"fboeoiy Gray ' creamy-tex- Itured lipeeieks go on with a “ado-smooth finish. Rich-red ‘favorites keyed io the fashions _'of American designers-Nose- ' y,Da|edevil,Souih American, ‘Garvin. Each. $1.15. '- IIIANGEB. AT THE DOOR m, o: the cottage door é; made his way: new exactly. word for word, "I've come to commandeer tonight Y ‘flame, one room, no more, . to use. as use I must we play of war." e door was opened tvimdty Ikiqlish gesture is th fight. i‘ ‘t? o nin Dnzland. he hearts o! England's men, Co; men from across the HEM . while Bneiand IIDQO_ flhendlly English greeting, To a smoker at the door. BILLET M‘ OAK he; been said and written the British oak; so much so her Ions are likened to them. the oak that grew on the swept hills of Ilnglund the shill- in depanded “t3 “build the drips st sa e e seyen flirt withstood the wind and and were the pride of the h Nan went by the trees er 5 also that 0 fl mm: seas, s‘; fineizrained. D . ‘I'M! was tried t/ut the fibre prov. d Wllflh. ‘Ihese trees grew in he tar of the great wood and never head to battle with the fierce lee that well nigh rent the Eml- The generations. trials and anxie- flea oi’ today are destined to foster strength m the soul of every Chris- m for "He glveth strength to that are bowed down." I D_QITI MISREPRESENTA- TION de that temperance sum! ylng troops n 5'13». with beer. Oposition was to dripping beer to Africa when mili- ta-ry llpplies were rotting on sid- . Objection was made to special 711089 oi.’ Canadian Brewers when 8th Anny came near to disas- ter ituotuzh lack o! equipment. We ti, an not ready to accept defeat {or our smiles in order that Canadian H‘ may prefer beer to bul- e . The brewers are nngrv that Can- adian citilens protested at sending B0 miles of freight curs locsicd with beer --00 per oent of which was Intel‘ from Lake Ontario- all the way around the Cape of Good Hope to the Middle East. Why the long haul when military equipment could not be carried? Would it he unfair to suggrsi that somebody wanted t0 sec Canadian Brwveries maintain t ' ' prof l Annual Rally of WIMS. of United Church "The annual rnlly of the various euxiliarie; orb tliewwlldlbfihof the u ieq u o ea r ca was M u" m the Albert-on with Mrs A ar o! the president, _ . dsid . . oo e. The opening devotional period was lad by (our ladias of the Sum- th and canoe Skfilfilgi“. iftting mantmooaphere for rnoon seas ltlrLaMlthMOn than took tin aha and Mrs. Fred Lear-d was asked to act as secretary during the aes- sion of the rally. A resolutions and oourtesies committee was ap- ambedhlra.“ mmilifinMigi-bntt and Mr‘; brute MacDc all. The ladies were t en given I carding ‘welcome :0 ‘m um . Green. Miss Bcrlha Bowneas responded fittingl on banal! of the ivisiwn. The roll call o! the auxiliaries was than read Mrs. gar] Weak: h! dfld $393.5’: wire 83 members and "i i t. \ irksrsdiiififta Box was than lu- troduced ‘g Mrs. Clark Nao- Quartlg questions were col- lected later in the meetlnl. . - . sheen, Mrs. lewellyn and Mrs- Tmve then sang the beautiful h " t is well with My Soul". TMis w very besutiiull rendered. Greetin s from the pres ant, Mn. Woodei e were then read by Mn. and although about in body the resident seemed trmly to be presen in spirit as her yer‘ worthwhile message was read. . .J. ypresi in bar 0. h menace ham clan and‘ Affiliated: 0.0.1.1‘. Bgamiava illustrations o! the d work done by swan! mis- sionariea at home and said I. doaa not iiiiiriiitiii‘ tgtigggti i? from the Communigt Friendship Secretary, Mrl. R. . MacAusland was then read by Mrs. Edward Mseaualand. Bhe_ s ecially urged the use of removal s {as by the local mmuniw Fr endship - man? or our young ple am leavin-t their homes these days and goin to strange cities. and if these slips are sent to the ministers or WMB. workers in the Places to which they go a friendly welcomg will be giv- en them and thus strengthen he decide what supplies his mop! shall have. but we will eternally protest against Canadian Brewers us- ing space for beer when there's a shortage o1 military equipment. - Rev. C. A. A. Nicholson, in For- ward, the Ozficial Organ o! the Sons d! Temperance. WOMEN'S SCHOOL FOB CITIZENSHIP A timely article by Alice Hemmind appears in the June Chatelaine on the Vancouver Women's school for Citizenship that, is well worth read: ing. This is e work in which the W. C. T. U. has done pioneer ser- vice. but we should practise our principles more widely and more thoroughly public questions should be carefully studied. The Provincial W. C. T. U. pro- tested to the Dominion and Prov- incial Governments against the em- ployment in industry of mothers of young children while numbers of men are still unemployed. Numbers o! homes are disrupted through mothers of young children being al. lowed to go into industry, leaving the children without supervision, with rwulting juvenile delinquency. Petition had also gone to the Minister of Pensions and National Health asking for the re-establish- ment oi’ the venereal disease control scheme of 1921. with all its oom- ponent parts, including the general application of the W "H tcst George Gau h. handwork w ich shs s the Mission Band children was won- derful and showed that Gaugh spared neither time nor ef- fort to make this work a. success. Following this and relatkig close- to it was the message from Mrs. Scott on Mission Bond and Baby Band work read by Mrs. George Sheen. It. told how to or- ganize Baby Bands and stressed the importance of Mission Band work. Members from the various auxiliaries then spoke briefly on their methods o! raising funds and use of study book. The ques- tions from the question box were then read and ably dealt with by Mrs. Clark MacQuarric. Mrs. Matheson then conducted the closin worship on the theme "Peace." he was assisted by Mrs. Sheen, Mrs. Yeo and Mrs. Green. _ Hxymn 52? "O God of Love, O King 0 Peace," brough session to a. close. svnmdc SESSION The evening WEN ' " b the afternoon ning devotions the f‘ for those in industry. for the armed forces. in hospitals and for persons applying for marriage licenses. Pro- test had gone to the censor board against motion picture theatres be- ing open on Sunday; u: the mayor protestins against the reappearance of ‘Tobacco Road" and to the Board of Education opposing children sell. ing raffle tickets or draw books for war or other purposes. Women's organizations should fol- low the example of Toronto District W. C T. U. in supporting the clog. inrz of women's beverage rooms, taking chairs and tables out o: the men's rooms, "so they could not Sit and drink till drunk." Proper inspection and the disciplining 6f the management for infractions of e law were some of the measures advocated to “clean up" the present stuation. The City Council gave leadship when it asked for abolition nf women's rooms and taking furni. ture out of the men's —-"but noth- ing has come of it so 19,1," qiq Alderman D. M Fleming. What is the use of trying to gc on with our social services. dealing, at great cost, with what are often results of such conditions. if we do 71°‘ HH-Qmllt t0 eradicate the cause?" he asked, nfter quoting figures to 5119i" that R great many crimes, and Wen Juvenile delinquency are trace. able to beverage rooms, Y r Auxiliary. Mrs. Russell Licard pre- sided and gave a brief but in- spiring address. She was assisted in the service by Mrs. John Ashley and Mrs. Melvin Bridges and spe- cial music was given by Alberton choir. Followin the worship ser- vice a solo "I card the Voice of Jesus Bay" was sung by Mrs. John Wells and was greatly app ted, The address of the evening was then iven by Rev. J. M. Fraser of rton. His theme "The Lgflgdoihizhemworld; and he de- V O IIK Igy that all tee then resented b Mr. Rluss-‘rllulziéd. pThe fo owibl Q t ved that wa our gra MM to God for myth” of unrnolestod wordhi and that we continue to pray or a speedy victory which may bring freedom of worshi to all men. I. Resoved that we sledge our lflyllt-y to our Kin; an the Bri- tish lbnptra and our support all the undertakings to assist the war effort oi’ our ooimtry. 8. Resolved that we express our ariagueeiatlon of the valued sarvice ncsnrnvc THEIR CRAFT FOR rm: INVASION or smug Canadian troops preparing for their dawn invasion of Sicily, load [ear onto a landing emit from the deck of one oi the ships making up the invasion convoy. (Canadian Armv Photo), in the absence to the ladies‘ Summerside for their numbers this afternoon; ‘to Mrs w (January to May), slaughterlngs of hogs in Canadian plants under 1n- Review of Agricultural Conditionsi _(Advancc)- According to s form- i totalled 2,741,000 compared in (Banada, in meeting with 2,711,000 in the corresponding months of 194d. However, the dress- ed weight at slaughter for l/hg five . months %ding tntal__of 19p by_over_26 898015 "Our figblirzg mm are mm»- and ready M bi! tbe enemy with everything they've got. Our '06 i: to see they have more I n enough first-rate battle equi - menl—-drld tbe job won't e finisher! mm’! our enemy bar ‘unconditionallysurrendcre '." /i@2t,4w PRESIDENT FORD MOTOR COMPANY ’ WHEN AN mommy npvmcs is held up by an enemy “hot spot,” the Commanding Oflicei: signals for the shock troops-the hard-riding, sharp-shooting men of the Carrier Sections. Zooming up in speedy, armoured Universal Carriers the boys in black battle dress throw themselves and their weapons into action with the wild abandon of rodeo riders-but with deadly precision and split-second teamwork. A Carrier Section (three carriers, nine men and a Section Commander) can concentrate fire- power equal to that of an entire infantry platoon on an enemy position. On today's fluid battle lines, the Carriers are stat- performers. They deliver a knockout blow in one place and- before the enemy knows what hit him-ere striking again far down the line. Each mm in the Carrier Troops is an accom- i\ IORD V-I AND MIICURY CARS FORD YRUCKI, YRACTOII AND llllll an’ ONE OF A SERIES OF ."ACTION PICTU i WITH cums MECHANIZED ARMY ' plishecl driver or radio operator; each is a dead shot with rifle, Bren gun, anti-tank rile or 2-inch mortar which are standard equipment. Useful also for laying smoke screens to cover troop movements, the Universal Carriers are often called upon to transport men and supplies over rough-and-tumble terrain which would stop a less powerful or sure-footed vehicle.‘ Canada can expect great things from the last, I fearless soldiers in the Carrie: Section-the Army's flying wing! One of more than 50 types of battle vehicles made and tested by Ford of Canada's craftsmen, the Universal Carrier is a versatile piece of equipment; has already figured in successful Commando raids and important United Nations OP CANADA, LIMITED LARGEST PRODUCERS OF MILITARY VEHICLES lid ‘IL-IE IRITISH EMPIRE HOG BLAUGHTERINGS In the first five months of 1943 BRINGINTFUP Fnriisn million pounds. due to the increased i markl hogs. This has nssistance, states the requirements under the langcoal agreement. 1:101; prigiég dur-J u e a-nua - n. - in 1943 exceeded the corre- aged higher thxnyn in {fie}... 212,655 1930. In June, 1943, wit_i_i_sil_aughier- running well ahead of 194d, weights of . p ces remained steady. been oi’ material; ~—-———i——- Current‘ WASHINGTON, July 30 --(CP) of heavier overseas‘ or friend cf his, Ezra Pound. the 1942-43- “American poet who has been broad- casting for the Fascists from Rome and this week was indicted on a charge of treason against the Unit- ed States, was an early convert to aesrr rr vzouosrznr. TO THINK w FIANCE I5 mecca/same Hi6 HEALTH! HE WALKS WITHOUT Hi5 cat-lea AND TIPPY AND "CAP" STUBBS the social credit theories of Mai. C. H. Douglas. According tn this h at ,. story, Pound thought Fascism an ed on the seismogrflu m ideal avenue for a tryout of the H re Douglas monetary theories. hence Llnchan, seismoloizsi-n ‘hock moved to Home where he forgot all dav. He said the mo - and about social credit and became. a M 111971 WESTON, Mass. July 2a -(AP> -An earthquake potentially "very easQ-l ect_ion. ’ . ___ -- College last niillll- Re“ 25 p.m.. EDIT. Rv floor" OH-OLEO~E|RRII~DKB ME GONE SEED AND SOME VITAMINS - -l AM HAVIN‘ A RELAPSEL’ T. destructive." believed lobe l“ vicinity oi Puerto Rico. W l“ ported ~ in followed by 25 after Shae/ks next six hours. All urre 1555mm from Boston. in a south by M arris w o the qgestion box discussion period: to t e departmental secretaries for their inspiring messages to the genization and choir of church: to Rev. J- M. Ihaer for h very fine address end to who contributed in any way to "as ‘t’..""‘."i.'.’~ .. r e cos g ymn ti; benediction was pronounced luv. George Gaugh. by ___._________, STDISON TOURING BATTLE- HELD! ALLIED "ctarv of war. has been touring th e North African battlefields. it was disclosed today. see-masses t SHOIJLDDA AQKED IF we couto so $WIMMINZ TIPFiIE 2 ii