‘ . ~..-.;~a:‘ '-“ "w." c ..¢.‘>' _lil<e Lord lllviuiltstcplicn and PAGE {$111K TllE ° cimitomziown GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Founded ln 1887) Authorhod ‘u Second Class Mall, Pant Offlco Department, Ottawa. President: Lleut. Col. W. Cheater S. McLuro _ VlorPi-esldenf: J. R. Burnett. F.J.l. Morel-try: Lleut. Cnl. D. A. MncKlnnon, 0.5.0. Idllm- Ind Manngln‘ Director: J. ll. Burnett, F. J. l. Azsoclslo Editors: Frank Walker and Ian A. Burnett. - “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." SATURDAY, JANUARY, 5, 1M6 Effort Britain's War Ou the lsl, of lzuiuary a visual picture of Britain's \\".\r cfforl was made public — a sel~ action from ilw charts prepared for the use of the llritisli lliii-fs of Staff during the \\'£l.l'. Some of the lliziurauis rcpruilucc in graphic form iuforlilntioii already published as statis- tics, for example the mobilization of main- power, the high proportion of United King- dolil casualties, l:‘-i'it;iiii‘s enormous iiluiiitious prodtip, her drastic reduction of exports and imports and the great increase year by year in the quantities of home grown foodstuffs. One (liagraiii iuidcrliics the fact that iii the United Kiugdolli coilsuiiiption of all foods was dras- tically reduced during the war, except for milk, potatoes, viegctablcs and grain. Perhaps of the greatest interest lare the diagrams presenting facts hitherto not available. Britaiifs heavy burden iii maintaining the free- dom of the 59th for Allied shipping is shown in a diagram of new building and losses of major British war vessels during the war. Five battle- ships, totalling 175,000 tons ivere built, but five battleships of almost equal tonnage were lost. T\VCflfY-flfi‘lll cruisers were built, twe ty-cight lost, 27i destroyers were built, I33 0st. x57 submarines w-ere built, 71 lost. The grim story of the Allies’ merchant shipping losses, ivl-iich exceeded new construction in almost every month of the war till ‘Marv i942, is the subject of an- other series of tablcs. In one month, losses ex- ceeded new construction by 650,000 tons, But from micl-l942 the tide rapidly turned, and British shipping during the last year 0f the ivar remained steady at a total of about fifteen mib lion tons, though as rcsult 0f the concentration of merchant shipbuilding in America, U. S. ton- nage was more than double. Another series of diagrams compares the weight of bombs dropped 0n enemy and occu- pied territory by R. A. F. Bomber Command with the tonnage (lroppcd on Britain. In Septem- ber I940, the Germans dropped nearly m“ thgus- Ind tons on Britain, compared with just over two thousand dropped by the R..'\.F., but this <German peak effort pales into insignificauce be- side the nearly seven times as great tonnage dropped by the RAF. in August I044 and Mild} l945-_ And in the latter month the U. 5- Elklhth ‘Airforce bombers dropped almost as heavy a weight as the R.A.F. A diagram 0f the flying bomb attacks on Britain Cmnliasizes the severity of thc first eleven weeks of these attacks, from lune to August I944, and the increasing proportion (les- troyed by Britairfs anti-aiicraft guns. The cumulative totals show six thousand peoplg 1d]- ltd in Britain by flying‘ bombs. The diagram for the long range iockets shows over two thousand seven lnmdned killed by this iveapon between September I944 and March I945. From an- other diagram, ll is clear that more civilians were killed and ivouuded in Britain than the numbers of killed and ivfiuiidcd in either the Royal Navy 0r the RHAI-I Finally, one interesting diagram shows the steady increase in both the cost of lwlllfl and the Wcokly wage rates in Britain up till the beginning of i941, when the c051; of liv. lug began to llSF-llfllc a fairly constant level, main- tained until tltc end of the war at about thirty Dc!" cent above the pre-irar level, ,wliilc Wage rates continued to incl-misc until at the cud of the war they were about; filly per cgnt 35mm [he pre-ivar low-l. Baiiflkwhire Makes Prowgress ll Hue lmilvs at a coloured map of Scotland, oiic finds in the liump that sticks nut iulo the North 5m a county sllupml ruthcr like a Santa (‘laus 5lflClxl-illl"-llllll is lluuffsliirc. it is mic 0f llic sluullri" crulutics. and it lives up lo the promise of 10ml things in its geographical sliatpc. For iuslzilicc, it is lllt‘ premier fishing county. ft ls the principal dislilliilg county. lls zigricultural llllltllllllhill has £ll\\'ll_\'5 liccu llirgc and out of all propol-tioii ln lls LlFCll and population. lt is oncof the Ilircc chief counties iii the brccililig 0f black Caitlfi‘. and of the three historic homes of that breed, Ballindalloch Castle of Banff- lliirc is the only one that remains. Qtill in iws- session of a livril. lt-lizis givcu birth to an cx- traordinary niluibcr of fzinloils men-nut only industrialists. pioneers, and meu of business Jami-s (inrdoii Bennett, the founder of lllct New Vol-k Timex, but also scholars and students like Thomas Ruddiinau, who was the davmi of luiuianists in the eighteenth century, and john Strachan. who can lay strong claims to be regarded as the greatest classical scholar of our time. And just recently there died Sir lohu Ijldlllfiltlllll, the head of the Lister Institute and one of Brit- lin’s leading medical figures. There is a pas- lion for education in the county. For 56,000 in- habitants there are no fewer than seven second- y schools, probably the highest proportion in "tain, if not in the world. One of these Schools, set in the midst of a. business commun- ity, specialises in higher commercial mbiects; another, also in c big centre, pays equal atten- fiou to commerce and culture. In the others, dlssic: and the sciences are taught. It is inter- ming to recall that one of the earlleot Scottish book; on Rhetoric was dedicated to the pro- mt of Banff. In the country, the schools lead direct to sgi-leulmre-and irnnufaouiringfiii- . There are distilluriol, fish-wring yards, mall, lime lam-m biggest limvbuiniiuz u ~- fin swan i. m Banffshlre-and flflllv “ minlnnninsnnanlllnsnihon ado; and there is a Bauff in the Rockies. That happened because a Banff man suggested to 10rd Mouiitstcpheii, when he was building the Canadian Pacific Railway, that there would have to be a Baiiff on the line. ll/Iountstepheii, being a Bariffshire boy himself, lumped at the idea. Banff artisans like to turn out what might be called industrial precision work, and, previous t0 the war, there was a big demand for such tools as their cutting machines for steel plates and bars. Since the war they have had contracts for many hundreds of these for Government Training Centres all over the muntry. -I:'DIIURIAI_ NOTES- \Vitli the addition 0f the hfagdalens for Income Tax collection, we will soon be a bi- lingualist province. .- w n- a: a Tomorrow Epiphany, or Old Christmas Day; as late as Al). I94. lanuary 6 was observed 8S Christ's birthday in Bethlehem; and in the Oriental churches, including that of Russia, it is still so observed. It‘ ll 1i . Gordon College, Khartoum, founded this date 1899, as a memorial of General Charles George ("Chinese") Gordon, who gave his life in 1885 for the defence of Christian ideals in the Madfii rebellion in the Sudan; Gordon lives as a national hero, both in Britain and Egypt, thanks t0 his gallantry as soldier and explorer, his integrity as administrator, his piety as Chris- tian, his chivalry as a knight-errant, and his tragic fate. x v w- a: An increase of $2,000,000 in our farm in- come in the year just finished is something to boast about, a per capita addition of $20,000. Is it any surprise our Income Tax collections are on the asceridant? In 1943, they totalled $2,- 274,882; for i944 there should be a consider- able addition to this. No wonder the Income Tax staff \Vl'tlCl'l is paid $43,000, considers itself en- titled to an increase. =01 a- w , In the last war 11 per cont of all surgical casualties died and in this walr only I pm- cent, Dr. T. C. Routley, general secretary of the Canadian Medical Association told members of the Alberta division. There were 10,000 685% of tuberculosis in the last war, 26 cases in this. Last wai- 10,000 soldiers contracted typhoid; 30 in this war. Typl-ius, rampant in the last war, was non-existant in this war. Trench fewr and trench mouth were also non-existant and shell-shock had been virtually mastered. ##1## A beautifully illustrated booklet has been issued by the international committee which was promoting Navy Island at Niagara Falls as headquarters of the Limited Nations Organ- ization. It is 1 copy of the case for Navy Is- land as presented to the Preparatory Commis- sion of the United Nations, and is signed by the American and Canadian sections of the Exe- cutive Committw of the International body set up by business men of Niagara. Falls, N. Y" Niagara Falls. Ontario, St. Cabharines, Wel- land, Buffalo and Lock-port. It is pointed out that Navy Island has 315 acres. that its 10w- tion would give the United Nations headquart- ers seclusion, a tradition of peace and of inter- national co-operatiou, and that it is easy of ac- cess, by modern communications, from any part of the ivorld. Among the illustrations is a magnificent photograph in colors of the great cataract of Niagara. ¥ * i Ill Canada is the most fortunate of nations. No country in the world should be so readily able to make the New Year 011-: of great ex- pansion of production. It may be necessary for Canada to give away much of her production, 0r to sell it on terms of easy payment over long periods, in order to restore the productive power of the nations with which Canada has traded in the past, or wishes to trade in the future, but it still remains a fact that, by i115 dustry and thrift, by the most rapid possible removal of all Government interference with private cilfcrprise, by intelligent co-opcratiou between capital and labour, by (lcvoting first attention t0 the expansion of agriculture and primary industry. by a cessation 0f increase in the national debt, and by the general return of common sense, and a general abandonment nf the nonsense prizachcd to the tzuiadian people for lllc last two gfeiieratiuils, this country should be able to prosper greatly‘, to aikl 4l99ll'£ll_)l(! immi- grants to the population, to iucrczisc the stand- ards of living, and t0 expand international trade. . it IF >9! i! . lirmu iicxt .-\utillml .1 comprehensive, flTC National Advisory Service will be avail- able to the farmers of liiigland and Wales. Be- fore the war technical advice was provided by county councils who handed over to the War Agricultural lixccutive Lliuiuiittccs. Now the Ministry of Agriculture will be able to c0- ordinate and direct all tlic advice given t0 farm- crs and stimulate activity where necessary. In this work the County Committees will continue to play a vital part, and close collaboration will continue with the agricultural education staffs of the county councils and with the agricul- tural departments of the Universities and col- leges. The plan for the new service is based on -lhe division of England and “falcs into eight provinces. At the head of the team of some fifteen hundred specialists to be enrolled in the new service will be Mr. James Scott-Watson, the well-known writer on British agriculture, who was, during the war, British Agriculture Attache at Washington after having been Pro- fessor of Agriculture at Edinburgh and Pro- fessor of Rural Fnonomvy at Oxford. In each province there will be specialists to advise on entomology, pleat pathology, soil chemistry, bacteriology, as well as nutrition chemistry, animal, crop and poultry husbandry. zrassland farm machinery and farm build- ings. Under pmimial specialists will work county nieneific amnion who may be (inscribed u the "gonad practitioners” 0f the scheme. The scheme also hwhidu a progranune of ex~ iunnfnl work with exporimcntol farms and ‘ ‘ than in spun. 0 THE CHARIOTIETOWN GUARQIAN Notes By The Way It ll l torrlblo commenta- Amerlca that. In n few shortyyeiwui we shall klll more pcuplg on the will! "l!" ll‘! represented ln our dead of the wuu-Altoonn, Pan, Mirror. l! Ciuudlann were shot at Gen- eral Meyers headquarters without hi! knllwlellllll- W! strange Hitler never had him executed for incom- petence. —'1‘or0nto Telegram. M th ore an scenery and bracing air are needed to satisfy tourists in Ontarlos’ summer playground, Comfortable bed: hre one of me first considerations and straw. filled ticks should be out.-—Hamli. I-Dn Spectator. A man who unlawfully carriea a Run l8 a polo tlal murderer-ivlth .n0 reservation . Unless gun-toting l5 ‘Punished much more drastical- lyfliun it has been, Canada is cer- tain to see a sharp increase in homicide, Now ls the time to make ll Very tough for all who are caught carrying concealed weapons iin- lawfully. -Edmonto.n Journal. Mr. lmGuardla goes Dick Whit.- tlngton one better. Dick rose to be mayor of his home town. and that: was all for hlm. There, as fur as thewencyclopedla knows, he Bot off. At that, he was a good mayor; he built welfar agencies. he put down crime, he ‘Encouraged underprivileged youth to aspire 111st u Flurello has done. He was a blt of a showman, too, with a winning platform manner. Bill; he had no future. He antedated the radio by W0 years-New York Times. A no loom which ha: no shut- tle but which lay: the weft, across the warp by acarrler moved to and fro by a lal spring device has been deve oped by a Unit Kingdom flrm. The head of the firm believes that the loom muy lead to a revival of home weaving becauoe lt can be installed 1n a spate room, can produce a wide variety of fabrics and ls without the clatter made by the ordinary loom. If, ls claimed that one skilled operative and an assistant could “mlnd" twenty-four of these looms without difficulty. —Unlted King- dom Information. Llko l" monlnl aftltudoa, laugh- ter can and should be cultivated. Laughter ls a two-edged weapon- valuable as a tonic, but deadly when used as ridicule. Therefore let u: develop as a. toulc this moot contagious and helpful asset in these bad times. Spread hap- piness. G0 about your daily duties seeking to cheer yourself and oth~ era. Laugh! and the world will laugh with you.~Sunday Express London. Ike wcr-dlncovorod “bulldozer.” whose exploits U. S. Army Engin- eer; describe in tones of reverence, l! pushing its way toward new con- quests ln Norway. During the past weeks several of these machines have been clearing experimental tracts in the Aames district with such success that the Norwegian Agricultural MLnlstry is contem~ plating the clearliiz of 1750 acres of rough, unbroken country in the vicinity of Torpa. This clearing of stumps and stones from as many as two acrep per day per machine is revolutionizing the pioneering" of new districts lmNoi-way and will call for a sharp revision of the premiums once awarded to farmers for clearing new areas.——From Nor- way Digest. To enjoy llle as fully as possible, and to be an asset, and not a dim- ger, to his country, a man must know more than the details of a trade or profession: he must know how to use his mind, and he should know as much as he can assimi- late of the wisdom of the human race. If he does not know these things, it makes no difference how able a technician he may be-he l: still on the level of the medieval peasant when he turns hls mind 9d ed or retooled at will i I PUBLIC FORUM This column ll’ open 10' tho discussion by ‘nono- nwudouto o! qilnlflnnl of Intel-out. The Chufottetouu , Gunman doeo not moan» l I lly endorse hho opinion of l l respondent-s. . _ WOODSMAN REPLIED Sli',—The letter o1’ Canadian in Saturday's Guardian, for misrep- resentation is 1n a clue by lt- self. The writer having nothing whatever on which to base his tirade, has resorted. athei- the manner of his kind. to the old trick of setting up a man o! nraw lu order to knock down. It opens with the misstatement that. "Woodlsmau has blasted the ietumed meu for refusing to work in the woods." As these promises are false the arraignment that. fol- lows Ls of the same nature. "Woodsman" dld nothing of the kind and, as a reference to his let- ters will show. But that l; noth- ing to "Canadlan” who has a capacity foi- finding such things where none exist. Besprlnklled over his letber are such accumu- ttons as that; Woodsman "slurred at the veterans". "derided the vell- erans". “chided them", etc" etc" and finally we are told “that a letter such as Woodsman’: would make them (the veterans) won- der if decency was not n holiday." One would conclude, after such s. stsbem ‘, that than was something shockingly im- proper in Woodsman’: left/era. I therefore. quote from them the strongest expression o! opinion contained therein. u it: presents the whole point at. issue: this country, y b9 according to the inclination or neceulty of the indtvld , but to express ro- sentmeut a the offer o! good. useful employment, is not m envi- able state o1 mind.” And further: “If we have entered on the mak- ing of a brave new world. we can help to make it so by recognising the value o! honast work whether ln the bush or elsewhere." These very moderate views which ane the whole slat ,1! Woodsman’: letter. m the lounl and hen-d of our offending. This is the voice of the “Ingram who publishes his ingwatltude in print," and. from whose unworthy presence "decency ls taking a holiday.“ and who can be belabored and stigmatized u an literate and the Lord lmowl what. I sometimes wondnr “Canadlaifl is someone with a perverted sense of humor, for l! taken seriously no greater dia- service could be rendered the re- turned men than such a. lebver as he has written. I am further accused of "lec- turing the returned men on their duties as citizens." Nothing q the kind is to be round in the text. and must be set down as another fabrication, used in the absence of fact. A lengthy parfgmph follows full of declamatory mnt, and which has as much bearing on the issue as the wlnd that. bloweth where 1t llsteth, and which good old Thomas Carlyle would des- crfbe m; being "barren u the east Wind Itself." A great. part. of "Canola-it's" letter is taken up with the sub- ject of draft dodgers, which whllo roi-elzn to the subject, moi-do u. splendid opportunity for covert undei-hand thrusts. Anyone u well informed on this subject u "Canadian" pretends to b6. has no occasion to ask “Woodanam or anyone else to undertake the part o1 recruiting agent among them. As toi- the personal slur implied bv this suggestion, we can afford to treat it. with the contempt. if deserves. "Every com- munity on the Island, he says, m sfatlsflcs. its quota or these rafters." 12,000 men and women enlLsted to matters which do not come within the scope of his “priir:tical" training; indeed, there is no 1min- lng so woefully impractical m that of the narrow specialist. Peter- horough Examiner. us see. According to here for ilvar service of one kind or another. The Guardian stated the other day that 7.000 went to ivork at war industries. Take this ____ \ A new thing to worry iihuiio l: the short-term, or sample, fiIYIlIE in which the cmploycs toil the management, "For a work We are havlng a walkout. Sr-o lviav you like it." Such a (hint: is fa- miliar in domestic life and has to he expected and endured, us \Vl‘|£‘l1 the wife says to the husband. “From now till Christmas Yin unt speaking to you." I-i such crews lt frequently works. nml vli~- cr tim is a model htulbuiirl fnr a long tlms- afterward. But ‘in 1h" llll"‘,f‘l' field of industry we don't lL"\'\\V. WP wonder whether PM" \‘7_‘l be sam-plo wars ucrl . H. R. "n the New York Tim .. Don't :0 at |Yl|li§l"\l' of shovcllin", snow as lllOl"',.1 ‘tho whole walk had to ho PlClEIYWI in u couple of seconds. Talivf t‘~~ stride, realhlniz that it (ltws rot take lonvz, if tho shovol Wivflifi steadily. 30111811." "11"! TQM-mi '_ll".V are not as young: as thvy ‘l~‘"'- to be. They sec the snurklr- of 'l_"l snow and feel the lanrz l'\ Ih/i ii r. "they take, lt as h challenge to their physical strength. They wiinl. to make the snow fly just us they used to do when thoy llrozl snow/- bull; at their flfllfi, or possibly lHPd to knock off the dorhv of Hit-town dude. Take It easy. Far bettvr to do that shovellinirslowly and have n nice, clean walk. than to make too great haste and have to have someone else clean the walk so they can curry you out feet first to the helrse for your last 1'lde.—- Windsor Star. The romantic atmosphere of the countr school become: vlslble on- ly to hose who vlew ll. from the vmtoge point of distance-actually It wan, and ls, essentially practical. Those who have attended a typical one-room school will recqll that if was totally lacking In frills — the teacher had ln thnl T001“ clam: from beginner: to hlflh- school entrance. and had no time for theory. for exper-‘mont. M‘ BM’- tlilng but straight "nllrlll-‘llfln in tho prescribed sub acts. That I01‘! of instruction, wt all it: fflulfil. m shortcomings, may have to Ill" t because it . because within reach. better way: now are Th, one-room lchool xyerhnvs lent mi- fo the my nu out! slower than tho aver-no ‘learn. b8 a tone er has no mo for couch- fn| an coddllnl..l.low the trend toward ‘ I mo!‘ llrlcr and more slur-um: mitosis. and m: i- wr- llble ulo m: motor vehicle do lndAlie try school out f taken tho coun- l old flotation. Perhaps the U010. ,1: on lfl my Gflf t hoo Mum gm n»; mm.» mm. r991" 'r1l| ‘Ill cette. , il Grade IV-—l. louhe Woodnldo. Wpod‘ o > cture. areal number from our small popu- lation and what ls the result? The rural areas have been so stripped of their working popula- tion that only with the greatest .clfort have they been able to [carry on, by working Ion! hours, ‘Illld to their utmost, with the as- lslstance of the aged. and o1 im- ‘iiiiiture youtn. The Department of §Libar liiis been calling for men tn work lli the woods", thousands lilo still required, and "Canadian" tclls us “tuat sufficient draft duclccrs can be found to fill all isquircm-snts." Previously he had told us that lumbermen "will hire men from the rural areas only." . ‘Th: uuznbsr of these draft dudrzcrs must be very great. ll’ sufficient can be found to flll all UlPEmEfifS in the woods. as ..n:\di:in" asserts. The lnevlt~ able conclusion ls that the farm! hcve afforded the hiding place fci- these cVJtil-CYS, and no greater slundci‘ r affront than this could possibly offered to the men and woman of nlie farms who did their part. so nobly durlngjhe great conflict. Aiid now. lii (inclusion. as wo enter on another year, with its hopes and uncertainties, all people of lzoocl wlll, to veterans ieturned to take up the thread or clvll life. to all soldiers of the common good who fought the but- tle on (arm, in forest. factory or elsewhere, I wish a ha??? New Year; and cherish the fervent hope that thi-vugh the troubled years that lle fore m. our be- loved country may at 1m reach the coal of pone. prosperity and plenty. I am, Si, etc" WOODSIIAN. CLINTON SCHOOL Result! of midi-term examlnlt- long: (a! (‘Jxllxnton ‘Béhoolk. ‘ rn e -- . ry c . Vllf-l. Inch Pickering. Grade VII-l. Irlc Heunev: Shirley Woodllde; 8. Welrumlho- 2. rude V-Jl. but Ronncy- 2. Allen many; . Dornthyifiou- Gerddlnc ln nlnlofgrplol .:.'"‘" in — dial Woqdlldo, The following p Ii or wit: ‘mode Tlfi. The North Nova Scolia Higlilaiiders Vlll The Brigade plan for the co ture of the Leer wu for the . L. I. of Canada and the S. D and G. Highru to assault across the river Em: to lolze the grouii-l b6- tween the river and town and the first blocks of the town. At the some time D Company, North No- vlel, wan to cross the Led; river on their right to ‘protect their right flank. The rema nder of the Bat- talion was to cross later and take port. in clearing the town. In preparation for thlu the Bat- tallun crossed the Bu: further up and moved up to the Leda after it was cleared by 7 Brlgade. A vital port of the fir; plan was 3 inch mortar smoke b0 cover D Com- pany's crossing but when it came down the wind ma amused and It was not in the right place. The company immediately put its lnch mortars ln action and went n- cross ln assault busts. The cross- ing was made no quickly that’, the far dyke was gained wlth com- plete aurprlse and n lnrlfi "limb" of enemy taken their 5m trenchu. ‘mere were four 20mm ln position, but the company lost only two wounded, Inter ln the day the remainder of the Battallon crossed and cleared a largo area in the centre of town through tin night, and the remainder was clear» ed by the other units ln the morn- lng. Major K. N. Webber was n- warded the D. B. O. for his work commanding D Company tn this action. The following day the advance toward Bmden was started wlth the North Novlel on the right. axls. Demolition! cuuned a great deal of difficulty as all vehicles were road bound but Neermoor was reached the second day and about thirty prisoners token wlthout d1!- flculty. The next two day: were Ipent twin: to get vehicle; throulli a maze of back roads and canals. and on 4 May, 1946, the rifle compan- les reached Timmel by crossing u river in n rowbont. It was decided against tin-Idling no the vehicles were brought bac grflund by Leer and Joined the Battalion after a long day's strug- gle with mud. At 1700 hn, 4 May, 1M6, a mei- sage was received to the effect that no further offensive uctlon would be taken and the B. B. 0. at 2100 hrs informed them that the war in the 21 Army Group sector would be flnlsherl officially the following morning. On Sunday, 6 May, 1M6 the Bli- tullon proceeded to Norden, Ger- many, where it spent about ten days disarming Germans and or- ganizing displaced persona. It than proceeded to Bani-n, Holland, where It was l spoiulbla ln part for 6 Alr- borne Dlvlalon until If: removal to Germany. With the movement of the Germans ln Western Hol- land to Germany, the Battalion finished its work one year almost to the day from lts arrival on the beaches of Normandy. Co: cheum nach gabh tlllendh. Bunmun uul Awlrdn Since D Day D80 Ind Bu Ll. Col. D. 1". Forbes BSO Lf. Col. l‘. A. Spark! . L. C. Wlnhold N. Webber G. .E.W. D . Kennedy Mlllhry Cram Mai E. S. Gray-K-A 8 Jul 44 . R. M. Grulnger . W. A. Myers. . Capt. K. A. Campbell-RCAMO Lt L E. Maser. Qllvor Sh: (Amen-loan) gum and many light. machine guns . IlTUI-N, INIIAIITOII Fly, binds, fly; atrenk buck lnto your sky; Replace the metal wlnu with aun- ea er. The sky l: your: nun, it: mad- owa clear; Boar, sour nznln, All Ioft-wlnnd thin a, together." Bwlm, lah. swim; coral deep; . reclaim your The son l: your: lnlii, the nun- There are no fhllll ‘fiespnnlnl now tn your translu- cent home. the loll b0- n to you; Bria-old the land; l. , lnhlbltohn, rclumi your truo lbod to warn! ‘ e Winkle: Goodman. spun foam; ywnllcmd Levin- Groyz, grass. now; ° ma; ui iu twhted near On land andQAu Ind llr; n. and Mn in the New York Herald Tribune. i “COMPLETE iusuniuc: SERVICE” W. K. RUGERS Agencies Ltd. Plum 540-541 i For Foot Ailmnts CONIUIII u, i. A. snows. m’ Orthopedic l “JANUARY s. 194s Professional llaril: .- GAUDET t? HASZARD sun-um, lollcltorl, Not-aria, m, noun T0 1.0m umsum A. our» s A. wurmm GwfllEaPRH“ SfIHHUHI fill!" NEIL w; magma Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond Sf. Charlottetown Tel. as» no. n» on DR. A. R. DENTIST lilGnlhu Skeet Offloollolrnlltoll-ligl Tolophnnozzll. .......-n-¢nr.".. “flffflland Company Chartered Aooolllolh D. F. ARCHIBALD Islam min mulch; Clurloflofwl l ; ; PUBLIC svmNooRAPiimn-l illlneolnvhlu an; m; qhg" oonoqonhnao, 01pm; ‘u; .. . w. I. uni-nay, no,’ .r. A. murmur, n.0, ‘Buchanan-pug law inns-menu >0§40+O¢O+§Q++O§+O-§-O-Q-OO§' ALEX yltmrnmloir Olllco: no ‘a unmgn; Hmong“ ‘Ooleobn. PALMER Iv 11,451,414 4- 1- MIMI. n.4, ma. clllnorollgjr [I Gil“ GAIII Q IN- Ill. WIIIIIIIII, nurse » llAlR RESTORER the hair. ‘pm no [r lmlt £0 ltu‘orlgln:le colt‘. l’, Lt. G. A. Glb1on—K-A Crolx Do Guano (With Gilt Star) Mal A. W. Jef- rson. (With Silver Stu‘) Lt. J. ‘D. Campbell. lWlth Bronze Hurley, L-Cv. MQBE (Military Dlvlslonl Maj. H. M. Cunningham DOM {(374066 Sgt. Russel. L. E. K-A Z2 Feb. 46 MM P245930 Pte. Fraser, 1155-131 Sgt. Martin, W30??? Cpl. Harrison, R. M 4 13.155191 Sal. Prokopchuk, .1. P160341 CSM Stewart, G. . DIM Sgt. Apenenu, A. J. DOUBLE DEBATE‘! The, specks o! fish called Dtmot have luncs as well u irllll Life Insurance gives a gives mont. Conserve flu lion ‘and Conuult your non-oat wrlh Prince Edward Offlul: Charlottetown GYIUI Picket-tn], ,.. s m. , and; mum. mm; star) r. some Sgt. ‘ n new nnd 0w"- uu u: bofllo lit-au- rrloo 0:21am M! MW‘- GA!!! STORAGE! BELIEVE!) poi-nan who ll trout ln th Momma-ls a who to protect lilo earning power lilm for kl: property. A Life, Endowment. or Pension policy ll an insured savings plan with guaranteed vnluvl lo: 11th:- mmn r. mun/HM n. nun. fir»! Dr. E tun, r but It. ailing-i lllflV f! stomach. unlit flit!‘ Improve: thumps b- Do‘! dlny. 0M" 1°" boflitodlga Prlcollloeull- Aueiitloiil Jun. romlvfll I ,1 alumina: of up-to-dote TIII- ‘I'll! 2 MACS 0 HIGIQOGQOIIOW." IIIIIIIJ Perpetual: Your Earnings I inn the name opportunity that Fire Insurance J. A. MoGUfGIAH, Noun. no. A BAIJI-XSTBI. souorma cuunm BUHJMNG B-L. 1L). ' MONEY ‘I30 LOAH IAXISTEI. SOLICITOI. IX» CHABLOTIIIVJWN ‘ " BELL & MATHIESON Snldlon, bo- B. l. Bil-I» D. L. MATIIBGON. L ., ll. Atklnoyn-at-hw LQANI 0N CITY AND FA$JL PROPERTIES “ 001145011085 l0 Richmond ll. . Charlottetown, LIJ. H. F. McPHEIL‘, B.A., NOTAIY, mo. ’ , aunrsrzn. somonon y Illldln: omuuuup FltEDERIC ‘A. LARGI nuuuern, are. mum»: annulus n1 unlu- Hume ms ' y. n. p,‘ OIAIIAITIIOIU. Ell. ‘ _ Charles ‘it. neon-u BA. ' ‘ EYES EXAMINID GLA§IS FITTED i 3. S. Taylor OPTOMETRIST 0on0: mgr-raga I9- stabilise hi. Nation. i amt-war Lin . at or Iphlll Brawl 0m _ llynilinan 81.00.,‘ Llnilfqd _ Prtfvlltill Maiugm _ ‘- éllfibtlui -' Mblllflfil n Inn-db . Iran u p. a. r. iuiuilqulif’ a son Omulhnlonkulfioumernoi‘