1115012 FOUR TIIE BIIAIILUTTETOWN GUARDIAN Morning Dally tl-‘ounded tn I881) President: Ltcut Col. w Chest" h‘. Mel-ll" Vice President: J. R- Bllfllfll- F-J-l Secretary: Lieut (fol l) A tllucltlntlnn. 0.8.0. Editor and Managing lttreclur J lt- BllFm-‘lL FJJ Associate Editurs: Frank Walker and lull A Bllflll" SUBSCRIPTION RATES Bv 1mm m 12511.. $4.00 per year; 62-50 t»! 6 mWl-"I $1.25 for 3 months; 50c fur one month on.» Delivery 55.00 pet year: $3.00 for ts uwllllll $1.75 for 3 tnonths; 60v for one MUIIIIL By Mall to other Pltbvllltl‘: and U. S. A. $541" P!!! N" Saturday lleckly: 51.00 per W-Ji 51-00 I" v ""1"" 50c for I mouth: Tue cllllflUllululllt ouariltztu iuny be ubtutrtetf ll fllplulllll’! News Agent,» I'm-mt bquure. New York; Old luutlr Noun Agbiu-y, lllltt nnil Win-lrtnulul lib-tum llrlrutlultlln Hut-w. l2" I'M" "-- llttulreial, .| l-‘u ltiu an, urontn; New» Slnld. Chtllt-nu Luttrwr, 1. Ill-mu \-wu Qlllld- Iiuillmrr Ont: llub Yulnwvtr shop, “micron N. 8.1 “The Sirongvst Jlcnzory is Weaker lhlm Ute Weakest lirk.” TTIIJDAY, IlTi-“(Cll 2U, 19A??- A Comfortless Speech There is little c0111fort to be taken from Premier Campbell's rcvie\\' of our car ferry problem. llc scents quitc I'l‘CUIlCll(‘tl to the pros- pact of tl1i< l'1'i>\“.llt‘t‘ gvlllllg along without a new iccbnvalccr 111111] zliirr thv war, llc concctlcS that the sltuatitm i- srrioiis, or might become serious m any 111<l]]!t‘lli, but argues that tiothing more can be di-uc 1311111 In rcconditiun tl1e old steamer and can 011 with the assistance, dur- ing summer 111011111; of an auxiliary slczimer. The fact 111111 our icrrv t1a11spur1;1li011 is rm absolute war IIUIJQsL-ll)’ lull. cviilcully not bccn impressed on the fttlciztl ziuthoritics. at least by the Provincial Govcri run, .\p:1rt from our naval and military t ining establishments, there are two large air forct- schools i11 this Province. It i; glninuwl 1bal twuii of tlwst- schools requires 3, tan]; c111‘ of 19.5011 II 11s ltf gatstvliuc EYCfy day and a half, as \vill. .1. uixuy oil and other sup- plies. The tr1111s111,\1"".;1ti011 0t these war neces- sities rhmivs ,1 groin additional burden 011 our ferry service. lid znqlie that a Steamer which \vas'dec1ncrl i11.~11fficiu11t for our rcqu1re1ne11ts fifteen years ago is 04111111110 of giving satisfac- torv service today, txndiri" difficulties tremend- ously accc11t11.'1tvrl.' is shccr nonsense. It is bail enough to have such idczis propouttd- ed at Ottziiva; i1 i: \\'--!'-c to hear them re- echoed b_\' the Preinivr of this Province. It must be very discouraging t0 men like Hon. R. B. Hanson, who has been fighting a single-handed battle in thr- llou-"c of tUiiiini-vns for our trans- portation rights. 'l'l'1e Premier rvfcrrerl to the visits t0 Ottawa of H011, Mr, .\lt‘llIlv\'l'E and Hon. My \Vrightt, but he did not tvll the llousc what results these gentlemen achievcil by tlicir representations. The fact is that thcv both came back with erroneous and mislcarlingi informatiivti, one with regard to the availability of mhcr icebrealtcrs in the event of an accidcnt to the Prince Edward Island. and the other with regard to the salvaging of the Clnv-forlvlrn.-ii. 'l'l1~=;» l-oirances were not worth thg paper on which tho." v. ore fczttured in the Lib- eral press. and served only to reveal the indif- ference of the King G-‘ircrnment t0 our situa- tion. The Premier accepts without question the Govcrifmcnfs as-urauct‘ that “it was absolutely out of the (111estii111, e-ithrr in Canada 0r the U11- ited States, to obtain the necessary facilities for the construction of a car ferry.” .-\s pointed out In these columns a few days ago, a contract it about to bc awarded in the United States for the; construction of an $8,000,000 iccbreakcr for the Great Lakes. This news. appcaretl as an Assoc- iated Press despatcb 0n Fcb. 2o_ How is it to be reconciled with the alibis from Ottawa? Dried Eggs From Australia At a special nitwziiig of the Australian Agri- cultural Council, lltlll in August, 19.10, the de- velopment of the poulzry iudrtstry was one of the main topics tindcr dbccussion, states Mt‘. L. M- Cosgrave, Canadian Trade Commissioner at Syd- ney, in n. report to the Department of Trade and Commerce. The recommended expansion was di- rectcd towards the whcat-grruving areas as a means 0f diversifying the wheat industry and, i11 addition, stimulating the production of eggs for export to the United Kingdom to replace sup- plies formerly obtained from European coun- tries. Owing to restricted refrigerated shipping space, it is now planned to rcducc the export of eggs I-’| the shell by the sub-tittilioii of powdcrcd egg. Plant for egg drying has been erected in New South Wales and Victoria, and exports from these state: during 1tl11-42 will be in that form. I11 Quccnslzinrl, South Australia and Western Australia similar plant \vill be in operation for 1942-43. Rlcamvhilc exports from the latter group \vill bc made i11 the shell. Accurate figures arc not yct available with re- gard to total egg production in Australia. Statis- tics covering‘ orct'~v:tr~ trade i11 eggs show ex- ports (luring 19110-41 tllltlflllllflllg to 17,881,732 dozen valued at £.-\1,1z2,7_;8 ($4,340,791) as compared with 101711.316 dozcn valued a: £A5o7.8_:4 ($_>.1_»_'_3§1l 1'11 1030-40. Exports of Egg Contents amounted i11 1010-41 to 1,095,356 pounds valued :11 £.\.1_:.3;.1 ($161,007) as com- pared with IlIC uculiigilmlc quantity of 560 pounds during‘ the [ircccdinq vcar. Mr. Howe and Criticism \\'lu-11 H011. ('. l). llinvs says that he finds trm chair slriilrgi-l- rnIlu-r dz-iziwing. says an cx- rlrmgc. b0 ~hnuld l‘t‘tll('lltlli‘l‘ lluit but for this prrsstirv (fzinzi-lzi inlgln still b" accepting his ~I.'1:v111:11l that i1 was r-i-lirulous to think that this _~o1u1tr_\- could turn out tanks. 'l'I1c Government still set-ms to think i1 ridiculous to bclievc that 1v.- i"1'1 ha-v- lzolh :1v1vtnc1'1r-il production and an i11.':":-'|~.-i| ttriuv. 'l'l'1tt is a point on which it has yet to be r vuvcrtvil It will b-n disastrous for this country if I00 latc the Govcrnmcnt rculizcs that I- — we are involved in a total war. We are not yet —t\v0 and a half years after we entered the war /011 a totabwar footing. _ The Bureau of Statistics reports the number 0f wage-earners employed in Dflielllbel’. I929 as 2r 202,000, whereas in December, I941 the number had risen to 3,141,000.. There are 939,000 or ncarly a million more Canadian wage-earners today than i11 1939. yet on the statement of Mr. Howe only 600,000 of these are engaged in war ltlflllalfy. Nearly 400,000 have been added to the payrolls of non-war production. Grant Dexter, a journalist whose pen has been used rcpcittcclly in defense of the Ottawa Gov- cnnnqnt, has bad to admit that the implication is that our war industry has not been expanded as rapidly as the manpower was available. He says, "'l‘l1rce hundred and thirty-nine thousand pairs of l1ands have gone to work since the war began :11 jobs which have small war significance." Mr. Howe has added his voice to the Govern- ment chorus which stresses the one point 0f pro- duction as though that were all that were neces- sary t0 win the war. And even in production i1 appears that Canada is not yet doing what it is capable 0f doing. - EDITORIAL NOTES - _ The Federation of Agriculture is making in ex- istence felt in our midst. a- t- a a Car travelling on the highways, if not byways, \\'Ill be general after tomorrow. v v it x _ ll° l5 "9 lmlgfil‘ known as "Doogal" i11 the Lcg- islature but “P00l1o." t- : a n- Wben once‘ the street crossings are cleaned "P. rubbers \\'Ill once more be at a discount. =t< it at [he Nazi Tirpilz ($5.000 tons) 1's, alas, loose somewhere, the sharpest and most alarming recent naval incident in British eyes. n- it- w- It 1s reported that I08 111.011. who are zilicns, flllll Islanders) will be working on machine tools 2n the Montreal area when Government plans are completed. it a w n: Easter attractions arc bringipg our farmers, their better-halves and offspring 011cc more 5;, increasingly large nufnbey; to City and towns Soon positions will be reversed- n- 1- w n- Ihe ‘previous Prime Ministcr of Canada is to his name grace the btflv-Qf a big Grea, ‘an; freighter, authority having been given by, tie epartmcnt of Transport for the Cryonia] Steamslups Ltd. to change the name of thw- slmlllcl" "Bclrylon" to “Viscount Bcmictt." Ii i! ‘t! it One fatal drawback in obtaining Federal gov. crnment recognition of the importance of our Polalll "OP and price is that. tmlike wheat, pota» to-cs do not eiuoy a world market, hellcc the gicatcr necessity for our representatives and oth~ ers interested constantly hammering at thg d001- of the Government to get the attention we de- serve. , ltllklllil It must comcras a. surprise to many to find M131 Royal (lukes, lungs 50115, may die not so we“ off as many of our merchant princes. Th¢ neg value of the estate cf the m. Duke Of Con. naught was about $640,000 0n which about $205,, 000 estate (ltity had to be paid. No less than $125,- 000 111 annuities and $5.000 a year in pcnsiong Spire left by the Duke to relatives and retain- ' it it a i: Ferdinand Foch, French hfarshal and membg)‘ °f ll" P11311611 Academy, died this date r929; in the darkest days of I918, when unity of command l“ _lll° Gleal ‘V?!’ W3! agreed upon, he was ap- pointed generalissinto of the Allied Armies in France and Flanders (hfarch); turning point cllllle l" Jul)’ it the second battle of the Marne. and thereafter with consummate abilitv he struck lllat "#8810 0f ringing blows which demoraliz- ed the German armies and forced them t0 sue for allnAlntlsllfl; his guiding stratcgical maxim was -— to hold positions is to prepare implicitly for defeat 1f nothing further is attempted.” i U I i N First to arrested in‘ a Royal Canadian Iountcd Police drive against evaders of military training who obtain employment by means of false national registration cards, Elzcar Gauthier, Montreal, was sentenced to six months in prison, He was accused under a section of the Defence of Canada Regulations. According to informa- tion placed before the court, Gauthier was sum- moned for compulsory military training in May, r941, but failed to comply with the order issued by the Divisional Registrar. For l0 months the Royal Canadian Mounted Police sought the evad- er, and others, only to discover that a number 0f prospective draftees could not be traced through employment lists because they had obtained false national registration cards. In the Gauthier case. the police traced a card which had been issued to the prisoner's vntinger brother and used t0 obtain work in a public market. n- a- it c Says an Ottawa correspondent; Morale is a fickle thing. It is mercurial: it has its downs as wcll as-its ups. and the task of the propagandists is rose: that the downs are not too prolonged. Young people here as in the United States some- times ask why they should be asked to go out and fight when there is no surety that "when they become mature and they are midway in their voyage another ideological plague will sweep the earth. There is little use in attempting to ration- alize the war for them. They must be told again that it is a fight for their own survival, not jn<t a clash between two diametrically opposed ways of tl1inking_ 'l'l1cy may not be convinced by martial music. but by the same token they can- not be persuaded by the rationalisls. This writer deplores the fact that there are too manv or- chestras and ton few military bands. He got-s so far as In [irotcst that "Iilrtggs arc seemingly ration- ed." He goes furtbcr. "l wouldn't trade one good baud for the whole kaboo-lle of Facts 0n the Radio." _ THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN N01 c3 BY TIIE WAY 1- bumbc no u efflu- ,.,§',‘°§_',""J..§ ate diabolical-there's practically no was-e to tnem. The most amazing thing about mean ls ma; m; metal casing 11m: bums _1n fact, u. Is this that sets off the thermile Inmde. Tncoretfcal , one could as easily 8WD 3' 5h°° m; star as put! out one cf these engines (,1 inwndtarlsm. But unit's just where the blueprint soldiers went wrono- Tl" wmll-m. zgI/Q them what they asked for. Metal that burned. A the thlt would explode if water were but. on it. Something that: would liberate its own oxytlll 111d 9W" burn in water. In other words, a [no that couldn't be doused. couldn't be smothered --wh1ch, on paper, couldn't be 911i 011V n19 bimwer has been n09 l0 PM m?!“ out at all, but to aid them, to help tttetn, to increase them. mu is dozie by vtvlns lhrm water in such a way (_1.e.. rkocnlzed) that the oxygen is available for consumption. This makes every bomb a hotter. flcrcer bcm-b than any German could have hoped for. But It also makes It a faster bomb “so fast, In fact. that the ther- mlte, which Is the unquenctiable, unsmotherable stuff. doesn't have q, chance to get In lb! worst ch18 before It Is shovcled Into l pail of sand, In which form It Is-tl you hurry _ movable to the street, or pldewalk - Pleasures of Publish- ng. Eskimos and trapper; of hhg Frozen North. who ate their dried strips of caribou meat or pemmican, have peznd on the idea. of this highly concentrated form of focd to save shipwrecked sailors from starvation. All life- boaks In Britain's Merchant Navy are now equipped with nourishing compact foods. among them this concentrated mixture of beef ex- tracts of high calorific value 1t ls, of ccuise, a much more 501611- tlfic product man theppcmtnican of Eenimcre Cooper, b21111; a beef extract with a Irgn fat content. Each man 1s supplied with 14 ounces of It, enough for a, fort.- night. One-third of an ounce, taken with other concentrated foods 110w forming part of me equipment In strips’ lifeboats, will make a meal for one man, and special measuring spoons are sup- plied with which the extract Is spread on the new type Qt shin’; biscuit, - Britlm Industries Bulle- tin. It Is utterly unrealistic to pic- ture this war ending in another armistice, another convocation of statesmen like the; at Paris, a11- other formal peace treaty and an- other wave of dlsillusfon, cynicism and Incapacity aincng t-qe victors It ls quite possible that these will never be a formal ptace Meaty at all, but that the War will end 1n stages — stages of cdlapse among the brutal servIt/ors of world Hitler- Izm and stages of practical adjust- ment by the free peoples to the successive practical DTOlIi€ITIS that world organizaticn wll raise. The peace Ls not something that will be written at some dstant future clate when the guns have tallcn silent. It I5 something that; l5 be- ing written nc-w with every burst frcm a free man's machine gun, by every tree pilot 01- bcmba dter or turret captain, Dy ev:ry fzec work- er behind tlum fading them the bombs and shells and tanks and ships and in the process co- operating with every other free man and Woman, who only by working and fighting together on a. world scafe can win this world crisis. -- New York Herald-LITH- bune. An anonymous Brlslollan Is prepared to buy Bristol's historic Theatre Royal, Mitch claims to be the second oldest. If not the oldest theatre ‘m the Kfiigdrm. and to present it. to the National Trust or hand It over to the cltv. The theatre was opened In I766 and granted letters patent by George III In 1778. me prologue recited on the opening night was specially written for the oocasfcn by David Garrick. - London Tim-es. Speaking before u United Char- fties Workers lunchum in Phil- adelphla, Mr. Justice Roberts ad- ded a footnote to the Pearl Har- bor repcrt he had haircled she President. “I catinol understand the smugness of the United sures" he said "I have had scme investi- gating to do recently and at the bottom of all of It Ls this sense of superiority and satisfaction: ‘It can't happen to. us. We are too great. We are building aft these ‘plants What- mcre would you have? Well, ladies and gentlemen, what more we must. have, if we an to live as our ancestors lived, ls we have Lived In the past, Is more sacrlflce for democracy." more you have tho complete story, not Just, of Pear] Harbor, but of America. during the last lwo de- cades. - Gtlcago Stun. Slr: An urtlclo and a letter have a neared on your editorial p380 out. the movement. to raise M! army under n Jewish banner to fight. HItler. Hitler first leis/ted blood by starting on the Jen's. and toda his hands are red frcm the bloc of many races. Since he started on the Jews In his-blood» spilling orgy It would be highly fitting, In the closing battle of this war, hat an army 0f Jews be a1- lowed to lead the last grand as- sault, upon Germany's borders and that upon the triumphant much into Berlin, a. Jewish aimy, or regt- ment be the first. to enter that city curryllng the flag-s of all the United Nations exemplifying the brotherhood of mankind, the strength 0f unity- and the mIght of right. - letter Minneapolis Star Journal. The Health lune ndvlaen a fruit or fruit. Juioe first. for breakfast Next, you should have either cereal with mllk or cream of some cooked dish of og-ga or meat. like sausage or bacon with or without pancakes. Toasted whole m» breld u better than ordin- ary white bread, because It has more Vttmun B. Ono of the most Important food elmrnls In breakfast. for adults and (hlldrcn both. "vs the experts. Is milk Plenty of It should be available for oergnlc or cocca. or just to take plain, Along with the above food. -Henlth {ensue 0f Canada. "Hitler." nlvn the SI. Thoma ‘Flutes-Journal. "dce=n'l fake pleb- I-ncttes before he strtws" A; n mwtler of font. Hitler and his Axis numbers don't even declare war before they strike But should the Allte; tmttnte Hltler In that? f4 s lhIr-c rtkhl berwsc Hltler does m HIlIer ls wllhrut. honcur; has never hesitated Io lyerk 1; pied , no matter how scremnly ma e But only n FascLst-mnded DPTSOII will soy that this justifies pied". breultlntz ttmong decent people. — Toronto sw- WORDS OF ( ‘H ALLENG F A ‘Phlilllllt A DI! For A People Al Wu “Vlctory must be our one clem- purpose." — Lt. Col. C. A. Drew. Ontario Conservative leader. Doing Hitler’s Work (Ottawa Journal) when Japan struck at Pearl Harbor It was bald that" United sums lsolatltmists were stunned Into silence". They Weren't 5W3‘ ned Into silence for IOXIB- TWIN‘ the pack are In full cry vasblll. their new technique for mischief more sinister than the old. , This new technique l; to drive l wedge between the United Stale-s and Britain: ranxifs all the way from asking why Americans should be "defending Emglands Enuplre to wlsecracks over “Colonel Blimps" and the "dd schocl tie’. Head and centre of the new cam- paign Is Col. MqConntckfis notor- ious (Xucago ‘ITIWHO- will’! l" more than a million circulation. Day after day new the Tribune pDUTS out the vials of its wrath and hatred against the British In its cartoons and editorials: and "CIssIe" Patterson's WashInBWYl Times-Herald. daily 50W! SW48 01' distrust: and Col. Patterson's New York Dally News (largest. circula- tlon In the United Statesl sows even more distrust: and the old anti-British crusader, William Randolph Hearst (now writing a column for his own newspapers) Is not far behind In the back- ground. doing Hltler's work In whisperlngs and inrrtrerdoes and wiserracks about the British. are the Iswalic-nl-ts trt ard about Con- gress and the members of the "America. First Committee’ and the Nazi agents President Roose- velt had mrre In mlrd than the outside world lmaizintd when he srrk" 0f s. “Cllvcden sei" tn Wash- tnzton Of th‘s devilish band of sabolcuvs the San Francisco Armnaut, one of the great we=kl’e.s of the Unlt- ed "laws, said the 07h»;- day: “Thcv carry cn tbe‘r campaign vfith cunnlnz apple"! to every old prejudice with a 1st. of new Pnes ft is helped bv thou-ends of dunes. They wtfuld Indlgrisntlv refuse to bomb an Amercan ship or sabo- tage a ‘plane. But they cannot re- sisf the tempt-aficn to repeat some wlsecrack turned out In a Hltfer factrrv In Berth. or In America. just as hLs factrrics are turnip: nut torpedoes to =ink cur slurs and 02- strov our cities". Recapture The Past (Globe and Mall» The Winnipeg Free Prsss has l strange habit of attributing mercenary and se't"tt1 mctivcs t0 all who venture to suggest tint the partisan Admnsiratlon at Ottawa Is not a Pebfcct Instru- ment for directing our national war effort, and that s"me firmed- fate invlgoratlon of the latter is imperative to meet the increasing gravity of the war sftustion. It has llmned the Commttxee for Total War as a cflque of wealthy Ontarians. who were annoyed 11th the taxation and o‘h"r polldes of the Kim Gavernnwcnt, ard wcnied to install at, Ottawa an Admin- istration amevabk‘. lo tf"e‘r views. and pictured Mr Arthur Mclghen as a senile reactionary who had been dragged out aralnst his will Into the arena of pcTt-ical warfare to serve as their ccmplahant toot fcr the achievement of selfish ends, It could not for a moment conceive that. the Committee for Total War might be animated by quite dlsznterested and patriotic motives, and be moved b_v a gen- uine dlsuvitetude about the Inade- quacles of the war program which the King Government was fol- lowing. It is a ccvmmonnlacc with psychologists that; icdfwduals who In their chfldhocd have been sub- Iected to oertaln fn-ms of unkind- ueas and oppresslcn an; om,“ 1n theIr adult years psore to seek re. venge for the wrcnvs done them by inflicting sImPar the Dfdpfletor OI’ the Frag Press, took the lead In a vItru-ous and of. fwtlve campaign m the stimula- tlon of natlunal war effort; by the IIXIDOFIIJOYI of full military cm. SCTlDtIOII The Influence vttilch he and his pslper exerted was a p0- tent factor In tnduclng the Liberal oonacrfpldonfst; to break Wm; 513- Wllfrld I/iurier and co-operate with sir Robert. Brrden tn the formation of the Union Govern_ _ PAN-CAKE MA K*E- U P A new kind ofmalre-up an: d by Max Faclotiliollywoudi, 1t aepem! to create a new com. plexion . . . it imparts a velvety. imooth youthful look . . . it pa ido tiny oomploxign fnultlmimn I00 for hour: wit out .- apflwdorinfl. MMCS BLOOD FOOD FOR PALE AND THIN PEOPLE A combustion elpeeldlly uluablo In flu treatment of tho ere their orlfln ll trouble. Io v comm-mu of the Ihaumnllsm. Get. u box now. Price II oenll. lhll Otdflmlaltvflc-n Pumps ‘I'll! N0 MAGS Ill Greet George Ilrect JDIIN TD There's a glow of accomplishment in]ohn's heart tonight! Delivering to a valued client the first of his monthly "continued income" cheques . . . a lifetime guarantee of security and leisurely comfort . . . is just the climax of a busy day of service. This morning he Iielpcd one man to arrange a "continued income" for his family, started another on a plan to send his young son through college, and filed claim papers for a bereaved wife. john lunched with a young couple who are getting married and figured a new insurance budget for them. After lunch he called on several business men! One was interested in group insurance, two partners wanted to know about business insurance, and another had a mortgage to take care of. Delivering his friend's retirement cheque is_]0bn's last call today, but his work isn't ended yet. He'll do an l10ur's study at home before he calls it a day. Hundreds of mcn likejobn are giving the same wide variety 0f service today t0 the more than 170,000 policyholders of The Mutual Life 0f Canada. Let their special knowledge and training help you find the answer to your problems. nAs nrAson BEPRDUBI an individual plan, specially suited to needs. See him today! In these ditficult times, the certainty of Ilfl adequate "continued income" program is more than ever essential. Your nearest Mutual Life rcprcsentativc will gladly help you design you: HAVE YOU ASSURE!) "CONTINUED INCOME" FOR THESE VITAL NEEDS? l. Immediate cash to tlke cne of specill obligations. 2. A lifetime monthly income for your wife and family. . 3. Additional income for educltion and other rpccinl nccds while children are growing up. 4, A special fund for payment ofthc mon- gagc on your home. 5. Adcqunte perform! "continued income" for the day when you wish r0 retire. All these needs ran and Jlmuld b: m! by your life insurance _ a . Ifyour plan is not complete, your nearest Mutual Life representative will gladly assist and advise you. Or write direct to Tbc Mutual Life of Canada, Water- loo, Ont. Do it today! Tl-IE TlIAl OF CANADA L Established 1869 HEAD OFFICE 0 WAHRLOO, ONT. ALI. PROFITS FOR POLICYHOLDERS Branch Office - Bank of Nova Scotia Building, Charlottetown ~ H. W. Pletch, Branch Manager Representatives (Charlottetown) C. H, BLACK A. PETERS. Representatives in Other Centres E. H. Monkley, Summer-side, Ivan Brown, New London, A. Fulton Campbell. lllolllilgll A. Gallant, Ruslico, M. Doris Rooney, Orwell Cove, Cyril Gallant, Amherst, lll- ment, Mitch by the enforcement of conscription and other drastic Policies was able to sustain Can- ada's war effort. until victury was achieved. l O Q I Tm or ument-s which slr Clifford marsh ed with inspiring force and convincing lucidtly for the accomplishment. of result-r satis- factory for the country and the Allied cause were In themselves quite unbnswea-rable. so his polit- ical enemies sought to discredit. hIm by attrlbutln to htm sinister and selfish ob actives. They depicted hlm as the bellwether of e. gang of selfish caiptlallsts who aspired to create a Coalittcn Gov- ernment to mute economic con- trol of Canada, and exhausted the arts of fabrication In disseminating ntmors and lnnuendoea about his motives. These afegatlons must have been very embarrassing tn hlm at the time. but he dudained to answer them They did vert, him from his chosen course, and the great. majority nf Canadian @p!q_ rgf_u§_e1!_[o believe em f 1n the light. of this history, It scuns to _u.s lamentable that. the Duper which so ably seconded his campaign ln 1916-17, ml Is sI-tll controked by his farm y, should speculate whether sir Clifford. I1 by been able to read th mcallt I omcme of p! m It. won fictional dlacord PWPlc who In their actions have been animated Just. as hzmestl by patriotic motives as Slr Cllfllford was In 1917. The obvious purpose of the contemptlble attacks u on sir Clifford was to divert pu 11c attention from the vltal Issues of the flay. and the Instigator: of them were properly condemned by =11 lnwllleent and deomt bittum of Canada as guilty qt dishqnggl, and unethical conduct. It ts dif- ficult to dlsoem anv other motive 1:1 the attacks of the Free Press upon the bong fIdes of the Oom- mlllfcc for ‘Total Wlr and all who flsreed with Its program the a : “b. , r ' ‘Mire t» distract more bitmiitm l‘; -.‘."~i' ‘$11355: liwft not. dl- frcm the Issues which the eom- ‘-.l_!lytr"'-n.,, mot!" I minke raised with considerable _ ‘~._. ' the effect upon the Iaasltude of Otto- ‘~ "- W-Itseemsnotlrm r lotto-to . - I . s ,\ the shade chance ll- in the Ellil fields the editorial fulmilgiallo"! the paper with vtnlch h stilt associated. l5 K-"ltlh seek to brand as self-seekers and Wrdl-fll wvgvgglh mi, em,“ Wm, that, B, more Rem name“ E th kh m llne had been take-Il- pf TANKS mu. WIN i THE DAY Because they havesvhat It lakes. They malt! It takes. the day It first went on sale. Hickeyb Black Twist l Chewing Tobacco ' MANUFACTURED BY head-i “way against obstacles, and our tobacco also. has will‘ It has made headway with the public nine! atttvrv l a ntctiotson Tultaccc tutu, Charlottetown