I<‘( IUR TilE lIIIlIRLIITTEll-tvfl GUARDIAN 510mm; Unity ifuutidcd u: I887) President; Lzcul. Col. l\. Chester S. McLuro Vice President: .1. 1L Wuflwll. |‘-J~l~ _ Secretary: Licut. c-n. U A. Rluclttnnon. U-B-U- l Editor and Man. gnu; lm-t-ctor. J. 1.. Burnett. FJ-l- Associate Editors: hank Walker and lln A. lllmfl‘ . I'll ISSFIIIPIIUN II.~\'I'ES By Mall tu l'.h.l., suit) pt-i year; 52.50 for 6 monthl- 5125 tut 3 uiutitlis. 50c for one month City Delivery c100 pct year; $34"! l"? l5 1110mm $1.75 fur 3 tnunth>;; We fur one Month By Mail to uthrr Pftnllltwis and L.>\‘..\. 851love: year Saturday Wcckl); ;,~:.t.u pvt war; sLtlu l0: b monthl- JUL‘ tn. J tinnitus The Chflrlultclunti nuaiihau may tie obtalned It Hotallltig} Ab“; ,\,~.- y, tune,- Square, New York: Old south Acws Jgvll . turner Milk and Washington Boston; tllldlluptilhan News l!" PR1 5i- Moutnr . J. I'm. 3.]: titty 5L, loruntu: New; Stand. Chateau Lnu.it~r, uttawa. thiln-s News Stand Suh- bury UuL; “I11! [u urt- shop, Munclun N. B. "l8 "The Stronqcst Memory IS Weaker than Weakest Ink." i H scrvali S Ill fly in the Conserva- alitnulantl)‘ cvidcnt ~ Yit-ld rccclttlv, cul- t"'t_v lucsday night. what authority is That 1'.“ -‘- '.\'t* tl\t' ' :_ by tnc it: nnurwn; 1.; It llllw" l..-'i llllltllHHll. tlis-t-lvt" in 111»! tlH s wt-tild give has sinnably the ItlCa n1 power at the cud ction period, assum- we hostilities cease and In the cvcnt also of liztwiug and a sticccs- w-tlltl suit the conven- ...l\c‘ the I1L‘\\' l’rctnit:r , but with considerable nd him bcforc making elcctoratc. These, of -, but thcrc must be _ :' iYv n, othcrwisc sitting incin- hers \\'ul‘,.. 1 '. z ing thcmsclvcs so busy as they lane lrsi ll i-ir 5411111.‘ timc, nursing thcir Cvlustitucnc} <_ Locally tl.c (luv :"\ uivcs are ready for thc fray exctpt t1»:- .t i‘ (ti; cry. N0 party is likely to nlaitc it_\.\'l'\\il) that has not a creative policy to pursue. ln (Qlppusition, in thc House or in thc l it is thc dcstrtictivc Cflltt‘ that i5 pa l.» bu tiffcctive he must be able to . tw-utlcttm thc faults, fol- lics and w . of Liovertttttent pOllCiCS. 3.(l1l'llf‘1l.~.l1'Llll-\ll and ltgislation with no concern about the cnn-utit-tires of his condemuzttio-n. otlm" than :l " ;ii.1iit1istr:-.ti~ii may be coin- pclled to tul. utl mcnd their ways. It i5 mightily dziitit , howcvcr, when a. campaign is afoot to ou~t :' Ljovcrtnncnt at an election. Tug (lpptwitlnn n wt have both principles and pnlicv to zulu- for the public weal. Other- wiw, witat i< _._ " » attract ncw voters or ic- tain old \~'v:1s nt n; tl»ti~.crv'ativc fold? "Auld lychts" in religion {[1141 politics are all right for tho-c who are more ('1' less (lone with thc vis- iuns of youth and prugrcsfl, but are mere stumbling blocks and iuutlrztnccs to those who havc n-uhfzr; lrtl-ilul Llictn and everything still before zhcrn. The Conservative Party is, and ever should be, a Reform Party, with its eyes sct on making existcnccalittlclvctur and more worthwhile than heretofore. "hat was thc idczt of Disraeli who saved thc l’;trt_v in liuglantl from oblivion, and made it a power fur thrcc gcncrations. Hc did not play up to the money barons, but to the farmers and tlzc itiamiu-thc-strcct. He launch- gd an advanccrl prisgratnmc of social reform which made thc old Whigs’ hair stand on end, 1nd many of thc mummified Tories turn in thc places of comfort and contentment to which Amy had retired, and to prophesy dirc consc- qucnces to thc rcftirmcr and the Party. But Disraeli won out, carrying the country at suc- cessive elections, During his regime were pass- Id s Factory Actfan Artisans Dwelling Act, 1nd the Agricultural Act-all advanced social- lstic legislation in that clay and generation. At thc same time hc looked after the affairs of the Empire and added India to the Crown. Dis- ‘yacli was undoubtedly one of the greatest states- men of modern times, and he was not that by playing up to capitalists and hobnobbing with ycstcd interests. If thc Conscrvatlvc Party ls to be rcdivlvus we must havc a man—or preferably men-of vision, rcform, progress and faith at the head, rcparcd to sacrifice, if nccd be, old time shib- boleths, hcclc-rs and stnnd-patters, and appeal to be hiittditappcrl in life's battle as well as to the aspiring, thc youths and the mothers gnd daughters who will have l. greater stake than ever in thc ivclfarc and natural wealth of this great Dominion of ours. ' b would It 0f the ing that tog; thc Prcmit". t stir lici: icuce of t not only U \'\.tl‘ §tll'll'i\ I.» \(‘S, Spy Thrillers Ouldone she sizc of thc allied armada which converg- ed nn Gibraltar is ‘Jtlfl to cxcccd that of any re- currlcd in all lli-b-rv .\n exchange recalls that in the principal 1 tgngztgemcnt 1Y1 the Firs‘! World \\';u---1‘il; l‘ .- uf Jutland-there were only r51 wztr-liip; cvuiqtvl in the British fleet, much h“ than l- tli ilu- llllllllwl‘ escorting Lien- tcnant liz" l.1l l.I-'Ilili1\‘.’t'l"5 forccs. ' , Most rt-nrn? bl» of all thc stories that have yct comc to I-glli is thwt of Maj. Gen. Hark \\'. (lurk, .~<-t-~u-l in rununand of the expedition, who with a ~tziii of sW-‘vn picked officers went srcrctly tn X-u-th .\fl‘l4'.'1 by submarine and met p group of fritu-llv Frviicli HI-IICFFS from whom ln- gaiui-l a gnu llhlw of vw-utial military in- flqnunhyll nu win h wcrt‘ ba~cd thc (lctails of thc attack t’i;t-- \-. lillvl’. (ieneral Clarl: up thit trip inal- llu- . rnngrmcuts for (jen- crzzl tifr-unl t» cmnv In .\fric.1 and cnllaburntc wi h thc laut-wl Nuh-ii» 'llu- lzuu-r 3n it- If 1- aunlhvr thrilling chap- nf ilil» :| l\ min ,\- inch, in incl, llillcr [gave 1 ll. tlildl l- ' .'| lit) lli‘. <l<\'l\l4v|1 In tlk't.‘ll]l_\’ rust of l"r:tut"<'. tnrauil, who had escaped ‘i Spring from a lurlfvss in (icrmzuiy whcrc llitfnr held him prisoner, had latterly bccn tuulcr POIICC s11I‘\'('lllt'\I1IJ(,' in France. But 11c ntauztgrrl to cludc his guards, escape in an :ulton1r>bilc dbgnisetl as an uhl utunmi and finally meet a !'l».\' ‘~ were planning to‘ .tl hold an cleciiou~ British plane at an appnintcd time and p "Bar the coast and then fly across the Mcdi rancan to take command of the Frcuch troops 1n Africa. ' ' The most romantic tiovclist would hesitate to involve his heroes in such ScClllillgly improb- able adventures. It‘s just another case of fact being stranger than fiction. lace tcr- — EDIIURIAL NUIES- Our week's prohibition record: (I) one m;m_ Indian. FCIIIIIICd tn Supreme Cotirt on murder ichargc (2) auuthcr charged with itmnslattghter, and (3) several others charged with conspiracy in connection with allcgcdly running a whole- sale moonshine distillery. Evidently ncithcr the ICUCI‘ nor thc spirit of the law is being obscrvcrl at s - at Rt. llon. Viscount Runciman, British states» titan, born this (late, 1870; educated a; Cum. bridge, represented Oldham in Parliament in 1399 and Dcwsbttry 190.40; in StlCCcssion “m, financial sccrttary to thc lrtuastiriv, President oi the Board of Education, President of the Board of Agriculture, Commissioner of \\'00ds, Forests and Lands, President of Board of Trade; prior to 1'C\'Olt1llOt1 in Sirain wcitt as special rcprcs n.1- ttvc t0 invcstigzttc mattcrs; at outbreak of ‘pres- cnt war appointed chairmati of Commission (m Shipping. m s Ill Ii ’ Sir Stafford Cripps, iu compctitiuu with {our other catiditlatcs, has been elected by thc uutlcr- ' ,graduzttcs Lord Rector of Abcrtlecu UIIIVQTSII} —& distinction greatly Sought and appreciated by statesmen, naval and military heroes. His predecessor was Admiral lidivard Radcliffe kiarth Russell lrmans, m ll,.\l.S_ lrhltc, when that ship 111 191,’, with ll..\l.5. Swift, engaged and dcfcattd six German (l\'.\ll'()_\'L‘l'5; tllt: stu~ dents clccted him two tt in su ‘USSIOH and on present occasion Sir :z:iifc»rtl gr»: ahcarl of him. Ik>k>l<1k Three men, who pltwilt-il guilty on Nov. 2 to a charge that prior to lk-arl Harbor tlzcv sent-d as agents of the japarvse (i0\'CI'1ltll\‘11I.Wlllltllll rcgi>tratiot1 as such, wcrc brought h. f-vrc jnllq. .\larcus l3. Catnplicll in llrooklvu lk-tlcrltl tourt who Sentenced thcin each to >uvrn _\<~ars m prison. Yllhcy wcre loscph lliltoti Survth. 40, of Old Lvmc, Conn; Walker Grt-v llathcstwn, 5t, of “ltshingtou, D.C., i “villi-VIE. 39. of Xuroton, Conn. 'l'hev bivntfltt thc oltl-Cstablishctl tuagztzinc, The Living .\'_{e, With Jflpiluvsc funds and cunvcrtt-tl it into a la- pancsc propaganda ptlltllCfllltnl, the chief mum-t- of which was articles by pacifist clcijuviiic|1 and others trppwitig war and advucatixrg ztpptut-e-I ment. x \\'hcther it be for a wakt- or vxctltling, (“c Prlccs Board will permit llt» extra stipplics of stigar, tca_ or cotter. lluartl rccortl at Lhtawa shows an 111111111‘ ' 11ml bceu reecivcd from czntcrit lllllllfitl and it * * 4r had been tnadc clear no C<il1t‘t'<$i<itl could In“ madc. If rcfreslitntuits of tca 1nd coffce are served at wakes 1n lieu of the strnugci- potion; which where (utcc common, the l‘l'lf(‘_< Pnm-l] States the Supplics Illllsl be prnvitlctl from in- dividual rations. "This is L‘I|l1-'1ll\' truc of all 5093i gflllleYllbf-Ii, for which no cxccplitm can be made, cvcn when it is a case of tnglflbei-c of thc armed forces being cutcrtaiucd," an 0ff1~ Cial declares. It it Y? A lot of pcoplc have wondered how t0 pru- nouncc the Scandinavian tiamc of Cauatlas ace fighting airman, PO George Beurliug. Ile 36;. tlcd it at an interview with ncwnsmcu recently, ‘YOuI Just give the first syllable the Scottish bu" and add "llflgh" he said. llc atlnrttcd the "Bcur" had confused some persons. ‘rlis father is a. Nethcrlandcr of Norwcgiaii-Svvedish backgmllfld. and his mother is of English origin. A: for his various nicknames he is indifferent. I guess nobody much calls me George, except my mother. My father calls me “Buzzy" and somc of thc guys overseas tagged me "Screw- ball. I (IOIII Cafe what they call me." Pressed whether any nickname appealed morg r0415", he said he guessed maybe “Buzz" did because it was given him by Verdun playmates who used to watch the airman when he was a small boy running along the street holding a. model air- Plam 811d making a buzzing noise with his mouth, >0! iii!!! r Canadian banks will have to share in restric- tron of wartime civilian activity by closing more branches and curtailing or suspending certain services over thc next fcw months, states Mr. CharIcsISt. Pierre, president of the Canadian Bankers Association. Dcspttc thc tremend- ously Increased demand for banking services to serve the armed forces, industry, and the pub- lic, the elimination of branches would bc ex- tended “in keeping ivith thc grcatcr cones“. tration necessary for victory,” Mr. St. Pierre dficlitrcd at the Association's fifty-first annual meeting. Mr. _St. Plerrcas general manager of Banque Canadiennc Nationalc. "This step rc- flccts the views of the authorities at Ottawa and must be taken by the banks a5 part of their share m the curtailment of normal activities being experienced by busincss generally," he said 1n his presidential address before the open- ing session of the meeting. v w m v Holding that thc "over-all record of Great Britain in this war is one 0f the great achieve- ments in military and spiritual history," Mr. Arthur Hays Sulzbcrger, president and publisher ‘of thc New York Times, called upon all Am- ericans in a speech at llaltilnorc to cwduatr: fully the British war effort and rcjcct :15 dislnyul “.1 lot of complaining about the llritish" in certain U5. A. cities. Mt‘. Stilzbcrgci" pointctl out that (luring thc (lcsrx-ratc days of 10.10 fircat llritzuu, “arm- Ptl with littlc more tlinu her t:uiu-;iQ,-_" {tn-um} back thc thrcatcued Nazi avalanche and held the llilfilltllH 0f ilvnirvcrrttjt’ tltruttgltunt Ihc \\'~r1'I(l until lht- llnitcvl States cult-rm] flit» w“, ,-||v,'\i|]_r,[ tnt.'ilit:n'i:u|i-m_ “'l'hic is “.4 a Singp, “HE” y“. C'"1l<‘l"l(’<l- "It i5 a coalition war. llritrtiu. among others, is our Winn-r, “'0 H“. ,|,.;,“.,,,_,, it [Irv-HI sctni-rirclc around thc cnutincut of I".u~ rnpc and thc ring will cventtiztlly strauglt; flu- Gcrumn unwer " and Irvine llarvcyl torts av nus WAY ___.. A young married couple recently determined t0 Spend their first war- time holiday on the wesxrn coast A huge crowd was on New street statlon, but they managed to get into a crowded compartment widen, to the w1fe's dismay. she discovered that she had left her ration cards at home Returning home and col- lecting the books, thsy gathered up their luggage once again, only to discover that. their “macks” had been left In the first train ‘Ihe ,nt=xt train not being due to leave for an hour, they adjourned to the istatlcn buffet tor a stimulant In [the crush at the counter. a tall fel- lowfs elbow‘ was Jabbecl Into the lhusbands eve. which n=cclcd first- laid. when at: length the by now d15- gruntlcd couple arrived at their destination. they learned that the Jandlmlv was too ill to accom- 'mcdate them ‘late ncw address given to thcm was lrilf a mile far- lther frcm the sea Nothing furtter llnwpfncddo upset thcr peace ,mlnd until on rcschlng homP madame fcund that she had once again lrft hcr rrit-fon rocks bchkid [—".n'l on thr- mat 1n the hall rc- lposcd Iirr husband's calling-up papers! HBlrmingh-am Mail. .W11bur Glenn Vollva who died recently, used to contend that the world was-flat as a pancake and would soon be destroyed. For some reason his statement, does not sound as silly as ll Clld years ago. -Buf- falu cCtl1'lC1'-EX])1'€S5. The large estate left by the late Willlntit Locke Williamstiurg ' i<t. mar Indicate the re- ‘omes to a man who ser- vos llttfllltllli)‘ at a charge so low lthat n creatcs amusement —Tor- 'ui\.lo Globe and Mall. An old soldier says these Nazi broadcasts in English are “an awful lot 9f Boche "-Exc-hange. It ls urged that many a statue could profitably be added t0 the syrup pile To ubvlac confusion, 1n- Cllmbflli solons had better keep their hats on -Whmlpcg Tribune A rnsv-chct-kcd boy of l2 Is n bit young m be serving 1:1 th-e front. ‘lines, but there arc quite a I€\\‘ 1n lRtFSla Leland Stowe tells how he mot one little vetcran, _ Kuputovskt, an orphan The boy snpcrl barefoot from his vllltlge filer the Ctczmnns came He ha}! lsccn the Fascists burn to death I115 lmcthcr, two younqci‘ brothers rind two sisters. lc-zr hcr with all the Jsws and famlllcs of querlllas they lcould find -New York Post According to reliable rcnorts rcavliiu": Caustic-Slovakia circles ‘in Londcn. rnly n small ru-mhcr of lthc names of the‘ vktims cf Nazlcxc- 'f‘11Ilt‘l‘= or." vundr kncivv ‘The rwm- ,bci~ of Crrrhs oxccntcd sure the uleath of Hsidwh h All radii rrehe" nrovldcd with n Peiya I I .or n"! c". .. gcnrc " Thvmnior. on" \v"-r a dsnth sent- v ct dcat-‘i sent- " cs=lr~u of to t-xtrzi supplies for a walzv "l ‘ i t itnc of cc ‘ at ll? removal 30f cl"-t'*i"': cm Privy stcrcs dP- lslincd for F“ front " —N9w's frcm ‘Crccho-Slcilakla rrrl" Th"rc was no wnv of width‘! a- lrctutd tho pftrrrlc, for ‘he vreat |TlTI"[‘C1l"ll‘f‘1‘(‘ blstietcd t-he entire ‘town (Berlinl Unto!‘ rim Linden had been extended by Hitler's order to fcrm a mnrrilflccnt avenue for parading. strr-‘rzht through the trenrt o! the r-it The ll-“W strtei- stretch- ed north and south and w" /"“"d thc Axis tthc chain. lncldenttflv, of the term "Avis itowcrs." smce tl-e southern cud of the Axis pcivt- c1 towards Rome) -Krcssman Taylor The nnnnunromcitl. [Irv thc L. M. S_ Ra‘1\vn_v' Crmpany that it has lcst 250m cups 1n a strcln week rc- calls a. pre-ivnr probicm which puzzled Mr Robert Graves, ‘the poet arnd writer. He never could understand why the yearly con- sumption of white dhtna BgIJ-Cll“! per head of the pontilntfon cf the Unttlcd Kingdom came to 52 4. It seemed to him a ridiculous figure, implying that every man, wcmcn and child in these Islands smashed, rid. or otherwise disposed of one china. egg-cup a week. Mr. Graves, in spite of varying despcrme sug- gestions, could not solve the pro- blem, which. 1n fact. remains un- solved, lf not absolutely uisoluble. -Msnchester Guardian. A shortage of oranges In Britain has led to the acceptance of n new and rich source of vitamln C, the ‘anti-scurvy vitamin It Ls now a [question of would a. rose by any other name taste as sweet? That's debatable But the fact that; they're leffectlvely ticking the place of seml- troplnal citrus fruits in the diet of British children 1s beyond question. -Before the war 1t never occurred to anyone to use rose hips. Child- lren, of course, have alwa s chewed tzhtm Whan vital shrlpp g space had to be conserved for more es- senugt cargoes and e supply of oranges dwindled, c small army of Boy Scouts, Glrl Guides and Iteachers’ Institute members turned Into the cotmttiv lanes of Ektglancl and Scotland with their baskets. ‘Two hundred tons of rose hips were turned Into s syrup for the older children. Two teaspoonfuls 1n 24 hours glve all the vitamin O which older boys and girls require Mother has no problem in urging llttle Johnny and Susie to take thelr vitamins, for the children sip ft with relish Brttaln’; Ministry of Health ts well pleased wlbh the result of the rosy diet and ts hop- fng for a much bigger collection of rose Ilips this autumn - Kitchener Record. To the 360.000 miles aha has traveled since March, I933, Mrs Eleanor elf. has added sev- eral thousand more The first President's wife to fly the Atlantlc 1s no stranger to travel by alr nor to travel by almost every other means except prrhaps camels or t-leptmnts I:1 her adaptability and her unfefgned friendliness toward n11 sorts an condlltcns of pe she 1s whnt. we llkc to think of as typically American. The British wm like her and she will like Brttlsh.~New York Timcs Is the Ortarl liquor (‘nntrot Board being rezisn-"rvrle when 1t ‘lm- its n person to the pitrcras= of any one bcttle of hPh-"owered llnuor a day? Why, th1t's only six hot. lea a wrekl Even 1f thev he Prve In ti». torn a man yet nbrrg on onl" "e ,bntt‘<- a div‘! n.’ course f thev were Jcnily rn-‘lenrz Ilrui r. o“- bcttle a. wot-k wold be com-thin: to cnn- slder - Wocdaz-ack sextlnet-Rcvfcw. the _ - .151‘? KEIJARkQTUIETOKEJEQIE-KDIAN Vichey’s Fleet (Winnipeg Free Press) The Hench fleet has it last to face the consequence of crossing the bar to flght for the Germans. 1t 1s not the fleet. tint fought alongside the Brftlsh at the start of the war, but It should not b: smallcrthan was the portfon that ceased fire when ordered to do so by Admiral Darlan 1n 1940. It may b6 increased 1n submarine and other small craft. Around last March the Hench fleet was regarded a! capable of tipping the balance of naval power tn favor of the Axl-s. Vlchy itself must have alternated 1n a belle! and lack ofbeltef 1n thlscsttmate, but Berlin appears to have held to the conviction that. 1f Its sailors could man the French ships, con- trol ln the Mediterranean could be wrested from the Allles for all time. But Vichy knew the use tol which the Germans would at its fleet and was fully aware at Its own bargaining power would be reduced 1f deprived of the we ht of the fleet. Now the issue as been decldcd. not by Vichy or Berlin, but London and Wusn- fngton. Both lost the lnltlat-lvo .that for a. time could choose the best time for the Hench fleet w put to sea to Issue a vlc y The components o! the ‘noon fleet which ran Into French nar- bors in 1940 may be renter 1n actual strength today t an then, but its collective strength Ls d1- lutcd by the dispersion of 1s strips. Recent rumors of movement-s of French ships or various types makes s clflc allocation of fleet to ay difficult, but t movements, carried out or not, cattnol; alter the known combo- nents of the fleet or materially change the grouping of the strips. They are mainly located at Tou- lon, but the rest are scattered along the coastline of north and west Africa. with a. handy, fore-s held tn Martinique, 1n the West Indies The larger assemblage at. ‘Pou- lou rcmalng much as It was 1n 19-10 after the affair of Mcrs-El- Keblr. the French naval base near Oran. There can have been little increase 1n capital ships slnca then, although 1t Ls probable that submarines and other small craft have been added. Construction activity at Toulon was fevevlsh last spring and was kept going 24 tiours daily. Details of the fleet then sta- tioned at Toulon reasonably agree in the naval reports given of them. The strength they indicate must bear perttnently on the actions Admiral I-Iarwood—of Graf Soee fame-now contemplates 1n the Mediterranean, if these actions are not already being fought. Vichy held the ese In Toulon harbor thrce battleships. four cruisers. 28 destroyers and somé 40 to 50 sub- marines. Two of the battleships. the Strasbourg and the Dun- kcrque, are of 26,000 tonnage and are new and modern. The Pro- vence is of 22.020 tonnége. [he cruisers include Duplclx. Foch, Algcrie and Prlmauget. The de- stroyirs are said to number 28 or 30. The larger part. of the 90 submarines listed in the Vichy tiaval strength are probably lald up at Tculon.‘ . ‘ The dispersal of French ships emailed considerable strength bc- ing based on Casablanca and Da- kar. If the Americans did not find all these warships at Casa- aalatica, 1t i5 pretty certain they [sank or captured most of them. lBesldcs the battleship, Jean Bart, of 35.000 tons, recently competed sister snip of Rlchellzu, thc-re were these ci-ulscrs: Colbert, La Galtssotmlcre, Georges YEygutcs, Ln Guolre, Montcalm and Marsei- lalse Besides these ships there was a 12-000-ton aircraft carrier. Of the submarines based on Casa- blanca. three were known to be big enough to cross the Atlantic. The battleship. Rlchellcu, 35.000 tons, was allowed to move from Toulon to Dakar, a long way off on the west coast of Africa, and ls stll! the nucleus of some con- siderable naval strength there, mostly thought to be undresca craft. At such various ports as Oran. Algiers, Btzerte and others belong- ing to France ln North Africa, other small squadrons have been Jocatt-d. These and the compla- lment demobillzed at Alexandria tmake quite a hole In the naval ‘strength Vichy might, under more favorable circumstances, have assembled at Toulon for the pre- sent emergency. Instead, the former Hench ships at. Alexandria can now be manned by the British. Thls small squad- ron would be effective aid m maklng good the strength the Brltlsh have had difficulty 1n amassing 1n the easlwrn Meditat- ranean. The squd ts sed of the battleship Lorraine. our cruisers, ten destroyer; and two submarines. 'I'he conse uenoes of the g- naclty of Dar an's admiral at, an were avoided by the French l-d- mtral. Godefroy. at AJexu-ndrfn. Instead of fnvf heavy loss of ufe. he agreed to having his squadron demoblllzed and kept In ting ‘about the harbor of Alex- im r . When the tldo of Axll su r1- ortty seemed m import! flu ltes tn mypt. resentment against tho Brftfsh seemed Apparent fn thc French crews of the warships fn- tcrned at Alexandria. This was polntcdlv alluded to by Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham when he rellnqulshed hls Mediterranean command to take up the Brftldh naval representation at Washing- wn. but. recent events may haw converted the French crews to m nttltude the reverse of having to fight for their standing enemy, the German. What, action the United Nations will take toward Martinique 1n the West Indles has not been re- vealed, but It. can scarcely avoid taking over the two French crut- scrs and aircraft carrier still In port. there. ‘me cruisers are Jeanne D’Arc and Emile Bertln, land the curler Beam. iHad Piles "H0118 Years | Mrl. Daniel J. R. Masher Upper Ktnggburf, N. S. recentl mole: ‘ ‘v0 nufferod rum Pllen for! yearn. I had both blind and liloedtng. I've trletl many llilnga-nothlnlt ave me relief. Luckll I anw an advert semen! of Ohlnlrol . A aln 1 decided to try. lmaglna my joy old too ' , . If you stiffer from Piles, get Jhlfllfblfl from your drugglnt today un- (Ir-r agrt-nmv-nt that Ohlnnrold mum. nat- ipfy Cflmfllllely or money buck. Onlyflfc. That Foreigner, General LaFleche . (Montreal East») The Government, lays Maxim: Raymond, "faithful to 1t: N110)’ ot oqdiztvocluon. nu dmsen from out- u the Province of Quebec n Mm- tlstar with a Hench-Canadian name." Evidently. 1n the eyes of Mr- Ruylnond and hi; Bloc POPI-ttatre. Miler-General Larlechc 1s not l. true French-Claudius R. Larlccno was brought up In 80x11, hts father's IJXIUIPIIQB. Both 111s , m; werc French-Can- adians. H18 forefathers came here from the village of Lwleche 1n An- Jou‘ three hundred years I80, Ind took part under Maisonneuvek lend- gfihlpnfnl the founding of Momma-l. o . [rcslwndent of u Devolr whom Car-_ dlnn! Vfllencuve baked on Tues- day‘ for impudence 1n censurtng g1 tfon Oamollque‘: support of La- ech . mitcated at Mont 8t. Berna-rd College, 5on1, the futuxva General started 111s car-oer u a bank clerk 1n thls city. {its first extended de- ure from the Province of Que- c came when. 1n 1914, he volun- teered with the famous Vinn- Deunema and went overseas thc fouowm yen: to glory and neu- dellh. o came back with the DB. O. md the on of Honor. to spend a year 1n hospltal recovering trom the wounds whlch mark 111m to thLs day. This 1s the background of the "Minister with n French-Canadian name" whom the Government has “c‘ from outside the Province of Quebec." It 1s true that for the most of the Inter-war period, Gen- eral LaFleche has held one of those Government posltions which. ac- cording to Mr. Raymond, are lven so enmity] to much-Can tans. Therefore c has resided in Ottawa. fullybn. mile outside the Province of Que ec. except when hle was repre- sentln hls countrv as mllftary at- tache, n France. Thus. by Mr. Ray- monds standards. he has ceased to be a true son of Quebec. He. 1s 1n- stead "candidate of the whole lm- perlallst and conscription ptflts o1 the cwntriT-fncludfng he senu- l official da y of the Card nal‘; own ‘ Bfchdlfiflfle. I-Mctlon Cathollquc of Quebec We had known that the Raymond group was isolationist, at home as well u abroad We had known ft; was narrow. But to call a man an exmtrlatc because he has moved across the Ottawa River reveals I» degree of parochtalfsm hltherto un- suspected. even 1n that Bloc which, qullfte gncoraslcloits ofdirpmny, c5115 p. se " ana en" an o to e “populafrefl p” Education: _tOtta.wa Journal) In a. lecture 1n Ottawa some 20 years ago, 8dr Michael Sauler, famous British educatlonkt, said that. inst/end of tewhlng our young people; how t0 think we were merely tenet-mg them how to remember. That was acute criticism, but no more acute than the further rcrrark that the theory of education 12s a means to an end, with thc end materirl gaJn. was a dangerous your poultr- Poutur WANTED 1i This season we are endeavouring to buy all our requirements of fowl and chicken locally, but. we need heavy continual supplles ta meet dressed and canned chicken. 1s ready to dispose of. heavy milk cd chicken. and buy flally either alive or dressed. the demand fur You will he well advised to sec us when W; also want large quantities of THE ROYAL PACKING CO. .1. D. JENKINS, Proprietor. Also all raw furs a specialty with us. pelts when you come 1o town. u-‘ >- Don’t forget to show 119 you heresy. It will be well 1f we in Canaan can take these truths w heart, With the close of the war and with a mezhsntcall ace wore noon us thrn ever before, it will be right. and neosssnrv that. we gfw: more of our young people t~c"n'cal and mechanical Instructions, but u will be a pit-Hr! mstake u we 0cm- to fmarine that onlv as education or as the end of editicattcn. Education ls scrrennc for u; own r-ke. Something to make men see more of truth uni beau y: to brim them a deeper sense of snortsmanshlu and fair day; a deeper undo-standing of l f1’; mrtm" I-ng‘. of its humanities. and emu- oasslons and pines, And educton 1s not science, that nod of so manv. In the last zeneratlon George Meredith. caught uu by th~ mod-tn nasslon for science. 01"ed out. "More brain, 0 Lord. more brain." Yet all of the 19th century's trsflnn for science-a pwsskm 1n whtch Germany was held up as the great example-wrought, little or g . And educatlon f; not the promotion of pride and vanltv. and intellectual arrogance, and the "right of prlvcte judrment." "Y et us be our own oracles nnd tripods and mods." shouted Voltaire, Bub In succeeding years the world was to learn what havoc this med rc- t with the fundamental articles or the ancient faiths. dendlw dialectic lcosengd and und mined hmnan confldencg 1n ~11 the codes and conventions. the rules of llfe Implicit In the constitution of society. Everv lrmnnect met its match In a contrary arrumemt: of seeming equal form until nothing smeared csneblc etthq- of pmof or dlsoroof. Every Found In scwnce, 1n Ipolltlcs. In economics. tn i-evgon. in morals was challenged. The old monrtnga were swam aw" . That ta not educaflon: it is chaos. mutation, ff it 1s to . $311k. must. hecctimfovonttffect; . u cc, morcy- D y. mus tench God. The fumes hlmt make for unity. foi- cocfni adhesion. are gpignfound ‘In girand gpstwct the- . nor n sconce varceq from or ‘louder- rgilgfon. In oun rs er In the- uffeottaig sad passions. mo” mvmnms influences: than; mqznrv factors In the man storm, the I3V.= e and Rulings In common, better; 1n wmnwfl. common hones. love: (nan; lwmlmhflioflffmirtuwdrda . . - Pl. ll. BONNET: 1914 Doul ‘of 1.11 happy In the hour, mm H; who has found our hid security, 1n tho dark tides of the world at n And hOlfd our war , ‘Who 1s so safe u we?’ W; have found safety with all Th; winds, and riigi-nfng, tam of develo Bulls PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND-NOVA SCOTIA FERRY SERVICE VIA WOOD ISLANDS, P. E. I. --CARIBOU. N. S. M. V.‘ " PRINCE NOVA" 1 "The Connecting Link Between These Provinces." Daylight Saving Time-Sundays Included Leave Wood Islands 10.00 A. M. and 2.00 P. M. LUNCHES SERVED Leave Caribou z Noon and 1.00 l’. )1. NOIITIIIIMBEIILAIIII FEIIIIIES LTH. CHARLOTTETOWN. P. E. 1, communion of souls. to which the Intellect ma-kca only partial con- trlbt1t1on~these are the morhfs- o! societies. here In Canada foundations of the future. We keep these truths In mind. Science technical 1n- structlons, slow things arc not enoug . It wit] be well for us 1r. in building the ou-r education for or mnteriat ains - these COMEDY 0r" ENGLISH The musical comedy has been almost exclusively by the wneflklns DBODIes. ._______,______ Uve Mimi-G's for lpnlnl. Evans Stomach Mixture A fl l1 obtnfiileili, fail ‘lh-Tfilllt-f! "flail" ° ‘ll ddd b I are a en y headache. heartburn, fill-l: Ind c sense of pressure below he heart. Recommended for ndllestlon. 1., s," itomgch and g “mung, Prleo l5 cents per ,.. scorrs, EMULSION A Iollor Way to lake Col Llvor 011 contains Vitamins A and II and . m n . m um“ tifim u’ btrda sInII fill clouds flyt , g , and the a1 e ar . We have built. s house that fs m or Tune‘; throwing. We have gained a peace unshaken for ever. Wu knows no power. Safe shall be my c0125. Secretly arm unfnlt n11 death's endeavour; Safe though all safety’: lest; nfe where men fall; And Ifnthfise poor 11min dle, saf-zs‘. -—flllfilfl Brooke. PILF. (imirlfusur GIVES IPUNK RELIEF! I'M mam form! of Pll": < "u! rfllrlrnl. Frr --ul Internal Pllu. "‘-'~'~ "-41 1 — Rooihcn. 2 _ n-w-u-nlo-q 1 - Astring- ent. Prior 60 cents tube. TIIE If") IoILIIS Professional Cards in w- - .7 I Qq-rw- .~|>‘V McLiOD 8t BENTLEY W. la. HENLEY. K C. I. A. BENTLEY K. C. Barrister: Ind Ammcrrfl‘ Law MONEY T0 LOAN l5! Prince Smut ——__'___i aeu. a. MATHIESO 1.0 \N Clnirlaitctfl . lslanli- f PALMER 8- HASLAM L. J. IIASLAM BA. jéh-B- BARRISTIIR U ~ m a! fro?‘ Sffllllll‘ (Ftmltfl C n a e own. ~ LOAN g‘°"" To 120.801 4-4 filflfflflu Ilorralland 6111111111"? II. F. AIICIIIBALII Chartered M¢°"“"““I' kn,“ Tm,‘ Bulldllll MONEY T0 Cameron Bleach! Chou-touch" |-|. F. McPHEE an. KL; noun ac. l IAIBIBTII soucirvl EYES EXAMIIIEII IILRSSES I-"ITTEII Mall Orders Glnl IIOIIIN Alkllhln’ . opq-OMETRIST New lflrtlllfln "gt: °"'::;,:‘.t':' as: 53:12?» l" m: B! APP“"‘"“' "rm. Iundw" ‘m an" Ilufldlnl ti“ ‘ J. S. TA YLUR | l i.