PAGE FOUR OCTOBER}, 1941 Great War. American industry has now on hand or in prospect several times the value of TIIE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN IIUTES BY ‘IIIE WAY 0+0- WORI) Germany's Losses OF ——' orders which it received in the Great War- , 1 (‘mum’) . . . . Poll mill d tern t |C0il1P3Ill€S like Bethlehem Steel, United States Automatic ‘hm! whm’! fin‘ l slgnvdioltil Gerelgged hergvigeudr flglurgs ilJilF ' ' ' .. —-i on rinan'man werosiw " ‘ ' ' 3.03.2.2".:°:"i..i§..:";:;:;:"‘“ “Milli; at; ~ ~ t. ‘ii?t‘°l"fi.'°‘gg°‘é“‘“ii President: Lleut. CoL W. Chester 8. McLure . . 5 ‘vol: 1 O Ur ers o.“ a= ' a a n _ FOB A PEOPLE AT WAR Dem r ' e mun r we, President, _|_ m gume“, p__|_l_ their books. Yet no one is rushing to buy their gfedegretraigfefilelggeegs thfi alga: u his k a——,l w" m. ieifieefédif: lgmgfmg, muumot: Secretary: Lleut. Col. D. A. MacKlnnnn, 0.8.0. securities in the market place. The reason is ev- Britain's Mlnistry of Home Secur- we?“ me men“? owed‘; m, wounded at , The e were 400 their ity invited the Institution of Else-- r W53 6pm; women-of-caxfmj‘ German tanks and air s Bdilnr and Managing Director’ alrfi; Bnrnettr—<F5=l:~-=~ —— —— — ~~— 1 ~~———~, — . Assam-ate Editors: Frank Walker and Ian A. Burnett . giizgéeyhizeersehalg‘Zgfiigzxeeiveggsatiilurifioi" (lop SUBSCRIPTION RATES lars rtinning into two figures there is now some By Mail in P.E.I., $4.00 per year; $2.50 m- s moauudotibt whether they \vill do better than in the 51-35 I“ 3 “‘°“““9 50° f" “M "mm" late thirties. The explanation is—taxatioii. When m“ D'~"""'Y 5&0???’ igeezznsfello I" 6 “Mm industry is called upon to pay for (lefcnse on ' or (the scale now contemplatctl it becomes evident By Mull in Canada and 0.5.5. $5.00 per year _ . , Sammie. ‘vuckjy: 52.00 per year; 31,00 m. 5 mom“ that there is no profit m ivar-tiot even for the destroyed in the same period. This was having clear y developed iéleto a contest of endurance, the §§$§§ho§§°°§§m “,‘,‘,;“,,,',“’°§§Z pulrélllfafiiiléofisaflllir‘ afifitlifiuli-Zififiil threatened with destruction, cigglgllbcgntribugigg bgeelellcwfy. — ll and we must not fall. — J. T. “gum u gnehw $1?“ "elf" Thorson, Minister of National entersmfi; ehfilell mg} i“ Egeeiiilllluefii war Services‘ making due al owaricc for the‘ Ncaseevcooeeooa-wo-eo-o» wounded who have recovered sui.‘ floiently to resume active service, it W ti htlng not only tut: ouf‘ iiiiiav ogi life but for the right of improving our way t-rical Eng neers to ccnslder the problem. They chose a committee to g0 into it and the result is a re- port on devices, one cf which de- tects incendiary bombs by operat- ing electrical circuits ruptured by impact». This device has a closed electrical circuit with a special "detector conductor" as one oi its parts, Should a fire bomb get into the building it breaks this cm- The 50o for 3 months Tllu (‘imrlottctuuu Guardian may be obtained n! HutuliiigH-t .\o\\.1 Agency, T-uiel Square, Now Yurlai Old Sontli Anus Agvnvy; Corner Milk iantl “Washington, liunlun; Ait-lrullulllull 5on1 Agency, I248 Peel BI... lluliirt~xli' J. line. ‘.451 llily Sh, Toronto; NQWI Hlltlltl, Clmieun taurlvl", uitimu; Wolfe's News Bland. Sudbury. Ont; Illlll ‘robin-to shop, llunflun N. 8.; Ellen Robertson Artiln-rsi, .\ b‘. Tllflnéfrollf/(‘Sl illemory is Weaker than the “war babies." - EDITORIAL NOTES — John Lyon, founder of England's second most noteworthy school, Harrow, died this date I592. ,A wealthy merchant, he conceived the idea of institution on ductor and sets of: a bell. advantage of the idea is that the alarm rings at the very second that the bomb hits the building and therefore before it has had time to slatt a fire. Other method< are also described, such as the use of light delecUng photo cells to oper- ate the shim by the effect of the bidsiht llzrht from the bomb. These systems have been standardised and specifications issued bv the British Ti§lEiiiYfIT§imF5 (Hamilton Ebectator) There is a glamour about the iname Crimea for pgiple of British blood, because of t famous cum- paign against the Russians in the eighteen-fifties. T ers are anxiously watching the pro- rations in the ninsuta- ress of o e defeat. oday British read- G is probably that the Polish cam. paigu weakened (lemony?) man ppLwer by approximately ,000 ln It bein the Nazi polic to conceal and min iae German osses, there are no close records obtainable as to those losses in the Low Countries. Norway, France, Yugoslavia and reece. but conservative statisticians lace the total in these fllds at nut ess than 800,000. War corres nd- ents on the Eastern front est mate “ . . handy to have when providing a second educational 'tlie lines of Eton, and so built and endowed the now famous school in Middlescx at which many of England's greatest men, including Winston Churchill, have been educated. l‘ l l‘ I we want to retire . . ." u for the triumph of Russian arms in the desperate struggle Billlnafi 1H- Beautlful hand-made lace from vadlug Nazi hordes. The familiar tllile cottage; 01f tEntglangs country lrelarpieshpltliech ilestlfhre so rominently v as eaes fasionamon e s filo eearerwanare Amegrican wrmen. In the g coming into the current news-the e t of $000,000 in land fl htlng Devcnshire village of Beer, where Isthmus of Perekop, Kerch, the Bea fllvhe- This L! Rpilroximflley 0m lace-making has been carried on of Awv- The time or year. too cor- thiietkileof the ccten i=1 flghtlns 10M Weakest Ink... standards Institution. {hoping th s time, not for H Germany's losses in the Russia‘; l-‘KIlL-Ut’, OCTOBER Ii. I941. campaign at about 2.000.000 date. I is therefore probably no over statement that Germany's man popper has been weakened to the ex- Mrs. Younger: “We're really asked to do very little when we're asked to lend our money, don't you think?" S! :1 ~< Enthusiastic Meeting w. i.- t.» on»... i» C°"""°“°'* °°"“-'- Bmdm» '" ‘he “Y t" .400 Ovens ‘we ‘h’7fir?pfffsttlfit.“‘li‘tliéé‘_lté°lkéiit.fiiii zi.......rlal-..ir.i"sro.tst'armai Ill-Haw "In-lite - - -==i>=d-\v~1==nw= wide the other day attending a mcetinv of the Pro- Ulllfll Slims We 11601"! the 111- ' - n th. \' innit-l nut in lzirgc numbers to attend last Vina-a] BO Scouts Execut. e Dar. eh m hfibllarlts to keep going in war-"Igumks 1- be ifelhmfi Yefeglfelfgfial: fillleggfrlyeeéPfefmgfigglerlggf- Hmllfilhlfl how others are suffering. .-. . . iv. in st - . . a w a er - e. 1mm‘ “"“ ' “mmill "men"? of the Queen 5 t {fie ‘th 5k; \1 t‘ hg l e l,‘ i? ftttifliii’ 2;, "lffisihl"°'“,‘§k°"~ gt siifftgix-lng and privation. resulted have to be counted in to heclriiiiif - , . , » , ,. .. ,- . ,\ . -. - S -k~ ,~_tme_Y-_ 03¢, l" W1 PP" ~ f" "1- 5,135 e6" , ,2 . ‘ y , w“ ' “e in the capture or Sevasto ol and 'he of about 2,000,000. Mrs. Younger: "And we are able to lend in such small lttl,ll__\ t, in... i\.i.i\c . ssociatioii. tri mg ev teaming e] he mm we“ how to (‘we and .v.i so years of zig.. Mrs. Ida Allen Surrender m, the enemy ere ,5 o‘ n me Rug,” cempel mm on _ _ (ivbrtq :1." Itlr, \\'. Chester S. .\IcLure remarked, with remaékebile Siecesis The “(agrees the zlglgehgzeberxfgdgnleteieetfxfageetgref? course, no comparison ‘between the along the lines competen observers mm‘ when we buy w" savmfl! Ceftlfimt“ - - - lint lllc lmrty i< neither (lead nor moribund. Ityoung Scout divers have'lmde sulrpriscd cw; en, Queen‘ squeen Mew eel-d ‘rlreniitiztg pnpgégltglonliltztifflghpfiutdgryg gaeettigetéeselteiirlig olitmvlvlilligncogznrligrg everybody can do it . . . but do you think such 1i“ i"“"'““"“° “l '°‘“'gf"‘iz“‘i°“ for the '“°““'lti.¢ Commodore himself The good work is to be tliéiiekatilktviiemiiié if. gtffifhrtfilmemow of Balaclava. of be drew- tms time irrespective of it. 'final small savings are worth while?" W‘. ‘M’ "l Hill‘ (lmlllcrfillc lnfitmltlon5 dun"?! continued in the cit dim" the pa" 1nd “U; form's wedding dressflt 008i {1-900-1iriIfnlSiiiiiIIoIiEBtiiIIfrTToiEBrToQ-ge Iflhiiff? lbiitfciflfiiilglxthzaliletféhiiitgfitiigilbviizgaiiif . \\'.'ll'lllllt’, :ti.~l as a badly needed spur to thel- i t ty q, i] I .y ‘ ‘l e , e Side by Slfle Wl‘ll Th? wblflzeiingale, explains why the Germans: ed for when he made his raid on MFI-EHF" “Indfid ti"? 87¢- Whlfl Wfi 91¢ B11 lfl ll- v t» . ~ w km t"....-.-.-.....e..t's \\'2l.l' activtiies f‘ 21”.“ "I a" f?" Pm,‘ “ll, f“ gm“ ‘“ ’°-‘~ gages}; 0,2,0“ igdusgrvetile spat 3p p pa? g ‘more? flag-h "hep 503ml in Sevtemvggrblilsgism; 51-511 I'm not good at arithmetic, but 1 realize that "‘ . 'oivet Oll t "no, 9' P0180 Onlfflm oovas core ergourso armeansne ae aseror _ __ _ \\_';< m,» .~,.-.t Immt t-ntplplstzgd by the Speaker‘ ‘T E lcfiellle lee e" “r gténtlnpeldespiflc the war to agate wipter set pi. t e is l M lGefigllflY. tenet €iidAgflrIV£ifiltSlm_ and the individual effort of small investors, added to- . . » t- - - r “an. rs . n _ . . . t-~;lvt-i.i.l_\ l-_\" ant.- visiling tizitiotial chairman, Mr _ V . I .‘ m“ Gated‘ Pew“ "5 °m "mnmfi Q" P Prfeseflted text m? _- $§ ether. can provide hundreds of mmmm ofdona" S Iti Italy these da)s to he fIlSlll0lldlilC i.- to lie e at s and Canada in details. but it is r P0 g ccmrs a demand far tailored edg- the past two days a fierce battle hus five and h-lends m me oversaw for Wm. nceds_ That», a lot of money]! iitnwlon tinntlon .\l.l’ The (iovernitienfs sliort- - - .. . . p. _ - ' _ ~ . un atriotic. llic national (lifcctorzite oi the _ . _ C""""4‘ m“ “immlmifl-v rewewfd by Hon‘ Dr Fascist party have inaugurated a campaign giirdiirubifniifirdefieiiiutgiiitictgy giid 133i? iiavgeiniiiiilgsmsvfilgiiiivwlifgiihniiofns 131$,”fifiefifl,,lfg"f,‘ififilfio‘°,folle}l ,\l-t.~,\li'l;,tl_ plw-VlllClIll Conservative leader. An- a ainst too much ele ante in womelfe hehions fancy Tuscan grounds. Fisher nets, the Crimean peninsula tp the main- five they do not knew why‘ u me Mrtyounden uxt i‘ worth while. when yo“ figure it up (YlllT ititiiit- of the tnceting was President 0g - - g 7 i’ ' a hf-‘JVX wmbiflflfivn Weill/B. Sl-TOHB- 15ml °1 m” Ukmmeu. "n" attad‘ mm" l5 due l0 some 1M1" 0f "M? - - s - n ,j' _ ‘ . . Necessity imposed by the style oi absolute ly w:ven, arc being made for Aus- . “mtmues m devemp- 593's l1 315‘ own thev do not know what his 11116 that. m! t It? llll'll<'l' s eloquent atldress, which appears in to- tram‘ New zgaland and south-patch from London. which also fault 15' and if ma“ is lost at see austerity,” reads the communique, "should lcad to the elimination of every kind of ostcntzition, particularly in fashion. A display of elegance and jewels should be considered a manifestation of they have no means of knowing, so far as this communication is con- cerned, whether their own letters or eels are likely to have gone down. this last regard, however, they do obtain some light because the Afriecmhwliile tpe Far Eest is being sen c eop co cured nets by tiie ,_ _ _ yard, mainly in cottcn. Mssqulto gara-hmfi nc°ffseg° ‘gYfr-clgemeafirlf @535; Q53; gag-Egg,mg,<}§,,g=§,f;g§§;l.85? fiitfftfi. originators ‘it t... 31:0 a big demand‘ ' lparachute method of warfare, villi mentions the difficulty of the terz-i rain and. the employment of Na Mrs. Elder: “Yes, it is, and at the end of seven and a half years we get $5.00 back for each $4.00 we invest . . . money that will be handy to have when we want to retire." days l~-llc’. .\lr. 'l‘tirncr is to be congratulated Elk rweicctioti to office, most of his col- .s on 1h».- t-xcctitive being also reflected. up lute. ._ _ s: ‘f Food For Brita i n JMmi-tling to figures collected by the Federal Di l>.'ll‘llll(‘lll of Agriculture, Canada has shipped rmtrly l\\'t- billion pounds of foodstuffs to Brit- lpitr: lrttin wheat and flour, in the past two , \\'lir.it and flotir exports to Britain in y... »l would add possibly another billion zt hilt ptltnitls to the figure given. iinrt’. t. tin-y arc, Canada's figures on food . or» ilwzirictl by the amounts Washington . t5 (ilmtit sending under the Lease-Lend lzill. I'm‘. Secretary of Agriculture CLAUDE \\'l\. min» told at New York gathering that in the llvXl l\\.=l\'c months the United States expects to Hill s.b»l llriwfin nllv-qtlflrlbt‘ of the food require- lllt‘lll< of the l§_§_i_t_i§h Isles. He held “food ivill win lll(‘ war, write the peace" and foresaw the time \\ll\‘il America would have to re-stock all litiliulw". iknl-ida is currently ivorking on an order of 3m twill-tn eggs for Britain and another such orll-‘r is in ivrtispcct. The United States poultry lll(lli\ll'_\' is being called upon to supply six bil- lion eggs :mrl i8 million pounds of chicken meat in cans. Iloih bcrc and in “lashington it is felt these \~:i<t Ol'<l<‘i'S can be filled without creating any grout domestic scarcity. That it is possible to export vast quantities of food and still meet home needs is shown by the fact that Canada in the past twoeyears has sent over 80o million pounds of pork, 700 million pounds of apples, 215 million pounds of cheese, two and a half million pounds of evaporated milk. 1o million pounds of eggs, 52 million pounds of canned tomatoes, I3 and a half mil- lion potinrls of honey and 36 million pounds of beans. People here may have had to pay some- what higher prices for these foods but few had I: go without them. Russian Winter Mr. llaisky, the Soviet Ambassador f3 tI-ie Court of St. James’, warned the allies of Rus- sia a few days ago against any complacency over the approach of winter. He said many amateur Slratcgisls talked “glibly about the weather and about Ht-ncrztl Winter and General Mud-.... dissipation atid exhibitionism 1lS wcll as an in- sult to those whose life conforms to the duties of war. Federal secretaries and their collaborat- ors will secithat insensibility or lack of tinder- standing are exemplarily punished." i I 1‘ I Unlike some mutiicipalitics in Canada, thc Federal Government at “lashingttin has frown- ed on the prolongation of Daylight Saving Timc. This decision was reached of‘ a thorough sur- vey of the power sittiation over the Linilcd States and analysis of tlic cffccl of continued daylight saving in the Southeastern region. However, the commission warned that if cir- cumstances warranted, it might recmnmentl re- sumption of the plan in sonic parts of the country or its establishment where it did not now exist. e a - t- 4- Hundreds of illegal gold wcdtling rings have made their appearance on the market in London and the provinces, and hnntlrctls of ivninvn have been wearing them all ignorant of thc fact that their bridal token offends against the Wctlding Rings Act of I855. This law requires that ivecl- ding rings must be submitted for hallniarking to one of the only six assay offices in England and Scotland. A gold wetlding ring is illegal in Britain unless it bears one of these marks: a leopard's head, anchor, York rose, sword between three wheat-sheaves, a three-towered catsle or a tree, fish and bell. a n: w m The elevator and produce storage in U.S.A. at present is at a minimum never previously reached. This scarcity of space, due to record surplus of grain supplies, has cattsed the back- ing up of an unusually large amount 0f stocks on farms and elsewhere in temporary storage. Elevator men estimated that about l0 per cent, of their space must be kept empty so that stored grain may be handled properly. The’ Department of Agriculture reported that as of September I approximately 84 per cent of the commercial grain storage capacity at 4o terminals was oc- cupied. Since then there has been further con- traction of available room arid the corn and soy bean harvests will soon be in full swing. n- a- n: u If Hitler succeeds in disposing of Russia this fall or next spring, it may be necessary once With the modern techniques of war, these fac- tors have been considerably minimized, and per- haps by now General Winter has been reduced to a coioiicl, and General Mud to a major or a lieutenant." On the Russian front, however, the officers are not discounting the value winter will be to them. A dcspatch to the Globe and Mail from the (‘cntml IIu-sian Front quotes a lieutenant- gcncral as saying the bad roads have already FWllICC-(l very largely the manoeuvrability of the Gornmn armies, and that winter, with its cold, should create even greater difficulties for the invnrlvt-g “livery Ritssian has his sheepskin Cont. Ilc is also used i0 the hard weather, and he line fcll boots," said General Sokolovsky. “The lit-ti Army man can remain in the open dav and night when necessary, but the Germans will frvtvtx" Nod Boom In Wall Street There is one place in the United States, says the Alntictary‘ Times, where there are now no Siyils of an infkttioiiary boom and, paradox- itwtlb- rthtttgh that place is Wall Street, the erst- ultiiv innit ill liriullls when [JTICCS WCFC rising in tht- t‘irl'llll‘y. Stock prices have been fairly l>ti-t_\‘.':iit mi the London and Berlin markets but on \\':tll Street they are getting nowhere. Excess prof ls tam; and now the threat of limiting the prof :~ ttltit-h Will‘ industries may make on de- iillsz’ t- l;‘|.'ll‘i\' have taken the joy out of life for tl~ sowiilutoi-s and Wall Street, which thrit-t-tl on ilicm, has now got the wartime blurs. again to revise ideas of how the war is going. Britain has shown no signs of being able to re- - 'st a major Nazi attack on Africa—either to- ward Suez or Dakar. Also, if Russia falls, the ']apanese are likely to cut loose—falling first on Siberia, later on Singapore, the Indies, Austral- ia. Even if no A.E.F. ever-goes to Europe, the ,time may come when the U.S. may need to con- lsider the advisability of sending an expedition to keep the Germans out of key points in West Africa facing South America, or the Japanese out of the Indies. For Anglo-American control of the seas cannot be a matter of complecency so long as the Germans can romp unchecked over the land. I!!! Physiological studies of the dwellers of the Andes Mountain in South America have re- vealed the existence of an entirely new human being, best described as the "stratosphere man," who constitutes biological entity radically differ- ent in several respects from other branches of mankind. The new species of man, also refer- -' red to as “the altitude man," was described for the first time at one of a week's symposia in I celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the Un- - iversity of Chicago by Dr. Carlos Monge of the lUniversity of San Marcos, Lima, Peru, found- ‘ed in i551, the oldest institution of learning in lthe Western’ Hemisphere. Life at two or three ]miles above sea level, where the system has to ' become adapted to get along on little more than half rations of oxygen, as compared with dwellers in the lowlands, has transformed fpermanent inhabitants of the Andean uplands [into a distinct physiological variety of the llli-l lt is itilcrcstiiig to compare these times with lman species. Dr. Monge reported. lhey should - m,“ the commencement of the third year of the make ideal airmen, the lits". a cheap form o-f drapery used by the natives, Czechoslovak refugees are help- ing Britain to get cheese from sheep's milk. They have had ex- perience of ewe-milking in Czech- oslovakia which used to export 2.000 tons 0f e~,.e’s mlk cheese a year The making of this n,vel cheese has become practicable by the invention of a new milking machine just designed in Britain, and. after (‘rtlieriments at the Northnnzpionshire Fa m Institute, 400 ewes a day are now being milk- ed by it. Trio ewes asc put in pens in units of sx and milking is dzne at a pulsaton speed 1f 100 per minute. Dumig the n-lllklng the milk is autcrnaticajly transferred to one cf two churns, either oi which can be emptied without al- feetiiig the main vacuum. and pow- er is supltied by a 1 i-2 h.p. engine driving a rotary" vacuum pump, Bt-iti ll farmers are ncw to be en- cont-aged t) milk ther ewes, if mg the lambs. In both but-tar f and curd ewes m 1k is nezrlv three times a". rich as cows milk and and 2Ibs. of curd a week for at least. four monhs of the year. There are so many ewes in Br"- tain that the people could, ll is estimated, get as much cheese from t-licm as they ate before the war and still have some over for export. "Blitz" blast need no Ion er send glass splinters flying in 1 direc- tions during a'r raids over Brtain this winter. The British Govern- ment's Experimental Building Re- search Station at Watford has successfully tested three new alter- natives to unprotected glass win- dows. The first is used in place JI ting emb°dded in thick cellulose acetate film which lets in light and eeps out ran. There is a heavier variety to take the place of north lights, roof lights or other glass on which. there is a heavy strain. It equals quarter-inch plate glass in strength. A third device is a lighter form of cellirlcse netting fixed to window panes by adhesive. A square of plate glass covered with this netting was put under a spring-loaded hammer which was brought down upon it travelling one-eighth of an inch beyond the point of impact. The shattered glass remained neatly in position under the netting. Canada has received much of the livestock shpped from Britain during the first half of the year. Bulls, cows, rams, ewes, poultry, pheasants and even canarics were saiel sent overseas to Argentina, Brazl, Canada, Kenya, New Zeal- and- and Uruguay. The cattle ship- d present a good cross-section of ritlsh pedl ee stock. In the beef- prodiicing cass there were eight Aberdeen Angus bulls. six for Argentina and two for Canada; a Devon bull for Brazil; and four Hereford bulls, three for Uruguay and the other for Argentina. Dairy cattle were represented by an Ayr- shire buli for Kenya. world's greatest dual - p 7s‘ er than 69 Shcrthorn bulls sent to Ar ada. All t s cows shipped ten going t0 Canada and one i-Iamsluie raniti T Uhil ahi sliire Dbwwmramsiipeq pheasants were shipped to moat c went to New canaries are becoming ular, and a gr disappear. . t British locomotive engineers are ‘now building 2i railway en nes part an larder fcr as locrmotfves for that. country. The engines weigh 1001-2 laced is ‘f0 "nutty-four nearly £200,000 iln for Turkey. They are tons each and their kilometres an hour. lpcrmotlves, value. were sent oversees from Br June 80 — seven more only ior a short period after wean- . at each ewe could provide between lib. ‘ window glass. It consists of net-- while the urpose breed, the shorthom, famous alike for its milking as its beef-produc- ing qualities was responsible for 8i In of the 05 cattle shipped. No few- were ntina andone to Oan- abroad in the half-year were Bhorthorntsa m “emotive K ‘ya. All the 45 sheep shipped alfrbiid were cf the Down type. Blx Scuthdcwn toms and l8 ewes went to Canada. wlfch also took two and eight ewes, as well as nine iuffolk rams. iiwoHa-mtp- ' M. niii woiinri the accessible quarters of the world, while six £8"; of canaries aland. Created more peop- t demand for t em~ is expected w en war restrictions‘ in the tbree months ending than dur- m’ "t°“"de‘ , know how to cope with this menace; but there is also a reference to Ger- man mechanized units, showing that. the Panzer‘ brigades are again on the rampage. It is now quite a parent that Hit- ler‘s next major of.ensive is to be. as anticipated, in the direction of lKefCll, with the object. of gaining control of the Sea of Azov and cv- eiitually of the Black Sea and We 0511085115. The rich oil fields in the latter area are in themselves ruf- ficiently valuable a prize to excite the cupidity of the insatiable Fuen- rer and induce hlm to exert his ut- most stren th in overcoming every opposition o the possession of this indispensable commodity. The Brit- ish are feverishly striving to get equipment and supplies through to the hard-pressed Russian armies. The Iran route ls. however, provirg a. difficult one. This much l-valititever. the obstacles. Britain. ‘having given her promise to tlze U. S. S. R. to send aid. will spare no effort or expense in endeavouring to tcarry out that promise. Why The Secrecy ? (Montreal Gazette) There has been received at this office a communication from the Post Office Department at. Ottawa. Public Relations Branch. and pre- sumably it has been sent to all newspapers. It deals with delays in delivery of Canadian mall to overseas tioofi and complaints made to the partment in regard thereto. Reasons for delay and non- delivery are given, together with an explanation covering the sometltnts jslow movement of parcels. All the information furnished is of a nar- lacter which ‘in our judgment could lvery well be assed on to the pub ic. indeed shoud be passed on since ‘the ublic are so directly concernrd, ‘but he document 1a marked rivate and confidential. So marked t a to all intents and purposes useless be- cause those who are sending mail whether letters or parcels to tt-ta- MAY YOU G0 SAFE (On the Death of a Mllwmfllll Friend) May you g0 safe, my friend, across that dizzy way, No wider than a Ill-LU‘, by which your people go From Earth to Paradise; may you t go safe toda, 1 With star and s acve above. Ind time and stars ow. And at‘, the further end may you not ail to reach All that you hoped 00 find upon f-lic other shore, Whore theehieong centuries lo curving u And fotiim away and cease, and than is time no more. And if. from some small door behind our Heaven, should stray A weedy ath, from which the or- th ox refrain, Hound to your Paradise, I11 seek it out one day, And sit and hear you tell rare dis-n tales 988111- -I.ord Dunsany. th reced uarie . g qif also: sh boilu-s abr , a total of M, valued at about £110,- 000 for the first half cf the year “VIURII MIT" Dr aunt! aadi , 0.2%.!»- te do l _ halln| miserable. Ilai "hqvaa" fill??? r l l 81h- m d3 Kidney Pills is sure to Post Office Department announces that 1,546 bags oi Canadian mail 5.1 the United Kingdom, sent durin the last weak in August, were los through enemy action, an event which is covered in private and con- fidential circular letter. “Thy does not the De artment give the public all the fac so that the thousands of Canadian families and ind id.- uals who are corres ndlng with friends in Britain, wit men in the army articularly will know when: they s and and can govern them- selves accordingly? B. A. F. CIIAPLAINS LONDON - (OP) —- Cha lains serving with the Royal Air nrce have more to do than preach a weekl sermon in an airdromeh churc or cha l. They often save act as enter alnment officers and give advice to airmen on marriage and divorce. firs‘ SPECIAL nx. 315 Cod Liver Oil Extract with Uresotc and Guiacol Com- pound. A real tunic fur cougus. colds and urlppc. u. is hotter than an ordinary cough meni- cing iur it reaches l-lle seat oi the trouble, relieves the rough and supplies continual treat- ment to build up the system io withstand future attack. The Ideal Tonic and Restor- ativc. rm» $1.00 Per Bottle. l MACS ECZEMA UINTMENT A reliable and effective rem- edy for Eczema, Scurvy, Burns. Salt Rheum and many other akin disorders. Price 50 Uentl. MACS FILE OINTMENT Glvea quick roller in all oases of Internal and External Piles. It hrlngl almost instant rellof from the itching, burning, “ ‘ sensation of plies. Get. a tuba today. Price 00 cents. MACS ANALGESIO LINIMENT Used In the treatment of l Rheumatic and Nenrulgia Pains, sprains, Bruises, Cus Varicose Veins, Enlarged Glands. Headaches. Inflam- matory condltlons. Price 00c per bottle. TIIE TWO MAGS t I40 Great George Street l , Mall Orders Given Prompt Attention. l l The help of ovary Canadian ll needed for Victory. In than days o! war the rhouflhrlesa, selfish spends is a traitor to our war afiort. A reduction in personal spending is now a vital necessity to relieve the pressure {or floods, to enable more and more labour and materials Io be diverted to winning tho war. The all-out effort, which Canada must malts, demands this sell-denial o! each o! us. SPEND IESS- T0 807 010R! WAR sllVlNGS CERTIFICATES, YOUR. BODTS ENGINE With each stroke of the heart labor is produced sufficient to lift a one-pound weight a little more than a yard. The number of heart- beats, whlch are like the strokes of a lift-and-force pump, averages about l00.000 in 2i hows, or nearly miLons a year. In 70 years, OQ-O-OO-QQO-QO-O-OOOO-m I therefore, the heart, working wim- out interruption, would beat 2800 million times. In a single year the haert dra/ws in and forces out 050,000 allons of blood, and in ‘l0 years t. would pump enough blood to fill a tank with a capacity of nearly nine mil- lion cubic fee. Say to Your Grocer I _'Want BRAIIMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEA You will enjoy its superior quality Stavert Grader. Hall 6' Siaverl: CI-IARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I. IDON’T GET YOUR y WIRES CROSSED Our tobacco has been on the Island circuit for a long time. Because it is never out of order, Island Mer- chants keep it on order throughout the year. POTATO GRADERS With Labor Shortage, Potato Blight and Strict Government Inspection common, Save yourself Time, Labor and Expense by using a Hall and H I C K E Y ’S' Black Twist 10c PER FIG Manufactured by IIIGKEY 8r IIIOIIOLSOII Tobacco Co., Ltd, Charlottetown. 000-0004000900 ml