r-r- 2 H‘. m =-i E fi w’? NO "l w Bookstore, Water Street. rural» Bakery. Water Street. w z C‘) t: I> a: S2 I> z ’f_ AGENT: Mrs. John Pond. ll 0|. u,“ SUMMERSIDE and govurgh,” u. Subacripti-vra Advertising. should be left with Mn Pom], d! b - , n. Guar an ma! be oblhéndnrllly atutuy of the following atorca in Gourllca l) g m»- ..-.""... qfrsrcrr: srzzz: column Is reserved for new; .,| local interest. but advertising ,1. ncwsy nature may be inserted n2 cents u word, strictly paykhl; h gflvlllltfi. JOOFING OIL aces. __\r0iRS fresh candles at Tay. wig co. Kensington. Lvllfl-l-l-Ol. . TAYLOR. Optometrist. 3. o‘ roun. will be at his Alber- .. Qrrzce this Saturday. August. _ L- 9-8-6-21. Eclipse Osmiridium Lrfc time service. n-rré-a-r-zr. .-ASPIIALT FELT, Pitch. Coal r.Plr:s1ic Cement. Roofing Cem- _ Lead, uure "ril and all roofink supplies sold Bruce's. L-li2-8-6-2i. 40K DIRECTORS MEET- at ri -:l0l's of the Canadian Na- 0E3] S2l\'L‘l‘ Fox Breeders Assoc- tlorr ireld rrrr executive meeting ; surnrrrerside yesterday, ndiiil; ironr outside the province era; svrn Glintberg. Winnipeg; .il. C. Rnthven, Alllston, Ont.; G. T. Hitchman, Ottawa, Ont; B,D0li0\'£1fl. of the Canadian ersrrie; ‘gillll; George A. Callbeck. Mgrn, rd T. D. Carruthers, Secretary. —STrnENT PILOT BAILS OUT Student Pilcl J. P. Gervafis of St. ‘onarrls. N. B. was slightly injur- iwhrn I c- bailcd out of his ma- Irlrze \\'ir;le night flying at le airport during ’I‘ues- . Gervais received slight but is reported doing well .~pri.rl. Officials at the airport ire became confused after un- ed'_r~ entering a scud cloud k to his parachute. The zndznt happened in the vicinity .rl:e rrzrporl. This ls the first ghr flyung accident since the po: :s ocrzerl. 'll.e plane wrrs ‘wreck- .-S. —T0 Iii‘. STATION AGENT AT ERTON — Mr. Joseph Calla- "111- ticket agent for C.N.R. at rmm "srce. has been appointed J70" seem at Alberton. to suc- Iri the lrrie J. J. McQuaid. Mr. lllilsirrm expects to take up his "e lover part of the month. =slrflcs§0r has not yet been rrned. All". Callaghan is a native ‘Nsrih wrltshirc. a son of Peter illflairnn and entered the service the C. N. R in i916 as relief itllraph operator and relief agent rithe PE I. division and has serv- -" @\'<‘l'.i' station in the province. H1925 to was appointed station lrrrrt at Kirrkora and from there time to Summerside in 196i. He Ill be rnisred by a large circle of iriends brrt all wish him much suc- obtainable at L-1l2-8-6-2l. —STAINLESS Enamel ma». rm ils m ity Iamnd plrilccafirgalf: 1:: r§?..“I§5i..Q““" L-l12-8-6-2i. I -v1sr'rmo m s's1na_M.5 p P. gorston of Montreal ls visiting’ Ilriuummerside. the guest o; he, 5-5 I‘. Mrs. Hammond Johngom -—FUNERAL NOTICE-The fun- érfl-l services for Mrs. Wm. c Schurman will be held this Thurs- ‘ilgityé affierlréoon at 2 m. from her es encc '- |P°1Y1L North Bedetgue-gchurmans —-ICE CREAM FESTIVAL AND DANCE at Preston Toombs flerd. Kenslnatorr. Thursday. August 7th. Also Bingo. Games. Bazaar. Pantry Bale. Fish Pond Refreshments. etc. Music throughout evening. Under auspices C. W L. L-133-8-6-2i. —SAD NEWS RECEIVED-Mrs. Hem!’ Jamieson of Summerside has received word by wire of the death of her brother George Lyle who passed away in Vancouver, B. C., on Tuesday. August 5th. quite suddenly. Further particu- lars are expected later. Mr. Har. old Lyle of summerslde is a son, and Mr. Lyle of Dot l6 a brother. —THE DEATH occurred at her home, Cape Wolfe. Lot 7 on Aug. 5. of Margaret A. sulllvan. R. N., dMIBhter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Sullivan or Hope River, M155 Sullivan wfls on the staff of Bournewood Hospital. Brookline. Mass, where she had been Supt, of Nurses for thirty years. until ill health caused her retirement one year ago. Funeral services will be held from St. Mark's Church. Mt 7 on Thursday morn- ins. Aug. 7. Survivors of her im- mediate family are Mrs. John A. Stewart, Charlottetown, John of Cape Wolfe and Daniel of Hali- brrrton. She was tenderly cared for lrr her last illness Mi5s l Eileen Howard. R. N., and Sees Invasion (Continued from pag_e_l)__ cast the outcome" of the "titanic" German-Russian struggle. He was interrupted once. when former War Secretary Leslie Hora- Belisha interjected, as Mr. Attlee said Germany was fighting on two fronts:— "Where are the two fronts?" “The east and the west." reprle Mr. Attlee. "Where is the one in the weal?" pursued Mr. Hore-Belisha but the Deputy Prime Minister ignored the question. Mr. Attlec said concerning the far eastern situation that Japan's attention to Thailand “bears omin- ous resemblance to that which pre- ceded the incursion into Indo- China." Mr. Attlec said that Britain‘s de- fences against invasion are ‘irr- N-S. -3USSIONARY MEETING— he arrinllrrries of North Bedeque lid Freetown United Churches if! on Tuesday afternoon for a lurt nrectlng at the Manse, North comparably stronger" than a year ago and that the flow of war mat- erials from the United States has surpassed any such aid during the‘. first great war. kdtqlre. There was a large atten- iuillte of members from both aux- Fill-K. irev. Mr. Hoddinott con- lliirclrri rho devotional period and ‘flirted ill feeling words to the wen dcrrlh that morning of one‘ their most worthy members.l .- Wm. C. Schurman. whom "l morrrnrd that day. Mrs. Hod- irrotr arrri Mrs. John Profitt lcd itfllcr. Mrs. Austin Rogers pre- ndrt cl the Freetown auxiliary, ( ‘glis- A- G. MoCaull, president “d e North Bedeque auxiliary. l the scripture lesson. Mrs. ércflilll during the meeting re- flgd to the death of Mrs. Wm. _-~‘Cliur'rnrrn and also the pass. jntiuirrs. r.. a. MacDonald at h b-ldgc. Alberta, who was a h member or the Bedequs aux- mi? ""1 had resided in Travel- ’ Rest for some time. A duet fiiwilil by Mrs. Roy Burns and u‘; Allison Profitt. After thc ‘Inc-u meeting a dainty lunch tervcrl__3_ Personals Gloria Bell of caps Trav- is visiting her aunt. Mrs. H. ' Dwnlns. Srrmmcrsidva-S. {gilt many friends of Mrs. rod- m alrlflston will leam with re- “ that she is s patient in tho "W County HospltaL-S. Emma: lrene Arscfrault of the u] [or the R. C. A. l". at Mont- " fl Spending her vacation with m ather. Mr. J. . Arscnauit. "ll Street, Summcrsldm-B. “fir. and ‘rm. Stirling Small- " °i Wohosron, Mass. are visit- tmlti". smsilmsn‘: mother. Mrs. \. U! Smailma. , gummsrside. ~Misw rre I i I iBURDEI rune: Thursday Night "EW borne oacnasraa Iva Leaves sumosasrua Referring to the Russian-German n, Mr _ s 1 ny elude.’ of struggle, he said the "Russian ar- %gn1§£'_ s y" my and people are putting up R —-—-—-- magnificent fight." Mr, and Mrs. Guy Hillman of He went on: "As long ago as July l3 f-he Germans claimed the Stalin line had been pierced ar. de- c'sive points and that the roads to Ieningrad, Moscow and Kiev were open. T|'ls claim certrinly has not been substantiated. If those roads. had been open all these weeks. why a have not the Germans marched on their objectives?" Mr. Attlec said that "we are do- ing our utmost to give all possible assistance to our Russian allv." O! the battle of the Atlantic, the deputy Prime Minister said that it la being fought over an immense area but that Britain's imports are bcing "maintained at a sltilflfiiilfy figure in spite of sll the encmy’s by her nlecel “~81 PRINCE CO son-rm. m seuvsnia..s'°§..fi"..‘,f'"“ a-rr-r rr.-r ha... M-h r... rm..- r. c. "r GADABOUT SUITS! New Ihlp- Milan as... half of your dilution rs done ment just unpacked. I-‘a-ll colors 5o°",'h"".""‘-'" "l" 2B mt of bowels. _Mon;s summer confectionery including blues, rose, black, brown. m: b:i's,“_‘?!l"‘.'°" ffflthfi- "I ‘ n: Delicious assortment. Gourlies Made of popular alpine cloth In below the belt. n ' ‘wnuch AND Rexall Drug store. L_173_a_7_zl rsman new ‘met Mm" m” “wanna mumerlr-cu-ur-Lrtu- um- ' |0nly $3.95 let. The s and 1o De- ipartmcnt. O I I NICKEL BAR. LUNCHES! time you're down town, stop in here for lunch. You'll Ilka the prompt. efficient service, the good food, the low prices. Stop and re- .fresh yourself at “The Nickel Bar." U O O GLASSWARE! Clear and spark- ling ln many new and useful _pleces. Bowls, Trays. Fruit Dishes. ‘Water Jugs. Candle Holders. Large Plates and others. See them in the ‘China. Department. window. 8 O Buy War Savings Certificates I Regularly. IIOLMAIPS SUMIWERSIDE r The cherry season has now opened in ‘Iillnish. Those fortunate enough to have a few trees re- maining in their orchards after the "black-knot" desease that attacked the trees a few years ago. report the crop to be fair, not as abund- ant as that of last year. _M___ The Tignish ‘Ilea Party wialch was held on Wednesday, July 30 on St. Srmcn and St. Jude Church grounds was a decided" success. An] unusually large crowd attended the gala gathering. Over a thousand persons were served hot meals. iMany interesvng novel games were played by the gay crowcLAmong the notables who attended were Rt. Rev. Monsignor Mcbellan. Premier Thane Campbell. and a large nurn- her of American and Canadian tourists. A tidy sum was realized. thus making the day a suooesg both financially and socially. Mrs. Cyril McCue, and son Joseph returned to their home in N:rwoo<i, Mass, on Friday morning after spending a mont/h on Prince Edward Island. Mrs. Lenard McCormick and children, Helen Marie, and Lenard souris are visiting. Mrs. Mc- Cormick‘s brothers, Messrs Henry and Albert Bernard. Miss Annie-Gaudet of Charlotte- town ls spending a fortnights vaca- tion nt her former home in Tignish. Doctor Lenard and Mrs. Cratz of Chicago, Ill., and small son are visitng Mrs. Cratz's father Doctor Johnston of Tignlsh. Miss Ekrrmeline Gaudet Orf Sum- merslde spent her vacation at her hcme in Tignish. Mrs. John Arsenault of Law- rence. Mass, is spending her vaca- tion visiting her step-mother, Mrs. sylvan Gaudet of Tignish. Mr. and Mrs. Adelard Mercier of New York, returned to their hcmc on Saturday morning after fiiending a few days visiting Mrs. carer's mrmford, Maine, accompanied by their daughter Wilma, and son Buddy. spent sometime visiting Mrs. l-lillmans mother, Mrs. Sylvan Gaudet. Mr. and Mrs. Percy colllenge and (laughter Gertrude of BostonhMiasm. are vacationing in Tlgnish. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Burke, Mrs. Shirley Brrwn of Boston. Mesa, accompanied by her son Arthur. are visiting Mrs. Brown's Next INDIGESTIDN- WALLOP YOU" El.0W TliE BELT? "lb Your Fomrus "n" For 1h Kind or rir-YGU RONICLE UNTY CH t eluding the Philippine Islands" and . that they "bear directly upon tl-ra Vita"! problems of our national secur- iur that Welles to Irrdo-Ohins move $4 rqwrirfin? United States interests. Hull em. fglldlfled. applied with equal force any similar action in Thailand. I I Frghtrng Rages , r (Continued from page 1r 5 '0 Ilva needed hsi to I! fact" of bowels. p m“ ‘Ihka one Carter's and ona after mull. directions. The: I "forgotten Little Li rm Take thrlecordnlo: help waks up a larger- an" "ihflxrgnmfin Intiva iuicea In your atom. ' "sll-lulu you or t a a “amt: arm: Li. l: ""i7d€t§fi£‘§§1.'£.°3!:2;,33‘c°°3er l I I 14"“ 14"’ P1111 from your drulaist - m. Interpreting The War (Continued from page 1) and without accurate know- ledge of the situation, as tho German broadcasts say? And Why. with complete and crush- ing victory all but in his grasp. did Hitler find it necessary just now to feed his eople nerve tonic in such iberal doses? He had but to wait a little. according to his own version, and all western Russia from the Baltic to the Black Sea would be in his hands. includ- ing Leningrad, Moscow. Kiev and Odessa. If that is not so, and formidable Russian armies still oppose his legions along the vast fighting front. a mili- tary miracle has been achiev- ed. Moscow has conjured new millions of soldiers, new re- sources of fighting gear out of nothing and transported them westward under impossible conditions to‘ kefp~up the fight. i Aside from the staggering Hitler statements about Rus. sian losses in men and battle equipment. the barrage of claims thundered from Hit- , ler‘s headquarters discloses I only one significant develop- ] ment to support promises of ultimate German triumph. l That is in the Leningrad zone, r the least important in a strate- l glc sense of the three main fronts. I The German official version reports a break-through north- l vward between Lake Peipus and i I l Lake Iimen to a point "close to Narva." If that is true, it means that a Nazi thrust has been driven northeast of Lake Pelpus from the Pskov-Pork- hov line to outflank Russian defences of Leningrad on the extreme Baltic wing. Narva is the Junction point where the Talia-Leningrad and the Pskov.Naz-va railroads meet. If it falls. all Russian forces still in Estonia and north and west of Lake Peipus will be caught in a trap. Speculation Still 1) (COnt1hil0d_fElX_l__Q§8 the rumors of a Roosevelt-Church- ill wndezvous despite the corn- lete lack of confirmation could and food for speculation in the absence of any specific statement that Mr. Roosevelt himself is aboard the yacht. It also was possible to interpret the phrase "Potomac river sail- ors" as an indication that Harry L. Hopkins. lease-lend adminlstra. tor who was last reported in Lon- don, might be aboard the Poto- mac. Hopkins has been Mr. Roose- velt's most constant agompanion on the river excursions. Amid all the speculation. how- ever. perha s the best interpre- tation of t e message came from sources which. whLe unofficial. have gained familiarit with the President through at ending his press conferences. They thought the cryptic phrase "Potomac river sailors" was more an indication that Mr. Roosevelt sister. Mrs. J. J. MacDonald of Tlgnlsh. Miss Anne Gavin. R, N. of A1- bsny. New York arrived in ‘flgniah on Monday evening to spend some time visiting her old home in Sea Cow Pond. efforts." n. this vital part of the blt- . tlef‘eld we are holding m" 0Wn."| he said. ' "July w“ g, good month. On the North Sea and Atlantic coast we destroyed or damaged of Put "l" 0f action 60 ships totalling 291.000 tons. This does not account for hits and the like. "In the Mediterranean the num- bers wen 23 ships iotsllin! 153999 mns and another 30 shill! W0" h" and considerably damagcd- Apart from attacks on smafiei‘ "n"! Ind attacks on warships. 659.000 10h! of “j ghlmfln‘ were sunk. damag- cd or put our. of afitlon l" "l" month.‘ Concluding, w. Attlee told the Houses- "We cannot forsee H3118!‘ ‘J19 time or circumstance. of our vic- tory; we cannot tell the trials and difficulties thlt we cave vet to en- durc, but we know that when vic- tory comes. as come it will- we shall have to take a Ieadinrl hi" in help'ng establish a W05‘! °1 peace and freedom and W“! 5"‘ tioe." ________. ran MAIN FUEL AT an usruamuo Arm: In: rmrca or rr. Tso-“Trmes 1.°°°P°° tonamngt-ltvfhlnmd- - made on small craft, barges. W88, On saturdav from Br" . Conn. arrived Mr. and Mrs. Aubsn Mvcrs accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Edward Arsenault and son and daughter t- visit Mr. Myers’ father Mr. Vital Myers. Mrs. E. J. MCTAMIC accompanied 1w Miss Gear-gene Hemphill left on ‘mesday morning for a brief visit to town. Misses Marion and Rene Dawson of Boston. are virliing Mr. and M1’!- Wm. MacLecd cf Tbznish. M" wjlljgrw n'nonr\eli of Bos- inn. arvacmlpaNed by her nephew. Mr, William Meade are now guests of Mrs. Peter ‘Burke. sister of Mrs O'Donnell; they plan on stavinfl some ti...» on the Island. visiting old friends. Doctor and Mrs Eric Iothe of Boston. spent s few days visWnIz ‘firs. mall-Mg forvner how! in Tia- nlsh guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Bernard. Miss Bemardine Morri-sw of Tlrznlrr has entered the City H's- niirl r' Chorlotuwwn. Her m~nv frlorrd- icin in wifliting her the best in her new work, A.C. Stanley Bernard, M~~h'ne-t in R!‘ AF unwed hum. Tuesda 0n two week leave. _ . .4’- i was aboard than that he wasn't- they thought he wrote it. Odessa to Leningrad. it was gredicted. would be accorr Pit-Bled Y new attacks in the norr. which would see-k to isolated Len lllsrad and cut its rail lines.) The Russian navy reported the destruction of I troop and This drlv munitions shipfl. Presumably German. by a Soviet submarine "Writing n the Baltic. Commanded b Colonel T. . ikov. an infantry? division flail);- nated as "J" struggled as a unit through German encirclernent. hellotiating forests. swamps and dozens of rivers and is ready now W 118M B85111. the commander gvggxte in the army newspaper Red In its‘long march. the Colonel estimated. the division killed 3,000 Germans; routed one Nazi motor- ized detachment. captured 300 automobiles and hundreds of arm- ored cars. motorcycles and bicycles; and seized stores o1’ munitions and supplies. The division was surrounded on l-June 26. It had routed a German infantry division, the Colonel ex- ' plalned, but was cut off by Nazi reinforcements. Facing the choice of separating into small units or staying together, the division elect- ed to make a united push. Counter-attacking constantly re- inforced German forces. it pound- ed away until it rejoined Soviet hues. On the home front. foreign cor. respondents were taken on a. tour of the Stalin automotive works. greatest in Russia, to show them that it was intact, with produc- tion undlmlnished. despite 13 air raids on Moscow. Its assembly line at the time was turning out a complete truck every 20 minutes. No Knowledge (Continued from page i) Canada. The card Mr. King received to- day was that. of Mrs. James Roose- velt. mother of the United States president, who at present is holi- daying at her summer place in New Brunswick. The newspapermen took advan- tage of the meeting with Mr. King to ask him rfrectly if he knew any- thing concerning rumors Mr. holding or had held a meeting at some undisclosed place and Mr King answered, “No." Say Churchill In Canada LONDON. Aug. 6 -(CP Cable)- The German-controlled radio at Pille. France today took notice or‘ speculation concerning the wherea- bouts of Prime Minister Churchill and broadcast an assertion that the Prime Minister has arrived in Canada by sir for a meeting with President Roosevelt "on Canadian soil." Asked about the enemy assertion. offic‘al quarters in London merely drew attention to the regulation forbidding disclosure of informa- tion concerning future movements of the Prime Minister. NE WS Y NA TURE N O TES MD By Stuart l. Thompson woo-wen EN ROUTE ...,__._. The other day a friend of mine had occasion to msks a trip oi no great distance. I expected he would motor, as the roads were good all the way, and he was in a hurry to In Paralled ____(gorrtlnued from Page l) eae demands. J policy declarations in Wuh- ington and mndon gave ‘mczs in American and British litafy reinrfooceme ts in the Far East and other indications that defence of Thailand was deemed necessary b9 protect vital interests and t0!- rltory of the United States. Bri- tain and the Netherlands in the South Pacific. The increasing concern of the United States government over Ja- pan's intentions was expressed b State Secretary 'Hull in an inform- a.l statement which crn hasized that a Jo esc move in Thailand wou further threaten and endanl- cr American interests and security. In defining the United States at- titude ardlng Thailand. Hull drew chi from the statement. of Sumner Welles. then Act Secre- f St te. l denouncng the ‘Aldrin rlnovenln Indo-Chlna on 24. Ju Vzelles declared that step clearly was undertaken "because of the estimated value to Japan of bases in that region primarily for pur- poses or further and more obvious movements of conquest in adjacent Stu-easing the threat to sources of vital defence mater-‘als such r== rub- per, tin and oil. Welles said the l arrive at his dcetlnl" 'n. But 1 found that ha was going by plane -=weli-it was quicker and he would get there all the sooner. I wonder why we have developed this habit of rushing to a place? Even when there is no need of haste we feel we must get there as quickly as possible. We dislike being "en route". As a matter fact l- “ es, and more often than we realize. the journey to a chosen place is part of the pleasure. This is especially so if the joumey be on ‘(lie ground. As we glide along in a railway train. or whiz along in a motor, or even as we jog aloofl with horse and buggy, there is spread before us on all sides the everchanging panorama of f'e1ds_ and woods. river-valleys and lakes. ponds and marshes. Every phase of nature, every type of country comes into view, passes and faces of! into the distance again. The swiftly changing foreground. the slowly moving background and the almost stationary distance all have their charm and interest at any pace we travel. But why rltould we wish it all to whirl past us? l have a friend WHO says he travels at "ornithological speed". That is. the safe reasonable rate which gets him there in plenty of time and gives him an opportun- ity of seeing the birds 0n the may. Japanese steps "endanger thelsafe- ty of other areas of the Pacino, in- and if it be spring he can also rear their songs even above the din of Now! IS THE TIME TO BUILD, REPAIR AND REMODEL YOUR HOME B U I L D i Now, before prices of ma- terials advance any further, is the time to plan and build your home. You and your family deserve a home of your own and now is the time to start building it. Ask us for infor- malion. RE-MODELiPerhaps you need a ga- rage, an attic, some outbuildings. You'll find us ready, willing and able to help you with quality materials at. low prices. Add Roosevelt and Mr. Churchill were r v to your own convenience and to the value 0f your property by remodelling your home. REPAIR! If your home ls in need of repairs, if you need roofing or other work done, you're only kidding yourself by putting it off, because it will cost you more the longer you delay. We can do all kinds of repair work, quick and reasonnbLv. Ask us for an estimate. Complete Selections Building Materials Always In Stock Of All We Are Completely Equipped To Plan And Construct Any Type Of Home Or Building — Townr Home — Farm l Home —- Barn — Garage — Etc. And Save You Money Come In Write or Phone Free Estimates And Advice On All Building Problems l R. T. HOLMAN LTD. “Better Building Service Department” SUMMERSIDE ii i‘ ‘ traffic. It is a barren bleak country in- deed where, as you journey along. you will not see the bobolink and the meadow lark. the vespcr o. savanna sparrow on the fence- posrs; the flicker or the red-head- ed Woodpecker on the telepnorrc poles; the shrikc or kingbird on the thorn bush; the killdeer or the spotted sandpiper by the wayside pond. and crow gulls or hawk: overhead. Nor need the journey be without music. No need of a radio set in the car. Almost all these birds are such perisient singers that the sight or sound of a motor on the highway or even a railway train does not scare them into silence. It is a common sight. to sec the bobo- link spring off a fence post and fly off singing lustily and the meadow lark continue to whistle as your car passes. Even the lisping vo;ce of the savanna can be heard from a train window. And suppose there were no birds to be M011 at all. what hosts of flowers are always in plain viewl There is no frightening these as we pass. The roadside is Lined with blue chicory, white may-weed and purple thistle. Tire pastures yellow with buttercups, rrow-thistles, and hawk-weed, and white with ox-eys daisies. Pink wild roses and white anemones and yellow cinquefolls are sprinkled along the grass- grown stump fenceg. In fact it is a question which you will ass most of, the many active birds, both near and far. or the hosts of wild flowers as you journey along. So should the next journey. by whatever means of travel, bore you, should you feel an impatience to “get there". you will find it a pleasant. recreation to count up the number o! birds or the different flowers you see as everchanging landscape slips past. I can sec where y friend in his Joyous Inhabitants of the town of Damrscus line the streets to view tha r-rrival of British and l-‘rco French troops following the evacuation of the Vichy forces _ 91BX10 117111118)’. be it ever so much swifter, misses a lot by leaving Mother Darth in travelling. l Russia occupies about one-seventh‘ of the land surface of the globe. BUT STILL ERIN One-seventh of the total area d Ireland is beat bog. TEN-CENT BIBLE The Blbls now can be purchased for as small a sum as ten cents. An apparatus has bern Dcrfecfed in Australia by which pure water can be obtained from the human breath. ONE-SEVENTH GUOBE “Now is the time to think hard and think fast." -—.Ba;bart Hoover.