I’ or. rotrv p IbE BIIARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Morning Dally tl-‘uunded m I887) z? PTKTSTIIUII: Iat-ut.’ Chester fllfllll" vile rrtslocnt, J. It. Burnett. F.J.l. spcn-rnry, Lieul. tut. u A. blavlllnnun. 0.5.0. Editor and .\l.t lll,'{ Director. J R. Burnett. F-Jl AASUCILIIL‘ l<.tl.tt.ts. l-runk \\ alker a-nll Iun A. BERN"- Sl I§.\\.ll|l"l'lU.\ RATED By Mull III I‘. r. t, sLutl p.r tear 5'46" ll" 5 17mm“ .. . _~_ _ 5U- t one montn. c... 3.113.}?! _l‘f.‘.'."l.‘ll .-§r.°§.=»» w- ~ we“ , 5th.’: tut .4 llIUlllhl-“oo a: By “XIII lII Landon 4m! OHS- A- - P") ' Satultat. nrvh-l -~>1' l1~'_1' 3"“ 31'1"’ u" h munm‘ out tor a months. btrolluiast Jlcnltlry is Weaker "l!" UH, II cit/rest Ink." _ |r l. _~.t:.\v. ocioui? 8. 194"- Litttlntltrs New Army .. w tautttlizllt army of oils il be reporting at ic Dominion tlHS tn. n- honws as , tltiat». These young t .- ,‘ .. \\l.ltl\\'€l'S, IWCZH)" (w: to he called, with ‘l rtmttiitg to twcnll" ' wcvtvvtl their train- up tn regular hlittl c "lllllCllf on the short- Wng, t-sprccialiy‘ as tlt." .' xtttt t-ift-rt a schcntc ' t will be rc- thirty days 'uetl soltlicr; _ shottltl ill rtttlilttcltts of .‘.,. iintl the training d, tvill be all the bet- ‘i in their period expires. ,, -. t t. " . . , ',v. l..l.ltt:l Ant] '.. ..._- ttttpcztrctl front timeto ‘ gin 0t" the Polish .' 11cc ill the autumn - \\.-ll that an attthor- .t t ll ttzatlc ztvztilztlllc by it l. utilon. Cutler the r -_.l,--, ¢wo divisions of as well as a brigade 0f ll; 1-,. r"- l..‘ I‘. , t .. ;..-~, 11¢. l ltrigzttle. The of- , t:',i‘t"r; fllltl some Of i.,, , t i l1...» wit.» ltatl escaped were rccrttited front _ -, _ llt-‘giitttt and Holland. . . - li- t"\ll.'l]l.~‘C, a large in- " ‘ » t- itttizt-tl in Syria. antl cavalry, motorized in training: camps , Wu France. Trfliflfifil ~ f .- n - c rps were available bttt v t ._..._,-__-_ - 1- w "'7 ' l~~TllY§ was (lctailetl for l I .1. 1'." l whctt that gallant ' tv tilt: itggltt, they were i and behaved with ttittg around it. earned tltc .. .lttlltl. .\fter the litvy returned to _ rcargttard action ' the Iritish Expedi- ' it of Rcnncs. They li-r exceptionally dif- _ tin anti-tank guns 0r ~. _\t-,t»:ltcr Polish unit, the 1 w" fil't't'llltli('l'<, relieved a French .» _\lt‘z sector of the llaginot rot rotttttcr-attack by this from the French lligh : “If the French High ten divisions of the . Division, the defeat l ltave bcen averted." Conunazttl . Cnmntattl ‘wit v cottll Thglntltlslrial Battlefront facts relative to -. iuittstrial front, as nrplcntent issued recent- :'t*.~‘ lug commitments on be- I British Governments ;{')_F;4X_V_ t-xptlttsltifl programme .l cItt-lnical plants, with a fr-sfistocyooo — mostly on . ntttnition plants, with fitoxvioooo for muni- fir shtills; .\rtnamcttt stlttcnt of 917.000.0001 special investments of 1rd or completed; $4.- - ttcttt, mostlv new tools - _ tanks, ctc. This $225.- .t..‘> o... . 4 ttttml- does not include n q - < privately’ to extend v -- ll'l’lli, t-tc., but is en- . and extensions may s‘ ‘aw-H rlnuttally. -~i~.-~.~.tt plrmt ltrograntn-te -. t1 I» il-tttt for 2§~pOtttttlPr$ rh will he one of the -~ c t" ‘- -- ‘lip llriti-lt litnpirc. - s l in (Etttxltla for shells wit‘ 1 ~ ' i tlltllik already exceed 9ft?" . it qli- plattt has an ortlt-r r’ a ctrtrtitl type of am- "lllllflil/"lf firms have a lll ittfatttrv iIIIIl\'<. Z schvlttlctl. despite ~ttli"~\ 1;," pieces of ‘t utter hr-ftlrc ntailr v ...- o, ‘ Cutwllit are produc- tz-vgins; from trainers " -'= w- tttruittq out un- ~ not‘. : are schctlttl-‘tl - ' ' "uh t-vcw $62.- m l: is lycing finished in half that time. Fast patrol boats tcorvettes) are being launched two a iveek. _ Food bill for the armed forces of Canada m the first year of war has been itl excess of >6.‘ 000,000. The uuitthel- of mctl to be ted lu- erctlscd in the cottrse of i1 W?" "U111 4 Pcdf“ and air -t'orce combined, go nrllrl." 300-000- Iu recent weeks the production of ntechzlttizcd m-nni vir-lnclqs in tllitatltt has been ttlatntzltltctl a, [he Hue of 400 a tldy. lly the cud of the year the output will be at a rate 1111121118 “P I‘) boo or more a dzty. The Par! declares that thcre are bottlenecks due to the intpossihility of alvattciltg all cle- lnents itt prcptlrxttitttt at thc same slwfll- 11°50“ r, plane can be tnadc, shell turned or a gun cast, {here must be designed attd coltstrttcted the ma- chine to make it. That is the job of the tool- mzlkcr, the man wlto IIIZIhPS the machines which tnake the ntachittcs. Tlte ntakittg of these ma- chine tools is the major bottleneck faced on Canada's industrial front. Finally the Pm! looks into the future, with the statement: “There is better than an even chalice then that after tltis war Canadian indus- m- will go on. after hricf intcrrttptiott. to ucw ltrights of skill, diversity and productivity. Thus ottr war industries may again lay a foun- dation for new peace inrltvtries. lt ltrtppcnetl in tolR and it should lmppcti again after this war." This great industrial rcvolutiotl is taking plate chieflv in the Central Provinces. There is com- oarrttivclv little evidence of it in the hlaritimes Frittrt- Fdward island scents to have been left romnlotplv out of thr- pictttrc: a fact which tnnv ltave far-renchiitg results in tltc post-war pcriorl to which the Toronto paper looks forward. EDITORIAL NOTES The political event 0f the wcelc will be the Cottscrvzative Convention here 0n Friday t0 bfl‘ addressed by .\lr. john R. l\lacl\'icol, Preside-itt of the National organization. i it ‘ l‘ The late Rev. Dr. Malcolm MacLeod was not onlv a successful Islander abroad, be was a loyal Islander to his birthplace. llis happiest days were spent in Belfast, to which he rt-turtr ed yczlrly for refreshment itt body, tniud and spirit. U U U I So many farmers ltave storage now-a-days that thcv are not worrying overnutclt about the prices oiffcred for the first of the crop; they can afford to wait, and if the prices do not improve to their satisfaction they can feed them to livestock for which good prices prevail. l'er— ltaps it would help it the Urllflfllllclll of .\g_rt- culture would coordinate with the export ttuttlc in thc interest of the fut-titers. I It =t< v Henry Fielding, English novelist and satirist, died this date, 175.1,. lie held up a merciless mirror to the people and the manners 0i his day. llis characters are always drawn with a Ina-ter- llis novels include "Joseph Altdrews", jolla- than \Vild the Great," “Tofu Jones", “.\tuclta' : "Love and scandal are the best sweeteners of tea." 1 I i A‘ If any one imagines tlte Nazis are going to successfully invade Britain, writes attotltcr ls- lander at the front, he is vastly ntistakcit. lt can't be donc with the defence prcparatiotts now effective. The cottntry is ottc ztrlnctl c.'tlttp-—- yet business proceeds as usual, and nobody worries about bombs, take it all in the day's 0r- dinary cottrse of proceedings. There are lots of islanders in the dcfcltce forces, and their opinion is unattitttotts-Jiitglatttl can't be beat. w w s 4- According to an Ottawa despatch, Montreal has outstripped the rest of Canada in sending to Ottawa the completed medical examination forms, hcr share of the first 30.000 young men called for compulsory military training to begin October 9. A huge pile of brown envelopes containing hundreds of filled-in examination forms from Montreal overshadows onlv a few dozen from all other parts of Cattatla pilcd on a table in the office of Dr. Ilcrbert Christie, sup- ervisor of medical services for the National \\'ar Services Department. Considerable delay has been occasioned in other part5 bccaugg gqmg doctors have been sending the examination forms directly to the department instead of the regis- trar of whichever administrative division he be- longs to. It‘! London's morale is growing higher day-by-day writes a correspondent. The people sec-m com- pletely aware of the fact the war is just be- ginning, and prefer to adjust themselves to a new kind of war life on the best available basis. Discomforts to the people having their homes blown away 0r those being compelled to flcc from their beds to benches in cellars have been great, and the altnoyztltce colossal even if the actual casualties have been very few. Property rlamage inflicted there rlurittg the mass raids has been severe when, viewed froln the private owner's standpoint, httt if viewed as the focus point of a major war attack it has been negli- gtble, and if viewed from the sensation reports abroad that London is in ruins it is nothing. n a s: s Rclnctnbrance Day falls on a Monday this year, and various organizations are planning a trigger and better celebration than ever. At Sfllllt joltn, l\'.B., for instance, the legion have flmlottttcrl several sub-committees to further their platts._ Such questions as ntilitary and civic Cn- operation, proper observance of the period of <ll0flCc at II a.m._ detail: of the nnntnn,» n", gram in the square, selection of the "pzulrc" to rcprcscttt the chaplain service and speak, pub- lll" fldflfPi-s Svslctn. attcnrlrtncc bv silvcr cross tnotlit-rs, nursinq sisters nnd spccial flllfists, in. vttattrttts to ht- issttcrl. laving of wrcatlts, trans~ portation to be provided for disabled and nqhtq rPtttrtv-d soldiers, both in the parade and baclr to ltospital. bands to provide ntusic. co-npcraliott 0f the‘ stret-t r"i1\va_v Ff1'11fi,'\n_\'_ rrrrlin broadcasts. Mbbcitv and other details were assigned to them time strength of arountl 10,000 fOF “F1103 1131i! ly ltand, and his style is bracing and vigorous. y ed the dandelion problem. the middle of a bouts-lam, l1. lieu "19 s-WWW- ol grass, is a strip ot green con-' crete. — Edmonton Journal. Sermon subject Ozitalxo church: "How I keep tram catching double pneumoma tn my pulpit“! And sometimes there is wcndel- why people don't go to church. _- Brockville Record- ‘er and Times. Several of our have missed size point about {save power. It. the lsome industrial cities hcur ahead of others and iduced. With maximum munity life are all kinds of people In live alone away frcm hide away from something in their own lives they wanted to forget,- perltans Dorothy Dix would under- stand. Sault Ste Marie Star. SI. Paul's, llalifax, the old- est Protestant church In Canada, yesterday‘ 22> celebrated Cl‘$fll‘_\‘ of its open- ing. For nearly taro centuries the church lzltg been a house of wor- ship and its ntellcvt’ interior 1s crowded with assoiatioits. It. is a church where litany great men of Br; sl ltisto-y worshipped. It ls a royal cllurcn \\'lfll a royal pew, (ltHglIJl/Cii by the coat of arms Along its galleries Izallg allcmnz escuthclteolts. Everything l\\'.llllll the building speaks ot an- .t.qtt.ty. _ Halifax Chronicle, l Canadians may think of rice ‘as scnltulttng wlrch ts always im- lpcrteri, but. it ls no; that way with lthe Indians In [lllS cLstrict. Our |'1‘:"etlt River correspondent sends itll word that lice Lake IfldlBflS have taken m 98 bags of rice this .on. Altd they do that without. _il‘.'; the fZCC beds The In- In then" cancts paddle Into d l l l c ace bcds, and Wllll their pud- ldles bear the lace out of the heads tcf the stalks, the grain landing in ‘the canoe. After that. it is cleaned land bagged and ls ready for use. llt is palatable and as a food ranks high. Itl cclor u. ls somewhat valuable, but, dark brctvn would ccvcr nus; o: lt. — Pctcrborough Exallulel‘. An unadvcrtisell product can be likened to a plant kept away from Lltc sun: It may keep on Lvmg, but it ctlltnot have its full pOlfllblal growth and vigor until it receives a full mezlstlre of sun- llgllt. The sunlight which can gLve an ttltudvertiscd product a new ad large increase m sales ls the p 'blic's favctp It TOIIIIIlZIS one of the strange vlrlngs ;n human bchaviorll-lt - this withholding of ccmttiattlcatiolts about a prcdun. .fl'cln these fcr whctn it is made. hWhat is to be said of a man own- ing a racmg greyhound who wants fame for it, yet who keeps it, always kennelled. nits refuses t0 lace it? —J C. Klrkwccd, In Marketing. The heroic defence of the British Isles is a magnificent. fact. But it should blind no one to Its possible consequences tn other theatres. Tcdav It seems clearer than ever that the drecz invasion of Great Britain ha. been render- ed tco difficult, for even the Nazis to attvlnpt. it, while the air war against her has proved a failure in the sense that it has shown no signs of being dccisve. London may be reduced to ruins; she cannot be made to surrender, and our is en- titled to fee; more cbnfitlenz-e than at any time since June that. the British cannot be defeated In Great Britain, But if this is true It will only redouble the totalitarian effort to defeat them elsewhere. - New York Herald Taibunc. Tna stranger the falr nl Armstrong ttn the Okanagalt) Is starting. Of course, you have seen other fairs, bigger ones and more pretentious. But 1 dare say that nowhere In the world will you see qu.te the same diplay of fruit and other things that emerge so fast from the soil of the Okana- gan. The peaches here, stltlopeo up from Oliver and Penticwn and Kelowna are so large that. 20 of ulzem flll a. crate contpletely. They are larger than a large spple, much larger than a baseball. A few days ago the basket of peaches Beatty and each fruit. mt-asurea at least 18 Inches in clrcttmfer- ence. One of them is all you can set through at a meal. - Victoria T;mes. He fed the guns of Jutland as a bOY. Today he ls not. a boy. He Ls a serious, modest anxious man who gives every ounce of hls being to a klrlgshtp not. of his own seeking. Yeste ay we heard hls voice. It was a volce hoarse with emotion, and a voice halted, now and then, that, its owner might overcome a speech. Itandlcap. But, through every minute that It, rang out, u. was the voice of a man, a fighting malt-the sailor-prince who fed the guns at Jutland and who acorns to quit the danger growers gave a to Slr Edward ham Palace, with "its honorable scar" He p spoke from London, ancient capital of the British ple. He spoke from London, w Ich "OCCIIIIIQS full front" and must bear the brunt of this thing called war, though It. be murder. He spoke from the city where he wit] dig, It need be, rather than desert his Pimple-the. people who have suf- fered most. with their faith In country unshaken, "resolute and undismaycd," as the King put It.- Buffalo Courier-Express. A few correspondents have scold- ed The Press-Herald for It; stand ‘In support of conscription, ’I"heIr grlevance seems to be we implied there tvere only a miserable few who cpporod compulsory military train- ing. ’I‘1il.s ncsvzspaper truly regrets lit gave any such Impression. Be- [cause ll, knows there was, In fact, Vcnnsidcrahlo rpoodtlcn to conscrip- itlcn. And lest there be others who ,al.so feel we skghtsd the opposi- tlcn and bnllttled its real strength We hasten to concede there was the following Imposing Ilne-up; corn. mllfllsti; German-American Bund: Amcrlcart-Yottth Congress; leaders of some CIO unions; pacifist or an- imations, and man: Individual bu. In n Western contcmpurarles the monttntlattce of rlayLght saving t0 fact that will be an that !peak horsepower load will be re- consump- tion for all within the same hour tlon because they couldn't stand it. They are perfectly normal people who enjoy the silence of the woccls, who is some instance found (‘cm- Insupportnble. There~ this world and some of the friendliest the beaten track. Perhaps, In some cases, to zone now, He spoke from Bucklng- ‘ Q-.- THE _ i’ GUARDIAN’ w notes in rtt: WIIYt Time 8PM.“ B“ (Exchange) It; has been‘ estarlnfiwgexglalslnglilel - ‘ 5O 5 Boston appear: to lnveljsgavn Sllgfilifirélfltigngnelfremux o‘ ms enme Wnat B woeiul waste 0t time. n. has been ueveloplng over a penoo of nnltlons 0t years sleep, like many mother biological process, ls sala w be merely a numt. , of evolution, uutn now we Cull i. seem to no mm- out. n. DA!‘ K044i“: burden once sold to a newspaper col-respondent. tnat. tie only reqttu-ed tour AIOIIIS ot sleep decided to send PUBLIC FORUM ‘ filo column ll on! h! be dlnunlul l; olneoponloull of quothll ll intend, Th QI- lofldiwl 0 In! I00 10-. no Ibo IIIIIIII d lolnnonlnln TEMPERANCE EDUCATION sin-At the annual meeting of lthe Temperance Federation It was a circular letter a day, during the earlier. flB1'w-‘b~ to those Interested In Temvflflt"? working oays of ms career. Doctors ll us we snoual meet? 518m 11°11“- I6 ‘the custom of sleeping ls an an clent as time, yet D605, us we know oi Ifwftily a hollowed out DIME In me eat-m, with the devetop- lnent of CIVILIZIMIOII came the Inevi- sleep m elevated beosteacts. They IIILO England. so, in step with the slow progress of mankind have collie Improvement- ln sleeping accommodations, and the simple article of furniture We all know as a bed has emerged. TOdBY the manufacture of beds and mag- tresses comprises one of Canada's major industries. In 1938 over four and one-half million dollars worth‘ of bedroom furniture was manufac- tured. By far the largest output was front Ontario and 91786. With British Columbia next In order. and the three Prairie Provinces trailing. The Search For Vinland (St. Thomas ‘rlmes-Journal) Editor Jatnes Curran, of me Sault ‘Ste. Marie Star, must be greatly encouraged by the announcement. that the sealch for old Norse VID- tatid ls not, to be abandoned. band of prominent Scandinavians, including members In Stockholm, _ New Yolk and Toronto, have WOTKCLI ‘out a plan for carrying on the work from wheres the book "Here W83 Finland," written by Mr. Cur- ran after long lnvesti atlons, left otf. These gentlemen h ve a f cl ‘tlor the purpose m prosecuting the search for evidence to either prove or disprove the claims made In the Algoma book. They have the co- operation of some scientists and certain scientific societies are much interested. l TIIIS summer some work was done in the Nlplgon area, tracing the old shore lines, vvlththe idea of trying to fix the probable location of the trail In that area used by the Norse- men from James Bay to bake super- ior, 1.000 years ago. It is said that the report to be made of the summer's obsnvations will Inc.ude a statement regarding the physical changes around Lake Nlpisstng once BO-feet higher than It. is now, and that. the lowering of Its waters occurred “more than 200 years ago." The spot. where the Norse armor was found near Beard- more is higher than the ground Im- mediately to the north, and It l5 suggested that. the Norse grave there was probably on the shore cf the lake of 1,000 years ago. I RICH DAYS Welcome to you, rlch Autumn days, Ere com wind, When golden stooks are seen In S, All standing arm-ln-arm en- t twlned; And gallons of sweet cider seen On trees In apples red and green es the cold, leaf-picking I , With mellow pears that. cheat our teeth, which melt that tongues suck them In; may .Wltl1 cherries red, and blip-black plums Now sweet and soft from stone to skln; And woodnuts rlc h. to k ,Into the lovelles ma e u! go t lanes we know -W. H. Davles. I WOOD ALCOHOL PRODUCTION - STOCKHOLM.—(CP) —- Produc- flfln 0n a larsze scale of wood a'co- Ffslfilfihttlggdbmsli 3ft.“ “e” ”’°' ' will be started ‘llltortfy, s engineers ____ ______________ als vmose views coincide more or fess lwlth those of these groups. __ Port, lland Press-Herald. -~.»A_.~ v..,.....--,-. ...._ --f1.¢\~- .-,,_.-- Macs Hair Restorer A delloately perfumed pre- » paratinn whlc restores, | itrpngthens and buutlfles the a r. IT WILL RESTORE GRAY lllml. T0 ITS ORIGINAL CODOI- O \# org, Promotes a new lml lup- erlnr growth when the halr II falling and Is remarkably r useful In preventlng dnndrull and destroying parasitic hall‘ kIIIers. Just follow the dlrec- slum carefully and you wlJ be amazed at. the results. ~ GET YOUR. BOTTLE TODAY . PRICE 60c Der Bottle GASSY STOMACIIS BELIEVE!) Even person who In troub- led with n: In the stomach and bowls should let n bottle of Dr. Evan's Stomut MI lure and see how III wlll rellevo all d st symptom! Dr. Evans Stomach Mlxture, taken it maul time! not only prevents all bad affects from ‘u, but It connotes the lunc- Ional nctl ty ol’ the stomach, assist dlgesllon and Improve: the appellu. nolvir nun cumin your; nor-rm ronu PRICE m an...‘ LADIES Whv not ull and loo stock of Mu Factor Soclety Beauty Alds and IIIQ advant- age of the tremendous drop In the price of these fbdllcll. Never before ha e prlco been so low In Canada. Now In our chance to B . DONT DELAY. w Q tnem, are of comparatively recent vllttage. Orfglnaky. a. bed roll-SEMI’ b I t" r fer conllort. might be brought to their atten- isasyliitlgiisisrsvereolprobaiblly the first tmtlon. urgentlv requesting them to ans introduced the first real beds‘ A ,Edttcatlon, strongly urglflfl the!!! lto use the specially prepared Tem- lperance Courses. As the COUFSPS tare already In progress It would be Impossible to contact these per- ‘sons Individually. Therefore _through the columns your paper we beg that this matter of ‘make Immediate use of this snee- A SCOUT LEADERS WANTED I ' Sin-Since Canada entered the War, a great number of Scout Mas- 1 ters have Joined the Colors and ex- ‘ pectatlons are that a great many more will do likewise. As a conse- quence, tlhe Boy scout Association.‘ In Canada generally and in this] Province particularly, is appealing 1 to those above military use to be-i come familiar with Scouting, and, If possible, lead a, Group of Boys. thereby assisting In this noble work. It Is evident from press dis- patches of late that. Boy Scottts are acqutttiltg themselves admir-l ably ln lifesaving, and we are m-| formed that ln England, Scouts, re- ceive nothing but, the highest of] praise from those In autuvority for the magnificent assistance they are giving. In many countries now overrun by Dictators, there were thousands of Bcy Szouts and the Association was abolished because these boys were not. permitted to act, or think for t-hemseLves. We are confident that once men under- stand the good work the bovs are donig in Scouting they will not. hesitate in offering triieir assistance. To become a Leader or Scout Master one must have a love for boys and boy work. Lectures and l Correspondence Courses are avail-, able. They are simple and very m- terestlng. On Prince Edward Island, we es- timate tltere is almost eight thous- and bcys of Scout age. At the present moment we have about one thousand Scouts. This number could be doubted If we had Scout Masters. If any mart loves boys, please ccmmunlcate with the un- derslgncd or the Bov Scout. Head- quarters on Queen Street, I am. Sir, etc., J. J. MORRIS Provincial Commissioner. An Honest Confession (Ottawa Journal) Judge Daniel O'Connell of Toronto told a legislative committee the other day that everyone knows there are Inefficient jIIdIZGS." There are, It is true, but its public admis- slon demanded an unusual degree of judicial candor. All the environment of a court room contributes to the tradition of judicial Infafllbllity which the judge ldons with hls robes. The Judge ls ,tlle absolute master of proceedlras. and even the lawyers step warily fm fear of arousing judicial wrath. Fcr the moment the Judge's word ls law. whatever the b03k5 say, and In dig- nity and deliberation the Bench speaks with the voice of authority. . It is a setting in which such a. thin as an Inefficient. Judge is har l_v to be thought. of. Who could presume to question the wisdom tr the knowledge of a. figure so auster- ely aloof? But hard experience has shown they are not always learned; some- times the judicial robe slips. It Is for that reason that precautions are taken In the form of appeal courts so that. the judicial errors of even| such eminent jurists as are called, "Hts Lordship" may be corrected -— I even the occasional spot. of lnefIlc-. Iency. | All this Is true, but It ls mt the com lete picture. The average cf efffc ency among Canadian and British judges ls extremely high,‘ and when two of them disagree, or_ two tribunals disagree, It. does not. follow that one Is incompetent. It- merely proves what. Ls common 1n_ every sphere of llfe; that given thet same condition. or the same set of‘ facts. two men quite honestiy wltlt draw sharply var Ing conclusions. j That Is the exper ence not. only of, iudges but of doctors, preachers, ed- , tors carpenters-and, need we say, bolltlclans. 1 LCITILOIY. | V OCTOBER 8‘ 1940 ‘ __.___-__ Molt men I._..s s....-¢' of Insurance vvlll meet. them: Illness. etc t; M t. wlgliie: no"? Ille to Ih A regular n ranteed i. 8. lags; 4 B. years of I fa. oét In touch with a Great puts you under no obllgatlon. IIYNDMAN 8r ‘IEEDS l. A clean-up fund (to pay off debts, expenses of last. ofl n mortgage and leave the family family replace, at least nartla y, his present earn- A fund for the chlldren’: education. A fund to provide hlm nn Income for the snnsct the following needs. LIfe e home: mouth! Income to help It's -Wesl Llfe man. This service co. ttvttrrn vance the Inner Ilne but better en- sdle m: v-tal UJIIILIIUIIACBHOD oe- vween toe Atr-alllnb‘ and raclllc ufIfLUBh ule railalnu Canal. ‘lne strategic gain w nle who.e Western nelntspllere ls 111111161158- uflbflllls most. lur-leacliltlls ail“ 11* uh: ussulatlce u. unity of Dflbfill glven u) AXIWTICBII AVYUVS m nutlsll AL must never be forgotten that. It. is on the noyal Navy and me luefCllttlli. DcfVlGt mat. Llld nut-piles M81‘ euort. prlmarky depends. Lflflll CUllllllfl-AIQ of ulc acd has been un- lnwrrupteuly maintained 1n spite of me LllSAM-HHQH call-SEQ DY Ute witn- U-YflWBA of r-rcnctl IISSISI/BDCG, tlcl tank as one 0t me lllust outstatio- lug tlcllievelnentc of ttlcse two great. se.v.oes. _ un inc whole, the Empire has gotta reason to be satisfied with the course of events since me Hench collapse, ‘line contlngents of auleo forces from tne overrun countries are growing in size and importance. "they are appeal-mg III me llgnung Ilne ant: rendering dtstlngulsheu service there. Neutral friends, who In June thougnr. that. Britain's cause was lost, now believe again In her flnal victory and redouble their efiorts to nelp bring It. about. CHUNGKING BOMBED CHUNGKING. Oct. 6—(CP)— Two waves of Japanese planes bombed this capital of the Central Chinese Government today, dam- aging the Canadian hospital, wrecking the French Consulate, and causing heavy casualties among Chinese gathered In a Jap- anese-deslgnated safety zone. Montreal Dr. Stuart Allen of WESTGLOX GLUGKS while it is still plete Both lines of Clocks Electric and Spring Priced From $135-$635 Pick Yours NOW! Ileddin Bros. 132 Richmond St com- _ BA IIARRISTEK. Canadian Bank of Commerce Bldg. Itlley Building BELL & MATHIESON Plume l5 - Provincial Managers the peak load 1- gtnatly increased. ev"n had mattresses mane trom|1a1 oppm-rnnny rm- Tempemnce , _ _ _ __S,_ Catharine‘; stzndanp ‘drfed rushes sewn ma, morn cgvgr-lxmucauon- Lharlottetown Summerslde Mufti-igu- i___ tings. The Romans copied their bfid I am 51p em i: In the Algoma wilderness are 3231s cgfifeslhewltliireenkfstdggeshz?, (REV-l LEWIS M. MURRAY; -— ~r men tie world would call hennlts.‘ - _-Sec' PEI’. T ranc Fede tI .. ' T They moved away from ctvtliza- fealhm °' ‘1’°°1- I“ “"1 m‘ Rm“ 1 y empe e m or mm moved all the patients to t. dugout and they were nnitljttrctl. Bombs fell within 5t) _var.1.s of the hospital building, blowing zu the doors and shattering the wit".- dows. Doctors from the ltoslnitul. ttlttth Is situated In the safety zone, treated 150 lfljllffld persons from the area witnln ttvo flours. It. was the first Japanese rind here In weeks. Focrons cttrtttt tttmtns rtttsr Because they ltnnw lhll healthy Kidneys Iemova from the blood the waste matter —tl|a excess acids and poisons, formed by the ever-changing human body as it decays and rebuilds itself. Bu! if Iii: Kidneys fail, illness surely follows. Bark. ache, Rheumatic Pains, impure Blood, Llclt of Energy, Too Frequent Urinatian, Sleeplelsnul, Headaches-all may fesnll from faulty kidneys. A: l health safeguard —u I wists precaution-regulate your kidney: frequently with Dndd‘: Kidney Pills-for over fifty years the favorite Kidney ramcdy-non-hubit forming. 103 David's Kidney Pills Cards Professional MORRELI. & 00. l]. F. ARGIIIBALD Chartered Accountants Eastern Trust llulldlng Charlottetown McLECD 8. BENTLEY w. s. BENTI EY. ILU. S" 01"‘ .I. a. auxin v kc. C. l". BEN" ‘LILY. lulu“: WINDOW Bnrrlstrrs and Attorncys-at-Law TIONEY TU LUV“ DISPLAY Ht‘) Itlchmtmll _ Silica: M. ALBAN FARMER .. LLB. SlILllZlTOlI. ETC. MONEY TO LOAN MucGUIGAN a. TRAINCR MARK R. I\lnc(}UlG.»\N. KC. C ST CLAIR TRAINOII. K. C. Barrlsters, Solicitors, Richmond Street. Uhllrlolletnwn H. F. McPHEE B. A. K. C. N0’l‘AllY. &c. BARRISTER. SOLICITOR Charlottetown MONEY TO LOAN Cumeron Block. (fhltrlottrtown. r land PALMER 8| HASLAM A. J. HASLAIII, B.A., '.L.B. BARRISTER. ET Bank of Nova Scntm chambers. Charlottetown, l’.E.l. MONEY T0 LOAN P.0 Bu: l2 Share Sea Command‘ (St. Cathal-lnes Standard) The old rivalry between British, and American naval strength, which t most people realized had for a long ;tlme become an anacronlsm, has now officially been terminated. t That Is an event of world-wide, Importance. The agreement between ~ the two great. English-speaking communltles has many Implications. ,It Is the first. great practical step towards collective security. Oommanglof the sea In the Atlan- ltlc Is now ared by agreement. '1'ne l ‘R/Oyal Navv from the outer Ilne cf American defence. but the United States Nav and Air Force In their WA l! SAVI N GS STAMPS ‘newly-acqu red bases not. only ad- JOIN OF BLACK RED C IIIGKEY & NICHOLSON TUBAGBO G0. LTII. Charlottetown, P. E. I. MAKERS HICKEY’S WHOLE HEARTEDLY ENDORSE THE TWIST ROSS