1...“... .. -., in the issue of the Stockholm newspaper Social- “Nazism has lately claimed a monopoly on Demokraten for August 3o, which said in part: European unity. It belongs to the paradoxes of history that a philosophy which is fanatically v u‘ maintaining the most extreme form of national- leeretory: Mont. Col. D. A. blIocQn;on.'3-3i_(?il ism at the cost of a universal community, now fillulcfilzlgdllzioatrflnngnlklw-‘gér l?‘ “nigh poses — and claims to be taken’ seriously -—- as the spokesman of European unity. The Nazi 11359317119" “T55 Europeanism differs from the earlier, liberal v "eases tt.".f'...i';'.t.".'.:.':i°.°:::.'..:."°"‘“ i-m or Euivpwiirm. i». n-tpisii. i... city Delivery $5.00 per you; $8.00 for ii month: power will have the unchallenged mastery of the 51-15 tori mun it a" f" W" "W"! Continent. Geographically it is true that Am- lilztfisllylgvgltlklfyzwglomg “fnuislzal fillloamlfaf crica isfaiiotlierhcontinent, [git from it cultigzil 50o for I month; point o view t ere is no urope, ony an c- cident, and to this America belongs by the right KEANE?’ irrefnfileoivnegor: of her rich, many-sided contributions. What Old Snlllllclllfiwioxflmlencflnaplllil-ls, l-nlglgv1helellligzn America has given the Old World is something 51:15:31,151; i-“llno 3T5: Boy 8L, Toronto; New, strum: deeply necessary. It would be an iinremedi- Chateau Laiirlsr. (Mt-III; Wolfe‘: New: Blind 5""- able damage to Europe's intellectual life if she “"7 on“ m" T°bw°° 5h°l"M°"°"°" N‘ B‘ closed the door to these refreshing Atlantic "The Strongest Memory is Weaker than tho winds." Weakest Ink." TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1942 0 llAlltll TTETO Morning Daily (founded in 188'!) - EDITORIAL NOTES — Equinoctial gales due 21st to 25th, when day and night are equal duration. is 1k is e The Axe Falls Without waiting for the result of His \Vor- ship the .\l:i_vor's interview the Powers-thabbe A sYdlley lnvclll". who Clalnli l" l“? able l“ have abolished the Accountancy Department of See through solid objects 12ft. thick, has submitt- lhe P. E. I. Railway d QAWQWWII. Tito of- ed his device to the New South Wales section of ficials affected are: the Army Inventions Directorate. The invention .\lr. j. F. Gordon, is being closely investigated by officers of the di~ Mr. George Proctor, rectorate, who declared that the inventor was “on Mr. Harold L. Howatt, the right track.” Miss Maude McCannell, l‘ "' * "‘ Miss jean McLean, "We shall know that peace has returned when Mlsl Margaret Irving. nothing is left for children to be afraid of ex- Bliss Ena MacLeod, cept their own former ghosts and bogcymeri,” M11 Milton Burhoe, writes Anna Freud, daughter of Sigmund Freud. Mr. B. Earle MacDonald. in one of her tiioiithly reports oii the llainp- These officials are advised that their positions stead Nurseries in England, of which she and are being abolished and that if they desire em- Dorothy Tiffany Burlingham are co-directors. ployment on the mainland in the railway service The I-Iampstead Nurseries are among the 4i they must apply to Moncton. This does not mean childrcrfs projects operated bv the Flt-WC!‘ Par- that appointments are guaranteed to theiii, as cnts’ Plan for lVar Children ‘in Great Britain. that would be contrary to the excuse for their l, l, ,,. ,,. dismissal, but. it does imply that as vagandgg occur they wi_ll have preference in accordance with their seniority of appointment. It is too bad that in_ their search for reduction in expensess the railway should strike so severely in Cliar- . . loltelown, the capllal of our Provlnce and the early next year. The contract for provision of headquarter: of our railway service since COn- '25'°°°’°°°. lwunlk’ the largest “beg” Purchase federation. We have reason to believe that had by the Umted Kmgdom m the ‘var permd’ w.“ pressure been brought to bear earlier the PM} announced early this year. _It compares with position would have been checked at its birth’ 112,000,000 pounds shipped in the year ending but as cvldenlly no one “presentlng us at Ottawa last’ March and 93,085,382 pounds in the year was sufficiently concerned or even in the know, mdmg March '94" the proposal was allowed to take it: course until T , too late to draw back. We trust as far as possible A ‘earcll, °l llle ‘llllces °l a Montreal ‘Val positions will be found in the railway service Submomlacllng lllalll “'35 lccelllly llllclcllakc" here for the“? employeeg some of them m) by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police who doubt, “.111 be transferred to Monclon where transferred a. truck-load of documents, files and their experience will be of considerable value, bool,“ l0 the pllll“ dlvlslollal llellllqllarle“ Fol‘ but it means the breaking up of households and l°wlrig a series of commission hearings, presid- Cl famll). relationship, It ls a question whether ed over by Lionel A. Forsyth, K.C., a report tinder prcsglllj drqumslances sullable accommm of the evidence was forwarded to the lloii, C. daiioii in Alqmgton can be found for the 1.85pm? D. Howe, Minister of Munitions and Supply, zive families affected. who passed the report on to the Minister of Jus- lt is to be hoped the Mayor will obtain some YlCe for action. The report alleged that the com- definite assurance that our loss in this respect Pall)’ had lfalldlllenll)’ booslml lls 905's b)’ lllfill will be made tip for by the extension of em- Slllallesi ‘Vllslelul exlllwagallce illld Paildcll Pa)" ployment at the repair yard depot at Charlotte- l'°ll5- town. Cheese, the dairy product most urgently re- (lUlfCd. by the United Kingdom, is being shipped at a rate which if mziiiitaiiied will mean the I25,- 0O0,000 pounds needed overseas will be landed iii $81k! Sometime! we still have to go from Canada to learn what Canada is doing, notwithstanding a multitude of publicity stuntcrs. Lord Marley in \ l l _ _ _ Parliament cited Canadian internment camp; for - 1°“ 5} "lbQl 0f V1¢l°YY—lll° mammal!“ flag‘ refugees as models which Britain might do well EEF-ll“ been Cllofitn for Couldn't: Third VIC- to adopt. Vice-chairman of the refugee committee, fjflalmlllgaglgjlltl: ‘vfitlclllflsllinlallllti on??? yss- _I.0rd Marley told ti... rtqiise of Lords he had vis- viOuS-lo evcrvolxc llhé d1 ° er)’ is" 11“: dB >0’ - itcd camps in the Dominion where refugees were inhtnmlcnv ii] the handgggof our ocoiinmairidy paid for their woik and would cveiittially become trQOPS it shmbolizes tll ll- an free men In5tead.of.relurn"'g to Bmfm" they l “l ‘mi a °.“l warlam preferred to remain in Canada, he said, ivhere lukst the symbol needed at this time. It has they rmelvcd valuable tralnlng and made a com ta "cn us aloii ti ' ' ' . - - out ivar, in wliichnoliirtztéeriiifiiiiibltiitofhblNciririnifit tgbutlon to m6 war e-Hort‘ He expmsscd the "ope he expended. ~ ritain would 011211.113 ghis‘sygtcnl, Some 722 commando daggers have been flown to Canada for. distribution to the 722 local units of the National War Finance Committee fllmutlllolll {he country, and when each committi- ily unit achieves its war loan objective, it will dispatch its commando dagger to the regiment ovcrseaswhich represents that community. Canadians will be asked to subscribe $750,000,- 000 in the Loan which will be thrown open to SHhFCFiPtiOII in a month's time. In the incan- Wliilc. preparations for the campaign are being completed. The objective for this Province has not yet been announced, but whatever it is, let its strive as in the past to realize it. The lead \\'l1lt‘lllll'lll€ Prince Edward Island took in the la“ Vlflriry Loan campaign is a. matter of his- tory. Let's make history repeat itself this time. New Victory Loa n Canadian school inspector preferred! The Bermuda House of Assembly decided by a vote 9f 15 to seven to obtain an inspector of schools from Canada, an unprecedented step since the colony's educational system is based on that of England. Earlier, a. motion to obtain an inspec- tor from England was defeated. The assem- bly already had approved a. salary of 5605 sterl- "lg (allmlt $2.400) a year for the position and the new vote came on the question of providing funds for air passage to Bermuda for the per- son selected. A motion to appropriate 5205 for Passage from Britain was defeated, while the One adopted allowed 95o for the trip, the ap- proximate price f0; air passage from Canada. l! ill W‘ The young Presbyterian chaplain who for- feited his freedom on the beaches of Dieppg to remain behind with his captured comrades has been revealed a: Capt. the Rev. John Weir Foote a graduate of Montreal Presbyterian Theologi- cal_ College. Church authorities after checking their-records declare that there is no other Pres- byterian chaplain reported missing and are con- yinced that the hero of Dicppe was Capt. Foote. Ijlie young clergyman attended Queen's Univcr- sity and the University of Western Ontario be- fore entering Montreal Theological College. His first ministry after his graduation in i934 was at Fort Coulonge, Que. He afterwards served “l Poll l‘l°P‘~‘. Ont: ivhcr: he.‘ became a chaplain. Hitler's Biggest Plunder In an editorial surveying the three ycags of war since 1939. the Stockholm newspaper Da- gplis hlylpeterlareltalls the gintelnse appeasement e orts' y erin, immc iatey preceding its attack on Poland, saying: “Berlin most of all wanted to prevent the three great powers from turning the force of their ariiis against (Jer- many; the British Empire, the Soviet Union and the United States. These powers now stake their existence on crushing the German armies. Germany's failure to prevent this is the greatest failure that diplomatic history knows." Drawing a parallel with the World War of ii-118th dit’ '. . n2 iongerlhaveeeanfillfisigrxiglgitlgri-liii;tfierigbflf flied 5h" dale’ '83.“ w“ ‘ sllwmllll lllwYell ated peace. "The German Empire's request for l- a“ to novel wrlmlg anonymous”: and lllll)‘ an armistice was addressed to President Wood- 1S add"? mfg Sell,“ "l, Wavcll)’ "Owls Wllll‘ row Wilson," the editorial says, "not only be- out hls 'l'c".t'ty pcmg ("Sdoscdl all“ maklng cause he was the leading statesman on the Allied aégfilgfnwgih h“, Pen’ he l‘)? ltblall lllld m°l° side, but also because he was considered to be - ' . . r°“$l all “ll?” ‘la a lflvaslmeflt ‘kinder’ than either Clemenceau or Lloyd George. "l. a lmlilbli)"; _l_"'m§ lle 50* 85°"! PaYlllE 0“ So he ivas. ~Bul Roosevelt strikes a different "'3 “m” llabllllle’ ‘Vllll ll“? lllmnm ir°m hi5 note. Too many innocent ‘nations have been "Olfks a'll'_alm°5l,°°m,l'l°l°l>’ llccomPllslled llle crushed under the caterpillar treads of the Ger- Oblect’ "m ll Co“ llllll ll“ lllc lllrfllll-lll overwork? man tanks. Too many nations have seen their he ‘"35 fl master character dclineator. aml foremost patriots face the Nazi execution squads. fillollgll ll“ slYle '5 easy and mrclflfifi. his plots The New» Europe horrll-l-m N“! Roosevelt ciffiisc, yet his master pcii vivificrl scenes oiit- can't be expected to be ‘kind’. Nor can Chur- ‘kill’ “ml lllllmlr» lllftlilnfltl and Lowland, and chill. And Stalin?" rfllfifll the standard of novel ivriling to a That America has contributed largely to lZu- levfll wlllfl‘, llasvalfltc been described as Vic- rope‘; culture and that America is necessary to mm“: _“l'°"‘8 llie coward that \\'0lll(l not EIAPQQQ was the slalunmg p14‘ in an nditnhfal dare 10 fight for such a land?" Sir Walter Scott, Bart, poet and noveliat, NOTES BY TNE “WAY hi club: nro being fofiedyinniizltalilg each week. The pigs are kept. mainly on waste food- stuffs and surplus vegetables, and the 3,000th club was registered by the , Etnau Pig Keepers’ Council n. few weels ago. About 0,000 ton-I 01' bacon or pork, or 80,000,000 ounce rations, are being pr each year b these amateur - keepers, an a good ill goes into the pool for the general public. The rest is the reward of the pig club members, who are allowed for their household-s the meat from two pig: a year, roprolentingvn 8 lb Joint of meat each week. Oriel! in hundreds of war factories are finding that. a pig club attached to their canteen means not. only extra. meat. but choice meals of pork 0r bacon which otherwise they would not see. Providing the club sells half it; pigs to the Minis of Food. the remainder can be kl 0d for oon- iiumption without affecting tho can- teens normal meat allocation. Sehoois, hospitals. fire and police stations are all joining in tne move- ment to turn kitchen and garden waste into food for next Winter. Parsons have organized pigkeopin! among their parishioners, and many local “pubs” have their clubs. On forms, tistially far from restaurants. the workers are avoiding mfiB-lless days by making use of empty sites and other buildings. -—From the British Industries Bulletin. r saw a za-ton tank owlngllll It the end of a crane between heaven and earth. It rose to clear the side of the ship, the muzzle of its mun slowly turning towards us, and then it Vllnlgélfifié into in?! hxpelg. glgkfore- man e me p soft hat and said, "Well, that's the last. of them," and when I said I'd been told they had just started load- ing the ship, he replied. “Well. We don't trike long about it, you know." "And thev don't for where aboard the ship the day before there had been a vast. alnost emptry hold. 110W the tanks lay snugly together ready to be blocked off so that. no Arctic storm should unsettle them as they were being curried to Russia, This particular lot were being put aboard a new ship. Amldshlpa the cat'- pentera and electricians were still working, fitting, nanelllnz and wir- trig in the officers’ quarters. There couldn't sureiy be anvtblniz much quicker than that: buildlnz a slim round its cargo. —-—I..ondon Listen- er. We worried just a llttlo our how Miss, Lludmila Pavlfchenko, who is credited with killing 309 German soldiers, will get along with the International Student Assembly that she is to attend in Washington. Most. of the international student movements We have known about in this country have been concern- ed with almost achieving peace through winning wars. But that has been auitie a. while ago, and youth movements have been an entirely different trend here sirioe last Dec. 7. And. be- sides, we have sometnini! else Y0 worry about. We are worried about Miss Pavllchenkoh ccvnPMllOR 0T1 this jaunt. among the students, Ueut. Vladimir Pchelinstev. He is credited with killing 152 German with 154 bullets. What worries us is what. became of those two other bullets. Could he have lost them climbintt up a tree? Did he send tihem to M145 Pavlichanko 8s muvenlrs? Did he take them apart to see how they were made, and, if so, why couldn't he have been satisfied with break- ing open one instead of two? Or did he make them up into an ornament.- a1 ashtray during his spare time ba- tween shooting the other 152? We trust one of the nivneroua Wasn- lngton correspondents will interview Lieut. Pchellrttsev during his stay there and enlighten us on this my- stery. —-Chicago News. Messrs. Gilbert. and Snlllvln in their time seem to have understood perfectly the Japanese way of life. Mr. Tolschus, writing the other day about the supernatural sanc- tions behind Japanese imperialism, said: "Scene of the more fanatical vlsionoiries of the ultra-nationalist organizations led by Toyoma Nak- uno go farther. To them the Japa- nese Emperor, as ii direct descen- dant of the Sun Goddess. is 0y dl~ vine appointment both Imperor and god of the mundane world, and therefore entitled to rule the earth as the Sun Goddess rules tho heav- ens." Except for a change ln the sex of the solar delt this la almost exactly the view o Yum-Yum in "The Mikado," expressed in almost. the identical words. Ko-Ko’: destin- ed bride, decking herself for her nuptials with the Lord High Ex- i’ fi an i=0 .. as ecutloner, it will be remembered. looks at her faoein the mirror and wonders in her artless Japanese way she is so much more attractive than anybody else in the whale world. Passing from prose to some. Yum- Yim proceeds to compare herself with the sun, whose rays are all ablaze with ever-living glory, nrid she sums up vier intentions in the following lines: I mean to rulo the earth, he l - Wo really know our won-tn, The sun and Il Yum-Yum actually mop farther than the super-patriots of okyo 1:0- dny. She calls ln the moon as well its the sun--the placid celestial Highness upon whose fiwo there‘: not a triwo of diffidenco or nhyneu. If the American people are inclined to think it will be an easy task to square accounts for Pearl Harbor. they would do well to recall Yum- Ylmfs warning - Ah, pray make no mistake. We ii-ro not. shy; We've very wide awoke The moon and II (New York Times) “An attempt to lot the Irloh In Eire in on what is m: on in the but tho. world might. fail, from the available evidence it i: n job w . . twins." write: Geoffrey Parsons. J11. of the New York He ld-Tri- bune. writing from Dublin. "It. must be done from the outside. It. wont be done from inside Eire." In his dispatch, Parsons says. "News of the recent arrival of largo reinforce. menis of American tr in North. em Ireland was not. pr ted in the press of Eire. The censorship in mire is five times as strfot o: that. one- vtilling in belligerent Britain. ‘I'm Irish live almost in a vacuum. They don't know what la happening at“. where in the world, They aren't told what. their neighbors thin]; and feel about them, except. by M]; pro. rirtizandlshs and they are completely ln the drirk about sentinent in Am- erlca The government never bo- llcvcd the United Stiles would be in the war and now that it. la in, it doesnt let the Irlah people pet more than a thin trickle of infor- mation obout how America is ro- lnt to war .—(Toronta Ilelein-rami THE CHARLOTTETOWN _ anything eitoept. ml ll WORDS OF CHALLENGE A THOUGHT A DAY FOR A NATION AT WAR "The terrible truth that eon- fronts us is that we are not winning this WB-r. We B" barely holding our own and out position may soon. become gvgn more precariousfi- Alex wglkgy, pqnirilon President _ of the Canadian Legion, owoztctrtootoontzroioo PUBLIC FORUM Illa oolomn lo ovum lot III flgggiqq by oorrelpondolf: o! ouotlone or interoot. ‘the Ohlrlolhtown Gnordlon docl lot nooollnrlly ondono Ila opinion d linooondonh. MR. BOULTER on AGRICULTURE Bir:-Next gworkitiir to win the imoortancxs to Pr as planning to assist the fanned-s oi the Province. It is to be honed. therefore, that the comprehensive newness given to Rotiiiv lust Merl by Mr. J. W. Boulter will llUL on.» be widely read but will r9c2ive cura- fu.l consideration from the Dominion and Provincial Governments. Of the many subjects discussed. two were of outstanding importance. viz.. potato growing and. pure bird livestock. Mi". Boulter contends-and he should know-that. "we are not. do- tnz the lob in potato itroivixiz that h“ we were doing fifteen sears aim.” Speakiml of seed Dotatoes ho stat- ed that "in the Itislt Coobler var- iety iilone we are almost 15.000 acres below the acreage that passed tin- spectiuii) last yetii‘. Without tit- LEIITDLIIIE to give the reasons for H19 above set-back, the following uuota- tion from Mr. Bombers address will sneak for itself:- “Lel; me tell you our situation to- day. I was in o. field tMr. Peooin and George ‘Thompson were with me) of as fine a. rrou of cobblers as you could tiiirl. This was n loiiz nar- row field. Oii the other side of the line and fulfill}?! parallel with it. was another field planted with the worst trash you could find and full of tlisc-"Iisu. That nit-ans that the good farmer will have to sacrifice acres of his crop because of the proximity of rejected potatoes. Now it would be considered a tierrioie thing if there was a law to prevent. a man planting such seed near a Rood farmer and yet. no considera- tion is izfveii to uhe man who is really the type of farmer the Prov- ince needs." "We have been urizcd by leaders in some of the States to establish man who is brave enough to und- ertuke such a move." _ As the establishing of disease free areas would Kill for Provincial Leil- islation. and as substantial advant- ages would accrue to all the farm- ers of the proposed districts. no great courage is required on the part. of the Government. Drovided fair play on Democratic principles 1s granted to all concerned. In the first place, before llWllli-Z out. fl. dis- ease free area. a Doll could be tak- en of o1! the farmers in that area and no action would result. unless the owners of a Rood malorltv of ed of the Dlfifi The area. in so far as potato Izrowiritz would be concern- ed would be placed under the con- trol of the seed potato inspection department by whom tine most uo- to-dabe methods of seed potato cul- tivation would be prescribed. These, no doubt. would include such mat- ters as soil analysis rufd cultivation. the correct. formula and uuantltv of fertilizer employed. the use of cert- ified seed. hllltnir iio. weodlriiz. sni-avtnu. dimrinir and finallv stor- one. Opposition intent be expected on- lv from farmers lackltit! in capital and not equipped ivltli the required machinery. It. should not however. be a serious matter for the Govern- ment to provide the necessary as- sistance. secured bv a lien on the oron. The nrofered assistance should indeed be a sufficient inducement to most farmers to insure their co-oo- oration with their neighbors, who. in turn. would no doubt be onlv too glad. to assist them with nclvloe and practical helo in other ways. In the above I believe that Mr- Boultier has offered a suggestion capable of large expansion in the future and one that worth of careful consideration bv our lead- inir farmers’ institutes. I am. Sir. etc- H. K. S. HEMMTNG Hay Fever And Pollen (Hamilton Spectator) The Spectator has received from hay fever sufferers-as is. usual at this time of the yerir~ioltrrs com- plaining of laxity in ridding the locality of ragweed, tifiiicii has come to be regarded as ‘the arch. offender. If lho municlpaily did its part iii qeslrcilng the xveed, and if individuals r21! theirs, it is re- presented, this rllstrrssing ailment would be athlng of the past. Weeds an prolific, however, and it, i: not such a simple matter to free the countryside of them. Accord. ing to some ccmmentrttors, it is all a part, of the pride man must pay for his civillzatloti. 1n the thickly- wooded localities, hay fever is un- known; l: claimed that it oamo with the clearing of the forest-e, Mien the tracts of denuded land becaime the breeding-ground of noxious growths. But it f5 no re- medy to sHBQV-‘st that tlrse stripped areas should be refoi-csted, of any otmsolotfon to sufferers to be told wharf: they airo already painfully conscious of~l~hot pollembcaring weeds infest. open apnoea. It. may be that Mother Nat-lute is having her revenge on earlier explolters, t. mokoe the condition no easier to bear. What victim: want. tohnowlnlww amino caueoof their dial-rose he mrioveii, It. la reason-table to stilvpooe that a determined, concerted nT/tack on weed-infested lanes and lot-s would result in at least. a temporary im- Rlrilnoy Aolds Bob Your Rest Many people never uom to gel n [ootl lllglfnoot. Tltoytumnid ton-lie lvvoh Ill amt olieop. Often l blue li on " when it may lie t ir kidneys. Ilooltlty kiriioyo film poison: from the Hood. If they m hulty and loll, poison: may in llltnyrlom and sleoplonnou, hurl- lcllo, hoe ache often follow. If rlon'l sloop well, lry Dodd’: Kidney ills-for Iulf a century Ilia lovorlto remedy. l0] Budd's Kidney Pills f‘ D i0 g Phone 117 g. fi. t1 MR. F I S We have a limited supply of Small. Gill Hots on hand in the different sins and depths, also borhd and morlino right and loft in one pound hanks, six and nlno thread ulna twine in one-half pound balls, oorkwood, m, eto. Jobber: Iot-Thollowfamoo: llNlllN JABK REll BUFFER PAINT Prince Idward Island’: All Your Isl-inn Inrilwon and Fishing Supplies I-louoo A. KENNEDY 8t 60., [Tl]. "The fisherman’: Think" i .__§=§ nnnuau emlb-ilmd wit. “‘—woiua'i>e' welcome, if nnflhitig better i; to be to deal Wllh are told, by “diligent Canadian and Amer boi-anista who wok the time and trouble to investigate ra than theorize.” The sel. erioo editor of Time magazine is support. In New York offence to let the and for yeans cam- paigns have been staged T-o erodi- on our mousazid men. were set. to work for weeks ragweed, with negative example of Chicago is cited, that city having employed no fewer than 25,000 men in cleaning up weeds at a. 00st of $185 00), with n0 mi- oiaenoe or the d. quoted ‘in City it. is a legal weed stow, CB, uproot-trig results. The he it. This neas municipal the Branttford lhrposilor observes: out long before I151‘! and su that, if Ian will lnobalbly remain less active "the plant. may soon be killed off by natural " ‘ A better method, and that to destroy the weed before it. flow. on, and, when dealing with mo- t , refrain from siioh an advanced period of their ll development? t Labor and lave! there on no other w i . To rulemine liberal notion of that ‘ Whichsofatie hat-h set. beneath thv eon . Oiriuilthipzugotvfourtiu/trooko labor! then like o. flllhfl moon. the f cause i Of life snail iiirht thirte hour from Dole to vole. Thou shalt taste health of nuroooe. an 0f simple Joya unwind without a. muse. Lovel limd thy heart shall cease to its befllliitl pulse was set. to rock and re e: Find but? another heart. this sldo the ave To aogrthe and clinx tm-thou but ‘o . Labor and mo! then fade without a sizh Submerged beneath the inexorable wave. writes: LONDON -- (GP) strong stand against Nazi "Free ‘rrade Unions," leadln derground newspaper in "We are approaching the annlvermry of the Gen-maria and Nazis‘ brutal and gag n of the National Labor "Wham Time failed to note was that other investtgwvors had foimd that the best; way to handle roadside and field-cor- iagweed is to leave it. alone. It spreads more rapidly when dis. tiimbod. Incidentally, lt is reported that one celebrated Nonthem On- tario resort for hay fever stifferers lioa within a few miles oif a large luxuriant growth of ragweed ivihioh nobody has upset! One and when some we dntentloned wusadieiis start to mow that growth the acreage in the district. anirmv- will 595mm LABOR AND LOVE Question vfhv -Erimu.nd GOIE. CALL T0 LABOR (Sept. 25). ll Write or phone 768. Buying Ffialvago Any individual with SALVAGED S C R A P IRON or RUBBER, not wishing to donate ll. to the campaign, can contact _ MR. A. BLOCK ll‘ e rl e r al Government licensed dealer 105 Spring Park Road, Charlottetown. Highest prices paid. Truck vvlll call . it is by no means agreed that this is the richt W80’ the trouble. The Bmntfom Expositor warns "wail meaning authorities" that, "by" all the available evidence, and jumping on ragweed patches, only intensifies the evil by eristiritig the propagation." ‘Ibis ‘was established some years ago, we 1933 tion in the 1n- p. surely, would be —- Urglng o tyranny, “n- orwny, seizure oration" WAR RISK INSURANCE To those desiring Information, we will be glad to furnish particulars regarding this type of Insurance, without obligation. NYNDMAN 8t 00. LIMITED Insurance Service since 1872 Offices: Charlottetown, Summer-side, Montague ATTENTION PUIILTRYMEN Several additional pure-broil flocks are required to supply hatching eggs for 1948. Selection and blood-testing for Pullorum Disease will commence October 1st. Applications will not. be considered after that ilatn. Send for application forms to:-- ‘ How Are Your Eyes f’ lf on are ha ptoml specialist. At your oorviea with years l‘ of ri d thorough ..i.°.*.‘l°....‘"i2$.t§‘. .‘ Coll In and dioolol your difflonltleo. G. F. llutoheson I. G. BUTOBIION G. l. HUTUHISON ARI YOU TROUBLE!) ITII LUNBA00 son: BABK I l0 we have one of tho hell remedies to offer. namely _ BACK-BITE TABLETS Iopoohilp eflootivo for Lum- hngo, So ntloa, Nonrlllo, Join Muscular and other form: of Rheumatism which ordinary treatments fail to roach. Prloo l0 oento nor hon. GASSY STOMAOHS RELIEVE!) Ivory person who lo troub- led with goo in tho stomach and '- ohonld got n bottle of Dr. Evan's Stomach Ml:- turonnd h nioklylt will roller? hlfdToti-eminl umptomo. Dr. Ivan’: Stomach Mixture taken at meal t pa: hot it romoto: the time; ionol ootl t onnnllm vol nooioll tho op to. oonto per bottle. an». rm: an“, m» F» and 68o. m I De r Powilormfilwilefngo-hr 3; 0 ‘lm edlhlll Balsam . . m" I. TNE TWO MAGS Hall Order: Given Pro-pl Attention I I llflflfllland cllllllllllll 'u'-'-'-""1'_~$“—' Ollnoron Block. l» e. a Riley Bllfldlril ‘EY-EFETANFRTET POULTRY SERVICEB, Box 39, Charlottetown, P. E. I. "CUTTING, THE’ 06hr?“ APE '.l‘OWN.—(CP)-- m Boo . q l‘ African Boom of Trade and 1n- gaiiatries has appointed a crvnmittot advise on economy mvasurq ' which might be adopted in ilil manufacture of men's clothing. ' Professionafilardt o. McLEOD a. BENTLEY W. E- ENLEY, K. (l. l. A. BENTLEY. K. G lat-men and attorneys-ul- Lnvv MONEY T0 LOAN 1M Prlnoo Street ll. F. ARCNIBALD Chartered Accuuntzmll gun", Th," llullillfll Charlottetown BELL o. MATHIESO MONEY T0 . lsliln ___}_ MOCGUlGAN s. TRA-INOR ‘UIFAN. k 0- Fill‘ Clllnlllalllffiilblfllt. ii. 0 Barristers. SullPll-“l! MONEY Tl) LU/Dl 5 O Pritvltiplal “an ' stvri-lit iiiitvinitetofi i’)- ro LOAN iuoivev P. 0;“ ,, H. F. McPHEEy if. K1‘- OTAR n, nanitiiiran soélllfilfillf 44 GLASSES PITT!" Jsmnw OPTOMETITIST N," mention eernraitat area.” 5 lntlnfll" Ivonimnlsyddam m;