L... Al-ll-lvk sk-v b-o-wvn r.-1-- “an run-m c-rr ri-rr mgr uh 4H5‘ 1N" I0"- lfl-w- \ ' terprisc. ru~ PAGE FOUR I TIIE BIIAIILIITTETUWII IIIIAIIIIIAII lurulug Dull] (Founded ll IIII) rnnlduuti Llrul, Col. W. Chute: Q. AIILIIO Hvc l'flllIIIhl1\IJ. fl. tfurllvlt, IJJ. ' Becnilnry: Ltoul. Col, l). A. IIGKIIIIOI, 01.0, iiilllur uud lluu ~i g Ulreulur, J. U. uurnotl. IJJ. Lltmrlule Luna trunk “Min, and Linn, Ill l. uni-uni, t.0..\.\.is_ 10a Aotlvo service) HLISSCBIFIIUN BATE u; 514A] l. r, I11. l. Slut! per yvlfi ll-M for I Inf-ll 51,2} for J muuthn; Q00 fur diu month City uuiiir-ry 5.1.00 yer year; 88.00 fur O month ‘L73 10i- A uionrhn; H01: for one month a; nun t» other Pnnllitffll IINI 0.5m. 80.00 iuturduy wet-uni 51's"! uer nun IIMI for rim (u: a month: IQI l moltll, The Cllutlulletlsuu Uuarifinn may In ohtllncd ll lloliullugn Arvin Agency, [linen Squlrl, New Ylzrkr Old South Aunts Afiufll‘), (urns-r Itlilk mm] Wtuhlnflon Bonlnli Alclrupuliiun Amt; Agi-nr-y, I'll» Peel Si. Montreal: J. fill $54 Iiuy at, ‘I'm-truth; hemp Stunif Chute" LIIIIIBII otimvui \\lIIIOI0 wu- Blunt] Summary, Onm llni Tobin-vi; bllnp, blunt-Inn, h. U. "The Strongest Jfcmory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." [LY 24. 1943 f S.\Tl‘ItI).-\\'. , N _ _, . Rev. Dr. Miller's Departure will join with the con- . l iiizcil Church in paying ~ i _. ‘ambit.- niirk performed by the , .\l' ‘ti: diving his nint- years’ pastorate lip Miller's depzirture on Mon- \\ 3101c Hilllllltlllll)‘. Apart from 1 l‘! ‘i- lit; has Iilnyed in church af- ~' (‘UHICYCIILIC and General ‘l '\L't‘ll interest in every mat- . .il iml TT-irztl betterment OI le Zls well as precept he ~j1it,,.¢ which will be not the 1 \\'{'.\" unobtrusive. Hi5 lit.‘,>'_ii;\{f'_ .\llS' Miller, I135 .1 null affection of our citi- '1 ', , , -_ .cv \\".ll find time and con- . it us frcriticntly. and that the . vfl he even richer than the past I11 ‘ ' ‘in service. Nurses’ Training Grant ncrcnsc the grant to the on for the training of Lht year the grant was 1r t is bt-iiig increased t0 $250,- fri lll~i year's recruiting campaign iciiis in schools of nursing l..',i\_‘. Some forty-five scholar- zi value from $265 t0 $500. WW9 iiiori: Straw-i: t" 000. .\s .l rt‘ the i ' nut.» liltlall lll‘ l ziwfirrleu‘ to wfcl candidates. eighteen for post-qt‘ t- ui ' in nursing and twenbv-onein pniip; ,\,~ lloiiltli Minister Mackenzie QXIwIjff/Ji in ' Llifi of Commons last week, the net l i . liinte nurses is greater than tilcrc/l <l(‘.~ll'r'll1lC to increase zidinn Nurses’ Association istrzition, to increase the inint of stiidt-nt nurses, and - “NWT; awistance to schools of ‘i.- for iiicrerisctl registration. It i-c time iiumbci" of students in g schools as soon as money .<tl f- i" incrciiscil training facilities. nrgliiris. Last year's grant lzrilf the eligible and desirable many i can he pin-t. 340.000 for . 1* took care of applicants. Sgnpms for di as-istnncc to schools 0f nursing in uniici cs and public healtliprgait- izations in Orrlcr to extend tlicir facilities for givintv nnsvprygrlllflic SUCCiflliSt training. Present 3‘ A ' ‘ . - . . facilities are tzixcd to C1.'»l“Clll' “I'd dlrcct 31d Wm pmvidc i“ 5,,,;,-,.;,_.¢,1 Qiirptlt of trained special- isis. _ Quc-tioiicd with regard to (‘lClZHl51 Ho" Ml’- blackenwic said the moneys are distributed b)’ the Xiii r.’ s’ .\.<FiiClZ\llCll= and hospital associations with the approval of the director of public health §pr\'ic(i\ llyiflfilPClll of l'cn<ions and Natwiifll - -' i‘ " _ , _ . Ilcriltlr 'l'h iiiprirp:'intioii 1S for the Irflllllflg “I CZ nurses for fill piirliii-Qg, boil! military and C1\‘ll- inn. m. y.» ‘m. f,,.i_.,i'sc-:l hy spokesmen of till 7 _'1i- llillnlf. The Alaska Highway ‘Will irithc opening of the ‘ll l).t\\>0ll Creek, BC“ t0 lit lilihiioiitiiii Bulletin has - tvizil >Ull\l'llll' nunihcr, con- _ i- ~ . .1 ziiiiclcs describing the ll iliscu-"siiig the national mince of this vittil artcry \\i--i." Iill‘ liiqli\v.'i_v' is des- -. iii :h<~ llulli-tm. to become "gliiluil aii'\\';i_\"', ziiitl there 1n liiC suggestion that, given . i ' ci-iiiii-iuiiioii and good . it v i' -. .1 ' ~rt cut‘ hctwccn this C0l"l"‘i<ZlY .'.llil \-'i I'\l'(‘l'l geologists will in- -'~ ii-iiiirccs. and the high- it" l'l.'tlli(‘tl in this regard. ‘l "it in: 1,, (m. ,i. i; rim, ridv.'iiitzig<*s have accrued to llil‘ l1 tar‘ \ ~ii - rouir- 'l'hc_v are summed up inip;t-<\i1i u "Cu n14 -\.‘l'_'l‘ >'(‘lll by the .\Iay0r oi lidiiii-ii: .\|r, _l1»Ilil \\'. Fry, to his “next- (hmy n: l1hii""" lll I‘_.'lil'li.'llll\'~, .\l»'lSl\'flZ “An acr[blylil:l(' W.- 114i r vzm i"Il\‘(’ litliiioiitoifs mod- ern :iir,ior'. Tl‘. ihi- uz-irniiig Jlllfl be iii Fairbanks in rim; (o; lt‘l i-_- Ummtr. liver lllt‘ grout iic\v liiglinni). riei-iiii n l \"llli sticli :im;izing speed bv llic l'iut--~l S‘ izt F \|lll\' l-lnginccrs, the jour- nZ-y iiVvllilllfl iroin ltlllllllllllll tn Fairbanks, that Once tun}; 1\\\i inn rziii h: mtiilc in a few days. ... . . .'lil~_ti pi rm’ iii l".'-irli.'iiil<~'. Ililtl lht: pCOPlQ of lidiiioiitiiii are lllil only good neighbours, but are now ntnr nciqlilioiirs for :ill time." 'l“he liiglitviiy is essentially an American en- itl through to-complction to serve 1hr- plTrnlllQ vxigrnfic. oi llie war with japan. \\"l‘i(‘l‘l Ilflslllllltfi (‘tilflg it is Io be, in the words m’ Prime .\lllll~'ltf' King in ilit- lloiise 0f Com- mons, "iii :ill respects :in imvgrzil pzirt of the Can- adian liiglinwrv \_\-|r'iIi. suliji-ct to the under- standing lll-‘ll tlicrt: shall iii no time be imposed any discrimiuziiiiig; oindiiiiiiis iii relation to the use of the road as bctwccn Canadian and United {i} States and civilian traffic." A: for the oil pipe- line, from Fort Norman to Whitehorse, which is also an American undertaking, the United States’ Government retains ownership until after the war, when the Canadian Government will be given the option to purchasc- The title to the land through which the pipe line runs belong: to the Canadian people. .- EDITORIAL NOTES - At the outbreak of war, Britain had 25,000 tractors for agricultural work; today there are 125,000 in use. a a u n- Vcgetable production in Britain has been rais- ed from the pre-ivar figure of 2,500,000 tons t0 4,000,000 tons. I I U I Too much rain, too little sun with the result the fruits of the earth will have more water than vitamins in their composition. _ a a 1- u There are approximately 1,400 members of the Women's Timber Corps in Scotland. They are felling, cross-cutting. working at sawmills and driving tractors and lorries. D I l I More than 1,300 acres of Romney (East Sus- sex) marshland-most of which has not been tinder the plough since the Napoleonic Wars- are today producing tons of grain, potatoes and sugar beet. U U I U Simon Bolivar, South American patriot, known as “The Liberator,” born this date I783; ivas a Venezuelan, his birthplace being Caracas, the capital of that republic; he liberated Coloin- bia, Ecuador and Peru, the last-named declaring him president for life in i826; he died in I830; has been described as “g Washington who had spent his energies and his wealth to secure the liberties of his countrymem" i i l ‘i Bureaucracy naved the way for autocracy and regimentation. Mr. R. Asheton, Financial Sec- rctary to the U.K. Treasury, said recently in London that "unless we are very careful, the state may take too much upon itself, and give the impression that it is able to plan much more than is possible. There will be a great risk that some of the state plans will throttle enterprise" He pointed out that we did not want to win a victory over state despotism, and find that we were mov- ing towards the "servile state." He said that per- manent employment could easily be obtained in the servile state-but could scarcely picture Brit- ain permanently having a system under which the state would tell every man and woman where they should work. A few more remarks of this kind, from our leading civil servants at Ottawa, in place of some 0f the things which they have been saying, will do us good here. l! i i i Elected to reply on behalf of Australia—and a public vote would probably endorse the selec- tion overwhelmingly-is L. \V. Brockington, K.C., British-born Canadian who recently went at the behest of the B.B.C. to cast an experi- enced eye over the ground and to tell of what he saw. Here is part of what he said, according to the Australian Newsletter: "I spent a. day at a. naval depot, where in surroundings at once peaceful and warlike, at once beautiful and grim, there is centred in one place as I believe no- where else in the world every branch of naval training and activity. I saw boys from the deep countryside in their earliest ’teens, whose hearts and minds had been turned, by some ancestral impulse, to our navics, that will yet set a ring of impregnable steel around the islands of Ia- pan. Some of those boys were the little sons of famous Australian captains who went down with their brave ships in far away seas. I was allowed to hear stories from the lips of many seamen, gunners and stokers, who had been in Crete, in Greece, at Tobruk, at Dakar, at Mata- pan, at the sinking of the Bismarck, in the Coral Sea, at Guadalcanal, in Norway, in Java, with the Prince of Wales and Repulse, at New Guinea, at Malta, men of the Canberra, the Sydney and that little sister ship of Sir Richard Grenville’s Revenge, His Majesty's Australian sloop Yarra, and dozens of other vessels, great and small, that have been freighted with our hopes and our honor. Did vou notice the length and variety of that list? I venture to say that in no country in the world, with the possible exception of Britain herself, could you find men who have fought for freedom in so many places. It open- ed my Canaclian eyes in wonder and admiration." Mr. Kings explanation of post-War interna- tional relations should not be taken too seriously, says The Letter Review. It docs not represent a policy worked out by the United Nations, nor ci policy discussed and accepted by the Cabinet at Ottawa. It i: merely a. nice description of the as- pirations of the bright young pinkos. “Function- al Control" merely means that the Civil Service at the various capitals will be able to run what- ever part of the national policy they like-by making an international agreement covering it, and not be bothered with silly interference from Parliamcnts- For example, wheat problems will be settled by international Wheat Conferences, of civil servants. If Parliament did not like it, Parliament could lump it. The speech itself was written by one of the bright young men in the P. l\I.'s office. The real danger is that we shall awaken some mowing, and find that plans for this extinction of our Parliamentary system have taken the form of signed agreements. Mr. Cold- well will like this plan- If Mr. Bracken is really desirous of becoming Prime Minister, he should expose this business in plain language, and point out that he is in favour of continued Parliament- ary Government in Canada. In any event, the whole thing is rather ridiculous, since neither the UK. Parliament nor the U.S. Congress is go- iiig to let their bright boys get away with any- thing of this sort. Mr. Churchill himself has said plainly that post-War policies will be fixed by post-War Parliaments. The worst that can happen to iis is that the next Government will have to . ifE_ CHAR[.'_QI‘TI~I_’[Q\_YN_GU_ARDlAN llotos By Th0 Way _.__ Wherever the German Luftwaffe mny be now it probably started 30in: there after it had failed t0 knock out Britain In 1940. -Kansas City Star. Whit happened In Argentlm was hardly a revolution. The government merely turned over and continued neutral on the other aide. -T0r0nt,o TeIQZPRIn. Sh?! of the week: A Llnouln County landscape gardener took a contract for some work at a local W81‘ blunt. and he brought into the fill-Y s. 88118 of Japs. When the dis- oovlery was imade, didn't. those Jana 1b a Guadalcanal in jig time. And the all’. too. was rather sulphur- oua u they were chased away. _. St. Catharlnes Standard. Wu hear much about "new IHOMYN’ There ls "new money." plenty of it. But who is getting it? The farmers are getting some, Defence workers are getting some. The middle class 1s not getting any. Without getting any of the money, the middle class has to pay the same taxes and make the same iaflrmflii H5 the classes that tire 8314MB the new money. When Wakes and prices increase. the initi- afe class ls riot helped; it i5 mm; I new burden 1.: laid upon lt. - Chicfl80 News Be fair to your Service man. Don't ask him questions. Don't press him for information about. what he knows. about what he learns. about what. he guesses. A senior officer. bvvini: new equipment. mentioned 1t with his sailing date, n; a iady friend. He is in prison. Another officer. writing w iis Wife. described his arirval at a Brtish pOrI; in a convoy of Americans and R. A. F, He was dsmlssed the Service. An R. A. F. alrcrziftman has been fined I50 at Boumemouth for care- liesspalk. -—$LIII(IHV Chronicle (Lon on . Nutritionists have ..wamed .111; public about ‘hidden hunger." This may arise from the lack of balance In I119 dlfil? and It mpay Occur even where there is a sufficient quantity p‘! food. The majoritypf pegplm Owever. suffer from hluden hunger Will-W they lack both the quantity and kinds of food required for the pic ntenance of health and effic- BHOY- Authoritative reports have re- vealed that one-fifth of all North American families have not money griouzh w buy the foods they need, m! Person in every three is in g, borderline state of health. and over one-fifth show clear signs of serious under-feeding, -Toronto Star, Parachutes foi- pigeon, 1,, the h,” a" l" U» 3» Armv equlDment. To m sure. they are designed for fea. cred messengers serving with the vflratrwps. But Just the same this has n11 the earmarks of a dang- igllllfi Dfwedent. Next thing you Oupgy). ducks will be agitating for "d "WWW Plkeons who have floated lazily earthward suspended 1mm a nlce- ¢°ZY Darabhutc will probably refuse w lift a wing‘ from ‘flan N° Flollbt. the least: they 86 e for will be a 50-mile~an. hour tall wind. In fact. there's no telling what sort 0f tiigh-non-flying ‘mums they may get: once they've pulled the rip cord. -From Christ- ian Science Monitor. . Colonel - G 1 1 1m. prize of ILZgBQUnKSE n Tllfliiifl. is not happy in captiv. if!" he British paper reveals that e as an anxiety neurosis‘ from ggnogirggndovfir the defeat of his me c- 8s been placed under "e of i1 psychiatrist. Hi5 s11- glrgnt finds expression in delusions. 0H5 other things. It ls only 11ft- ggflffllx; pgmalls- that, Nazi generals. R ceDlv sensitive souls, Shflitld fret at frustration. The world how- ever‘ m“ be dl-‘Posf-‘d t0 “more the 9118M 0f the smaller fry. The men. Iitllra IZ¥THIIOXIS OI the guprgme p n9 C. Hitler, once he has been billed. Offer more premise to =01. ence. and more satisfaction to f}, common man. -W1ndsor Star, e WIIIIIGIIC making any all-incl“ ignite; Unrieda-stonable complaint. it duct o: g t hat the average Dm- or m n iirio s:lioo1s_ primal-y l ondary —-in this dav and age l5 n“ dlsfiiflilulshed for his or her ability tn either writing or 5pQ1]ip_é_ Educatfonists seem to linve fallen ‘iilstctiiuitlemieriirn or sumosi-“g ‘hm- wngue- h 18 8 is a punli s mother as a m“: mllfit be proficient ln it - 1'1" of course. The misuse I'° which ‘he lflfltllllitle is commoi '1 subiectpd dispels the notion Fl v Engllsh WmDOsItlon, at least their ls no satisfactory substitute for rm‘; xgltrtgzl lesson and the written u. on The schools would (10 We" to nay more attention to 'he subject -_Brantford Expositor, --____ _ The lezemi of "the m", gig?!" P991316" IS. of course, rum. cal. Without the ambition will Zbmflfgpc?" 0! the izrerit majority rman and Italian neg-pm neither Hitler and the Nizfs ~ Mussolini and the Fnscisfs “ionili gilléevllilglne very r.“- The Clem‘ aunt! mlmz evidence ls tint n1“. tyrants and their henchmen wEPE endorsed nd b ' . countrymgn frgizicetinillugiilgirciiigg: {lilies to the lowest in the rnnks of % crowc , . . In this as in an iiielerrogiisiiiidthe Deon“ ms“ ‘"‘ the embodim fits. The latter beam‘. I 5m en of the desires and m 011s of their followers “Q: whit followed so ardently when ma}? fig misfit fillitression was succeed. Sf-B-nd at the bar of ln‘er- l 83a nst civilized human. W. -—Brimt.ford Expositor. good between the alr-rald flutter. g’, m‘; 31g “$801M night-time rind oh merits of cacophony that d imite the mellow New England a Oevhere these days we find our I “m5 0911mm: on next winhr‘; ° 1 “ml “"- It 1s WYhBDs that. 5m Bit. bgn the hottest days of the . most concerned with the Brine be tte 1 ' nfllct ofnvllawsr blirbléii I i é e s s 2 2 ii I BIIY. 1H5 all very perplexing. A]. moat as much so as whether we Should net up. don our helmet; “m tweet, our little whistles at. that first. blast of the siren. or whether we should watt for the flutter-izubbeta repudiate any undertakings that Mr. King may Innke for his beautiful plan of "functional con- trol.’ ~ - - r ~ k [if I r (We like that word) or just. turn over and no back to sleep _.Im¢1_ no, fer into the night, _ch;-miln School Monitor (Boston). _ PUBLIC FORUM POST-WAR TRADE Slr.— ‘This rural made: was cult: pleased with an Item 1n the Gunm- iim's editorial columns recently. dealing with Jack Canuck‘: post- war position "On World ‘fiade Lanes". credited to Exchange, and including the following paragraph: "Unless all good intentions fail. peacetime trade of the past will ahead. Favorable trade balances and relative volumes will count for less than capttcftv to raise the world's purchasing power and living standards. The trade channels on which goods flow outward from this country should multiply, with cor- responding return cargoes. . . ." In my opinion, the above f: l timely and sfgnlflcant- statement. because I presume that we mean what we say with regard to the "Four Freedoms"—and, materially speaking. especially "freedom from want and fear"? The reference to "corresponding return cargoes" would certainly do barriers. generally described as the "protective tariff". around the na- tions of the world? At the same time One must be mallstlc in the matter, and herein lies the slznlf- fcance and need for elevating the "iivlniz standardf-because It. manifestly unfair and unreasonable to permit. the products of peons. peasants or neat-slaves to scuttle isfiv. North American standard; of E I would like to see the nations decide to make a start on the ob- jective of a well-fed world by de- cliirlniz wheat an lntiematlonal raw material, iuzalnst which barriers would not be raised anywhere around the world's ports. 1111s would be merely a beginning. but a very important beginning of that "New Order" about which the people talk, these days. As a. noted Brltlsh banker (Sir R, Noton Barclay) put the matter: "In recent years, primary products have actually been destroyed 1n large quantities. . 4n an endeavour to equate supply tio demand. I think we are beginning to realise that this problem should be approached from the opposite angle. . .'I‘he aim should be to foster demand rather than to restrict supply." I am. Slr, etc "EJLB." N0 Laurels Woni (Globe and Mall) Last week in the House of 00m- mons Mr. Brooke Claxton, Parlia- mentary Assistant bo the Prime Minister, laid claim, in the name of the Wartime Information Board. to credit for the swift distribution of news about. the Sicilian invas- ion. This and other daily newspa - ers were able m show that. . Claxtons claims were without foundation. On Friday he returned to the subject with a revised ver- sion. He conceded that W. I. B. had nothing to do with the distribution of news from slclly, arguing that it. was in the distribution and $19M;- ment of the early announcement of the invasion, and of the Prime Minister's statement on Canadian participation, that. the press was indebted to W. 1- B. Unhappily Mr. Claxtonb revised claim is no more correct thin the original. We have no doubt, that last week-end the W. I. B. 0111011115 were as busy as bees upon a honey- suckle tree. We are reluctant to strip them of the laurels with which the Parliamentary Assistant fortunately the cold record of what actually occurred does not sustain his claims on their behalf. The Ottawa correspondent of The Globe and Mall, through the courtesy of The Canadian "e88. saw the first message on the 1n- viision as it. came over the C. P. printer-as mere flash bringing I. report of the Algiers radio that A1- lied forces had made c funding In Sicily. This news was taken by our correspondent and a C. P» 1Q res- eiitntlve to the office ofithe ime Minister, and both they and an- other Ottawa correspondent 8111-101- pated W I B. in communicating the tidings. Before the had left the Prune Minister's o flce there arrived a second news report, lntl- mnilng that the Canadian troops were participating. Thereupon Mr. King's statement was released to the correspondents. his statement was des atched ivithout delay bv wire to he As- sociated Press office In New YOTIK. from which it was relayed to the member newspapers in the United States. This evidence shows clearly that the established news organiza- tions. and not. the Wartime In- formation Board, were the QBEIICIBS through which the first. news of the invasion rind the Prime Minister's statement were disseminated nroiid. Mr. Claxton indulged in myster- ious hints that only the danger cf impairing the usefulness of W. I. B. prevented him from unfolding the WIIOIG glorious tale of how the board had worked. We cannot 1m- aglne what there is to the "Xllll story“ which has to be hidden. un- less. of course, it. Is some form of trickery which would outlaw the agency in newspaper offices. In Ln- dulizlnil 1n this sort of claptrap, a common resort of politicians who have to Justtfv an unsound case, Mr. Claxton brings suspicion. not. credit, to W. I. B. Our belief is that had Mr. Claxton imd all the W. I. B. officials been living In Greenland. or playing tennis at. the C untry Club through Thursday, iclay and Saturday. the public of t Is continent would have received n more and no less Information a ut the Sicilian Invasion than w actually distributed to them. M031 Ado About Nothing l (Globe and Mall) Our Prime Minister is terribly up- t and annoyed because the mill- ary authorities overseas would ave restrained hlm until Satur- ay evening from announcing that anadian troops were participating n the invasion of Sicily. By the ime that. he revealed his acute dis- leasure to the House of Common: on Thursday, he had worked hfm- self lnto a utatc of virtuous fndll- nntlon over the au posed alight up- on Canada. The " oronto Btu np- provtngly descrfbet: him u "some- what. nettled." and u having spok- en "heatcdly." Seemingly no tale of Nazi atrocities or Japanese crud- tlon ever stirred htm to greater de ths of wrathful emotion. y his account his annoyance developed first on July l, when In- not set the pattern for the days 1 no particular good w the greedy 1° insists on crowning them. But un- ' Front Line Generals Action at fut for Canada's in- vasion army field; seven Calm-Ill“ ggngfgl; 1n cOIIIIIIEDd O‘ W10 corp‘! and five divisions. The Dlvliwnl Commanders include MAI-GEN. 8mm. By DOUG- HOW Canadian Press Staff W11"? ‘rho typical Canadian field sen- oral i; young and effective and he has n. solid career 0t Pmlefismnll lm. In none of these essentials does Mal-Ge!» Ramsay sterling Stein “The unknown of the 1st Cimnd- Ian Army's three armored cor generals is the little. 46-year-0 d engineer from Quebec City who took over ln Britain the division left. by Lt-Oen. E. W. smsom when he became a corps commimder- HQ broke In with the army as a snP- per In 1914 and he has been WW- ing pp steadily ever since. F0 two months Gen. Stein was attached as an observer to the British dfvlsfon that made history by leading the 1st Army Into Biz- erta In Northern Africa. And 50ml! studied under the famous Lt» . Gfffani Martel. great. eXDOnent. of tank warfare. From those experiences .t.be Bell" oral is 1n a position to give an ex- pert opinion of the Canadians u they are shaping up In Brltflln- H6 Ls h h d bt they will says e as no ou "acquit themselves as well in as they have 1n the infantry. be- “Mild big guns, 1n planes and in p“. Gen. Stein's forte f: a conscience which makes him labor for success and a Dilsonallty which makes subordinates ulck to labor with him. Hts bus essllke mimner 1s exem lifted 1n the am 0f his mee with a tan durlxig a scheme. He barked, "Where an you go t" The tank commander re- pll z "I'm taking this road be- cause It's easier going." "Easier going. Hell." can-m back the genera. "It's a quarter of a mile farther. Save petrol." m i-"msr GREAT wan . Born 1n Vancouver, 1897 of Low- land Scottish ancestry, Gen. Stein has a. wife and son, William, , living In Quebec City. He was - mlssloned as an engineer officer 1n £3131‘ following his graduation from . . C. He fought in Fiance and 5e18- fum in the First Great War. Pro- moted ca taln tn 1921, Gen. Stein studied a England's school of mill- L813’ engineer g In 1921 and 1922 an IBILEI‘ Instructed at, the Royal Military Academy for two ears. He was confirmed as a, leuten- ant-colonel at. the outbreak of war and commanded the 811811169X‘ training school until proceeding to Brifiin for a. round of tasks at C Gen. Stein moved to the field as Assistant Adjutant and Quarter- Master-General of the division he now comm-ands. A promotion to Brigadier put him over an armored brigade and his last post before be- coming a general was its B1‘! Edi" 0f Lt-Gen. A. G. L. McNBUB WW5 staff at Army Head uarters. He has been a. tvlsional com- mander since January 1943. formed that the British military authorities, for reasons of security. wanted no mention of the presence of Canadians In the Allied army of invasion and he saw from a copy of Gen. Eisenhower's reclama- tlonto the French peop e that. it spoke of the attack of “Anglo- Amerlcan forces" upon Sicily, mak- ing no reference to Canadians. Thereupon Mr. King got busy over the cable with protests against this omission. When he failed to ellclt any satisfactory response from fondan. he appealed successfully to President Roosevelt- The result was that. Gen. Eisenhower referred In his proclamation to “Anglo-Ameri- cim-Canadlan forces," although in his first communique about the on- erattons he used the words "the Al- lied forces of Britain and the Unit.- ed States." But London remained unmoved by further pleas from Mr. King that he should not be debar- red from announcing the participa- tlon of Canadians. Boiled down to its essentials, the gist of Mr. King's complaint Is that. Canadian troops were being classl- fled as British troops. They are n. unit. of the British 8th Anny, and ft was only natural that an Ameri- can Commnnder-fn-Chlef should lump its units together as British troops. There has never been reas- on to suspect that the British mill- tary authorities want to conceal the participation of Canadians or preven them getting full credit for their exploits, They have welcomed the presence of Canadian war cor- respondents, who nre given every facility for sending stories from the battlefront to Canadian papers. Col. Balaton sym athlzed with his lead- er's fndlgnat on. But. In declining to name the Canadian commander he refused to assume that “people am Just being fussy" or trying to make things dffflcu t, thfnklng theta must have been some good reason for the British veto- The whole business seems to us I case of much ado about; nothln . The solidarity of the democratic a - fiance for the cause of freedom will survive this trivial tempest at 0t.- tuwa. But. wfthal. It. ls exceedingly lamentable that the Prime Minister of Canada should seize upon such a minor episode as an excuse for a. thinly veiled crttlcsm of the British Government. and pointedly thank the American authorities for their greater consideration for his wish- es. Nor was there any excuse for his innuendo that. some people did not regard the services of the Cn- nadfan forces as on a par with those of the British and American forces. No such Idea. ls harbored Either In Britain or the United a a. If there was any slight upon Can- ada. Mr. King had better rend his heart. and not. his garments. His persistent olfcy of "no commit- ments" be ore the war. his refusal to remove obstacles to a full nation- al war effort since the conflict be- gan. 1nd his o position to the cre- ation of mach ery foi- co-ordlnat- lng the olfcles of the British Com- monwea th have nil combined to weaken the Influence of Canada in the councils of the United Nations. There Is a good deal of truth in the observation that under his minis- tration: Canada has become "the lettuce leaf in the Anglo-American sandwich." If he had allowed Can- ada to be put upon a complete par- ity with Brltaln and the United Staten In regard to her national war effort. he would have been on happier ground for his protest of Thursday. __,4... JULY 24, 1943} PERIL 0n the sea, on land, perll of fire, lightning falling aircraft, of automobiles, of accident, of sickness, or war. In our modern life we are surrounded by pgr, :' ils, and that is why we employ the system of in, -~ surance to protect lis financially. I We are in a position to provide a complet, Insurance service, and welcome your inquiries for advice and information. No obligation, IIYNIIMAII & 00. LIMITED Insurance Since 1812 Offices: Charlottetown Summerside MOItIagug g Notice Re Fountains and Lawn Sprinklers l.- Efriiiri- Persons operating fountains or automatic lawn sprinklers are warned that these services must be metered. Customers are also warned that hand hose must not be kept running unattended. COMMISSIONERS OF SEWERS AND t". WATER SUPPLY PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND — NOVA SCOTIA FERRY SERVICE VIA WOOD ISLANDS, P. E. I. — CARIBOU, N. S. M. V. “PRINCE NOVA” “The Connecting Link Between These Provinces”- (DAILY-SUNDAYS INCLUDED) Starting July 1st the Nova. Scotlis-Prlnca Edward Island Ferry Service will operate three round trips per day. Will Leave Wood Islands Will Leave Caribou 1.00 mm. 9.00 mm. 11.00 mm- and 3.00 p.111. 1-00 v-m- Ind 5-00 im- LUNCHES SERVED NURTHUMBERLAND FERRIES, LIMITED CIIARLOTTETOWN. P. |i:. l. l The BBC has started broadcas- tlnig English lessons to Europe in preparation for the invasion, and m prepare Europeans for oo-opera- tlon in the period of reconstruct- n. 10rd Croft, Undersecretary for War, warned the British Home Guard any Gennim attack on Britain would be airborne and the country would be relying almost entirely on the Home Guard for defence. Professional Cards , “COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVIC " W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Phone 540-541 i W McLeod é? Beiitley W, E. BENTLEY. K. C- J. A. BENTLEY. K. C. Barrister: 1nd Attomeys-al- LII MONEY T0 LOAN 154 Prince Street Harrell-rid Company ll. F. ARGIIIBALII Chlmred ' Eastern Trust Bulldlnl Charlottetown . BELL 8i MATHIESON MONEY T0 LOAN Clmeron Brock Charlottetown P If. Inland EVANS STOMACII MIXTURE evrscxiimiiisu AND GLASSES FITTED J. S. TAYLOR OPTOMETRIST N01! Location Corner Kent and Queen Sh. 0 polite Rlx’: Grucerv Evan n50 hv A nolntmenll Phone tmi ence ioi: A very effective mfflllfldlg! obtaining relief from r _ orders 0f the dltlesll" 0g, ans. which are attendtzgum pa. headache. h?" “m; naln and a. sense 0f D"*>m_ below the heart. F"; r mended for Indigestion, Ya“ pepsin, Sour Stomach End stomach u " - Price 85o n" "m" MACS ANALGESIC LINIMENT 1 -lmcnt "I fhzndreaNeuralflc glued R eurnn c Pains, sprains. Bruises. "its: aches and Inflammatory LLB. dltlnns. M. ALBAN FARMERI n. A.. A cEI-IIIiiTIITiIIIISSLéIfLT-Illzfiiigi. '_______M°NIY ,T0 _lfO7AN JET W.‘ 011T? iFE-‘(Tv IABRISTER. SOLICITOII. ITO- Offloe: 90 Oren Georle Strut Money to Lon: Qollgggtom n. r. McPheelB.A., K.C. NOTAR Y 8w. BABRISTEIL SOLICITOR- Illlty Building Chlrloltetowll PALMER & HASLAM A. J. IIASLAM. B. A. LL. I. BAIIRISTER. ETC. Bank or Nova Scotln Chambers Charlottetown. P. II. I Price 50c n Mm“- MACS BLOOD FOOD For ale rind thin vtolm Elpeclnly valuable l" treatment of those (Hafiz: where their orlirlfl I5 d m". able t0 an irn overlsht-on’ u, dlllon n!‘ ti? rang-l" h, me llfnfiilii" of Rheumatism- Price 50¢- TIIE TWO Mics t ll 0am Glvon Prim" M‘ I Attention. MONEY. T0 LOAN ll I. 0. B0! ll