_¢- --¢- u-u-s-a-s- ......_ .. .- ....~_-q--“a 4a.» 'A -=-.. I» A _.. .-.n .. -_= ..-_--- VAQEZEAW? _ IlliE CIIAR LOTTETCWN C ll ARC IAN Morning llally (Founded In I887) Pi-esiiit-iit Llflll. (bl. w Chester s. MrLurI vii-c rrvsllltlll. .|. n. Burnett. FJ~I~ secremry |1;,.u;,.("ol t) A. lllacKlnnon. ldllor and Alunzizing Director. J R. Burnt! . - é“. Associate l-Itliitn-s. Frank \\ alker and Inn A. Burn i. s!‘ isscitii-‘iiibTfirr-zs 1y Mull III P. E. l. slim pa; velar. Szfflmtigtg B1011“! $1.25 for 3 months. llo or 0 _ ~ Cm. |,,.|,,,.,, $51M ii" _\'l‘fll’ s3.00 for b monthl- 5155 for 3 monthnsioo p" y”: - ‘;.I;-dL‘5.A. - §fllll?lylillz‘ld\l\l'lilx'lklt\"iiiii.llllaliNll‘ YPKIY- 51-99 7°‘ 6 mum‘ 50v for 3 mnnlhs. ‘The Jlcmnry is Weaker "l!!! [he “ICU/i ‘A [Wk-n iioxnsri \I dvsr 5.71940- Pnrliiiititrnl And People M 1H,, , - ,. it; \l'.:‘ i-n/Ft- King has iilditfltfd m‘, he T . . t‘ oiliirutg the stiggcitlml- . Tl. . '* ‘ ' ' I 1IIIHIQLA lo, :1 l ' m ll'lllil'l' some time ago. .0 In“. ' 1 llllllCll rather than Pm" influmi '1' -. . ;; t that this is the PTO?" g ~ . . . " . . . The mum‘ w .. iii iintical time. h < , n‘. of Parliament is t u. of the Montreal i i<<11-.- ‘lit elected to do a War ,~i_.ti.iiirne<l nor pro- sitttcmcnt from 1h? ‘ - iii-pliable duration of "in- tinder wlllfh ihe y ‘.ji-_ lt is of the highest -‘~ imwtiliztn people be kept progress of the ita- can be done only ions, It cannot ii-oiigli occasional state- nienibers of the GOV- . spfvig-cs that they have it...“ is not in session. ,, i, ,__,.,.,..,t with a procedure ' . u.» ;!-_<- (loverntiient continues _ ‘l -trictlv one-party organ- .if Conimotis does not by t r‘~.~ iliv ion of votes at the 1. ;‘i‘\t’l .i/.lt‘<§ more national- i-yn 'Y_l\_\' party government can lloiisc itself constitutes a claim to oi‘. forum in \\ vial statements canbe dis- riiss/‘il a ~ if net-cecal)’ criticized — which is p -"-i"~'c lictwccn one session and ltt-‘i":tt'i'. * _ T}... Pu-“ili ‘lllltflll is in practically con- m... ' ilii- British people are in Fziir Nected representatives amt , w. of the nation. They are iiiittritii-l f“ \' 3"‘ ll1\_\' “Wm m5 P7Ogre5§ 9f {hp \\‘,'l,r, 1i» "l ~ ‘r ’i‘.\'l‘. duties and responsibil- his which create those Canada ought to i- oarrcllel system so long 'l"-i@ Canadian people H" itic= :ii‘.il ' rcstuoii- li:i\'-- :1 p‘. ri- "hi. itfli.‘ imp... y“. ivilv and are. likely to be tax-w] r severity s0 that the .. ‘Fhey want to iv how their money is _ ,iev are getting for it, ‘ -ii -i:~li= betiveen the presenta- \\"ll‘ art‘ l\ll"r‘.\ {fun-i of :,, , ~.'lll'll.l' ‘l will not content them. It shntlltl tiwt (‘4ill'r‘lll them. The ivar, fllil"t‘li\'f't‘_ i»: reaching its most critical star-e, and the people are anxious. ThCY have not lo<t CwlliiflPllCfi in the outcome but their anxiety is iioiii-ila-less natural. The Prime Minister has taken the position that only a partizan goveriitticiit can conduct this WEI‘ f0!’ Canada, or, at any rate, can do it as adequately and efficiently :~.< a national government could do. RP!\TE‘S('!‘ili'lli\'f‘< of the 45 per cent of the people for \\'ll’t‘ill the Government does not speak should have the opportunity of considering and discussing the, Government's acts in order that this 45 per cent--actitally' s. little more than that __m;iy haw ifllfle‘ active part in the war pro gram and its direction. At Wcstiniiister the people of the United King- Elom have botli a National Government and an Opposition. The Government has all the sup- port that it rice/ls and is still subject to the constructive criticism which is the safeguard of any representative assembly. Britain boasts of this condition and has every right to do s0. In Canada we have the same system ln theory but not in practice, since there are large gaps in its operation. It is thc Prime Minister's clear dutv so to arrange the meetings of Parliament thaf these gaps will be few and narrow. If Par- liament is to be prorogticd the recess should not extend bcvonrl tlic early part of October. An even better yiroccdtire might be adjourn sine die, the undcrstanilittg being that members be re- called after a reasonable interval, certainly in the event of any new emergency. N0 arrangement which keeps the Governmefl out of touch with the people through their Par- liament will int-ct the. conditions ufldfl‘ Whlfil’! we are living. The people of this country have too much at stake to lic satisfied with any long interval lictwccii mic sc-"sioii of the House and another. lifiivcvcr (lvsii-alilc those intervals may he in (imp; of pcitct‘. The Prime Alinistcr has proposed liiiiist-lf to l!" at strong advocate and apostle of lT-trlirtnit-iilarv responsibility. That rcshonsiliility is grcitcr no\v than ever before in liruil Production \ The prcliiiiiii:ti~y' estimates of fruit production in Canada fllis si-asoii arc generally smaller than the I1')_§()('.~ll|ll.'lll'\. Stilistitiitiallyt rcduccd apple ‘i fyrnspi-ri in all producing provinces crops are. except liri yli Ciiliimbi:i whi-re only a slightly [igiigm- iiiili! Illjll] tlit- l‘(‘(‘fil'(l production of last yirar is (‘XIII ClCll. 'l‘hc nrcscni crop is estimated at 4__:‘:i;__'iin llill'l'l'l\ coiiiparcil will’! $.79l.<)0O hlllTiix of l.l\[ _\l'.'l~flll. The production of 550,- cmo llll lli'i\ of ptfiiz- indicated for the current season l\ only siiJlitly bclmt’ tllfi 1939 “OP 0f ]']illIl\' and prunes also show a §7',".icvi lni ‘i l». dccrtwisc for llll’ coiiniryt as a whole. The rc- ductioii is llllt‘ to llll‘ smaller yields expected in lriti<ll (‘iiliiiitliizt Il\ iii Nova Scotia and Oll- lario l»<-iti-i~ vii-lit. it..." iii i939 are anticipated. (‘aiiadiaii iv tillfllltil this _\'CZll' is estimated at 220.000 llll-llPis coinparcrl with the pf€Vl0ll5 year's crop of AQI-YyIOO bushels. Prospects for thfl TI-IE_ CHARLOTTETOWN_GUARDIAN this country's history and recognition of it be- comes a Government obligation. The people would like to have a National Government at Ottawa but if this is denied them they should at least have such measure of tiational reprcscnta~ tion as a sitting Parliament affords. peach crop show a slight improvement in British Columbia in contrast to the substantial reduction anticipated in Ontario. Ciiflflfllilfl production for i940 is estimated at 754,100 bushels which is well below last ycttfs crop of 935,000 bushels. Apricots in Iiritish Columbia. the only province producing this frtiit on a commercial scale, are estimated at 64.i0o bushels compared with the i030 crop of 59.000 bushels. This _'vear's cherry crop of 151.000 bushels is considerably reduced from the 223,000 bushels produced last season, The greatest reduction is reported in Ontario, although a slight decrease is also expected in British Coltimbia. The prospective production of grapes this year is also below the I939 yield. Although a substantial increase is anticipated in British Colut ia. the decrease in Ontario re- duccs the Cattadian total. The I940 crop estim- ate amounts to 42,909,500 pounds compared with the i959 production of 55,595,900 potinds. s’; EDITORIAL NOTES - A. \V. Kingslakc, British historian, who first used the now historic expression "thin red line" in his "Invasion of the Crimea, born this date, i809: “Soon the men of the column began to scc that, though the line was slender, it was very rigid and exact". “The Russians daslted on towards that thin red line tipped with steel." ll l 1C U An esteemed subscriber asks us to call atten- tion to the progressive slackening-tip of home training as evidenced by the behaviour of young- sters in the street. He says he has been re- peatedly "bummed" for money and cigarettes by both boys and girls, something not heard tell of in days not so far distant. 1i i! i! I Straws are showing how the wind blows. Con- cern over the fate of possessions of European belligerents in the Western Hemisphere have led the State Department at \\'ashington to order the re-establishmcnt of the American Consulate at Georgetown, British Guiana, closed seven years ago for reasons of economy. Mr. Wil- liam O. Boswell of New Florence, Pa., will be in charge as vice consul. Similar action has al- ready bccn taken in the establishment of con- sulatcs in Greenland and Martinique. It has been deemed advisable to have American of- ficials in the various posts watching affairs and American interests. =0- : i: n- The Pctain Govemment has perforce to adopt the Hitler attitude towards women, and are dis- couraging their employment in business. A writ- er in Paris says that young ivomen should not seek any profession other than that of wife, mother and housekeeper. “What is ruining France," he went on, "is the number 0f child- less couples who live a selfish life, appropriat- ing two incomes from salaried positions." He says that women who are allowed to have pro- fcssional interests should concentrate on femin- ine tasks such as teaching and nursing and be discouraged from entering business and taking government jobs. U I I This is the gist of a warning to U. S. A. by M. Adrien Klurquis. Minister of the Interior in defeated France: "In I932 when I was in the States," he said, "a young man with average brawn and average will to work could have hoped and did hope to amass enough to live comfortably. When I returned in 1939 I was as- tonished to find that the American youth no longer wished to work, no longer had ambitions, and preferred the relative ‘security’ of a civil ser- vice job to running in the race for fortune. It probably is this attitude which has allowed the spread of the infection manifest by three critical signs: women filling jobs of men in industry and commerce, wearing too much make-up and re- fusing to bear children. I warn you that when a nation generally presents these three mani- festations of ‘decadence’ it is time for that ria- tion to look to its future and awake." l i i i The Ovidian metamorphosis of a lion becom- ing a porcupine receives a realistic allusion by the military correspondent of The Times of Lon- don, who describes the surface of Britain as bristling with thousands of little camps, placed on strategic sites and ready to launch their "deadly quills". In the World War there were units called “listening poets"; these are called "waiting posts." The military man visited one of them and then wrote: “A little camp con- taining only the barest measure of comfort, con- atant hard work in the construction and im- provemcnt of the site, in "addition to the fre- quent manning of action stations, astonishingly little leave, even ‘walking out’ regarded as a rare privilege-such are the general conditions. The men take it all as it comes and with the best kind of philosophy. No one watching them at work could doubt their great enthusiasm and eagerness to make things hot for raiding air- craft. They live almost entirely for their task and have scarcely an existence outside it." a v is A notice posted in the Press Gallery at Ottawa may possibly be a ‘little surprising. It reads: “All Canadian newspapernicn visiting the Unit- ed States must obtain special permits from Wash- iiigton hereafter, it was announced today by the external affairs department. Applications for such permits should be made to United States constilates in Canada and should be made at least two or three days in advance of the day upon which the journalist ivishes to leave for the United States." Of course, nobody belonging to ,preserve the countrys NOTES BY TNE WAY In the British Empire then h neither legal nor popular prejudice against. the re-electlon of a Prlme Minister for a third or even a fifth term. Gladstone was Prime Mln- ister from 1868 to 1874, from I880 to I886, and from I892 to 1&4, when he resigned. Macdonald was Prentler of Canada for three terms. Iaurler was Prime Mints- ter for fifteen years, and Mac- kenzie King has broken that. re- cord. The difference ls that, while a. Presidential term ls limited to four years. s. British or Canadian Prime Minister has no such guar- antee, though he has a natural ex- pectancy of five years. — By J. V. McAree, In Toronto Globe and Mall. A four-ycax-old victory visitor. who arrived in Winnipeg from England this morillttg. had a word for lt. During the last. three nights before the fumliy left Devonshire, there had been air raids or air- rald alarms every night. It had been necessary to spend an hour or two ln the air raid shelter each night. By this time children had become thoroughly familial" with other phases of wartime England. They knew about. ‘rationing’, and what 1t meant. Rationing meant that. you have so much sugar in your cocoa, and so on. Thus, on the last night before sailing, when wakened up to go to the sir raid shelter. the four-year-olcl remark- ed: “Mummy, we're having our sleep rationed £00. aren't we?" -- Wlnnlpeg Tribune. Good news comes out of Chicago, from reports prepared for the an- nual national convention of the W.C.T.U. next- mrith. Despite the fact that more money 1s being spent. for, liitoxlcanbs and that Zl- quor ls much more available today than ever before. distinct gains have been registered for the catise of temperance. The otttstandlng achievement ls the record cf no slzeable region itoting to change from dry to wet in 1939. whlle— as ln every year since-the antl- llquor forces won more than half of all local option elections. gain- lng ln twenty-nine States. Ob- vlously the general Zack of enforce- ment of regulatory liquor laws, especially those pertaining to youth, plus the continued bad re- cord of the drinking automobile driver, is resulting ln a public re- vtilslon agalnst the liquor traffic wherever the issue is raised. Na- turally, a democracy, to be pre- pared for all eventualltles, must arm itself morally as well as physically. - Christian Science Monitor. Boston. A few days ago "Tenperrente? wrote to the Times to say that he had sent to the Chancelior of the Exchequer. aa a contribution to the expenses of the war. the sum of £2,500, which was about the tenth part of what he c sessed. In a more recent- speech Sir Kingsley Wood revealed that “Tenpercen!er" Ls by no means alone in his pub- llc splrlt. From many instances Sir Kingsley Wood picked out three: that of a rich man who had sent 1950.000, without any condition or reserve except. that his name should be kept. secret; a [1 note from an invalid llving on a verv small fix- ed income; and 10s from a (lis- abled ex-soldler of the Iast war, who did not. feel comfortable at taking from the fiat-ion the whole cost of the woollen socks that protect his stump from his arti- ficial leg. Many a mature man may recall a letter ln the ‘Times of June 24, 1919, ln which one "FIST" announced his Intention of casting into the ‘Treasury a sum sufficient for the cancellation of {150000 of Four Per cent Funding Loan. Not tlll some years later did the public learn that “F.S.T." stood for "Financial Secretary to the Treasury" and that the donor was Lord (then Mr. Stanley) Baldwin. —L0nd0n Times. An Import-ant question is that of the so-called excessive profits tax. We have neither the time nor the space required to devote to a long commentary thereon today, but. we have reason to believe that the 1n- vesunent. of capital In industry and business becomes. as a result. prac- tically impossible. We know of no serious-minded investor who to- day would be willing to buy shares 1n a company with no prospect whatsoever of profiting therefrom. Our whole economic system ls still based on profit. I shall let our economists squabble over the merits or lack of merit. of the principle of profit, but I know one thing: our system cannot get along with- out profit. The moment you take 1t away, by that. very fact, you slow up commercial production at. its source. Once again Canadians are accepting the war effort as an unfortunate necessity, but not. with- out. grave misgivings. They real- ize that. we have been forced into the position of adopting the econ- omy practised by the totalitarian States. without at the same time possessing their mechanism. We shall have to deal with a govern- mental machlne which acts very slowly, and each time that the aroducers shall have explanations glve or to receive, they wlll have to wait. slx months to a year for a reply. We must think of the present, which ls dramatic, and of the future, which may be marvellous, if we prepare for lt 1n a. realistic and practlcal lash- lon. It ls extremely important to power of recovery and reconstruction. We have no right. to exhaust our- selves. It ls our duty to flglit with all our available resources, but we cannot destroy, without. ruining c.rselve.s forever, the essentlnl ‘flramework of the natlon. —- "Le our." The apparently incurable desire of clvlllans, of our race at. least, to look on at "battles" has been shown again by those who took chairs and stools into the street ln a northern town and sat. down with cigarettes to watch an air road. Special constables ln the last. war had difficulty ln persuading old ladies 1n London to go back to their houses on air-raid nights, for, they complained. “We can't B9B what's going on unless we come out." Bo Mr. Godfrey, before Namur ln 1095, having come out. the Canadian armed forces on the active list may enter a neutral country, except tinder veryl special provisions whilc Canada is at war. Pass- ports moreover are now required for civilian Canadians wishing to cross the border. Canad- ian iiewspapcrmcii. however, are in a special- catcgory: and require special permits. This places the newspapermen somewhere between the soldier and the civilian and recognizes that, in his way, lic is actively fighting for his country. "It is a proud thought,” says the Telegraph journal. _._ to the army to discuss financial questions with William III, stayed to watch the operations in the fleld. When the King rebuked hlm sternly he protested that. "I run no more hazard than Your Majesty A moment later s. ball laid Godfi-éy dead at. the King's feet. Mr. urchlll was doing civi- lan duty durlnv the last war when. after drnlng with Tom Bridges. he said that. he would stay the night, and watch the next day's battle, but. (writes Bridges in “Alarms and mun-alone‘! "Arm; bud- i Ordinary sore The Nazl Bluff A Myth Exploded By "Runnymede" (Reprinted from ‘The lfllfmlrli" nsuonai maemne of the 0w- ldlan Legion.) (Continued) Clausewlita had no Ideas “what- ever on the “Flfm Column. War; were foir soldiers, not. for WQISBJ and rats. He was, however, an l-r- dent apostle of "war to the llmlt’. He believed that "to introduce in- to the philosoiph of war itself I prlnclple of m ration would be an absumdmy." In W111‘. 11¢ WOW. "the errors which proceed from a spirit of benevolence are tabe worst. To put 1t briefly, there was no doubt. about this Director of the General Academy of War at Berlln having been thoroughly orthodox ln his Prusslanlsm. Does one have to apologize for having introduced Frederick the Great. and Clausowitz lnito this dlscusslon? It. ls t0 be BOW-d Ml- All we are striving to do 1s to es- tablish the origin. the‘ development of all the "hoop-la" with WhlCh m9 Prusslans and the Nazis Built-mild themselves as soldiers and "super- men". _ The foregoing observatcons are introductory to an examination of THE HORTON ACADEMY 0F ACADlA UNIVERSITY A “Modol" Academy (co-educational) nndu uupcrvlnlon of Dun of School nl ucafiou. Gull nddn In residence of School d Household lconumfcn and Finn Ark. CURRICULUM :—Dulqnod lo ma! tho nudl cl the students. TEACHING METHODS :—l1lul!rll- lnq (h: but In the "Now Teaching." COURSES r-Unlvonlty Matriculation, GIIIIXIA, Budnnl. some of the Great Principle; pro- The Nazis are hum-diggers a; Dollfldfli by Clflllsfllmz- W9 8Y9 defeating people who are beaten Oflnwmed WTUWIBIII’ with Q16 before the battle begins; but. when recipes he gives for finishing of a t. defeated enemy, for putting the last bit of polish on the destruction of an army that 1s In retreat. And p we are also greatly interested ln examining just bcw the Nazis did that sceclal lob when the “super- men" had the Brltilsh Army ln re- treat in Flanders only a few week: ago The Three Principles We have no desire to be pedan- tlc. but. we do wish to recall that. the Nazi-Prussian has been schooled Mb" A." to carry out certain of Clausewttzs d principles. Three of these relate to the conditions precedent to a-bst» lute and unqualified trlumpli once an enemy has sustained d-stfeat in the Pursuit, which ought, lf pro- perly conducted, to wind up with destroying the retreating foe and playing ducks and dmkes with his First, the retiring enetmy. dls- oonsolate and all the stuffing knocked out of hun, must be giv- c-n no rest. He's got to be driven from pillar to post un-t-ll, 1n sheer a despair. he qulta cold. . Second. when the triumphant “supennen" see the disheartened lads dusting for their base. t-rick ls to make for t-‘hal; base along lfnes parallel to the retreat, get: there first and Just gut-her in the prisoners. will give them a real “Summer? are simply not in the Job iivas to stage these daily t-acles so dear to the Teuton heart, those comforting assurances ()1 im- conquemble the field. They are concerned wlt-h 810M318 Dmmlfc 0f future macht and its ultimate realization of Gemianys Weltanschaung. well turned-out exhibztion base. Were always put. on wltli rate appreciation of the value slwwmamhlp- The)’ looked tre- mendous as they swung out from the Tlergarten, through the stzitelv into the the Linden. It heartened the but-ter- loss Berliner immensely to the Baplng with open mouth scowling "supcrmen." g}? 511911‘ Way to the Ehrenmnl or no E hey run up against soldzcrs who fight, the ICLIITC. And s0. the muct footed Nazi anny, the flaming “German sword," is no more "invincible" than that. The Special Show-Troops And. . In and around Potsdam, Hitler, emulating Old Fritz, used to titani- tain one or 5W0 regiments of well set-up, grim-looking, ycung NCIZZS. 'I'hese fellows were Hitler's “Ex- spe-clally trained and rllled to the minute. Their main apex; strength with their Welt- The performances of these new, Lmops a first of M1185 of the Brandenburg Gate Parlisler Platz and along stand at Lite field-gray swmlplng ferociously columns of Chancellery ln the Wilhelm- "rtiiiu, when uie disorganized It's-iss- mbbie are being scattered all over the pra-u-le one way of shoeing them to the plaoe where you want t-hem to go is to envelope their flanks, get. around behind them and put on a boa constrlcvbor act. This, of course, annoys the retreat.- lng and beaten enemy tremend- ouely Clausewitz ttd not. know any- thing about aerial oomibat. He 11v- ed Loo soon for that. Concelvably. a however, he would have added a of the skies, boirrtblng and machine gunning of fugittlves, 1f he had known. (To Be Continued) r Moderation About France (Winnipeg Free Press) What l5 "nwderatlon." the renders T’! T°r°m0 Sfllllfday Nlilht are ask- lnz themselves ' after reading an rtlcle by the editor itrgini; that the cause of c d‘ - i few more Principles about mastery hel am ‘an ‘mm “cum be 118d lf we would all take into ac- count the [act that there ivas nut. "T91 Eymbfllhv in Quebec for some 0f the clerical elements in the Pet- Now, the point which lt is dcslr- 8111 Shfldmv-Nazl ovcrnmcnt in ed to make 1;, this 1s that 1n the Hanceufln these clicate circum- biiitie of Handlers, Involving the slflnceei he Wrote. "Catwdtatts of British and Nazi armies, all the element-s which Clausewitz pre- scribes as absolute certainties for pxtacxittethtagtrttrgticii origin can con- bv being very guarded in tltclr lan- the national unity bringing about the destruction of “use “hm” the m?“ and unwillin- a retreating enemy were, ln the vernacular, presented to the Nazis on a silver platter. In the fllrstt. place, the Nazis had overwhelming superiority ln num- ber, in tanks, artillery and every- thing else. In the second place. they had crashed rlghit. round the southern flank of the British and had swung up behind them vla Albbe- vllle, Boulog-ne and Oalala. In the third place, thanks to the qulfllnstisan of King Leopold, the northern flank of the British was slmiply ln the air; and the Nazis had txtactlcally an oipen wed t0 Dunilterque. Not. entirely open. There dld happen to be a few Bri- tish soldlems 1n that neighbourhood. And thereby hangs a tale. The Nazls gave the 8E1". no rest (a. la. Clusewltz) and kept. simasfn- lng at them night and day with everything they had. They had overwhelming lorlty 1n the alr. In fact, if Clatisewltz had been reporting the actnon he would have quite before the show was over. with the conviction tlhat the Brl- tish Dcpediitlonary 1y and lrremevably destroyed. And by all the laws of war-if there are any such th1ngis—the B. E1‘. ought to have been destroyed. But it wasnW. It wasn't destroyed for the reason that the British sol- dlers were infinitely better sol- diers than the Nazis. They were braver, more skilful fighters. And they fought. back. ‘Phat was the whole story. They fought. back. And they trimmed the Nazis even when the latter had everv conceivable military element in their favour. The Nazis could not close the gap at Dunkerque, because three bu tallons of the Rifle Brigade held two of the panzar dlvlalons at ADDED- towns are evacuated coast mrlborles are war areas and resttlctfons upon the civilians are painfully un-Brltish. Troops ivimder n Shops have removed Identity. where thev are bound for so that ate nation upon whose neck Herr Edger Ls temporarily able to set his Saturday Night readers. havingi dlxested this suggestion which ap- pjeared on Page 1, then turned over PB-Qe 2 where the journalistic apostle of moderation had publish- ed a sonnet by Sir Charles u. D. Robe 1940.‘; in which the following “mod- erate oplnlons find expression: rts dedicated "To Ftrutice, June UPOII l-IICB . . . not Th9 llnomlny of betrayal, vllely mung From dotanls who would lick the butchering hand, Drwllns of “I-Ionor" while they slit he: throat! If Saturday NllZhVS editor consid- BPE that Sir Charles Roberts has reached the desired degree of motl- eratlon In his comments on Petaln government. we fancy that most Canadian citizens Wlll be able to meet his appeal for mcderutoln without the slightest trouble_ Nameless Countryside the (Brandon sun) It. fa difficult. to those of us who Force was “We” lénow Brltaln to visualize the most. eautlful Isles as a battlefront. Yet and great. ghost towns usually allvc with vacatlonlats at this period and all the countryside is changed. The vast majority of Britons loynlly accept the inconveniences as their part of the vital war efiort now forced upon the nation. They accept anonymity on all hands. Every bown or village 1s nameless and the police stations and post. offices no longer Identify lFhBmBBIVB-‘l- VHBRG churches are a‘so nameless and all road sign-posts rid milestones are obliterated. their local Omnlbuses do not tell IDEAL LOCATION e |mous Britain. This is one phase of ACADIA UNIVERSITY WOLPVILLE. NOVA SCOTIA FOUNDZD INN Graduate course: loading b deqxul of M.A., 148a,, 11)" “d Master in Music. Four-you cannon lndlnq lo dnqrou hold Economics and Music. Special courlol leading to "Honors" and “Advanced Cw". 1 Honors‘ . One-your special course In Education for graduates In Science to qualify for flu Teacher's License of the Province of Nova Scotiu and the doqroo of Bachelor in Education. ‘Plano-yua- ccurn loading to a lloonflato In Music. Three-you course loadinq Io a oorflflcate In Socrllarlal Science, Three-year nous-u In Enqlnoerlnpbzrllllh dlplodma laadlnq go “M! ego an Two-you course leading f0 diploma In Houaehold Economic; your: in Nova Scotla Tochnlca Pro-Medical. Pro-Dental. Pro-Luv only residents can go about anony- the country's preparedness. No stranger coming from the skles wlll find directions for his evll ways. N0 motorist can find lils road except by former usage. Thus any German paracliutist or troops dropped over Brltaln bv carrier airplanes wlll not be tendered direction in their dirty work. While every man who can shoot a ztm Ls in a clvlllan antl- parachute unit, Refugees landing ln Canada must breathe huge sighs of relief to find a land so peaceably at war as this. CANAD.~\—l940 This ls mp fireed by which we stand O r a z Freedom to ivorshlp ‘neath our own roof-tree, Never to cede to l-Yfllfll. 8w" 01' sma , _ One breath of praise, 0r slnge penny fee, Nor never bend, to such, a suppllant. knee. Our fat-hers‘ God! this vow to thee we make. with our lites blood to fend our Llbe t. r y. Yield all we have for King and con- science’ sake And ‘galnst the posters of hell n0 quarter give or take. The boastful Hun, threatenlng width tank and bomb. And that foul liost that seek-s the jackars share. These ne'er shall rive» great Enl- land's hearth and b01116. No sate thelr niaw beside he: streamlets yfalr; _ Since smirohed in mlre ls fiancee .y rare, We face alone a. fleroe embattled Yet nieigr, ‘till Britain's sons shall breathe free i111‘. And till‘! ilhe fiend bauk to hls P" 1B r 11 Q Shall British prow turn home. 0f Brltalnks flail be f" M. W. I-Iambly ln Saturday N181“- Inc.‘ WIFE from: m‘ a m BATTLE DRESS wrruiunusaa. malt-mi AuB- 4 _(CPJ-A spare battle dress which Opl, Sidney Allanion of this York- slilre town carried made it. P055- gile to bring to England his 20- yoar-old French wife. ivhim 11¢ d15- guised as a British soldiler. when they fled in the face of the in- vading Germans. When the Ger- mans swept. over France, Allanson told his wife, a bride of Inst Jész; c a uarv. he had to reac/li the but was ‘got going igltbout laeriufie ML EVANS put. on e a. e ress an - ed her hair beneath a steel hel- 5705156“ MIXTURE mel». We highly recommend 1M! “Sldfl 80$ I (>37 and We 5°‘ reparation fur people suffer- fof." eXip ulned pretty Lucette, who 5pe~ak5 good English. "I had one blanket and a dress with me. We sierpt two nights in the car. One day we were machine-gunned and bomibed. We came among all the poor refugees on the roads. That, kept. her identity a secret until a colonel accidentally touched her whole my: ll‘; cgiidwdcd Lrcopshlp she hand. She explained the LARGE AND CARWIILLY FACULTY o EXCELLENT GYMNASIUM AND SWIMMING For Information Apply Co tho Rights-u. t. n —_- I another principle that Clausewitz nover thought of. It ls this: ""5? rlcd. Ii é strengthens and heautlfles lhl halr. AUGU§T 5. 1940 T“'_~§ In Ash and Science, Ho“, Ark and cGlll Unlveuity, and Pro-Hurling Cour-a“, SELECTED POOL t-hlnfl. the col n I off firth “and ddg riot scgldd 5281-83,‘: ____________ CARDINALS Wm HALIFAX, Aug, 4_(Qp)_Ha flax Cardinal; swept their "m, doubleheader with ‘Pnaros ban‘ ball Bearcats here Saturday ma‘ rung 8-3 and 13-2. ' n‘ _x= wflooooc-o-c-o-wowc-u-q...“ How Are Your Eyes’) ll you are having y t A of utnln-headaehesfsirii: IE g midis-zines; — consul a 5m. S AI your service with ygln of experience and a thorough refracllng service. Call in and dlsclss your du- flcultles. C. ‘F. llutclieson G. I. IIUTCHESON I‘. G. HUTCHESON. o O-O+ObO-O-OO-O-O-O4-O+O $604M I LADIES’ SWIM CAPS Why not visit our store and Inspect our stock of Balhlfll Caps before making your pur- chase. We have n complete stock or Bathing Caps In the very ‘latest shades and ranging in price from 25c to 75c. Q See also our large stock of i r: rsorrgua Sun Glsses priced from I50 to $1.00. MACS HAIR RESTORER A delicately paratlon wh ‘perfumed pre- ch i-cstores, II. wlll restore gray hair to ll-l natural color and produce l rlch and abundant growth 0! hair. Price 60c. Order by Mn_ll T0118!- ng from Stomach Dlslrt§ after eating, heartburn. Al‘!!! and sour stomach. u It In "I6 IIIICSC sioiiiiim ' Mixture that mime can B"! its Evans. Price 85c per bull"- i sun sumo! \ STAMPS f E. T. HIGGS _ x o c0. mo; Calais. There was nothing left of the old 60th ‘I-‘bot (The Royal Amer- leans) when thing; were all over. But. 335.000 of their comrades had made their gateway. which was what the Rifle Brigade sacrificed themselves b0 bout. standstill in spite of losing all their equipment. And fmm the unmortal story of Dunkei-que one eatnsblls quarters rather naturally oblect- ed," and he had to go. Other- wise he might. not have llved to be Prime Minister. Manchester Guardian. FOP COMMOII t root I Make Ends Meet! Buy 10c Per Fig Straight Everywhere ln P. E. Island “ Hickey’: Twist" SOME T 0 B A C AROUND FROM ONE s" IIICKEY 8i Tobacco Co. Ltd” Charlottetown CONT CHASE AROUND IN CIRCLES BUT CUSTOMERS ARE PERFECTLY SAT- ISFIED TO G0 ON USING THE OLD RELIABLE HICKEY’S B L A C K TWIST CHEWING MANUFACTURED BY c o LOVERS SKIP BRAND T0 ANOTHER NICNCLSCN