1.1.- »- more ilcfiniie and clcar-cut than llii; .1.“ qt i-i'~:_.i1l\' llhlflC by Carlton H Tllnvcs, l'l'~ll<'$\\ll' of illistury in Columbia Cni- \"ci-.ii_\': "\\'e iwri- tlzc final dr-tcrmiriing factor in winiiiiiq i‘i<-- .. <1 World War, but more than any oilicr until-n. cvcn Ill/WI" than Nazi Germany, we have 1H,... RC1‘... in.- for losing the peace and briliglhti‘ on tho ll1'3~<‘lll world war. “We in-kicd nu our rights and spurned our duiics. Yiciim illll\i‘.'f‘~‘ of a bad kind of narrow ]]'1’,l/t]1;‘lll,<ll]_ wc rcpiidiatcrl the League of‘ Na- tions which our own Prcsidcnt had fashioned and we thus s~t the lIIICU for all of its later flout- ing; liy oilicr powers. _ -'_\[..,-¢(y,~,~i-, \\'c sclfishly and short-sightedly fCllbCfl to fin-givi- the llllCl‘-.\lllCCl debts and tlicrcli_v pz-cvciiicil any tilllcly forgiving pf the fateful Udflllilll reparations. The result is that Germany now has Ilitlcr, WlIllC we are accumu- lating a debt for national dcifence which makes the iiitcr-.\llir~d d~l~ts and the reparations of the last war “‘.‘\'lll ll'l\ il."_ _ _ Prof. llayiqs rccllgillZffs clearly the relationship between the (lcmziiid llV the United States for the repayment of the Allicd debts and the insist- enCc 1W lug ,\ll’<-<l powcrs upon the payment of reparations by Gci-iiiztiiy. The Unitde States gov- eriiiiicut ovcr a long period of years maintained thcrc was no cruincctirvn bcnvccn the two sets of transactions. Tlrchnically this was true, yet actu- any “my “m1- closcly united. The abandonment of FCPZIYIIIIOlIS \\'ZIS ziliiiost coincident with de- fault on the ilclit payments. This destr_0)’5_ O much eiiiploycil itrqiuiiciit of U16 i50l¥1tl°nl5l5 who scck to excite anti-English‘ feeling by re- presenting lllC dclaiilt as a delibente repudia- gion, which it certainly ivas not. An American Com mefll Mr, W. R. Alaulii-ws, editor of the Arizona Daily lingic, who rcccntly made a Coast l0 com, p.11} m‘ tfnnadzi, has written an article on Canada-S “m. CH1," fm- ihe blew York Times in which h:- hzinds out both praise and CfltlClSTl- Much ligis lil‘('ll accomplished, he says. l" {e {p.14 m‘ ;|illll\'ll'_\', air training and finance. Mor- alc is hirzh llllll ilic (faiiadian people had should- a lirc.'iilii:il\iiig load of tiixfllwll- cople are without a com- kes to lick Hitler." timorous and ercd _ ‘mt tlii: (fziiiailiiin p_ prcliciision of "what it tad d Their government is timl B" llillllitlhll)’ postpones 1131p cisiims. Canada, in f» lacks a warrior chicf. This criticism, comments vincc, while forcefully Much the same l Matthews‘ new. __ _ . C d pziiicillv on Lanadian platforms and in ' aria - h“ ‘1‘l'\\ ,_-~,1...r5_ Ic not the Governments lack nf (Y(‘l‘i’<&‘)‘! priivi-ii cvcijv l-PW mouths Ill ilu- cahiiict lllll\l_\'lCl'S?'\tv0llld> a Gov- "purpnsi: ridged and edged with ernniciit ivilli a nit-l" lw (‘llllllllditul on a recruiting campaign at this lain ilnic? On the contrary it ivouldbestrug- li the tide of recruits. not endeavoring King is indeed th: very re- gliiig wit to stimulate it. Mr. lcasant duties and de- opinion. the Vancouver Pro- piit is not by any means hing has been said rc- vcrse of what one looks for in a "warrior chief." Shakespeare urges somewhere that when the blast of war blows in the ears it is desirable to imitate the action of the tiger, stiffen the claws and summon up the blood. There is something of the tiger in Mr. Churchill; he shows it on oc-' casion. President Roosevelt can stir and rouse by the very timbre of his voice. Mr. King is not in this company. He is not at home and not comfortable in the panoply of war. His talciit and inclinations lie in the sphere of political c0ni- promise. That has been an advantage to the Liberal party, but it is Canada's misfortune. For Canada in her war effort must dress by her war leader, and if he, as Mr. hlatthews points out, has no comprehension of the task lying ahead, how can the nation? An "Emergency" Election‘? A dispatch from Toronto quotes Premier M. F. Hepburn thus: "Unless some emergency de- velops, there will be no Ontario election this year." Mr. Hepburn added that he "could see no emergency. “Next year,” the Toronto dispatch says, “brings the conclusion of the statutory 5-year term, and an election will be held, unless Gov- ernment zind Opposition agree to prolong the life of the present Legislature because of the war.” Ontarids last Provincial election, as well u Nova Scotia’: was held in I937, with a few months’ interval between them. Under the law each legislature was therefore entitled to hold a 1942 sessions. Premier Hepburn of Ontario, see- ing no “eniergency" to warrant a premature wartime election, has decided upon a 1942 ses- sion, and is apparently willing, if the Opposition will agree, to keep the present Legislature alive by special enactment for the war's duration. But Premier MacMillan of Nova Scotia ap- parently does see an “emergency,” for he has procured a premature dissolution of the Legis- lature and is holding a wartime election. a l? =- EDITORIAL NOTES —. Patriotism that comes in part from the head is much_more useful to the country right now (says Priuter’s Ink) than the ifroihy, emotional, flag-waving variety. a iv a This is Michaelmas or the Feast of St. Michael, one of the regular quarter (lays in Eng- land for the payment of rents and business ac- counts. Michael (Heb, "who is like unto God”) one of the seven archaiigcls. According to Daniel, 10:21; 12:1, he is the guardian prince of Israel, and the New Testament allusions (jude 9; Rev. 12:7) bear out this view of his character and function In the apochryphal and apocalyptic books he is the recording aiigcl, the angel of revelation, and even the intercessor for man- kind. : i: u u The appeal of Major ]. David Stewart in his letter to His Worship hlayor Holman to have parents and friends of the boys \\‘l'll€ tlicm and send cigarettes is repeated in this issue In ad- dition to the “D" Company of which the major is commander there isithe Island battery as wcil as Island signallcrs, airmcn and incinbcrs of other units all hurigering for regular lctlcrs and an oc- casional cigarette. Do not lct us forget them, for though “we are all in the front liuc" these days, most of us here are only luafing compar- ed with those on active scrvicc. I C I 1F A much-travelled letter rcccntly found its (les- tination in a London editorial office. It was dated “5:30 A. I\I., April 1, 194i,” and had been posted in Kumasi, (iuld Coast. Iii can- celling the stamp the local postmaster had used a die which printed an undulating inscription which read: “Buy Gold Coast Bananas.” The editor in reproducing the envelope imagines that the date of cancellation "is apposite —rcvcal- NOTES BY TllE WAY The UnIIed Stain novr I; 110-. , ed not with a choice between an outbreak against the Dutch Ia- lands or appeasement of Japan. A5 1n Britain's experience with Nail Germany. the choice today seems to lle solely between taking the . Initiative to forestall further m0v-| 6s by the potientlal aggressor or gfirlflllblllfl him t0 move first. — hristlan Science Monitor, Boston. 0f the 1.100 fllml made In Hollywmd ln the two war years! only 5V0 have dealt: n any part with, Hiileristn. The ‘i tllm propaganda; for ivar" Into which Senator Nye’ and others are lnqnlrlng Ia, then, the One fl1m_ In 22 ln which Holly- wood recognizes the u‘ fence of c man whose works have become the flffl-Qccilpatlon of every Inform- ed person on this earth. One In 22 scents not excessive. To say that every film which witches on war ls war propaganda on that account Ls nonsense, of course, And l1 It Isl Dfopflzflnda, the Senator can reati sutured the publlc will stay sway‘ 1n droves, with no word from hlni trolt. News. Russia h not crushed, not 1| she likely to b0. But neltlur In t t-uk II and American WWPOH-l- So be not deluded by waves of optimism that flow perf- odlcally over us British. The men-l ace to this Island and this Empire 1s as great as ever; the prtyipect of the coming battle when tler- strikes at. its 1.1 not diminished. By sustaining Russian resistance now, by waging war with all thei fury we can on the second front , now, by our labors In our factories now, we shall win when the time of testing canes. — London Daily Express. Hitler's Germany. left. to British When Mr. Hanson landed from s. bcmber in Brltaln he declared: "Essentially this ls s. fact-gather- 1118 mp. We went to see all we can see and what more Canada can do in the svar effort". That was fine. ButMr. Hanson Ls re- ported to have added‘: “Prime Min- ister King doesn't, tell us anything so we thought we'd see for our- selves”. Wasrrt. that an unfortun- ate remark, especially to make overseas? 1t ls simply not true to say that Mr. or his ministers do not. tell anyt g of the war effflrl. In Britain or here. More- over, before he left Montreal, Mr. Hanson asked reporters to “be sure to say h.iw much we appreciate all that. Mr. King and his cabinet have done to facilitate our de- parture and 1n making arrange- ments for our reception on the other side". It. wlll seem tn many that If Mr. King so facilitated Mr. Hansonjs trip to England and ui- trcductmi to Britain's high of- T163115 tie did the best lie could p05. sibly do ln the way of telling him of the war. - Ottawa Journal. l A _New York manufacturer, who contained to make buggy whjpg even after a market for them had dlsabbqnred. wires to the Sun of that. city to dlsclcse that. he now has 1340.876 of thcm 1n stock, lie fmds storage space ls setting a bit crannbcd. He wonders if the Government, could‘ not pay him "¢¢fI}P8X1-$bl10n"sp mat- he could lauga. at those other manufacturers who snapped making b11883’ Whllli ivlien the maxket for thcm evap- orated. -- Edmonton Journal. Russia would probably prefer us to take l1 more serious view of her precnt. position and future than trust pecple In this country show signs of 00mg. For one thing, l1 Wwld make rather piaxier Russzak llflscnt, need of great help from Britain and the United States. We are ridden with popular fallacies about. this war. One is that In a, fciw clays the Russian winter wlll, descend and me Germans will; nbhglngiy lle down to freeze after the Grand Army's Illustrious ex-' ample. Nothing c:uld be more, stupid than this delusion, for If the Biusians could fight isgaznst‘ the Finns In a far northern Jan-l uary the Germans will certainly‘ be able to fight, against Russians dill-RB rm Ukrainian October and' ing the lighter side of war,” and he adds with his pen: “Just give us the chance.” Yes, they nave. no bananas in England these war worrying days. Qilll When acting Prime Minister Nash opened 9 o'clock P. M. session of the New Zcaland Parliament at Wellington the other evening, he raised his hand for silence, and the members dis- tincty heard the chimes of Big Ben in London. This ceremony, followed-by fivc minutes of sil- ent prayer, is now in daily vogue, says the Wellington correspondent of The 'l‘iines of Lon- don. As there is a difference of time of about ten and a half hours bctiveen London and Well- ington, the latter preceding, the opening of parliamentary sessions has coinformcil to Big Bcn, whose chimes are also broadcast through the whole Australian network. n a v u Prime Minister Churchill, in a speech in the Commons the other day, bestowed on four mem- bers of the Production Executive the rank of "Cabinet Minister," although they are riot mem- bers of the War Cabinet. They are A. V. Alex- ander, First Lord of the Admiralty; Lieut. Col. J. T. C. Moorc-Brabazon, ll/linister of Air- craft Production; Sir Andrew Rae Duncan, President of the Board of Trade, and Lord Reith, Minister of Works and Buildings. The traditional distinction between a member. of the Cabinet and a member of the government is not always clearly defined in books of reference. But aside from the fact that the former may always directly approach the Prime Minister, while the latter may not unless invited to do so, there is a financial background behind that dis- tinction. The I937 Ministers of the Crown Act raised to £5,000 the salaries of the normally loiv- er paid officers of Postmaster-General, First Commissioner of Works, Lord President of the Council and Lord Privy Sea while their hold- ers were members of the Cabinet. Although no outer Cabinet exists, twenty-one Ministers are listed as being what is technically called above (lays out of the the line. In normal tinics they ivuiild have seals in the Cabinet. As the Prime Minister made clear in his speech in which he- mentioned the four new "Cabinet membeis" they have the right, not possessed by junior lllinistcrs to zippeal to the Wai- Cabinet against lllf‘ decisions of the various coordinating committees. , lple beyond thoze who WORDS OF CHALLENGF A THOUGHT A DA! FOB A PEOPLE AT WAR “Victor! depends on t-M '1- ertlons we all Pl" 1mm u“: they must. be far beyond Ill!- uilng we have yet made." Dr. Hans Kuhn, of Smith Collette. Nornhampton, Mass. Address to the Canadian Institute of Public Affairs. ooov OGO-O Lonidon’s Bells Silenced (M11558?) Londoners, who have s. historic affection for their church bells, are keeping careful count of the alr- raid damages to the city churches and their oiu-Illonn. The record can be read between the lines of the axiclent nursery rhymes about. Lon- don's churches: "Orange and lemons gay the bells, of St. Clemens." The blitz finally caught up with tho bells oif M. Clement Dane, 1n the Strand. They were to have been hurled In sand for the duration of the war to save their gay nursery rhyme pest for posterity. A; they lay In the porch awaiting removal an incendiary bomb fired the church. Now only the walk remain. Tbs ll; lie In debris. Some may never peal again. "You owe me flve farthlngs, any the bells of St. Martin's." Maybe they wlll g0 on collecting their debt-s of years yet, the bells of St. Martln-lri-the-Flelds, at Tra- falgar Square. A bomb hlt the church and damaged the crypt early tn the blltz. but. the bells are stlll Intact. "when wlll you pay me? say the bells of Old Bailey." The Church of St. Sepulctire. op- posite the 01a Bailey, scene of Eng- land's gravest criminal trials, once ‘had a. grim task. Its bell tolled a death knell for murderers con- demned to the gallows. The Cen- tral Orlmlnal Court of the Old Bailey has been hli three tlmes, but St. Sepulclirqfs bell has escaped so far. "when I grow rlch, say the bells of Shoredltch." The Actors Church, St. Leonard's, mother church of Shoredlth, still has It; bells. It has another dlstlnc- tlon In Its official register, whlch records the death in 158B of Thomas Carn, aged 207. The pres- ent church was buIlt ln 1740. "When wlll that be? say the bells of Stepney." Inoendlarles burned holes In the roof of St. Dunstaifs, Stenxiey, known since the fifteenth century as the parish church of all those born at sea. Bomb blast-s broke the w1ndows.. "I do not. know! says the great bell of Bow." The most famous of all flondon Church bells are those 01st. Mary- le-Bow. which once sounded the city's 9 o'clock curfew. For‘ cen- turies the hallmark of a Londoner was that. he be born wllhln reach of their sound. The bells remain but: the church has been severely damaged. None of London's bells has sounded since the day war was de- clared. Until peace comes again only one event: could make taeni speak—-the arrival of invading German troops on English soll. Bu: war cannot silence the nursery rhyme. Cockney children playing In the East End streets chant "Oranges and Lemons" as they choose partners for the tug-of-war which ends their ancient game. The words they slng, though are their own blitz-amended version: pgpyembar. -—- Manchester Guard-l Gay 8o up and gay so down ' To ring the bells of London town. T tanlmlntment of Mr. G. Herimucfgnsegncendiaries w light -, D5 2n of the e c- f — Dmector of Fruit Julcréswanld 515.2. Out. with the sandbags! K111 ‘em all tins must have puzzled many peo. dead! wondered Mast ectlns are. Why a director of frut Juices when them m hardly any frult juices one known of to direct? The explanation Is a lunderstocd to be that frult. juices I Vigtory Or Vichy (The Fortnighil Law Journal) We not/e that. e summer has of some kind are to be produced In come and one and Vichy has all Mlllantlly. It is asked If there ls any l that. time rgn more than true to Its Jikelihood 0f llllces coming from abroad‘, thus reducing the came space used by fruit. There I3 the difficulty there that Spain and Palestine, which give 11s our main °1‘*}"89 Supply. have not the ma- chaiery for extracting orange julgg’ and the United States and the Cape require the cargo ypaoe {or more essential goods. still, were i, the fact that concentrated orange juice Ls being canned In America so strong than. It, can be watered to produce three or fcur flutes the "Win31 quantity at normal strength. - Manchester Guardian, 1 The lltlusslam In re! "'5 (=8 . are OTQBIMZIIQ "Qpolchg- 111$" 31' Olmlohlenle they defeated NBPOIecn. By oipolchenle they mean to (retest. Hitler. We, too In tli country must have opolchenle t» ‘élliywwfi $°’.’.i";‘.“.l“'?i""f W.‘ . o nu t o for freedom. What does this m o Ruslan word mean‘! It means Orxarilzatlon of civilians In every city. town and village ti; “m; me Nmllar Forces against. the Invade-r. It means the creation of a plain- ,c1othes body of quiborteurs, back. street killers, ambush layers, booby trap makers who will u, m; wherever n Geri-nan .0153. sci; m; foot. It means that. every ma woman and child 1.1 actively In the; battle for freedcm. — Sunday Chronicle (Mndon. The vnr llllwlrs Io be t on Mussolini! nerves. ThlVI':;hn‘hlj minister of the Interior h; ha; b“. ned all dancing and has decreed that women are not to wear trous- ers or shorts. A IQVGIIMGII-yguqfld girl w” arrested last; week and had to pa a zoo-lire rlno for appear- Ing l a football guns dressed In Shorts Scme time ago, Muuollnl had banned the Disney and Charlie Ohnplln 0r represent» Fuc tlves, as It was said, ‘of other Amsrlcan Jewish humcvr." ‘mils does clrciu. It has tho dint, nolao and not. mean that Iher ls nothing w uisollnl cannot broad V9 I zocfl sense of httmor. To Idiom the striittlw. lerkhw and bellvwlriz of v~~-~-"-i Rwi iv- “blackrhlrt. boys" tine must. be terribly funny. Ibr hot-led -—. nu to SInI- o! shameful form of llcklng the con- querors boots and sllll has a re e- sentatlve at Ottawa. to repeat I'll. th- fully to hLs qufsllng masters for transmission by wa of collaboration and more boot llc Ing to the Hun the full extent of Canada's war ct- fort. We can only see In this con- tinued 1111151111 of the cuckoo In our nest. o. mistaken and discredited pol- Icy of agpcasement. It. ls said that this Ls one at the request of the British government who still expect better thin of Vichy. This a pears hardly ere lble. We frankly believe the British thinks that. anything wt come out other than more and more o not muei-ve t boot ii king at In in i no b l appear tfiat the Blell/lbl’! government ml!‘ QLbrnvQry. pl” m!‘ e l‘ ' “””“““' very properly wishes o avoid the " appearance even of interference In Is ii matter that could be made to a -{ ar a matter of purely Canadian and that this hBl n. request. Had t wished w tatlve and, tend ' vernal 11c . been co ILN Into o gyovernmen a i: repreaen tlsb requested this the algnatlon of the illana would have burst forth lctatlon to a severe Oommonweal 1N0, that story ls .V even strike d: stand for Vic-h Inste ‘Victory. When we of ting . $89890 . s cafe when a an Informer the ‘camps-tin Into a mere adver slogan makes u: feel that e coriaclo of the W11 im ualymany mlht. t. llluidf VI" ml.‘“'“"f' m“ .18.! > n m l bnllymo to are‘? clap]; at? s lot. else buldcl 6X08 h Ill-IQ be for ii mm mum’ than uiynmig 5M1‘? ma: 1111C 2 I wnlogiltnke; ‘Ion-onto Stu. Mflllf It would A l1 n th re on little-Cans- In un- prlntable denunclstlon of Imperial d people with- of Ngtloua. too thin. We mettmes wonder how many of the Y! ‘ stern and. lcketsl ad o! brave men In the enslaved countries rlak- ohn I V mi a or tartan It cull. an mm may be. an, V‘! u 1t liould nut. . 1mm In It: widen the trimmings, bran and malignant-nu um a. rn ut up. It hu brus- s. Wid this ls a fen- tbe lmllu away. Shakeup Needed (Saint John ‘Iblegrnpli Journal) It Iv about tImo that the federal government at. Ottawa took some . deffnlte steps to end the oondltlon ‘of affairs whlch exist: In connec- ' tlon with the administration of the ‘department of labor. The lltiutlou u regards labor mutter: In this Dominion has been a source of constant Irrlinlon and oomplutnt almost since the outbreak of the war. and during the recent months u ha: been geltlng worse Instead of better. The fact. that the loiiroe of these ‘ lnts has included not only the labor organizations ' and the employers of labor, but many Interests which m Indepen- dent of both these elements. I: ladl- catlvo of flu umiiblafutory stats of affntn which exlat In the labor department. Canada"; full and aucmssfitl participation In the war depends upon more mm the number of men which In onllsted and train- efl In flu fighting services. Equally Important In the arming and equip- ping of these men, the supplying of them with udequa‘ u. A of munltlom, and tbs contrlbutlon whlch this Domlnlon can make to- wards keeping the flow of war material moving scrou the Attai- tIc to Brltaln. The maintenance of peak production of many classes of munitions and the mw materials necessary to produce them has been seriously mtarded by labor dlffl- culties which ‘the federal depart.- ment of labor seems unable or un- wllllng to cope with. Th‘: situation cannot. be allowed to exist indefinitely. If those In authority In the CCDBTl-Ulaflll at Ottawa are incapable If straighten- ing out the tangle and getting production up to the level where It should be, then they alto-alt! be re- placed by others who "an achleve the desired goal. Or, If the present mlnfster of labor and his assistants lack the necessary authority to put. an end to the conditions which are now causing u. great deal of uncer- tainty and unrest lhriugliout the country, such authority should be made available forthwith. At all events. press despatches and newspaper comment from coast: to coast Indicates inmost nmatlsfiic- tory and disturbing labor situation 1n too mimy places in the Domin- Ion. Canada cannot go all-out In her war effort. until It Is cleaned up. And that respomlblllry NBSYS prim- arlly on the department of labor, and ln the final analysts on the aederal government at Ottawa. Length 0f The War (Globe and Mall) Frequent warnings against com- placency have been ry In the 1185b Year. A warning ls again called for In view of n. remark made In a radio address a few evenings ago by Mr. Herbert Hoover, former President. of the United States. He predicted the collapse of the Nazi regime even though Germany suf- fers no mllttiu-y defeat. Among recent commentators ,on the possible length of the war have been Mr. John Blggers, Lease-lend director for the Unltled States In London; Mr. Edward P. Taylor, Toronto man who Is now chief exe- cutlve officer of the Brlllsh Supply Council In America, stationed at Washington; and AIr Commodore A. C. Crlichley, Canadian-born chief of Royal Afr Force Initial Training, now visiting Canada. Mr. Blggers told the British Noble he knew there was dis- appointment about. American pro- ductlon. He explained the nature 0f mass production. saylng It took a long time to get started, but once the Industries were lined up the "harvest of maxlmum effort” was garnered. He said lie thought. com- bined British Commonwealth and United States productlon should outdo Axis production by the middle of 1943. June 30, 1943, Is more than twenty-one months away. Mr. Taylor Is reported to have raid the war may end by 1043 1f there an no hitches and If the u- sembly llnes pour out. the goods. It will be necessary, he said, to out- blllld bhtflefmgng by u) per cent, 01' Wfhllpa even 100 per cent. Alr Commodore Crltchley Ia quot- ed as saying he believed the Hun would be defeated wlthln four Years. which. from the beginning, Sept. 1, 1939. would place his guess for the end at some time before 59PM 1. 1951. The longer the United Stat/ea remains out. “the Ionizer It i; going to take, of course," he added. p In the of all thatls known overnme nt BSIIIIEBS me ha“ of the war effort. of urc hoo artist. who so misuse: urs‘ Au s)!» 0! n1: 10a.’ WIIBIENINT Ill!!! Wll STAND l!!! I When working at high prec- uure, chew a stick of refresh- Ing Wrlgleyb DOUBLEMINT GUM-It helps keep you alert and Ieelln flt—makes ou more efiicient. And the ell- clous peppermint flavor helps keep your mouth and throat cool and fresh. CHEW DOUBLEMINT WHILE YOU WORK-millions dol Carry a ackage or two wlth you. emember, it’: only 5e! ER 29. 1941 i? _ Sassy Stomach: Relieved l W?!" Who l: lronb and elrNbun- a bottln of “Dr. Iv h Mlxtiiru” M IIII illllcll! It wlll rel trenlna HOLLYWOOITS TBU - cow LIPSTICK n 4 AMAZING FEATURES l. LI! 11k red I 1 Nari-din»; iilallltialilll t Ellie lflorufnufiltlve up; cm l I Price 75o andnffigliunv We on | of Mu get;- migtitilrcimf muons Call and gee 11mm BORE BACK ‘f be: 3111.211: :0. ofil-eli. llojimel; BACK - BITE TABLETQ Eilmilnll! llecll I’ . bu». NAM“; llemllgr 53$. gleloéirrmatlm onliaeliih u] treatments full’ to realism; 50 cents nor l»; ‘TNE TWO NIAOS H9 Great George shut l Mall Order: Given Prompt At at on. l 0e I How Are Your Eyes’? l1‘ on no hsvln of In — head‘: symptoms clues. sore eyes or dluilnesa — consult I specialist. At your service with year; of experleuue and a thorough fflfrlfllnl service. dutgilglltglel.‘ and dlacull your DWSOHITOBIY about the strength of, Germany, Mr. Hoover's statement ls, to say the least. nalve. The Hitler regime In In control of the greatest; and best equipped army 1n the history of the world with the greatest pro- ductlcn machine behind ll: that has ever been established. Russia Is forflnz the expenditure by the Ger- mans of large quantities o1 war mflllerlll. but the Germans, prepar- 1118 10f Years for this war, have re- placements stored and tn produc- von at least. equal to the drain. 5991113181!’ reliable information Is that. the Germans anticipated, and DYQPB-Yed I01". B. campaign lasting P05511711’ a your against Russla. Not three months have yet elapsed. It would be foolish to give too much Welsht to the disorders In the occupied sections of Europe. Few In these areas have arms. Unarmed, undlsclpllned populavons cannot stand against machine gun; in the hands of oppressors as ruthless as the Germans. If the world were to wait for the Wllflbfle 01’ Hitler's regime, It would wiflt. at the best, for years whlle PM Peoples of occupied Europe were being further enslaved and forced to produce for their masters. while hundreds of thousands, per- haps rnllllons, were being shot or G. F. llutcheson l‘. G. HUTCHESON G. I‘. BUTCHESON starved to death, and while m; m; of the world stood at arms. m the worst. the war would be extended further and further, to India, deeper Into Africa, and In time to South America. Such an attitude would be an Invitation to Japan to extend hostilities 1n the Pacific. Against the dynamic aggression 0f Germany the only answer ll l. dynamic war to crush Germany's armed forces. 'I‘l1ls Is the policy of the British Commonwealth and It: allies. The war la being carried to Germany by the Royal Al: Force. Help Is being glven In Russia In In- creasing quantity, The Russians are doing their share to force the using up of German munitions and war machines. If thls continues WI may hope to reach production parity earlier than the middle of 1946 For the anccor of the suffering millions now bowed under the Nazi yoke and those who are standing agsnat the onslaught of the Nazi |armles this conflict must. bu brought to Its only possible con- ‘cluslon as soon as the aviillable ‘force Is ready to do It. If our world, Including the United States. lakes the essential steps, that end may come before two more Y0"!- o-oooo-wovwoou-wno Say to Your Grocer I Want ‘ BRAllMlN ORANGE PEKOE TEA You will enjoy its superior I quality l Paint Will Make Things LOOK Better Nothing wlll make a tobacco taste better If it ls not made rlght from the best of leaf and Ingredients. Hickey: Twist passes the hardest of all tests, the test of taste, because lt ls made of raw materials. HICKEY’S BLACK TWIST 10c PER FIG Mimufac ~iiiciiiav a Tobacco Company Ltil , Charlottetown carefully from the purest lured By NIOIIOLSON