. i3- 'B65“"Zl§.1'-:BE;?, -..-.s.-v-.-~.-— “f? "i_"r_..." j PAGE FOUR‘ IIIE BIIARLOTTETIIYIII GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Founded h! 1H1) President: ueut. Cot W. Chute: B. Molar: Vlts-PIESIIIEIII: J. B. Burnett, IJJ- Secretary: Lleut. CoL D. A. Ahclllnnon. D-l-O-i E-lllor and Managing Director: J. B. Burnt", IJ-l. Qsaaciate Editors: Frank Walker and Inn A. Bruno“ SUBSCRIPTION BATES 3y mu m r. l; |., $4.00 per 1w: 8w M I III-Nb $1.25 Ivr 3 months; 50o for an: month Clty Delivery: $5.00 per ear; $3.00 for l Illtlllll $1.75 for month .81 Mall In Canada Ind lLS-A. $5.00 pa: laturday Weekly: $2.00 per year; $1.00 for I nlonlhg 50c for 8 monthl. Tho Charlottetown Gnnrdlnn may ho obtdnld I Bulullltl‘! mm: Annoy, Tlmu lqunro, New Ynrln Old iuutn Nl-nu Agency, Corner llllk 1nd Wnlhlnlton, Bo|lcl| Qjg-[rupnllfilfl New; Agency, mu Pool as. lonlnnh J. Fins, 8M Buy BL, Toronto; New: Stand, Chntonu LIIIIOI, Ottawa; “'0lfn'| Nun-n stand, Budbnry, 0nt| Bub Tubman gimp, sfnncton. N. 11.; Ellun Robertson, Amherst, N. l. ZThe Strongest‘ Memory is Weaker than QM Weakest Ink.“ IVEDNESDAY. JUNE l5. 1941. Nazi Invasion Motives In a remarkable dispatch from Lisbon dated June 1o and published in the Winnipeg Free Press, a news correspondent predicted the likeli- llnnll 0i ii€llll1lll_\‘ invading Russia regardless of \\'ll.ll fllr-nwlchillg concessions Stalin was prc- prlrld in uffcr. The prediction was based on ‘ that negotiations between Moscow were only incidental to 1 bitter fac- . llggle which was taking place among ,1 i\'1.v_“l'_<, tielmnnys grnerals preferred w. fur ll1illlfll"_\' and internal political rea- <hl rh» nthcr band both Ribbentrop and sons. Otto CIFVIllIS, the .\'nzi trade expert, opposed in- vggiw ml fClflllfiflllC grounds. They maintained '1 could bc persuaded to become the . lll of the Reich and that agricul- pllllllclinll, togctllcr with the transport c-wulrl he slowly taken over by German < sf» lhrlt Soviet ivlleat, oil and minerals cm. ll Il(' '.l.lll without a fight. ' h: l-llQl of these two points of view, it is alhglll. ll~‘\".llll(‘ acute in a nlonlcrlt when there “n. illl i1 tll‘l\.‘llll5lll in Berlin and factional slrlizq ' the hittcrllcss of which was illustrat- ed n.- lilf; rm that RlKlOlf Hess fled to save his liic. Xrl/l party Imllcrs feared that blitzkrieg must Russia would augment the al- lllolls prestige of the military and generals an increased measure of pow- er. Tllf‘ laller were insistent 0n prompt action IHZCTllPI’ of the implications of the U. S. lease- lvflrl It'll flllll the ncccssity of destroying the ‘ zllil‘f:lry' machine before attempting to ill. v be little or much in these specula- llllt ai lmst they offer an explanation of the» cxl-llzs nf lhc [Hist fcw days, and nCCEnlu-ilffi i110 impnr-rrlllvc of llritaiu and her allies mak- rlw l>c=t pns=lhle use of the breathing spell ct‘. by the Russo-German conflict. This, a< l..nr> .\lilll.<l€‘f Churchill indicated in his FllT'l'l.l\' bl-l-nllczlst, is prcciwly what Britain 15 r} q."l'llc lclnpo 0f the R.A.F. raids over Gcr- " allrl Cvcrnlrlnjv-occupicd territory is ‘m- crvrlsing daily, and is now said to be outdomg in furv the ivorst Nazi raids over England. The Vuilcli States reaction, as reflected in leading Amc .n rlmvspnpers and in official quarters, is w. g1,» in accord with Churchill's statement, pledging’. aid t0 Russia and amifltcpilve Blludmg up of the campaign in every dlrechon. illq Pym A Sergeant Major On Uniforms A SCrgc-nnt: Xfnjor writing to the Ottawa _,ournal 0n recruiting emphasizes the importance of having attractive uniforms and (IISUHCIIVC markings‘ fur the different ranks. He says mills 35 vmrs’ CXISPIUCHCC uniform is the chief pride 0i hm _\.,,,,,,g Sglrlipf, and ‘its n621IllCSS,}f)1I£d3fld tthe dash givcn tn lt by fiiClllgsi "W995i i‘ 3°?’ e c" are one, if not the principal cause of ‘clan and that pride nf (forps which ls so desirable ln evefY rcrrilllcnt. 'l.‘his is borne out b)’ lhe "(PQTIWCE 0f ftrTllv others activclv engflzfid In recruiting "Id trawng ymmg soldiers, and 1S one _of the reaf- srms for the popularity of the Navy with many 0 ' ths. oilfflilifcii color is detectable by U16 Qnemyr" “T5195 this authority, “has not befifl satisfactorily provfly ThglFrench Army yvorc Horizon Bhlc while the British‘ we: it has never bccn proved that t e rm 5 abl» to distinguish French troops an)’ mo" rmdilv tlnll thcy were the British. In fact tlv: ride of brass rm uniforms, in buttons, Padfles» etc vvllcn POUSIICKI. gl"¢5 the mpressm" of “ugh argue, nmnhcl-s than are actually on the iicld. ‘This I have demonstrated on many 0c‘; casirms. It has the same effect as the Pollshe baygngt which causes a small group t0 RPPCQ" much more numerous and menaclnl ma" ‘t does when its bayonets are blued or dulled and cannot be seen. The flashbof pollslgfiliayprgfrt: informs the enemy that a aYonct C 3'8 l _ mincnt and the consequent tertseness resu ts fr: troops in forward positions being ready tgriqlizle even before the charge commences. g _ £0,111"; m the charge with pollshedbayoneta vs a mm: ‘luv-inspiring sight when viewed from t] , ci ‘ill end. _ WARE Jrgfiryling very hard to recruit a. volun- tary army and we should appeal to_fl1€ YOQIIE man's love of personal appearance ln offering him tfljfltllllflfl Iicttcr than the uniforms now ul vogue. \\'ilh all the pipe clay and pollslpflt was the dash rind swwlggcr of the old red,_v_v 1ft all blue uniforms which recruited the British Army for rcnturics and while we cannot use those pat- terns in war-time we C311. and Fhmlldr milk‘? the uniform more distinctive and less like 1 prism l tl an wlmf we see now. Eat/Asia final argument it may be recalltd U18! the stiffcst fights in Greece, right through the whole campaign. We" Pl" "P b)’ lh°_ EYZQM n-mps, who wear a gaudy and very UISKIHCIIV; uniform and who have an esprit de corps whlc lhcv maintained to the very last. "s "Having once been a recruit mYself “d ha“ ing afso been a recruiter, I may lay claim to some knmvlevlge of the subject and to some mfijllhl into the psychology of the prospective reflwt 5° l if that the above remarks need not be Pisll-Tush- ed as the fads of another old crank who thinks in the past. On the contrary, he thinks very much, not so much of today, as of tomorrow- "just look at the colors worn by men in their Summer clothes of today as compared with only a few years ago and then figure why the same preferences are not likely to be shown in uni- forms. It is worth thinking over if recruits are to be gained." =-. EDITORIAL NOTES IL Dollar Days are here again once more. n- : a- u The prohibiting of the installation of new oil- fueI equipment may be the prelude to gaslcss Sundays. n: u n: n- Defense training, like defense industries, is 0n an around-the clock basis- At the Univer- sity of Idaho, three eight-hour shifts are being provided for trainipg pf students in arc welding. i Any sacrifice or inconveniences the war may cause us, safe and snug at home, will be as noth- ing compared to the sacrifices being bravely made by the Mother Country and by our boys volunteering for service overseas. a iv u x A teacher in a London volunteer school was instructing his Free French pupils in English. He first read in French a passage from Pierre Gaxottcs latest biography without designating him and then translated it thus; “This mun used 8ft inexhaustible variety of m6lh0d5 to achieve hls objects-designing provocation, calculated delay, false news, deceitful cordiality, veiled menace, stubborn incomprchension, corruption, espionage, familiar waggery-wvery mortal thing. nolsy bluff included.” “Who is ‘this man?" theiteacher asked, and in unison the class yelled: "Hitler!" “Yes," sighed the teacher, "but the book is entitled ‘Frederick the Greatfi" =4- nr >v= Deep sleep of exhaustion is itself an anesthetic potent enough to permit of wounds being dress- ed without the sufferer knowing anythillg about it, according to Dr. G. H. MacNab, surgeon in charge of air-raid casualties at Westminster I-‘Ios- pital, London. This (liscovery was made when I50 wounded men, still carrying their rifles, ar- rived from evacuated Dllnkerque, Dr. MacNab told a London meeting. Many of the wounds, he explained, would normally have required anes- thetics, bllt the men had marched for fiftv miles and they slept while their injuries were being dressed. The pain would have been acute, but they slept on for forty-eight hours. in a a n- There is no one in public life appreciates the value and influence of the Press more than does the Rt. Hon. Winston Churchill. At a recent banquet in London this was the Prime Minister's trlbutc to the Press: “Vi/hen things are perhaps not at their very best in this country, when there looks to be a certain amount of danger, and when a certain amoullt of uneasiness —I think that is the ex- presslnn ——ls rife, the people and the Parlia- ment do not look to the leaders of parties, nor to derrlagoglles, nor t0 great manufacturers, nor to business man, "Not at all! It is to the journalist that they turn for one whom they suppose may give them some ‘chance of emerging from their embarrass- ment. ' a n- : n- john Horne Tooke, English political reformer and scholar, born this datg, 1736; wok Holy Orders at Oxford and accepted a benefice; real- ‘llng FIR Condition of the people could not be materially battered by preaching the Gospel alone, he entered into what was then a new field for an Anglican clergyman, social work among the people. In I801 he was elected hLP. for Old Sarum, but was excluded from Parliament by the Act which made clergymen ineligible. A milflpf considerable wealth, he entered upon his political llfe with zest and determination to have things done; carried 0n a Press and plalnphlitecr- 1ng_ campaign which landed him in Court for political llbels, and, in one instance, for high treason 0f which he was, however, acquitted, fir; was the author of a philological work, “Diver- sions of Purley." n- : n- What amazes us beyond anything else i5 the smug complacency of many of our leaders in Church and State with regard to the present as well as the future. One would imagine by their acts and plans that they are satisfied that every- thing is to continue to go on as before, and that there is no need of “w0rryil1g" about the fulur¢ In this world some one must do the “worrying” to keep things right, and at this particular time especially. The youths volunteering in their thousands to save the democratic way of life are not going to be satisfied with institutions run on old autocratic lines and by old, unchanging leadership. Be the war short or long, the re- turning soldiers, absorbed into the Legion ready and waiting for them, will wield a power and influence that will shake our existing in- stitutions from their foundations up. Is it not the part of wisdom, then, to look ahead, and to prepare for the new social revolution? 1 i i As showing how the Poles are bring crowded out of their homes to make mom for "Volks- deutsche" (Germans by race who have been living in other countries, sometimes for many generations) being repatriated under Russo- Nazi agreements, the New York office of the American Friends of Czecho-Slovakin quotes from German newspapers on the progress of German colonization in Poland over a period of fifteen months. It is stated that, of the 180,000 Germans from Rumania, the 165,000 from Russ- ian-occupied Poland, the 43,000 from Lithuania. the 5L000 from Latvia. the r4000 from Bulgaria and the 12,000 from Estonia. some 422,000 have been moved into German-controlled Polish terri- tory. While most of the settlers are farmers. about 4,000 small business and shops in the Poznan district are said t0 have been handed over to them. The number 0f Poles evicted is put at about 1.500.000. Thr difference in num- bers between the oustrd Pnlvs and the "settlers" is supposed tn derive from the fact lhat thr- P0!- ish families are much larger than those of_thc German!‘ i ‘ ‘i ' T _ l ma,“ ____A \)’Q;> ,_,__,,4¢-<- -< -.»_.,. ~ 11g: cynlzLorrl-zrowlv GUARDIAN__ IIIOTES av m: vmv ers trading on the coast, revealing the great. distances at. which ctty lignts can be seen M. sea, have been most unpresswe. It. Ls understand- ablq that. the blaze of modern light- lng, with the colored signs so mum favored, will be visible over great. distances, especially when reflected by hes. clouds. These facts 1n- t a problem to be solved when the question of an effective blackout is seriously faced, It need not. be aslnned that such pre- cautionary vwtlon ls more urgent now than it was earlier for undue alarm. Until now the danger about New Zealand has been primarily to shipping, and that position still obtains. But while there may be no immediate liability t0 attack on these slhores, either by way of a raid or something more extensive_ there Ls no sound reason for providing beacon lights to a possible attacker and doing nothing about 1t. It would be folly to leave the planning of a. blackout until the need was urg- fntar Auckland News (New Zea- an . The Briton I: not only n better type than other lea have some- times thought hm. He is superior also to his own opinion of hknself. Thus, one man who thought he was afraid of his own mother-ln-law finds himself equal to terrors she would never have wished for him. Another man who couldn't imagine hunself talking back to his boss will talk back at the world's would- be boss every bmnbed night. 1n the week. But not. only dices the self- styled unherolc Briton find him- self a hero; the self-styled “low- brow“ finds himself a “hlgh-brow‘. The London Philharmonic Orches- tra has been making a round of the Provinces. And Brltzns who did not. know they liked good music have been turning out. in thousands to hear 1t. played. Jack Hylton, Brit- ish jazz band leader who has been conducting the classes on this tour, says a. typical comment. from hearers 1s: "I'm a high-brow and dldnt know it’. What are all these discoveries goin to do to the aver- a-ge Brltcnts sef-estcem? Probably it won't get out. of hand so long as British humor continues to equal that of the Landon woman who terrupt. the conversation. “My gozd- You know, if we British win this war alone. the world wont be able Monitor. And nnw comes a learned doctor presenting case histories t0 prove his theory that. the pangs 0t love increase the blood pressure and cause strange and incurable pains! Where has this fellow been all his life? The news account. says he is a clinical assistant in a psycho analy- sis institute. He must. be. He. prcb- ably never gets out. of his institute if he needs case Iustories on that point. Incidentally, we prefer our case histories from Shakespeare or the Victorian novelists. This chap hasn't a shred of romance. He talks about stomach pains, ulcers and asthma. as the result of “emotional disturbances". They may very well be. but why not leave it. that the seat of the trouble ls the heart. where poets and peasants have had it, safely located these many eons? But; the brnve doctor isn't going to leave it there. He Ls starting a new field of medicine -- piychoscmatic medicine-to dcal with man's emo- tional nature. He says the pains may come from a jamming of the emotions. That; is pretty graphic. and psychosomatic medicine, we presume, is going t9 try to unjam them. He talks about a few other emotions, too, but, like the rest 0f us and the analysts, rather fixes on love as the prime disturber. Well. ft. ts pretty hard to kill love or stave off its mlsappllcations — we doubt that the gocd doctor ln his laboratory knows how hard. I-f he dld he would present his case his- tories as an apologia for the medl- cal rofeslon when 1t falls to flx up t use stcmnch pains — a good one, too. — New Ycrk Herald Tri- bune. By setting aside June 28 as Army Day the Government has taken a step which. 1f taken ellrller in the war, would probably have aroused greater enthusiasm among the population for the Dominlons war effort. Those citizens who have sons or relatives in the army, or who themselves are doing war wcrk, are probably fairly well informed about the intensive training oiug on across the country, but. ohcrs whose contact with the troops ls limited to seeing the occasional soldier, airman or sailor on the streets, the occasional parade of Reserve Army units and like events, undoubtedly have no idea of what is really going on ln the nation. This is a. leaf borrowed frcm the United States’ Army book, and it 1s worth keeping. It will now be possible, for the first tltne in Cana- rllan hLstnry, for the clvlllan popu- lation to vlslt clamps and bar- racks on a clay set aside for just. that purpose. A; Major-General B. W. Brwme, the Adjutant-General. said in his announcement. recently, “you will get. a thrill when you sse these men in uniform - men who have volunteered to fight for your homes and your country". There is enthusiasm for the war effort. 1n Canada, but it is not nearly high enough. That is due to the fact. that. an insufficient number of Ecrsons are brought into direct con- t with the war. we are not bombed, as Britons are; we are not in daily danger of death from the sklfl; we do not. have l0 ration our- selves nor curb our daily pleasures. 1t. will help us to realize what these things mean if, by watching the troops at work in camp and bar- racks, we appreciate the true mean- lntg of their sacrifice. — Montreal S ar. l! we must have pickets, we'll take Abe Tllkotsky every time. Abe is that. American citizen by choice who has been plcketfng the Ameri- can Peace Mobilization pickets In front o4 the Whit, House. What we like about. Abe is that he has shown us the perfect. way to got rld of all pickets eventually. ‘me effecllvenew of a picket llne ls bound to be canceled but when it 1n turn is plcketed, for obviously a picket. llne Ls no ood unless it. gives the impression that their. is only one side to the dispute. A ldteted lplokef llne is proof positive iihat. there are two sides, and the average passerby will Just. let It go at that. ‘Ihanks in Abe Tltsotsk , dole to a algn saylng, "Ihla Estab- lishment Unfair to Organized Labor", ls another sign saying. "This Picket. Line URI!“ l0 U11‘ organized Labor". In fact. since the great. majority m the public is un- Tha experience u! master mnrln- . talked to an American newspaper. w m correspondent in an air-raid shelter ti“ “t °"' while the bombs threatened to lll-| 0- I is ness", she said, "this is a raid. rte“ m" Young mm “ho l“) to fisk to stand us". - Christian Science I but it 15 m" PM" “my t° d° "- i‘ wt! now know that the perfect an -» l \., THESE HAVE KEPT FAITH gm With clustered mowdrona and with aconlte. _ ‘And thrushes and the alnzini lflrké r - These 1:1‘: rails bright Invtnclblec. that: 8 A potter-n for the frarfle and me: Towei-Zwfiiii flame. and barren-a‘ I walls mav break. ' ‘They have no other answer but a’ soruz. This is the challenfze in the poet's‘ eves: He slnrzs through all the darknessl as or ol l, And Milton lives. and Norman hosts; iWILh Eula-tented hearts no RTave' co d. And that sweet lay. his little min-l strel made For Richard. coming 1mm his Ions: crusade. __Marv Brent. Whiteslde in the New York Herald ‘Tribune Jobs For Returned I I v Men I (Sydney Past-Record) I l wlicn the House comes back to .Ott.nwa after the summer adjourn- ‘ment, it will have presented f0 it ‘a bill "to ensure as far as possl-l lbl" that. men who enlist for active service in this war shflll lei "WY i d jobs back when they return, frnnl the fighting. ']lil.'=. according l t-o an announcement by Mr. McLnr- lly, Minister of Labor. Perhaps it. is rattler a thankless undertaking to intrude even a mild doubt of the perfect felicity of this , atmouncenlellt but. lf it really 11-, mounts to anything but a DIODE hope by the Governmcnt "w! I! may aid recruiting a bit it Wfluld be interesting to know what ft. is. Of course ft is the right thing, In ' for the Government to, not merely the idCal as- ‘ surunce that we should be able to their lives in this war that lhvy shall come back to thclr old 1055- ‘ 'w¢= can. But there ls lhc rub. We ouzhl .rl0t. t0 promise auyltllng here that lwp do not know that. we can 0P1‘- form. l For u Ls obvlous thin. what can (Continued on page 8. C01 B) _‘ ei-z_—_~z__i__r——~i—~fi———~ 4 organized, the second sign probably would give the pickets‘ plckcters the better of the argument. - Cleve- land Plain Dealer. WHY ON EARTH ‘DO THEY DO IT ? ...huy and us: exprnslva hubby equipment. . . and llnt IIISIIII it I People who own u lot of expen- sive hobby equipment like cam- eras, fishing tackle, guns and the like, carry a lot of worry unless they have good sound insurance to shoulder the loss if something valuable is broken, stolen or lost. Jftlllll.‘ Pnu this worry on to n 900d sound lnlvmlncl policy. WI run lulu can o! you lo puhellon. “In n,’ v -" Sim-in- '- .. . . . EQKEIIIH ‘U* '4" m1" W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. i TIIEY ARE sun: 5 T0 PLEASE YIIII! , We have now on display our , large din lny of the new and up Io ale Bathing Capg, l at. 25c, 35c. 50a and CAMERA SUPDLIES , lgocsfparuCmmeras $1.35, $6.00 | an . . ' ‘BvIitel hlllnrlufl ‘IN fltselii r s ma e" m: o n ' makes of Cameras. ' LET U8 D0 YOUR. DEV- l EUOPING AND PRINTING I FISHING NEEDS , Onr large assortment n! flnhln supplies will nuke It l any or you to I04 Inst what you wnnl. to make your ontlng , n sure success. ' Steel Rods, Bamboo rem. ,1 Linen, Reels. Cuts, Enzlluh l I-‘ller. Mosquito Lotions, etc. l cnocomrss Moira ‘packages, 60c, $1.00. $1. and $2.00. Gnnonn packages 60c and I $1.00. Moira XXX Cholocnlen. bulk 60c per lb. Moira Fresh Made olatel 39o per lh. curry everythlnl to We make your outln; n real auc- ceu. ' TIIE TWO MACS 76c. Choc- ‘ Nature keeps faith. thoulh WW1“ °f Entzland burn! I Imam the Avon. ‘them Ire nut-Ms‘ $13.50 3 for $1.00. Sweater bargain. Greal: Barga MEN'S SWEATER PULLOVE $3.00 Dollur Days $1.50. CHAMBRAY WORK SHIRTS 79c- ' value $1.00 Dollur Dnys 79c. ‘ins FOR DOLLAR DAYS Thursday, Friday, Saiurday June 26th, 21H: and 28%|! YOUTHS WOOL GABARDINES $7.95--3 only, Fawn, youths‘ Gobardines sizes 35 36, 37 regular $20.00 Dollar Days $7.95 ' MEN'S FINE WOOL GOLF PANTS $2.9$—regu|ur|y worth $5.00 up to $8.00 Dona, Days only $2.95--Whut n bargain! YOUNG MEN'S SUITS $I9.50—Very smart ull wool suits, sizes 34 to 38 Dollur Day. MEN'S SUITS IMPORTED WORSTEDS SHJS-Béuutifully tailored $25.00 suit; i many new shades of worsteds. Odds one of u kind Dollar Days to clear at $18 73f! MEN'S VERY FINE WORSTED SUITS $I9.95—regulur $27.50 and $25.00 lines all new this season Clearing Dollur Days $19.95. MEN'S SPRING TOPPERS 25% OFF-Any Spring Topcout Dollur Days ct 25% take your choice every coat included Dollur MEN'S BLACK MINERS RUBBER RAINCOATS $4.50—DoIlar Days we ore giving you u special price in Block raincoat: good quality $4.50. MEN'S TIES 3 FOR SLOO-Silk ties odds for lust season worth 75c Dollar Day Sula in the store clearing Days. MEN'S TIES 65c—5 Dozen men's silk ties regular $1.00 value Dollur Days 65c, MEN'S HATS SIDS-New colors, new styles extra value Dollur Days $1.95, HOLEPROOF SOX SOc-Dollur Days-a big line of holeproof sox, fancy wool, cleclr- ing good patterns, 50c puir. STANFIELDS FINE COMBINATIONS LIGHT $2.25 Dollur Days $1.75. WORK SHIRTS $I.25-—Best quality Chumbroyl large cut, on sale Dollar Days 95c SHIRTS LEWIS, TOOKE $l.39—Arrow collar attached styles worth $I.75 to $2 50 Dollur Days uII sizes $1.39. i ' SPORT JACKETS—Fine material Fawn only $2.95 Dollur Day $2.19. MENgSolll-luATlaSosshgmGood quality fur felt huts $4.00 and $5.00 slightly soiled CAPS REGULAR $1.50 QUALITY-Dollur Doys all the odds to clear at 95c. PYJAMAS DOLLAR DAYS $I.49-Lov Dollur Days $1.49. NAVY BLUE BROADCLOTH SHIRTS $1.19 Regular $1.50 value, Dollur Days $l.l9. M w E golagplbgysrglsxlzkrrlzs s1 so-A» odd lot of $3.00. All wool pullover sweater; MEN'S ALL WOOL V NECK SWEATER COATS $2.69-Worth up to $4 95 u great WEIGHT SIJS-regulur price $2.00 ely broadcloth Pypomas regular $2.00 quality R5 $I.50—A|| wool pullover: for men good value at in dark blue also light blue chumbroys regular K H K A I WOOL COAT SWEATERS $1.69 worth $2.25 Dollur Days to clear $1.69. l FANCY sox 4 m. $I.OO__A|| pair for $1.00. HEAVY nu: DENIM OVER Days $1.49. g°°d “MY Pflfum‘ "QQI-IIOI’ 35C Dollur Days 4 ALLS $I.49—WeIl made great vuluc at $2.00 Doll; JUMPERS HEAVY BLUE DENIM $1.49 -Extra good, HEAVY BLUE DENIM DUNGAREES $I.I9—laced buck Regular $1.50 Quality Dollur Days $1.19. BLUE DUNGAREES $I.I0-A well Dollur Duys. Best value In town. made roomy dungaroe spielul prices at $1.10 for HENDERSON s. CUDMORE WORDS OF CHALLENGE A THOUGHT A DAY FOR A PEOPLE AT WAR “It. l5 clear that. the enemy ls determined to serve Mam- mon. Is ft quite clear that we are determined to serve God? The enemy has achieved unity 0f purpose. He Is not hedging. Are we hedlglglngbofilhle S!!!‘ moses n - Slim" — Chaplain Major R. D. Mesa. Chatham. Ontario. f r0 0o >0000+0Q+0+o+0 vac-oo- MEN’S WEAR Say to Your Grocer I Want BRAIIMIII ORANGE PEIIOE TEA You will enjoy its superior quality YOU CAN EXPECT ~ A GOOD REPORT When you ask any Islander about 0H1‘ tobacco he makes quite a noise about its high quality. The report ls loud enough also to mniw us feel satisfied that our product is keepifli! ‘l5 flavor and freshness. Mickey's Twist sells f0!‘ 10c per fig everywherl Hickey’s Black Twist Chewing MANUFACTURED. BY IIIIIKEY 8r IIIBIIIILSIIII Tobacco 0o. Ltd. Charlottetown..- ‘H‘Fq|p 5K‘ I._I_\I II n n n n I n u ll I I.I-I_\-H-I~H¢\F-'J-\-'-H-'J-' E 2 W " vevvvvovvosaooovoovaooo II