PAC-F. Four; TnlE OIIARLOTTE iOWN GUARDIAN Alorulii; IJ-Jlly 1l<'uuxided In [I81] hesiueut. LIeUL Cor w. Minster b. Mel-III! Vice President; J, B. Burnett, IJJ. Secretory: Lleiit Col. D A Maclsinnun 0.50. ( Inn-s: uiu Managing Director J. i; Burnett. FJJ. Aswciiite Editors: l-riiiiii Wautei I-lld Ian A. Burnett SUBSUIILPYIUN KATE! I; lull III PJLL, s-Luu [WI w“; $200 n»: e iiioiiuu g LL28 for 3 mouths; 50o for one miilill 4 Uliv Delivery $5.1m per year; $3.00 lw b mum-ll $1.75 for 3 uiuuim; We for one Month. B] Mill In other Provinces and U. S. A. $5.00 per yell iniirilay Weekly: $4.00 per rear; $1.00 for i nioiilll. 50o foi- I mouth: 1 The Charlottetown uuui-uniii Iolcflnl‘! New: Azeni-y, ii-iay be obtlliied It Hine- equal-n, run lurl| Oll loiith New: Alum-y, Comer lull and Wellington. Bolton; Aleti-opullliin hiswe Annoy, L!“ reel lg loiilrenh J. l-‘iiie, {til Uri; on, tor-into; lune titul- Oliueeu Lani-tar, uiiumi; iniln-‘u m-wn Ullnd. Brilhurl. 0n; nun TODIMWMI aim», Aluuuloii N. ii.| ' “lilo Strongest Memory is Weaker than Ill Weakest Ink.‘ AUG CST l4 1942 FRIDAY, Building New Icebreaker: While we have 1111-11 tuitl repeatedly that ii; i5 impossible to c111.‘ - 1 ~1v 1111' fvrry for the Bor- den-Tormcntine 311;.’ lllfi W". “'5 note (ha, not one bu, . ice-breakers are being constructed in the _\.1 f» of the 1131040 5MP‘ building Company for "Wire Oil Kile G111" Lakes. Contract i111‘ 11.0 built on the Urut Lulu-s, equal iii Size t0 the 5i95°'tOn ice brat. ‘g ships built on the coast in I9I4 for ocv ssivkwg has been awarded to the Toledo c1111 - 1;1rd headquarters hi \\'ashi11gto11 Are thrsz‘ l1. lsion of a 111w‘. lervice between 1 —"l'iavi1ig in 11121111 hlaritime 1'» 11rd t: economic i111 [rid the n1. t1- defense aild tra vinces"? This question was "sv. ary than prov- su-zuuer for winter lduuiuce 11nd the mainland, - iT-ic resolution of the -- expresses it —“the , ~ f;_.r-1'proviiicial trade c» of s of supply to vital fir-pots in the Maritime Pro- .1 1 at the recent sitting bf Parliament by a l l'\'I\'.i\’C member from Toronto, Mr. I1l;1.u.\‘ico1_ who unfortunately found no suppo-rtcrs among our lsland Liberal representatives. Our Boards of Tr .- hoivcver, shoui-l x111’. fl-iusiasm in p11 11ml others interested this (himpcn their c11- xc 11rgc11cya11d import- lnce of our wru ~ sportation requirements, The news item r1111» - quoted indicates that where there is a will flu-re is a way. C.C.F. Appeals Those who on the pr their cconuuac cs find the answer in 5 in C, C. F. promis- Ss of liighcr pi" 1w an dv-uhtlvss now Ytgilltlillg with some app ht-usiou the stronger bids‘ lilill are being made by the C. C. F. for the support of the East's iwlu-irizd workers. ‘his fact is‘ noted ironically- h_v ‘.110 Winnipeg l-‘rcc Press. which goes on to ,~.1 “An attempt is htmg nirzdc {hi5 year ‘t0 iillflll<l€ C. C. F. activities hv contributions made by trade unions, and it tulle-s no prophet to fOrCCHSl that, if a sircugtlu: ' is 1~<-c<1i\'c<l from such a source the day is 11111 " did-Wilt Whfll 1h? PW‘ sent agrarian ul-psul w d1 have to he Stopped. It bers should not he fora-d to pay more for fwd than they can get away with, and higher agricul- tural prices arc qu-Tt-‘k-lv reflected in the ivorking- man's household luvhut. C. C. F. leaders at- tempt to leave thr v-i-s-irui that by soaking the rich and inxpi 5 p1"iv-.1tc1_v owned capital, both ends can be . . but it is doubtful if a nation which has 1c mrd during the war that practically all the rich men's incomes can be tak- en away from 111cm \\'iil1f;-tll materially meeting our war costs will S\‘.'.llllI\\' the doctrine that a single process of confiscation will provide en- ough to go round for all time." This basic divergence between the urban and rural appeals made hy C. C. F. leadfirs is w0rth_ watching. To the \\'fll‘l\'(‘1‘S in the towns and cities the C. C. F. nialces its how as a party stand- ing for complete socialization or nationalization. But to the farmer this appeal is neglected or ignored. Nothing is said to the farmer about socializing him. Instead the C. C. F. appeal far support is made r111 the 1v1<is of maintaining him as a sturdy and it1(li\'i'lu.'!11sfic owner of his land, but one who, \il'l’lf‘t' C. C. F. benevolence, will receive highcr and 1171111111‘ HFiCCS for his products. The tcchuiquv ciupfiu-vd hy the C. C. l7. is not unlike that r111_:1‘.11_\ c1 11v the l.ihrr.'1l party on many occssioiis-a lllfl which gives added i11ter- est to the critzcism of the leading Liberal organ of the West. , - r. New Sources of Drugs in a papcr entitlcd “The Problem of Medi- cinal Plant l‘ro-'111<“~:1 During Wartime" givcn before the 1‘L‘Ct'1ll :1 ""11; of tho ltoy-zil Society of Cllllflflil, l)r, ll.111-.1 .\\-11=1, Associate Botanist, Division of lloiu _\- lhdllllllOll Department of Agriculture, 11isclo<<~1 111111 the progress of the war has sucrcssivr-Yy- 1-1i111i11:1tcrl 1110rc and more of the usual <~11:"<-. 111’ |~lr111t drugs. Since the beginning of the 11x11‘ 1'1-.- l>ivi~io11 of llntany has srurligr] 11,41 pumhilui ‘s of hwriuisiiig the produc- tion of cr-rtafu 111111,; idrmls zilrl-ady being grown in Canada and ~11‘ 1'-»:11111*11,"i11_; the production of others. Kinny pl:111‘. 1l"1v'~ uswl in the manufac- 1"s, hut only relatively 1.1: 1.1 the practicing phy- 11 plrircd on the latter 1111"; of Ijl‘upl'l.‘1'l". 1 fcw arc abs iilll i 1~ an. 152111111 Y ‘ ~ i1 i ,» wllliifl‘ nf Criscara ~1n1< d llr. 3min. 3-H] m1 pliw- -~-11~' 11f lliv world dc- nyn-(I fur "1' ' -- '1" who: is I1h1.'1i."- (fl from 1' ‘ l ' ' l‘! 3H‘.- \\'l1i(‘lI ;_r~<1\1;< iu l’ i ‘ >"11\r\; iullicrilr (hi! thy 11':.i1‘ .--11 1::'1'71l1' vliiuill- ishiin; 111:1‘ 1i 1" ‘~ o1‘ rotting. 'l‘l1c province of 11-115 1 ":1 his now passed t» Lrgwt ice-breaker ever Legislation protecting the tree and carefully regu- lating the methods of harvesting. Methods of growing the Cascara tree in plantations are being studied. Digitalis, Belladonna and Hcnbzine are other drugs important in wartime. There appears to be adequate supplies of the common Foxglove, Digitalis purpurea, available, but there is a con- sidcrablc demand for another species, Digitalis Lanata. Seed supplies of this, as wcll as of Bella- donna and Henbane, are very scarce and steps have been taken to increase the amount of seed available as rapidly as possible. Ergot is a drug obtained from a fungus which grows as a parasite on rye and other grains and grasses, The amount of infested rye varies from year to year with weather conditions, Labour costs have largely prevented Canadian crgot be» ing collected and offered for sale. Experiments are being conducted to determine whether ergut may be economically produced under controlled conditions. In addition to the work ori these few drug plants, important for wartime uses, many others are being grown experimentally and particular emphasis is being placed on the search for strains or varieties with higher drug potencics. The general public should be warned, urged Dr Semi, that the growing and harvesting of drug plants is usually a difficult undertaking requir- ing great care and technical skill if the product is to be 0f any value. Although prices of some products may now be high the beginner cannot usually hope to receive large financial profits. .- EDITORIAL NOTES- Another Old Home Week draws to a. close, adding to the many laurels won by Col. D. A. MacKinnon, its inspircr, organizer and mainstay, though he would like us to believe 11c is one of a crowd and entitled only t0 a share of the triumph. ll Ill i Ill General lllacbfaughton has expressed a desire for a visit from the cditiors of Czuiarla to scc how wzir is organized over there, and among those chosen to go is the enterprising editor- proprietor 0f the New Glasgow News, Mr. I. R. H. Sutherland, who will represent the Mari- times. n- : a n England is doing more to feed hcrsclf than she has done since the abolition of the Corn Laws. She has a population of 684 people to the square mile, feeds more people with the products of hcr own soil, i11 proportion to its arca, than any other country in the \\'0t‘l(l. linghuid and Wales have an acre of laud per person, Cler- mauy two acres pcr person, France three and a l1.'1lf acres, .\1ncrica .20 and Russia 30 acres. ##1## lohn Galswortliv, English novelist and play- wright, born this date, 1867; spent much of his early life in travel; first revealed his characteris- tic style and method in “The Island Pharisees," a. criticism of English character. sociciv. and i11- stitutious; in succeeding novels showed Iiiuisclf as much a social psychologist as a writer of fict- ion; skillcd in the analyses of character and so- cial relationships; plays display the same quali- ties and are moth-ls of construction; principal works: “The .\l.'111 of Propcrbv," “The (‘nullify House," “Fralci-xiiiy," “The llitriciaiis," "The Dark Flmvcr," “Five Tales," “Another Shcaf" and “Saints Progrcssl-play- "The Skin flame,” “The Law is what it is —n majc>tic edifice. sheltering all of us, each stone of which rests on another." a u a- a “When I left Ottawa a short time ago, instru- ments were being fashioned having to do with the organization and regulation of the country. l fccl that the average man and woman in this fair land of ours will go to any length to assist the Crown in the desperate condition in which we find ourselves today . . . We are doing things in our private and public capacity we had never believed possible. And I am firmly c011- vinced that, given the right leadership, the peo- ple of Canada and of the Allied Nations will make every possible sacrifice." This was the message brought; by Hon. Iiumphrcy- Mitchell federal minister of labor on his rccciit visit to the b-Iaritimes, in which this Province was not included. It was at the same time an appeal and a challenge. It was an appeal to every man and woman to realize that this is cveryb0dy'5 war, that the maximum effort cannot be achieved un- til evcry individual in Canada finds his place in the wartime scheme of things, and is not con- tent until he is rendering everything possible with the one aim of helping to win the war. u i- v 1: According to ‘a report to the Department of Trade and Commerce by R. P. Bower, Acting Canadian Trade Commissioner at Newfound- land, the Commission of Government in that Dominion has been considering for sometime the question of restricting the sale 0f spirits in New- foundland “botli to conserve present stocks of rum, whisky, brandy, and other spirits, and to reduce demands for shipping space." The scheme, he says, will not at present apply to alcoholic beverages other than spirits. Be- ginning l-higust 10, I942, a. new form of permit was brought irito exclusive use. This permit will allow not more than three bottles of spirits to be bought at a specified store of the Board of Liquor Control at St. John's or Corner Brook by or for any one purchascfin any one week. Until the new permit forms are issued, the various stores of the Liquor Control Board will rcfusc to sell to any one person more than three botflcs of spirits in any one week, though this action will have tn he taken on existing permits. New permits, which will cost 50c each, went on sale in St. John's and Corner Brook on july 2o, r042. 'l‘l1e regulations will not apply m orders placed thrnugli the mail order department of the Hoard (If l.i1|ti0r Control h)’ hmm firlp residents i11 outports, who could not he cxpcclcrl t0 order iu such small quantifier, when (llg fippflftunitic§ for regular deliveries are lacking. The regula- tions will not apnly 10 institutions, tinits of the JTIIIPtl forces, nmuufacliircrs, chemists. and 01h- r-rs who noriiuilly obtain llwir supplies in bulk directly from the Central Store lloartl 0f llll‘ Liquor Control in §t. John's. rm: CHARLOTTETO\VN NOTES BY TllE WAY We may hope that the “gen. erai oreinaunng of die 6111116 Arms PNQUCLJOI) plug-mil" 111a» is now reponm w De under way will be as uiorougtagoirig a.» the ciixuni- ssances reaiiy require. Sbrateilc necessity comiblnzu Wllh BICWLDK experience in manufacture ,0! the planes, guns, tanks alld slurs fur WhlCfl Presioem m; cit an. ii-uge 20am early in the yeiu", distal/As ttie changes lor Lrie purpcse of securing better balance. We want. encugn of everything but. not. too much of anything 1o meet, the challenge of the situation vmlch lias never/pea. Over-production o1 one mm may cause Ulldeli-PIOGUCKIOH of 01lie.s because of main-inf saoriages. Thus steel Ls DEGCGG in great quantikes for guns, tanks, merch- ant. ships and ivarsiilps. '11.ie first two of these four categones are export items, e5 are planes. The tiiird is the means of export. The fourth is me means of pro- tecting the third. Obviously pla..es, guns and tanks WKLOh cannot be exported. for lack of merchant 511.95 serve no purpose in the war. Neither do merchant strips which are sunk for lack of protection. Ii all ties wgeitier. - Providence Journal. Cold gwran is recommended as cum for hay fever, but nicer. suf. ferers prefer sneezing to the life of a fur coat or a slae of beef. - Tororitq Star. A special handbook issued to American soldiers nistructliig than on how to get along ivftti their British allies advises against "Wy- ing to swipe his girlk Tore have been suggestions mar it is one way so become u.1p.pular even in AIHCILCZL. - Sa-uli. Ste Marie Star. Winnipeg has pledged itself to send two mfllcn cigaieiies and a ton of smoking tobacco to tue Cur.- adian and BHKISU 50111.1"..- taken prisoner at- Hozig K2112 The D9326 was given Qll bmiilt of we citizens by the Lircazei" Winnipeg (Jo-ordination Ccnurihtiee for War and Welfare Servzces. — WJlllifXE Tribune. The importance- nt" establishing and maintainaig niacliincr)" far continued collcciicn of scrcp rub- be: is emphasized by pie fact that. when a Lire ‘ wears out" only about. one-sixth of its vubbn‘ content. u destroyed and most of the re. maindef- may be FCTCVL-fid and put back into cliculaticn. - H-zhway Highlights. Following a finding that Ottawa needed 2.000 low cast du 11 survey disclosed there that many vacant city limits 13.111 yet be E-kd of . F/dmonlcxi Jcuma New regulations issued by till Wartime Priors and T;ade_B€fll‘d and other Government bcdics are coming so thick and fsst. tum the only c1121 the pill) up with t1. m is to s1. at 1h.- 1111.0 frcm '1 a m 10 l“ p rn._ sires to rrtire einh, _ take the radio to bed wuh yvll 0r you are 1mm 1o eel up iii his tricming and cccntnt scmc 0.: 1S6 ,h._._,, a h v \\‘.ll s - ycu 1o fine or sic I jail It locks as 11 n _ mcnts of the Grixrnnieht are vi.‘- Port. Elgui Tin There is somttliing vcry (‘oligvll- 1a} between 111;- (.11 11.. 1nd 11.1: Engiisli An Ehgkslimcin scribing me viriizcs of Lire C people, but. he cnznci with :- "Of c. s tile ‘ that we have be.n cvkzied for thousands of years, aid yuu have only been clvi ized fcr a few hun- dred wars, and when we sc g w-e say, ‘Look at KY1? gem. h l eycs, and 1111-11" s ‘s’! 95" ' you stem to 1i. 11 . 1 . We have an uncivf 1nd at11i..e o! calling the Chinese "stinks." Dd you know that they call us “chim "'2 - Maude Royren in The Churchmcri rNrw York). There ls no iiectl to stress the necessity for Britain of refining her power on the s.a.s Forbh the vast, potentialities of the airplane, the main commerce of war must still be transacted by sea Wtthcut sea power we are a, condemned l5- land 11nd no longer an empire among the Unltxl Nations We re- joice in the great. American v1c:c:'- es in the Pacific. But. let. us re- member that for this maritime ria. Lion failure to learn the lesson of these vlctorlzs would mean death. —bondon Evening Stand-aid. hlontlily periodicals - among them the Navy - smfcr in HmCS of crisis, and especialiy when, as now, crises, decisions and events, both at home and abroad, foilow each other like bombs in a ‘blitz’, frcm decmnds made on the phezic instincts of Dail newspapers, with sue: edit 0X15 are hardly t napping. with monthlles the writ- ten word must always risk being out-dated before the page is print.- ed. There was once, indeed the un- fortunate predicament of s. ub. lication which was issued wlti a magnificent description of the coronation of King Edwaiu VII, although lt had been pzstporicd at the last moment! That. was a clas- slc and minatcry accident, - The Navy (London). After 15 years of parish vlsltlnl 1n farm houses, ranch houses arid city homes, there have b:en car- taln thoughts collected ln my mznd on the bookcases I have come across, and what. I have found 1n them. Most of the time, of cciiz-sr. 1t has been bcoks, unless sme strong-minded liousrwlfe, with no love 0f lllélillllfe. has dcclcird L0 make a china cabinet out ot‘ the solitary receptacle previously rc- served for the fever sh outpour- lngs of Kathleen Norris, and the strongnman stories of Zara Grey The most: noticeable fciilue of the contents of bmkcascs ls their lmpervlousriess t-o change, for though tlhere are probably thou- sands of new books published every year, the great mnjcrlty of bcokcasrs lndlcnte that. pubdhers went out of b11=lne"-s stout 1920 or even brfcro that. But thmi, there ls something raffrr lmtterilwble abcut 1i book, _ By Rev. Dudley F‘. Kemp, lri Cnizary Hrralzf. m <1 4h rx O A member of lhi- Royal Army fvfcdzral Corps, taken pr $01101‘ nt 31d! Rat-gin ltirt NTVHTDPI‘ and reciwly iepnti- zit d, tn‘d mi nmuc- m8 5501's’ cf Dllffi‘! camp l1",- at Scxcglfnno in Northern Itily: "We used to have regular concerts and, 0f course, always finished up . (VH1 200s on, "tn have with ‘God Save The guards that. we were not to be allowed to sing our thev didn't. know fact they thought we were tngin B. popular themselves. grrln-z round f ‘(hid Sflve the Kin‘ at the tops of fhfir voices imti crdrrlv offlccr hen-d them -—- and poor chap, stroke." - fmidcn Listener, GUARDIAN History 0f Tryon llnite l Ohurch 150 Years Of Service 1792—-—1942 By E. S. D. 2111.81‘ TRUSTEES Rev’d John Flshpool remafneo but a year at Trson exchanging Pastor-ates in .1818 \~;l‘.h Rev John B. Strong of Charlottetown who also stayed just a year, and was succeeded by Rev. ueo Miller, iii whosq pastorate s. long trust deed was drawn up witness that "con- sideration of five shllfngs John lard of Tryon River did grant to twelve trustees a certain parcel 91 ground us a site for a chapel house, called Tryflll chapel, which had been erected for the use of preach- ers who may be members of Meth- odist Confrence." It was document which would requlie two or three columns to quote in full, John Lord. son of the first. man of that name who had come to Tryon one who had come to Tryon in 1773. held liLs lands under one of Hollands’ nine hundred arid ninety nine year leases. drawn ln 1794, which described his land as bounded on the from. by the river, on south by lands ocminied by Nathaniel Wright (Smith farm tn 1942) and on the north by the Kins’: High Road, and by lands demfsed to and occupied by William Warren, containing in all three hundred acres for which he bound himself to pay slx pence per acre. and it; was agreed if rents went llllllafd too long Holland might re- possess. Accordingly the first main mist; placed on the Methodist tnistees was “to observe and perform several covenants and arzieements 0f’ said lens-e as regards the premises here- by assigned"; in other words to pav the rent on the chapel pro- PBTLV. bounded as follows: "com- mencing at. a large stone olaoed 1n front and on the east side of the l-figh Road on East Side of 'I‘ryon iivcr running along said road 210 fret thenzy- east 210 feer, thence north 210 feet. thence west. to plat- of beginning.” This would be a ffthle over one acre in extent, and so the trustees were committed to bay the Hollands slx pence oer annum. rent for the church land. Incidentally we d0 not know whether th's rent. was ever collect- ed. Ma 1e Josepha. (vrldow of sur. veyor Holland), who was living 1n TPYOH at this time was a Roman Catholic but she would not insist cn a Melhcdist slxnence, as her descend-cuts Iikwvise never requested them nearly Methodlst dime. because the trustees never secured a release of the covenants agreed to fn_ this 1819 lndentu-e, 1t; was, and still f5 the right of the landlord, thezr heirs executors iind ad- ministrators, to demand the mnra} ‘"1" 0f 51X Dene-e Halifax currencv 1O" each find every year 1111 2am AD, when the 999 year lease uni GXYIEPG. - The trustees also bound them. Y selves 1o ccztnulete rm Qhapg] now building together with such houses P5 mav be erect-id." The Chapel we 10811) from the deed was erected "bv "miles T315911 Dartlv by coll-actions madr rt dzfferent times by preach- cr and D-‘Pllv bv vcluritary donn- ll-lj-s bl’ prowl:- Qr societies called Afcdicdlsts and bv monies borrowed by some persons." The trusters will allow such per- sons ns appointed by cjnfergncg land _nn other without consent; of Superintendent of circuit)" so the ..e of said ("he-pol for performing fill “is or rcpszicus worship therein without rut or interruption. provided always that such person or persons ao- Domted by Conference shall preach no other doctrine than those ccm- bncd in certain notes o! Ne“ Testament; mid first four volumes of sermons preached by R,ev_ Jqrm Wesley." Providliigz also, and here we fancy a strong local hand, "that game preacher shrill not. be sent by con- ference to said chapel for more than two years successively without consent of trustees of t-he Chapel and tlle men leade s of classes as- Sfllllbillli: at snld chime]. The trust/res were also m cougqr frcm time to time from t-he sev- eral persons attending public wor- shfp the pew rents and other w“. trfbutions (except such collections as commonly made by preachers and class lenders) holding the same 1n t;ust to pay the Interest 0n filly molmflw or borrowing and to satlsf all annuities befom sbnlylns he ffiflldlle to the suppdrt of the preacher of the Circuit. After Day the preacher lf there should then be n. balance it is to be applied so the deed further states "for the furtherance of the Gospel by bulld- lng chapels or otherwise tn said circuit, and among such poor per- sons of society of Methodists m, Tryon River settlement as the trustee-s. superintendent and men class-healers shall deem fit. I O The trustees were also enjoined at. each and every mg {our Quarterly meetings to be held every Year to have present for the scrutiny Of all and every "the Book and book of Accounts. vouchers and papers of Trustees relative to said chapel"; a provision which iuihappfly foi- many years has never been carried out. No Trustee minutes or soc/aunt books are today available and the history of Ti-yon church Ls that much poorer. Perhaps these books, and later minute books. are in tn- dividual hands their historic value unsuspected. Tf iio board of would be very happy to receive then-i and preserve them with other records at the Parsonage. The trust- ees of the Church one hundred and twenty ffve years nyzo. and their successors were to be member of the Methodist. society Ind were w be twelve stipulation has not. always been carried out. In 1882 when the ure- sent church virus built. them were ban trustees: fifty years later there were fifteen. the Trustee ‘rryon United Church 1n number. ‘This lut. T114; trustees who signed their names to this first. trust: deed on King’. The had definite lristructona Natlcnrl Anthem, but. the hire. In song and learned l They would go swag- ‘e camp slmzlng one day an he nearly had e The Pacific Offensive (Hlmlllbn spectator) Not without a price 1n imp: w! men, the Allies have made fl breach ln the Japriese bastion o" Australia and bezun What h“ ever appearance u! a mBJOl‘ 0i" fens ve. American Marines have succeeded 1n landing on one o! the Solomon Islands and the at- tack ls being pressed with vlsolll‘. as the aim ls to make the drive continuous. The Allied Pacific fleet has lost. one cruiser; l-WO cruisers, two destroyers and one transport have been damaged. 'I'h.e Japanese have also suffered the loss of a large number 0t aircraft and surface units. Admiral E. J. King, Common. der-ln-Chlef of the American naval forces, warns of the diffi- culties of operation now un- der way. Considerable losses are to be expected, he says, fri the attainment 0f far-reaching re. sults. For this l; no isolated rald undertaken with the aim of mere- ly feeling out the enemy's strength; it. fa an attack in force and its purpose Li to drive out the foe. Bea-borne offenslves are usually costly, es ecfally ln this day of land-base aircraft, but the losses suffered ln Allied ships in this instance are not undul heavy. considering that the tas Wu no easy one and that the enemy is strorigéy entrenched. The Jiipa have ma e attacks. but the Allies are report. ed to be holding their Own, Importance attaches to this well-planned amphibious opera- tlon because of the "far-reaching results" which have been stressed as its objective. This goal is plain- ly to force Japan out of that part, of the Pacific and hack at her strongholds ln the Dutch East Indies. If it. is successful it will remove the peril to Aus- tralia and New Zealaxid. The slm- ultaneoiis attack on the Aleutian: is also significant and points to a concerted offensive. Both of these moves tend to benefit Russia and lessen the fear of Japanese treach- ery on the Siberian frontier, as Japan is not likely Lo take On any heavier Axis commitments while the Aleutian; and Solomons are threatened. What ls now happening in the Pacific may ultimately therefore have great consequences. The battle of the Coral Sea and the defeat of the Japanese off Mid- way Island were both Allied vic- tories, but. they were defensive actions. These attacks on the Solomons and the Aleutfans are purely offensive and for that i-earxn are cheering. ‘Ihey mark a turning of the tide in Allied strategy and give a glimpse of what that strategy is. It Ls well for civilians to try to vet a true per- snectlve of the Allied position ln the Pacific. Japan holds most oi the kev points and is rapidly en- deavouring to consolidate her con. quests, rf her naval strength has been whittled down, she still re- mains strong fn the air, with tier Zero plane concc-td to be One of the best 1n the skies: her resour- ces ln manpower are huge and her fighting spirit is One that holds death in contempt. ‘W the 16th October 1819 were Joseph Wocd, John Clark, Michael Clank. George Muttnrt, Charles Muttart, Wm. Wzlght, John Lord. Junr Wm. Wood. John MacWllIfams, James Mncwilliams. William Barker and John Leard. These were evidently the prominent Methodist of that day. George Muttazt and son Charles, were from Cape Traverse, the latter. twcnLv-one years old being the youngest trustee. The oldest. probabl-v in his etirlv fifties. wns Joseph Wood, ex-soldier whose son William was also a member. John Clazk may have been the only t" sbce who had been twenty-five years a member of the Tryon Soc- iety. Michael Clark, John Leard, and the brothers John and Jnm-rs Macwllllams were still under forty, and William Wright and John Lend Junr had yet to see their thirties. The average age of the twelve trustees at the time of their appoint- ment was 36 years. Great grand- children of many of these trustees are Still Dzominent 1n 'I‘rycn United Church but very few grandchildren remain to serve the church below. Mrs. John T. Dawson, whcse hus- band is one of the oldest members of the present Trustee board, ls ii g-ptmddnughter of trustee James Macwillfams, and Rich Lord ls n grandson of John Lord Jr. of the original board. (To Be Continued) fierce counter- ' Fashions In Paris (Npw Yo‘?! J1me?" d“. A story rum tony l. ago told of the “thriving” business of the Paris dressmakere. What iematns of the Once famous mute couture has obtained 81399151 Pllvn‘ m. from the Nun for the 1m o! textiles and manuflctuim luxurious dresses at prices for which theuky . the limit. Another report. on the state of Parisian fashions came the same day fiom a French refugee girl via umdon and told I dlflflflllt- - “Hémiflfi Omfiita?“ .1“; est t-hilll cheese box, decorated with flowers and birds’ feathers from the parks. Pieced together. the "f0 "mmlmi" throw a beam of 11am on the PW" otnuiitiiyrsru ha; always been a 1:. .2212; ‘"1" they en as s - the prosperity which the Nazis "Y to create Ls a pseudO-DNSPEIRY based on an illusion. The French dressmaking Industry fs still cater- ing to a cllentelfi. bllli 11-8 601mm?" are now exclusively Gem-inn offl- cer; and their wives and bile "ll staff of Nazi officials. high and 10w. who are tn a position to OM91’, to bu and to BY- d. Germsiiy they need rationing cards for ctofhlllfl- In 37'5"“ u“ Germans d0 not. In Germlmy. when two old sulfa must be turn- ed in m- im Ersatz arment. m9? would have to psv n mflllll- I" France the Nazis pay 1n "oocuimt- ton marks," a fictitious currency derived from nomination costs 1W- led by Germany on France. It ls the French who ln the end P5? 101 the goods they produce, 1n thfa in stance merchandise to please the feminine vanity of the invader. At the rate of 100 francs to the dollar - the unofficial rate of ex- change on the black market- 1n Paris — a dress o! the hlllll-B 0°11- ture, priced, according to our re- port, at. 50.000 francs. would 00st $500, a pretty stiff price for a. war- torn Europe. In comparison, the average Frenchman must. pay for a bad meal in a restaurant 200 francs and for nri egg (if he can get it) 10 francs. On the other hand, the prices of the huute couture are out of reach for the French mariffin hi the Nazi-supported fashion boorri and the dress material for wrr- sli-e can afford to pay ls uriobtain- able. she goes to the park aria picks flowers iind feathers for hei cheese-box hat. And in the shadow of the nazf glamor the mldfriettes and their families cannot have thret decgrl _B‘DlS a day. The Alllcs hope to defeat. Japan some day, and the attack on the Solomons is a beginning toward that end; but. civilians should have no illusions of what a job that. shall be. The Jsps may be driven from Java and Sumatra. from Singapore, even, and the Philippines, but there ls still Ja- pan itself to reckon with. They will fight with the ferocity of tigers to hold every yard of con- quest they have gained; they will fight like demons to save their homeland. But even so, invasion of Japan fs an Allied goal. It. will no doubt be a long, bitter road. but there can be no pe Pacific until Tokfo is conquerecf The landing on the Solomons is the first step; step by duet). ft must continue to suc- CGQ . TO A YOUNG POET A thrush ls singing in tn: wocd . . . The highway passed by, Ari artery of roaring flight Below a flaming sky. The aria does not. falter . . Among the twilight trees God. bends his head and listens Through needless centuries. -Florence Ripley Mastln in the New York Tunes. GUARD WOMEN'S HEALTH CAPETOWN — (UP) — South Africa. has taken sieps to guard scientifically the health of wcmeri Ln the uniformed services and Con. sdfazi nurses are helping in the Jmglilk; Spotlighting lop-Held Aleutian Isles ls Harbor l4 “SFMICHl is. O MrDanalii Buy Bering Sea J‘ IULDIR l. Q Khio Ilolb Pacific Ocean £1)‘, RUSSIA Cloléup look at the three tiny Aleutian islands relied by h!!! Trom the U. S. shows them to be mere specks on the map with l total area only halt that of Rhoda Island. But Bataan wag m bigger than these three rocky, fog-swept islands, and with 10,000 lap troops reported occupyilll them. Attu, Agattu and Klska may. jggjgeycogge pflbattle arena as famous as the Phlllvlllllg penlnailgi OBIEMIIII helps you stand llie O S and efliciency are vita . Keep lib-refresh your. eelf while working by chew. lug Wrl loy'e Doublvmint Gum-t e pleasant chewing helps relieve fatigue, and soothes the nerves. And the delicious peppermint flavor cools your mouth and throat —jreahen.r you up! Carry a package or two with you- GHEW IT WHILE YOU WORK—mllllonu do-orily 5p. WORDS OF . CHALLENGE 1' "The war 1n which we are fill 911858961 Ls a struizzlo over _ the question of vrhiit 11 be the nature of the fut . soc- , fety of the future ordcrof . civilization." — Dorothy Thompson. QQQQQQ. i MAX FAOTOR HOLLYWOOD FAOE POWDER Created by Max Factor flolly- wood . . . In cflrrecl r-nlor harmony to blend irith indi- vldiinl complexion coliiriiigs ll’ your lkln looks dull and llleleu try this powder see If your skln doesn't 100k I 1 I r loveller. Price 'l5c—-$l.35. MA! Factor Clranslu; Cronin - — - — — —- 7"" Max Factor Meltlnz (‘Ii-mis- In Crelm - — — — 51-35 ‘h; Fggtqr FOIIIIWIIHMY Oren-n _ _- - - 750—$l-35 Mo! Factor Dry 5H1‘ Cream — - — — 759-5131‘ THE PASSWORD TO QUICK SMOOTH BRAVES Yndleye Slilvlnr Lminri _ _. _ - - 85c and 514-1 Meiinens Skin iirmr. 1“ _ _ _ _ _ _ - Gflc Lu: Shaving cream. Pigs: Liix Shaving Lotion. Menriens Trilcum. Wlllllllll Aqua Vclva, -;lle—t‘le-B-l;des. Auto SHIP Blades, Mlnom Blades. Schick lileetrle luore. ‘I'll! TWO MAOS M9 Greet Georlfl 5m” Mel! Orders Given Prflllllll Attention. Professional Cards McLEOD I. BENTLEY w. u. llama-zit. K. 0- J. s. imvwunz K. 0- Iu-rlnten and Acumen-Ii‘ Lew IIONI! ‘I0 LOAN 1M Prlnoo line! (if Morrollandllllllllli"! n. "r. inciiisiin Chartered Awflnnn” ,1 . ‘Intern Trust Film" p -, Clnrlottalllfl '1