' ."v1‘.F|P-: _ ' .»=..’<*_': -$- w.» F‘*Lll?_ TJflL CHABLXUETTENlBARDIéISW NOVEMB_ER 1g, 1942 tie ciuntorreiuwn iiuinnun illflflllng Dairy wounded l“ 1"" r ‘if t: Li in. c i. v. Chester S. MOI-lire resbib: Presidvnlzu .I. R. Blllfllflll. FJ-l- _ Sflcretur): Licul. col. _D. A. Maclflnnum g-aklfj-l Editor and ulazuigiug Director. J. h. Burne , d‘ Aunt-inc Editors: kriuik Walker and lln A. III!" SPBSCIKIPTION RATES By Mull in P.E.I., sun pr-r you; 52-5" 1M 5 Wimbl- $1.25 ior 3 munins; 50c fur one month City IJUIHHI) $5.00 pct will; 53-0“ h" b mun“ $1.75 fur 3 uionihs,. bUu for on: Month M~ ‘l ii l’ \ii 1: and U.S.A. $5.00 p01‘ Y!" ggiu-Ki, sift/u ‘in-i yuan; $1.00 for 6 monuu, ‘ JUc fur 3 uiuuthl The Cliurloitciuwn Guardian may b0 obtained ll lloiullings News ,-i,,t'ii-:,v. “"165 §ll\l=ll’¢- 5¢W 7°“? Old south .\C\\a _\ -nc_\, Currier Milk and Waslnnllofl Boston; Mctropiil You: Agfllcy. 1245 Pee] 5k Momma v ,_ , y 51,, ‘luronlu; News stand. “n; ilclics News Stand Suh- ,, _-.;,.ip, Mnnclnn N. B. TT-he Stronqcst lvficmozv IS Weaker wfhiin ‘the Weakest Ink." -\\'l'.I1.\lI.\'l).-\\'. NiHl-IMBER lfirulifiili _______ Liimi") . vtiiivv hleeliligs linih 1\l‘u\‘lll\‘l'il, <\<-11 lll ivartiuic for ;,.t 1,. nu the zilcrt. ilhc ‘Quit ill la-r night's [w lflllpllk‘ 'l'lu':v1:'<- I . .. ..i-, ulnlc mu pct’ urn‘. - .i::.i1.~' y.» tnrtlu-v (Iniziilifs war . w. .iu- llllCfltlCill of the‘ ,:' .:~ .it lliillh‘ zuul ztl llllilv-‘ll ‘ |"~ chit-i spiakvr. linu- w.» ic lvzult-i‘ in liit r a convincing analysis nllll hc was ably SCCfilHIr‘ i\ t_\', Uinsrr\':itive lczulci‘ _. 1 Hun, Dr. .\lzu~.\lill.'tu. diszilt both with fcilcini _ iii-niinztliiig iii 2th Districts 0i Qucvusl . iiztriiitiiiy, enthusiasm mull ltll>llll$$ lult nothing in ‘ ‘ divs arc all well and f.i\'~ l >hnultl prove able sturd- rxt provincial coutcsf when 21rd b..uvi's in ' it ct-nzcs. _ _ At l)‘ iii :iiiuz. ‘in 11nd evening mcctiitgs, cu‘- phasis \\'.l\ p-m-l nn the ncglcct, tinder liiltrfll mtq, U,‘ du- ~is oi our agricultural lll-llls- t,“ ,\1 a ‘ ~ \‘.ll('ll governments should bc making Qitfy iiiurt to encourage farm pruduf- tion this nvliiicri-iicc is inexcusable. It IS somcthiuiv which the Conservatives propose to b . . . rcmcil_v when rcniriictl to power, in the incan- time it is thnir dutv as wcll as privilege to focus public attention on the Government's sins 0t 0nvfnl§~iivn mid ctmnnission in this and other rcspccts. A Free Press Indispensable couvcntions l "The position 0f the Clnily newspaper prcss in a cuuittry at ivar is bcscr with special prob- lems and difficulties," szi_\s the Globe and Milli “Newspapers have abnormal dfifllanck "PO" their space for the daily flood 0f war news ar- riving from cvcryr corner of the \\'Orl<l§ the)’ a" bereft (if the services of competent mem- bers of their stztifs who have gone On war Sci‘- viccs; they discovcr that governmental regulilfl tion of commerce and industry tends to curtail ldvertising, and they have to cope with Pfbel‘ minor troubles. But thc survival of an efficient independent press is absolutely essential to the latisfactory working of the democratic system. for whose preservation we arc fighfmg, bflause it provides tlic best available instrument for the dissemination of information about current events and ptililic affairs of all kinds, and for the exercise of thc right of free criticism of Governments, which is a. bedrock foundation of democratic liberty. _ “But in wartime c free press is peculiarly in- Ilipenszible to my democracy, because during wars Governments arrogate to themselves vir- iually dictatorial powers, through WhIQlI lhc)’ interfere in every sphere of human activity,_a_.nd {hey arc usually able to reduce the Opposition forces in Parliament to a state of innocuousncss, if not to passive submission to their will. Con- "qucnrly the press is left as the only ¢ffcctiye watchdog of the public interest against the mis- deeds and encroachment: of Governments, and Canada today, owing to special circumstaflffi!) provides a striking example of ‘such a situatiOH- Accordingly any measures which will operate to weaken the power of Canada's press and re- strict its influcncc are contrary to the funda- mental intcrcsts of the natifln- “Since no (laily newspaper could survive as 1n efficient organ of public opinion if it liildfv rely solely for its rcvcntics upon the SUIJSCTIP- tion which its ZFDJTUKE reader is prepared t0 pay, its continued c.\'iSl¢flC€_ (lfpclldi “PW ‘l5 ldvcrtisiiig rcvcuuc; and it is Justihis revenue “Md, “mph-i g, m prcscrve the independence ‘mid, i; the llFC-lllUlHI of its uscfulnes to the public, and m dispcnsc with subsidies citlicr from (lovcrnmcnts or businesand. financial in- tcrests with private axes to Ermd-l Postal Information The incrcrisc in the volume of domestic, over- scns and militarv mails has liccn tremendous in __ USCfuI information on post office services and a brief section on mail for the armed forces. which should prove very’ helpful. l: can be Obtained on application to ilic P05! Office DC- partmcnt, Ottawa. , Emphasis is plucvil in the bnukltt and n1 other literature issucd by llldilellllfllllcllli P" “WHIP portame of "early mailing" for Lhristmas. [he mail will reach innncnsc volumes this scason, and inexpcricncctl help will have 1o be uscd to cope with rhc rush. It is cssvntizil that the pub- lic co~0pcrzitc in this matter. “Not later than Dec, 2o for local delivery” and other (lead-lines advanced corrt-sponiliuglyg is the slogan this year, \\'c should all try to rciuvnibcr it — EDI IORIAL NOTES- lt is most gratifying to he able to report out- stzitidiug <lli.‘t‘K'>~(‘S of our zirins Ill sca, on Lind NOTES BY TIIE WAY Proud Mother-They promoted my son Jerry’ for n-ivruzg the >81‘- geant. They made hm a Court. Martial. —---_'x':‘nange Gandhi at one time wore a sill! hat, morning ccat and spurts. Some one m-ust have stolen them when he was taking his morning tub. and leii him win only a. guest towel. — Hamilton Spectator, A German correspondent, at the front in Russia, complains in I broadcast: "what: we have gained one day, we must fight. for all nvcr flgflln the next. dav " Now. unit that. just. too bad! - Hamilton Spectator. Our philosophy is that we must take things as they come. and it is with a high consciousness of duty that. we report. the hanging upside down oi‘ a painting by the Museum and in the air. U I O l Local potato exporters are (lciiietl the right of Modern Art. The composition 1n- vclvcd is an abstraction by John was last FTiday -and no two ivays about. it, unlrs the artist had the of tlt‘l.'t_\‘, free of charge, fut‘ >hipniciit of Pfilll- int‘.- by mil in 2cm \\‘i‘.'llll('l', IWCZIHSC Cllll~(‘lll 11y lllt‘ linzird of 'l'i':it1-piii"t (Viiniiiissinil liught npcn tlic (lnov for uilicr Sllllllill‘ applicatittiis. livid-cuil_v the merits of tlit- C5156 do not Ctrllllf, l only possible consequcnccs In thc railwa)’. ' >l< i! d‘ ‘I1 .\lrivie progrzimnu-s arc likely: m Ill‘ (‘ulhiilvr- zilily" L"lll'l.‘lIl\‘\l. 'l‘lic li..\i.,\. National llouixl of: hcvic-iv (sf .\lutio|1 Pirturi-s urgcs the innvic iii- LIUSIY)’ to S\l*]ti‘lllI (lOlllllC fvzuurcs for thc tlnrzi- tinn “(is a saving of tints, critical nintvrizils and nmiipruvci- nccdcd for winning tlit- \\':n',' illu‘ l,_ Ililltlllllll] t-i {t ri-snliitioii to il1i~ cffcct followid 1i spvcch l») Lnwcll .\I(lll‘ll. chit-f of the Ullivc, of \\ ar illliITllHllIOIl llurcati of Rlutiun Pictures; liufore tht- tiuh .\nnu:il kINIIUYCIICA‘ of the liUZlHI urgnr; Ltlllliillllll iii tht- iilllllllfiliUillllld.’ ' >i< v >l= v Is it [ios-ililc lllltlkjl‘ our ])l‘(“-(‘lll sptcni of jurisdiction fur an innncciii uiun tn bc coniict~ rd? Two lll"r\'t'lll"(illl litiys, one of Whom cun- fcsscrl nftvr zui innoccnt mun lizul llCUll .\t‘llli"l‘ik‘- irrational ivliim of signing it up- side down in the upper left-hand curnri- We have a feeling that rztial Ccrnssoz will simply lliis lin.p;;en g as continuation of his worst sitspicicn about the way thin-gs are going. —The New York- 6i‘ ' When Biilrnsfatherb Old Bill In- <i,_ m’ , his .cc_».=ni;a,d ip-arius "win-ac" dldt-“naténe go,’ nbertvf lie was gu t_v of a breach of discipline, as disc Linc appears to be under- n a sphere within the Juris- -n n1 th stern mllltarist, Mi'. n, Min. tcr of HD1113 Secur- . vs tron Birmingham have f (‘r an inspection of a unit i‘ the Naiinral Fire Service by tivn 4r \/I lclals, an ord- szued to the effect that s cf iihe N. F. S. firemen cmon. are not to use when addressing icr but mvst. use surnames cited by the appropriate Plziinly, during the next) ‘ it will be improper for'any mctnbei‘ of the N F S. fireman or firsivtiziinzz, to fallow the precedent Ril for the- vrirnt- wit." - Ill ll) jail in Xloinvczi _ !(l‘lll'~'f ijccs he cr she must say: for five months curh fur zi-sault and l‘iilIll‘\‘l'\'. lgo’_','é“glg'~iq_f§t ‘§r,‘,'1i,,‘f}*= . . - .. . . t. ., ilczuiwlulc cuunscl has lit-cu ztrrztnguig to launch Fmyurgn] ~ _y_on,5on Tl-ug-l-L :u' r - "li l’"-l.':.1\’.mit~i1'- tr ——-— . Q1, Appeal! f0] I l), i“, “fl, ‘_ 3* ‘i khllh.) Austrrliafis racing men cheerfully it ‘mom is at i.ni 1.1 m1 (ll lli? tiunc in \\ llll .2314?“ up m, the can we,“ cut police now sziv ht- hail iii) piirt. llri-luiul, air~ fcr bincctil: . for the a"m,v ‘In rcsttul on thc- night Hi lily‘ l'Ul‘)lit:l'_\', pin-fraud his Il1lliIL‘CtlCC,\\'1t~ ciiuvzciud, is still in piilicc culls. many Unc of the youths coniv-"stwl a wcvk IlQu n ft-w Pg fionegzsr hours aftci" BlTlJtllCI ivzis svuicuct-il. lli-Htiilici‘ “From ivzis fll'l't‘>l(‘(l scvvrnl days ugh and snlisuipiviuiy‘ “M” The both boys plczttlcrl guilty. r * r v Gcucrnl Bernard Law Blontgoincry", tlu- Iicro of the ligypti:iii cznnpztigii, is zni .'ili.~~ti~nii<liis, liodly and iniplzicablc inzui. \\iith iht- /.<-:il oi tlic Godly he wcnt In work. llour Zlllvi‘ hour, for twelve days, his liiglith .'\i'lll_\’ had surucil (igillllut cvcry foot of Ronmicls defense, [itimint-liit-g the Axis Army with zirtillcry and aircraft. clawing a way forivard tlirimgli bztrln-tl \\"5i‘<'. mincficlzl and bonliy trap. Ill‘ is an Zlllsivll‘ man, the sun of a bishop and rht- grzuidsriii t-i Dcan F. \\'. Irélffill‘, who wrnlc :1 liic of L'li:i>t.. and the mic time must pupukw wliuullioy~ nnvt-Ll "Eric or Little by Little." .~'\n Ulstcrniziti, bi-rn l iu (otuuy Unncgal, hu \\'IlS niztrki-d for thcl clergy. llc wcnt iniu iht- .\l‘lll_\', but tht- mavkl of his rcligiutis upbringing is still (lot-p in him and he invariably reads the lessons at Church parade. i 1i t it Religion in the army. General Douglas ‘.\‘lac-, Arthur, a. dour Prcsbytcrian says: “By pro-l fcssion I am a soldier, and take pride in that fact, but I am proudcr, infinitely prouder to he a. father. A soldier destroys in order to build; a father only builds, never destroys. The one has the potentialities of death; the other cm- bodies creation and life; and wliilc the hordes of death are mighty, the battalions of life are mightier still. It is my hopc that my son, when I am gone, will remember me, not from the battle, but in the home fCpCElllflg with him nur simple daily prayer: "Our Phthcr Who art in hcavcn'." An army chaplain was making a, sur- vcry in one of the Canadian camps and asked this question of a. soldier: "What is the one thing you miss most in your military life?” This was the answer he received: "In our home we have a. practice of saying grace before meals a! we gather round till‘ lllllli‘. I miss that home touch more than anything." , ,- 1k v -. w Sir Stanley Maude, British soldicr, died this date, I9I7; son of General Sir Frederick Maude, V.C.; educated at Eton and Sandhurst; joined the COIdSlNBIH Guards; fought in tlic Soudan; severely ivoundcd in South Africa. 1899; military secretary to Governor Gcncral of Canada 1901-4; assistant director of 'l‘crr- itorial forces, War Office, i914; wcnt to France on staff of 5th Division in command of 14th Brigade; severely wounded, on recovery sent to Gallopi in command 13th Division, being primarily responsible for the sticcvssful evacua- tion of Scrvia and of llcllcs; transferred to l\lcs~ opotaniia where he liccamc by rapid stcps com- mander-in-chief, and organized and executed the brilliant campaign leading up to the capture of Bagdad with which his name will cvcr be connected; dicd inllagdarl of cholera. a i- ‘iii s crd “Fritz.” '1 lie real ‘oi , . r: mv lLLYOIlEb " —Aus:rnlinn '\'r>\vs- t loiter- Wi iin a week there have been rlxrne ‘tyflIlllfili in Mlssisrsrtpl —C"l€ loss than t~h~ number rccnrdcd for an of 1M1 Tivn c-l "no nzob murd- cr< were partia-ukrl‘: revulttrv. - t in’. l~|"‘i'iip'r qt lit-i-r-wr-old A nltt-rl N? how's Tit" ‘lilrd 2h" (‘iftilll of a Yen‘) cnrcrl to lit» ‘Inn 1 I‘ min-fer -Ns\v York Herald Ti‘!- btutc. How fzlsl can r.n Alguinu moniac trixvcl? A m- s? is an ungainly lctilcng croriziircyiti mam‘ “nits. (‘W11 iliougn wiJn u fine s:t of untlsrs lie »p1-,-,1@r~.t5 omethlrzg of a nmjestic uppe . But it seems that he can cover a lot c-f ground in i1 short time ivhen he is but $0 ll‘ 5° when the Stars Bnnrhsvvana COT- rc-“Iondenl rrporlcd that a 111C059 "a. ahead of Ari. Haircuts car tin me Batchaivztnn highway for a enn- siclcrablo distance at a sused of frrtn tivctnty to tihlrty miles an hour, something of a discussion started "That's easy for a moose. commented one c-Xtperleirzced hunter He declared that a moose could probably better cvcn that. speed and that. moose could outrun a hound. "And," he added, “I've ptwfld B hound ‘at thirty-five miles 1m 110111‘ or moi-eW-Sault Ste. Mai-ls star. Drastic restrlctlgn on the usepp: pflipfl‘ are impose a new PB ' control order of the Supply Minis- m-y_ Evert your letters inrust. be cu to the shortest, Tne order e-rijolns that only the quantity of PEP" that is reasonably required nluy be used for any document, leaflet, pamptilcr, report letter, or memor- andum —whet.her prlntied, written, or typewritten. The use of paper is more strictly controlled for ad- vertising, pools and competitions. clmulnrs, mapping Mid P 8. and labels. The restrictions on posters extend to advertising win- dow bills and show cards. The bnn 0:1 new newspapers and per- lodicals continues, nnd a fresh pro- vision limits the advertising space in stich publications. - London Daily Mall. Prepayment of a poll lax will not be necessary to vote 1n some Am- erfcazn SlBiRQ when a pending bill goes through t-hie Congress. This exterminates the poll wieevfl. — Toronto Star. The enclosed German leaflet on recently dropped 1n a. Hampshire garden It may be o! interest. to you since M. attributes the follow- ng statcmait to The Times: “Ii! then iihls is not in an sense the opening of a ‘second ront,’ what may it be taken to mean?" (This is a charactérlstlc example of the di.=lio:irst_i' of German propaganda. Prime llliiiistcr Maclicnzic King, former, isolationist has now got a ncw and srlf-satisf_v-- ing alibi whcn snrclyr prcsscrl liy critics-"it ivasn’: mc. it ivas (Ihurrhill!" It ivas (Thurchill i who asked that Canadians be sent to Ilong Kcrug. l It was Churchill who adviscd our maintaining diplomatic relations with Vichy wlicn all but we had quit. Now it appears on the broad shnulrl- e-rs of ("hurrliill is laid (he responsibility of Shipping "a train m’ hoxwars of (Yanarlizm hccr fifty iuilcs long" to Egypt. (if conrz-c if this were true, and the rout of Rnmmrl the con- scquvncv, we might bc iurlimvl like Lincoln un- rccvni vczirs, mil-i.‘ pn-‘ldl rcvcnucs rcaching a ][p\\' i131], hi‘ 1)\'(’T .f_,.i;7.i_;o. Unfortunate- lv. thcrc ll.'1\ lift-n 1i curivspoiitliiig incrcase m iinnihcr (llTUClliPll. Last _v:w'ir Sonic 2.000.000 items ‘Ii mail l"‘-'lCIl(.‘(l thC 90ml LU!" OHM‘, due to failurv ll‘l llio part nf scndcrs to address c,,,~,-,,-;|,-, p, ]it'1i\'l1l(f,'i ri-turn :uldrcss, clc. In additimi. iluvlligf tht» HHIK‘ pcriovl llic Armed 1:0,,“ |-,,-,.,- |',..; (iffici- had thc extra burden of ,;_..,,;,',,._, up], impi-np<~i-l_v prepared mail —— OW,- _g_;r)_1;z)-,) L-iu-i-g 37mm) yiarcvls and 104.000 nmvs iirnis rcipiinil l'4‘~t'lilfll'('.s*~lllg and rc-ccir (Iitimiing so that iln- inc-ii in llu‘ f"l"~‘05 ‘lvcrifil5 lVlllllfl rtwcivc flu-Er mail. These figures re- pri-scnt ccmiuviiic loss and waste. as wcll 8S tuna work and cxyicnsc t0 the heavily taxed postal -crvic<'. .\.< an aid lri ri-mi-dyiug this situation. thi- authorities lmit- issued a Imoldct (if postal ill-l furnmlinti, cnntninfng air mail and other rates, dcr similar circunisiauiccs in pray that all tlicl other generals In‘ supplivil within potvnt liquor,‘ of the same brand. Hut we doubt tIic authenticity of the rcpnrt, know-lug as we (lo that the lrilish Government docs not iutcrfcrc with the internal or external trade of any of llic Ilnlli-l IIIIHIIS or stick t-i find inzirkvis fur nlllvr t|._,r, niuniiioiis of war, of which Iii-or is not It'll“- matcly one | . c more so because 'I"he sentence quoted i4 from a Iendiny article, the sense of which is per cctly plain in its context, all (h an earlier svntcnce had described the at- tempt to mzigrfiiy the rnld into an abortive invasion as a "clumsy pret- ence" which "will deceive no one but Germans ”- Times Editor . — Lady Hayward. 1m Imidon ‘Dimes. The people of Great lh-ltrln are taking no chances with- rrgard to the air wnr lmidon reports that. "every house and building in the nation has been equipped with an alcrt. {tic-watching sound." This II a wfsq precaution The Germans will probably throw cvv-rvflilrig they have nit the Ialard CWzdeI one of i-ht-se nights Arid the Ire boneless their cause the more vicious will in», their tiny. -Branflford Ex- When will our war mlnlafcrs and their nvenls come to under- stand that they are over- wnrknz this “hush hush" buslnrss mid that in dolnt! so they rm rzlv- inz wings to mischievous rumors’!- Wncouver Dally Provlncl. Ferren, and it. is upsde down -<:r. Bill uivfer fire. In rimilarfiwc believe that the situation is lcovered the question of shipping land ended with the demand for the Dieppe raid is one of mnnvl On Sending Beer To Emu (Montreal Gazette) Described by Rev. RJ, Mudb- mar, Secretary of the United ‘Church Board of Evangelism 1nd ,Eociai Service. as "I scandal and a disgrace," ghltment of Canadian :eer to Egypt is a. matter for which the British Government has been wholly responsible. The Mucbflior complaint. uttered in the course‘ of ta temperance address 1n Knox lChurcb, Regina, on November 3rd, ‘W83 that Cauadlnn beer was beln sent over a distance of eighteen thousand miles when South Afric- an beer could be sent over not more than four thousand. ‘Ibis. said Mr. Muchmor, was waste and grclly. The Minister of ‘made and "Commerce, Hon. JJi. MacKlnnon, explalnstbat the procedure h been folowed because the British Government wanted it that way. Canada has followed “the definite wishes of the British Government and of the British military authori- nes» , The MiwKlnnon answer dispose; ,or everything except the unwisdom of speaking In ignorance. A; rc- norted in the Regina. Leader-Post, Nlr. Muclmor elaborated b‘; theme. BEFORE Yllll IIISIIRE- vfI-e gave his audience a. picture of cue brewery shipping enough beer .n three months to fill a train of. cox-cars fifty miles long. HQ dgnlgd {objecting "b0 men 1n Egypt having |brer,‘ but emphasized the distance.‘ |'I'h‘s would have sounded better iliut for the xenerai attitude ex- gvessed in the sentence: “The liq- nior busmesq 1s so a gresslve and profitable in Canada day that 1t yhas secured £10m the Federal Go'- ornment permission t0 mlp beer to “gym and has been shipping this ‘cesi- for well over a year." The truth. as supplied by Mr. Mac- lfiilwu. is that the “pewnlsslurfl irvllrcd from the Federal Govern- ment was in reality a definite rc- quest from British Government and military authorities. The Muchmor criticism would rerd better if crlflned to me iriattzr of d‘stance, even lf .L lucked foundation. The crlzlc- fsm itself was incorporated in u resolution adopted by the meet- iiig which Mr. Muclimor address- cd. but; this resolution began: SVCJ] in the matter of liquor con- sumptiun both ‘n the civilian ranks and the armed forces." It then "immediate and drastic action in the interest of our avowed total War policv and the well-being of cur citzeiiry." ll. wll'. be noted that F11 Dmeflfis l0 Egypt were not the ".318 ccncern of this gathering. "The well-being cf our citizenry", ("xpresrd In flirt-her restrictions upon their liberties, was there too. Advertising In Wartime (Th: Offsiwa Journal) Peopc are sometimes heard to ask Why advertising veuould be n1. lowed in wartime. They argue may, it. is a wasteful and useless prac- tice that should be abolished or at least greatly curtailed. Sensible answers to such people are provided in the Retailers‘ Bulletin, an official publication of tliranvivartlme Prices and Trade The‘ Bullctlnystates simply that, if the production of partlc-lur goods ur services is permitted t en < it ls permissible to sell them, and it ls permissible to assist their sales’ by using advertising media within the few regulations si-r forth by the Government, More- Over. the Bulletin outlines the ful- lowing ways in which advertising may contribute to the stabiliza- tion of business and the econom- ical distribution of goods and szrviccs: "Informing customers of the cf- fect of Government regulations up. on purchasing. "Giving current information re- garding available goods to prevent panic buying or carding due to rumors or temporary shortages. “Interpreting priority or 51mp- lifled practice rulings by lving reasons for rationing, 1m], non; 0f Supply. reduced deliveries or otlygulgiiirtallmtfints bof lzervfoe. b] I18 e uy B pu l qlliflkly to available perlshablii goods or other goods In plcntlful | CHRIST IN FLANDEBS (1915) We had forgotten You, or very n arl 9 Y. You din not. seem to touch us very near y, Of course we thought. about You now and then; Especiauy in any time of trouble, But. we are very ordinary mcn. supply." The Bulletin further clear that merchants may adver- tise comparative prices in order to move perishable. out-of-season makes Block or broken ranges of stock which are offered at special prices. Blwh advertising is helpful to org- anized commerce, although 1t should not encourage unnecessary to d Concludes the Bulletin: "Until peacetime conditions are restored. advertising will find many new and different functions to perform urging customers to re-I strict their choice and to save- rafzher than to choose spend, educating the nubile to more economical and fuller use of available commodities. informing consumers of the facts behind the elimination of “frills” from new standardized and simplified pru- ducts, etc." Daniubian Futures y (Halifax Chronicle) Now that the tide of actual war appears to be turning 1n some de- gree in favor of the United Nafions, it will probably be our next. step to pay more attention than ever to the psychological front. and to atirmril, yvliere possible. to widen breaches in the ranks of those nations who are aligned with the Air's, either by choice or through lack of it. The recent presence in Halifax of Dr. Rana Klein, editor of “The Voice of Austria" bends to impress upcn us the fact that, for a long time now. he has been lnslsfniz that the Austria-Hungarian Empire of the past wgs the great stcadvfng influence of Central Europe for centuries; that llzs bople were for Wm)‘ years the allies of Great, Britain. and that. the majorty of them acceded Hitler's cccunatlon Onlv because ft ivns unavoidable. years, the Habsburgs did keen rule along the Danube-Jbough, indeed, not entirely without friction. In the old Emifre there were G311]!!!- speakmg Austrians. Magv-irs and Slavs, as well as Czechs. The rur- Prislng fact. u not. that this hetero- geneous grcub occasionally seabed with a certain wuount of sectional discontent. The miracle was that it ever held tcgethr at all. Bur. it did so, nevertheless. until Aust ‘a- Hungary was cut up on no very wise principle, at. the end of the last: war.‘ Whether a restofutlon of the Hapsburgs, at the end of the pres- ent Wm‘. could ever hone to meet with success. ls doubtful, to our mind. But some stable reconstruct- fcn of the Daiiublan situation will cefalnly have to be achieved if we are to hope for European peace in the future. Pcsslbly some Federal scheme will be capable of Institut- ion. After all, switzerland, ever since the fourteenth century, has Riven the world an outstanding ax- InB 1n nationality, speech and even in religion, can federaie and live to. getber amicably. The disturbing elwnent ln Cenlffll lmrope, at least since the eighteenth flfllllfy. has alwa s been Prussia. It is Prussia agn n, under a new buying. nor stimulate the desire boar I. Certainly, for many hundreds of) _ ample of how three peoples, d'ffer-' m“ devempmenfr 0f 1°°l11 BOVBYH- WAR- TIMI TRAVEL TIP NO. I “v75”. lvold lnyod nuns and help relieve Ivullnlc puma on the railway: Ivy making nunalhu curly and pnlclulinj llchta well In advance 0| lulu than.‘ CANADIAN TICKET? ______$ NATIONAL Flights llaily' O CHARLOTTETOWN O SUMMERSIDE O MONCTON ‘Sci-ring the Mnrltimrs" Z FLIGHTS *DAILY 3 HONCTON -— SAINT JOHN Save Time-Ga by Air PLANES LEAVI; CHARLOTTETOWN: 8.303.111. 12.30 p.111. 430p.‘ ARRIVE CIIARLOTTETOWN : LOO [LI- IAB p.m. 7.05 pm- For RESERVATIONS Ind INFORMATION apply P. E. I. Travel Bureau — Phone i100 Rogers Ticket Agen cy-PMMSQ Airport — Phone 140B EFFECTIVE NOV. 18¢, 1948 * EXCEPT SUNDAY Maritime Qenua- Airways Limited L .__-_¢ PASSENGEBS —- AIRMAIL — AIR EXPIUISS “F. R. Brow ESL" Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Class Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside. Lloyd Lewis merit and me preservation of local ssntiment and language. could also provide sufficient mllitar solidarity iriiiilgkeirii poliiiiig‘ 12"‘ ° ‘m? 'l°“' an u um would-by filer. y . If such a Policy has in it any vir- tue and likelihood of success. now ls e time to let these Danublan name, which is bearing the world apart Bub there have always been ele- ments 1n Germany itself which have bmn opposed to Prussia. Well into the nineteenth century such] t tales a; Bavaria, Saxony. Wurtem- a burg and Baden always felt that, their outlook coincided more with that of France than of Prussia, (Ijtumgght well be that not, all of’ erefore, one might look (or success if such German states as these, to- gether with the larger elements of the old Austrian Empire could be And there were always other things t0 think of i to mink o , I Hil worlé, ms name, hi! ‘ - m . - And 5% Wedgnly mdught. o! You on a un y ISometimes. sin-naps, not even 0n a Bundfly. Because inc-es always lots to ill one's life. Y In country time’, in city street, or by-way, You WBAKEQ among us and we did not see. Your feet were bleeding u You walked our pavemants, How did we miss You: footprint; on our pgvcments? Can ihél‘; be other folk u blind u we Now we remember: over berg m Flanders. (It isn't atran e to think of You in t Flanders , mu hideous warfm seem: to mike things clear, we never thought. about You much fliereis IbuS 6i trying; a man has got, I Pgglsasiiu sort. vi. fsderflLex; ....~____ . i " COMPLETE , INSURANCE SERVIC " s But. now that. we arc fa: away from En land We have no doubts, we know that You are here . . . Though we forgot You-You will not forget. us, We feel so aurewhnt You will not orget. us. - But stay with u: uni-ll this drum II past. And so we ask for couriile. strength and rdon, Especially, I think we u]: for pur- on. And that You'll stand beside u; a the last. W. ll. ROGERS ‘Agencies Ltil. Phone 540-541 --hucy Whltomell. | Df-‘Oples know that we have their future welfare at heart. so that they mly learn in time who their real fllwdi m. 8nd do their n to nu the world of its present am; u 5111811; ‘as we can come effectively to l Evans Stomach Mixture A .......:r:r sir."i:.:=r.r..;s on f t it i whlcli no’ nttgiigeiie liiyI-‘P: "WM! l. urfhnm, gln 144' Richmond St. Charlottetown isi f “m. . f. ishlfixli-‘iewhlicllirhivliiiic pmhlllll?,“zr‘? ““°""“’_“'-'i“"‘“""“ LONDON — (C P) »-_’1‘li:* 11 air vice-marshal to fly m .1 bu" lug raid has been promtilfll- i". Ali- Vice Mai-shat J.E n Bald" who took part in the WOO-Wm raid on Cologne, now dimmi- air" finer commanding-thank . ll_\ In who has been promoiiu .*\L‘llll§ Marshal. The musk-deer llflS an iuife but it?“ upper canine nob urvl us . V ‘_ Professional Cards Mason a. SENTLEY EV K C. Ban-mm and Atuirnvyrl" LII HONEY TD [IO-AN Ill Prince S!!!" he heat-t. 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