1 l PAGE FOUR i TllE GIIAIILGTTETTWN GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Founded In I881) President: Lleut. Col W. Cheater 8. MoLII-l Vlce-Prelldent: J. IL Burnett. F. J. l. Secretary: Lleut. Cut. D. A Maclilnnnn. 0.8.0. ldflor and Managing Director: J. ll. Burnett. IJ-l. Associate Editors: Frank Walker and Uent. Ill A. Burnett. R..C.N.V.B. 1Un Actfvo Satin“) “The Strongest Memory in Weaker Till the Weakest Ink.” rnunsniivfiviin! s1, 1045 How They \Vere Treated -\nul\'in1- 11111-1111 election boasts alMJut 111C o ,*-- s ‘ v . H- __,_ <‘. _ ,1, .' ' K1111; tiovciwlilinlts 1.111 1.1 1111 “K11 51mg “I Canuiliaus 111111 have served their country 1'11 bank, me i,,,1,.,,1.,,,1@1,1 \\C\‘l\'l\‘ publication News came, 1,, 1111. 1111111111111; cinlclusious: P111111- .\11ll!>lt'l' Klvuk :_-'--1'1'1'111111'[1I.‘ aft“ 1111...‘. 1,1111. 111' "111. 11.1i' 11:11 szill refusing t0 1 1 ~- ' ' 1 3111111- ii 11:-.rl1111e cosl-uiliviiig 11-‘11115 Qllluled by cverv Federal c1111 servuin and 11.1 the wives and children of 1111-11 on active service. Mink. 11131111101- 1§i11;_1'_,~ government through ‘more 1111111 11111 _\1'.'1rs' 111 this wzir 1‘\']\‘CfL‘11v1‘C~ peam] Wm“ “Plum, 1,, e111,1,1-gc dependents a1- 10111311-1-5 1111- scrvicc men's fziiziilics, rclusing to pav the cost of 1111111 111111 clothing for inore than t\\u children 1n :i11_v soldier's 11111111)‘. .-\fl(l Ml’- Kinq‘, 111111111-1- 111' Finzuivc .\lr. llsley thought 1t 110 slinniv- 1.1 1111- 11i'r1l \'L‘.'\Z' 11f 1111s win‘. 10 dflend 111b,. 1-{111111111115 iv,- “Jflllllg the Can- adian Ho“; 01' Cniniiioiis that Canada could not “affoi-d" to pay for ihe adequate and decent n1ai1ugflaf1fg 11f =11‘.1licrs', sailors‘ and airmcifs children. _ 31¢ King",- g111crin11cnt. iluring iiezirly- four war \'(‘ZlI'>. until ff‘lll' of public outcry fOrCffd 311 curl of the practice, kept disabled and discharg- ed service 1111-11 zivvaling 1:ii'41_v pension awards on a. “c11:n1-:1< mziriic” lu-spitrll allowance Of $19 | 111011111, rlocliing the $10 monthly allowance by the amount 0f the interest 0n any YlCEOT)’ b°11d§ a soldier might have acquired while on service. M; King's government, at the end of five years and c" 11:1 iiwiitlis 11f \\;11' has not yet pro- vided a >211 and 1111011111110 inodcru l1osp1tal_ for the care of the wounded and disabled incn from all parts of Canada sent 1o Canadas main orthopaedic centre for treatment. h 11 15 _\lr_ 10111;‘. government which, forced step by 111111111131; step to increase thocivilian clothing allowance 101' discharged service men {mm 111g $27 maximum it first fixed I0_$3S1 1° $65, to $100, is still chiselling on mcn discharg- ed with insufficient allowances and refusing to pay them the difference it owes. 4 L 11 15 _\l1-_ King's government which, having ooldly denied the heirs of men killed in battle for Canada any right ro the war service gratuity paid to men returning from battle, now be- latedly reverses 11s own shabby ruling and, with a general election iii sight, iloes by order-in- council the justice it refused to consider in parliament. 1 ——.'-\nd, incidentally, it is the same Mr. King's governmcin which all ilirough the war neglected to provide hospital facilities or a dis- eharge depot for returning Prince Edward Isl- and service men in this Province, but insisted on having them treated and discharged at Hali- fax. Elections In Canada {he smrv of the increase iii the popular ‘.018 1111111111111; 11-11-{1911 ballots) ln Canada's 13111111111111 ¢1<~q111111s ‘hive the 1111-11 o1 1l1e cen- rurv is told in 1111s iiiblc: 1900-11011. '1 9521496 1g04_No\-_ 3 _ 1,030,186 19011-011. 21s . 1.178.856 ioii-scpt. 21 1307.538 ‘ISM-Dec. 1'1‘ . 1.883.329 "ISM-Dec. 1". , - 3.1191305 1925-01-1. 20 . 3.168.412 IRE-Sept. 14 3.273.052 ism-July ‘.38 - 3.992.481 i9a5~0:1. 14 4.452.675 l940~“./In:'cl1 20 4.572.531 "K .1111 i-lt-cllnn, _ "F1: , election vsith \\"7l1lr‘l1'S franchise. T111 rt- are 111:111\' 1-rri-rs l-_\' which volt-rs c1111 kill tlivzr 1111- 111 ' ll1~:| 1111 1-l1'c111111, 1111K 1 ll, lf :1 111111‘ 11"“ 1:» . <11111\'-1lc 1119 1111114 1~;11111f11;11__ . i: 11111 :1|11l lri-us again, he kill, 11E. 11.11; 'l111-1'1-r1-.'1'1 11'.'11c.-:i111'c 1s 11111511‘ for a new 10111111. 111 1111s 1'. {1-1, '1 1 .1':\' 1'i\'11.:1n \\ll0 take. 1111. .1-1~1,1~1-111,1-1L 111' 'ii1;_- the 11111110 (if 111s 1'11. .. 1111 1.1- 111111111. 11,111- ,,1' 1'1. . 1 11.111111» ll(‘l(l >lllUC 1874 151111 , ]';'.~ 1'1 :1 .\l11ll1l;1_\‘, \\‘l1lCl1 l5 the 11'1-<-T1-1l:11' <11. .:.1 11.1 1111- 111111 gi-ncral elec- flm 11> be ll€ifl lune 11. lflccliiuis 111111 l1. 111111‘? 1111111 1111;11- 11,1~11;11;;1111, 111. . . .1 i-lcciiun 111 1311;‘, 1111' rn...1 i. 11-1 11;11r.'- lhun >1.\' weeks f,,1- 11,,11; _\. 11111-~11.1_1- elections start- 911‘ g1; _ 11 ~11 '11 1111 'l*.:-,~s<l:1y, five on 'J‘l1,111-~11;1_1'_ |'11i1;' 1111 .\l-1'.1i:1v 111111 tun 1m \\ 6d- 110-11411; T1111 1.\',‘_' 1-l'.t:'=n_ 111111 illIkT llrilisli Col- 111111131 (-11-, -111 1111- (11:10. sizuil-ii. 11.1.» :1 tbrcc- 1111111111 nff ' l1 111111 1 111110 1111' ilie chief (.11.._.1,,1<;11 1,1‘ 1.. 1 ' 111111111111; frimi 0,11,; 1,, c1111.; '|11_- _\' cli-clinii \\2l5 111111-1110}: 1:111, :1. will. llii» -:'.\t \\'.'1~ 111:»- dzrv. $1111. 1,1 1h’ ‘_ 1_v scored five r11111'<- 111 1111- 1:1:1:'1.'1-11~_1 fl \.-.ii'~. l":'i1l:1_v, $111- lll‘flfl\' :1n1| $- election 11:1)» l7l'\ll‘ 11.1w: l1('1'il (‘1111-(‘11 as 11:11. 11ml 1:11. 11;‘ 1‘,- JO 11011111111111 eli-c- (10115 since C111. -‘ . 11.11 full/111: 18/1,", \\1-11111~-1.:~_ .\ue. f to l"i'i1la_v, Sept. 20; 18,1, 81111111111. _l1:1_1' 12; ISIJ. 'l'1i'.i1'~1l.'i_v. l 1. _'..’: 1373. fl-KIP-nllil)‘. 9on1. 17; 13R; 111111.. _lu.1c :0; 188;, Ttu-srlziv, Feb, 3.2; 11°01, 'l“111ir~<l:1_v. .\l':11'rl1 5', 1890, '|‘111-~11;1_v, |111111_-_;;111<1'~ \\'1-1li1<-=<l.'1;1', Nov, 7; 100.1, 'l‘l1ur~:l:1_v, .\'11v. 3; 1008. .\l0n- day, Orr. 26: 1011, 'l‘l11ir<d:1v. Fcpr. 21: I017. Slondav, Dz-c, 17; 111:1, 'l‘11<-<1l;1_v, 111-c. (i; I925, 'l'l111rs1l;1_v, (let. 311: 111:0, liirsdav, Sept. :11 1-1 F:1l11r1l;1_\, (7st. man_v's capitulation. For Britain's civilian popu- seriously injured and upwards of 150,000 war period ending V-E Day——.\fay 7—totallcd ed, 3.709 missing, and 8,834 prisoner or intern- ed. The totals by services are 2.399 for the Navy, 79.744 for the Army and 20,702 for the R.C mated the death toll of his country in this war at 1z,ooo,ooo split about equally between the army and the civilian population. This appalling figure can be at best a. rough guess for it is probable that the exact cost in human life of the \\'ar to Russia will never be kno\\'n. where between ten million and fifteen million in all categories. The Russians have placed the toll of German army dead on the eastern front at more than five millions, though this figure, at the moment, seems rather high. This would put the German losses in dead and wounded at better than 10,000,000 in the armed services alone. The civilian dead in Germany as a re- sult of air raids must approach the million mark. man concentration camps is unknown. It will be a long time before the liberated countries can complete a census and have any idea of what their death toll is. Poland had a pre-war popu- 1811011 0f 351000.000 but it is believed that up- wards of 10,000,000 died or disappeared. which these figures represent is altogether in- calcula-blc. years. The new moon is on the 9th June- two days before the election. teers," says C.P. Ottawa correspondent. How come? peusary will be reviewed at tonight's annual meeting in the City Hall. There should be a large and representative attendance. =1- : 111 =11 will take over the handling of all applications for gasoline ration books. Till the prcscnt the provincial authorities have handled the A. A. books. 011 the road and have one's tank refilled at any time needed, instead of on restricted days zit restricted hours. Freedom is beginning to make itself felt. is being accused by a Quebecker with lwing the father of a slacker, because one son, married with six children, got postponement in conse- quence of being employed on essential work in a war factory! have been counting 0n the strength of the C.C.F., it is now apparent that that party has been fall- ing back badly, from month to 111011111 across m‘? l>°“°h~ Bu‘ ""1 “en “'15 W“ Canada. This trend has been particularly :1p- llarcnt 111 Ontario, where the C.C.F. is going t0 lose seats to all of the other parties. So far has this trend gone, that the C.C.F. can be cer- tain of no more than 25 or 30 seats throughout mm t” England‘ The" Sh“ “We”: They demand the whole country, although they 111:1_v receive as many as 40, (lcpcuding on 110w tlic vole actually goes. .\s far as can now be ascertained, it is now certain that the fight in the Federal elec- tion is going to be a straight two-party contqt blg movement 1mm ElgrOpl-I to the ' 1- '~ _ Orient. Remem red y many ns 5111111111 m the LlbFnls and the llogrcsslle Co“ pne of the happiest craft 1n the fnaglqiiesof a .~('l\£lll\'€5, complicated by the fact that the num- Atlantic crous other candidates running for the smaller parties will absorb a small portion of the vole. T118 votcs which these small parties receive, 319m; Li“ “'31”? lfrfim‘ whd‘) ad‘ , - 1 , ,- _ I I mire cr grncc u nes an con- Moskms‘ vvlnlc 1 icy “Ill not be enough to take 111.111) sous, 5111mm 111.1, 1m 1191 11,81,111, up. one of the “Ems much the Union opposes 1s western domfm- tlon —- and all its members now come wfthfn the "sphere of influ- ence" of Britain or France The y of the Union la the Egyptian minister of’ Arab 11f’- fali-s, Abdel Rahman Azzam Bey, a toug-h fighter who wants com- plete independence for Arabs, not only in the Middle East but clear across Africa to the. Atlantic. . The Union is giving 11.5 moral support to Syriu and Lebanon. At JUNE “on, m} this juncture moral support fa about all the Arabs have to offer. slnoe they lack substantial means to em- How-sver. their unified election night. date 1892; was-a successful editor having occu~ pit-d the chair in The Lang Islander, Iirnnk/yw; ling/Ir, and Barton I-‘recnmn respectively; in 1855 be published Lear-c: nf-(Irars, a collec- 111111 of unrhymed irregular verse of striking 1111\\'('l’; 111 the Civil War of 1862-5 he :1ct<-d $1: a volunteer nurse, zmd left his impressions and iccord of 111s cxpsrience in Drum Ta/vr; best known for his éiong Of The 0pm Road; Afoot and light-hearted l take to the open road, llcalthv, free, the world before me, . _ The long brown path before me leading Feels ‘h? Tran“ manic o’ a d” llenccfortli 1 ask not good-fortune, I myself am good-fortune, A mallgryiflrofllégi? Wm‘ haven“ situation lsbetwxaetxpregrlttglnfrf-endlv W°"='“'"$ W“ 511311111 nliliiinr1iurial1~filiiliiiceliiaiiil “°""*’""g“‘? Ibé-friii/rpgiii; iiiidsyliiiiri l4; I930, Monday, july 2S; 1935, Alondag t Strong and content, I travel the open road. Oct. 14; i940, Tuesday, March 26; 19.15, Monday, June u. 1 War Costs In Lives Terrible as has been the cost of sixty-eight months of war in human lives, it is some 00n- solation to know, in the words of Prime Minis- ter Churchill, that for the British Empire the toll was only a. little more than a. third as large as that of the Empire in the fifty-two months of the First Great War. Empire armed forces suf- fered 1,123,315 casualties during the war just terminated in Europe, including 307,201 killed. These figures are not conclusive, however, for they run only from Sept. 3, 1939 to the end of February, 1945, leaving out of account the last two months of intensive fighting before Ger- lati0n the casualties totalled 60,585 killed, 86,175 slightly injured. Canadian casualties for the 102,875, made up of 37,206 dead, 53.066 wound- In Berlin last week a Russian general esti- The cost to Germany has been placed sonic- How many millions of civilians died in Ger- T-he burden of human suffering and misery ________i__ -EDITORIAL NOTES- Feast of Corpus Christi. I F ‘ ‘ Tomorrow the end of the wettest Way for u 1r n1 a "First priority home goes to Pacific volun- I U U I The work of the Charlottetown Free Dis- From tomorrow the regional oil controller in u n r It will be like old times being able to stop a - 111 a Ur. Bracken, with three sons under Arms, =11 >1- 11 11 Strangely enough, to the many people \\'ll1) 11'ill ilistort the picture in many ridings so 111111 11981111106. rm Ornflmflm 10 My unexpected wins and losses will be normal on Elf':__N_cl_l;ilflfoslu.n__‘ ________. i!!! \\'alt \Vhitman, AIHCFlCHH poet, died this wherever I choose. fixported, quite enough food ls left qulrements, Of all the world's countries, Canada has at this mo- ment probably the least, reason 1,0 land stands a tragic witness to the N112! determination to enslave mentally and spiritually the eo- ples of the countries which hey over-ran and plllaged. Books 51-9 the creators of mind and charac- ter, they are essential to the re- 1h habilitation of the peoples of the Nazi-ravaged lands. The rastock- 1 adequate provision of books for educational purposes, will be a tremendous fRSlb-bllf. ft ls one that cannot be neglected. It ls one of the urgent priorities of recon- SLYUCLl0ll.—-(Th8 Halifax Herald), the and nf the vessel 1.1-hic-li,1whe_11 l1.§z"‘§-‘.°..“ .ll§“1“5.’-‘,.,»’J§1“’l.i1.?§§" 931.13 we for 11w war 1111111111 Jaimi- under the British flag. The hulk was towed 1o Karachi, India, ind 11913511959 and there sufficiently repaired to re- 111911!‘ 11419113’ W and Wolff, 1101' builders, while 5.- 000 tons nf broken decks were cut iiwny and new fittings added. Now she is 1n service again, described 1p: as one of the finest, troopships S1. nfloat, ready to do her part in the Transjordiam vvlshvs not only nf many who .11 - 1 1 11 1m d o; travelled on her but also of‘ those t ems no my a “ma n Aglow far-flung the crimson-bos- omcd morn, ploy force. Weaving gold threads across the opposition is 1n lhsclf a sérfollm thing and 1t, obviously could grow lntn something much more izrave- More- Each dreaming stream rose-tinted from on hlsh over. the Arabs are likely w i=1 ‘Notes By The Way At no time fn human hlltary has so much responsibility do. volvecl upon newspaper writers to be prudent so u not to create differences of oplnfon among the Allies who are charged with the grave task of establishing perma- nent peace. I-f they create schfsms. they are playing Into Gemianys‘ hands-St. T omas Times-Journal We can enjoy the Canadian Winter; we have endured the English Winter philosophically. But when we have a Canadian Winter followed by an English Winter disguised as a Canadian Spring, we feel that Nature has gone too far. and that jokes on the subject are out of place. What we should like to see fn Canada. ls something to‘ compare with the matchless beauty of an English Spring. 1Peterborough Examiner), What we o ht all to remember ls that, excep for butter and sugar, Canada ls now better fed than ever before. Our roduc. tlon of food has increase enor- mously during the war, ln spite of labor and other shortages. and although much of our output '1: ere to meet all reasonable re- complaur about its food position. -Brockv11le Recorder and Times. The destruction of great llhnrfcs ling. Europe's devastated book- ng of Europe's lost libraries, the 4__.___ Great Britain wasted no tlme w whatever 1n acting to restore full ' civil liberties when ft was official- ly announced that the German menace had been removed and the war in Europe ended. Home Sec- retary Herbert Morrison rose in the House of Commons on Wed- nesday. May 9. to announce that the government's rlght to imprison persons without trial had been res- cinded, and that the privileges of the individual under the laws had been put back into force. It was a move that gained force and value because 1t was made so speedily and spontaneously, for 1t came on the govemmenf/s own initiative one day after V-E Day, and whfle the people of the British Isles were still on holiday 1n celebration of that victory It is an excellent pattern. - Memphis Commercial Appeal. . We may teach Germany that carry with her the good Eastern sky: new born. THE ACHARLOTTETUWN. 0011110111111 Arre Japs Abgndoning Southern China ‘l’ D Witt M K nzfe, Associated (ByPreg Fore he Neews Analyst) Southern China - developm which seem to prance the Japa- abandonment. of many of their fll- ot gains ln that part of the cont nent but which are so startling thpt one hesitates to ac- v . Nanntlng “ma, close to the French showing weakness 1n their corri- dor through South-Central China as far north as the great Yangtze urs eastward from 1t reaches the sea north of Shanghai. Recently, mo. afns have neezi moving from the towards northern China-or may- One natural thought, of course, ls that the Mlkadob forces are concenti-atlng 1n the north precaution 81811513. Then. too. they might be consoli- dating 1n Northern China Manchurla for a final stand when coastal area has lngly tenuous. Their predicament grown worse recently through British victories which have knock- ed them out of Burma and not only have reopened China's back door for passage o have created a great f. and millions of’ books during the M818 flve years of war has been 5191):}:- {I French Indo-Chfna. This big area not only has ceas- a profitable source of ‘because of the blockade, have decided to is of! as 1m asset, salvag- t they can for use fn Nor- China. be that the Japs But of course they couldn't af- aw all their fighting orces-even lf they were able to do so, which ls doubtful. French a, Thailand and Malaya defended for their 11111.5- cost the enemy men who comprise the garrlsons. y part of thestory. ls true of thfs Japanese- rrltory on the continent Lso be true of the Dutch These rich islands, the supplies which pnnneeds for prosecution of the cut off by the A1- have much val SPORTS JACKETS Why wait for hot weather - - only to find stocks de- v plefed . - - Here’s your golden opportunity to choose from a well assorted stock - - - featuring all the t] . swaefkbggll’); l: QCORDUROYS - GABERDINES 1 5.95 ‘° $15 “YDS-Now’; 1'11. Time u‘. Buy." wllfdelny. our progress to- vlcwry.‘ _ indicate a tacit admis- ps that. they are areas we have been hey will leave their which will be cut of! fr 1r- Meanwhfle they wlll fn Northern China for a rlnfsh fight. h I thfnk we should position with reserve u developments for {__- motherland. the she has lost a war. and that she guidance, 1vill lose another if she starts if. We may impress upon the children the awful cost of war in lives and money. But the schools cannot bring about the complete reforma- tion which must be brought about fn the German mind ff we are to have no more wars. In the flnal analysis, the church will have to do the job. Germans will have to go Chigstiiilnizectll, apd this is the uty o to c urc . Its leaders will have to be inspired men, cap- gglgampmwbgéd able of securing the confidence and respeplt of the) massIes-and there wi ave to e a arger number of them than there are at present, sen-Led at’ me conferen for ‘tlhc job is going to be n tr:- men mus one. The armed forces and the statesmen will have to devewp 1m” restore grpert ouguofbechaos 1n Ger- many-— u w mere of a w"! » temporary character unlessy ft ls and the United 5118 followed up immediately by n their 179515 0m‘ strong revival of moral teaching.- Guelph Mercury. I-Wclgen Syria ‘ —-—- - anon. were; a When, In February, .1941, the at Uhe end of’ t Cunard-White Star liner Georgie were placed under 51113113511 h1g0 Igew York afger m} II-Iiggglvler, the peoples of both these mon s o a scnce, mem ers n e her crew insisted that she bore a through the cs charmed life. She had been at independent Narvik. at Bros‘. and at St. Na- zalre, a frequent target for Nazi bombs, but as one of her sailors said, "They can't '1t 'er. They tried enough but they couldn't so much as the d151,, as scratch ’er ruddy back." ‘This 1mm should recew was llucklvvhich courlidnislast.‘ F111»: B mantis ater as t e eorgc 11y ma, Howevm._I,-1,.,N,M wmmued to 1' .511.“ 2.1.2121. fii"“‘l.‘.'...”°".‘ll¥l: 1111-11-1 11»- w- h alorcfnfi; iii-i: drozpped two bombs negotiating m: freed“ pm" both of which hit her, leaving her 1i tvvisied and burned-out hulk on w. n. BENTLEY. n o. The French - Arab Fight Is Dangerous (Evy Dewl-Lt MacKenzle, Asoclalze Pr lzn News Analyst) 1131c circumstance — with e trappings of a cynfds hol- —tm/ all th E b10065’ clam at, arms s-ofrig on among count ting 1n Syria.‘ between French tr and natives could SPORTS SlllRTS Almost unbelievableds our showill’ o! Snort-B 51'5"‘- 1 Yes we have Gabertlmes - Rflyfmi - w°°l5 and Bmad’ cloths in almost every shall and pattern . . . . . . . . . . . YOU'LL LIKE OUR OUTING SIURTs NEW Brushed Wool Zip?" c5“ sw°"““' 1All'sl\ades . . . . . ma 0 res 1o try to halt ft. ppsmd in Syria 1s thb: its little nzigh-bor, ken from Turkey e last war, they French mandaxtle. $2 ‘° 5.50 eastern couxvifles have nturles bee-n fiercely and they continued to press for their liberty until Frame finally promised it. The second Great War- . 1944 ffmaJJy wna net when Syria. and Ish- e full sovereignty. but June 1, d their independ- Reosnl-ly Fmnce moved 1n more troops. saying th-w: purpose of establishing bases for the movement, of forces to the Pac- HENDERSON & CUDMORE “WHERE QUALITY IS SURE” Tlim the trouble started. for mil: Syrians charged a1; being hun-strunfl ed t-he virlthdmml of a year in the yards of Harland all French troops. The French didn't icomply and fighting has broken out n Syria, . full the! Wm‘! fiflfhdtbméi...» 1... 11,1111 1.1m Arabs over the qflmlm o1 91¢ national home for Jew!- The Union-gotten Men m the men who are n b0 them 1n the Paclflbfw Here enters another element - the Gwemlflfllf i0 newhlwl-Icraited Union of m) tee. T 1s comprises Egypt, , , Saudi Arable, Syrh, nd Mme Yemen. The Union t this affects a pop- , “WW9 i" Dre-WE!‘ days. 0f course not all the Arab peoples 5110,1111] nre members of the union, Lebanon a '55.? o MA’ in 0N (FxGcbmnge) em. on May The Ubern vernm her V-E Dov-w- k“ d $10M of m» mllfta-W WW1» W" 1° l" ‘m’ u; receive ca is}? dgefled instructions were 111V- en w 1.11m who 11m 1110mm! be caught fn the drafts last func- vlnnl Yfiftl govegnbpixgit. 11134318151111}; 6 mun nomc . and declaring that ser- SYN’! r lpalthy but a strong religious tle, o r the vast majority of the-m are magm- unanswerg ls w become of the counters who hiwe neither return- nor m» Th r number of, the end Munch was ofgpgallv placeclmat f0 d ogollgfon of fhftgfacfg also . n: es a w“ l“ a” w" “um Japan wand ilggm otil whim. gleeihods and e or 0N proposed 1M1 very through pollce action? mm Wm‘ c0511 theaa questions ooncem the fairness and equality of the will‘ effort. They are all rain ' whlch lfhe Government has Involv- general 111 v luntnry M9115- m 1: 311312211 ‘lrforrnofilon as _ per50 1, or dllafwéfl.‘ lcnmln iii“ 1111s count-ry- The nunbor of drafteea still in tonal Defence .fn a statement. nmle 5 1,11 are eff-ll 1n numb“ u! ti! F136: Government o w a "flrgto vovn" 9011-011 o demob- mm who were not certainly not be "out" until the mural vim have seen Bum $113111 clvfllgfi 1H0 and 114 c11- t! the svmr-ithv states even though the latter are no‘. Arabic Indeed. Indian Modems what earthly artist could have uh-eady “e vomm; 11.111- gympgfhyh‘ mm a . Dlf-‘f-"Ted 11118. On- of the worst aspects of this 901g," 1he'd,m°bg11mt1°n wlll be a very slow pmw- l‘ l“ we!’ l8 17 ‘P011 consideration. ft may 1B"- f" I Y Ilenceforth I whimper no more, postpone no W1,“ 1,12,11,11 11111151 concave the Telaldfms more, need nothing, Done with indoor complaints, libraries, quer- or “rm reiieemed‘ to glow!“ me ulous criticisms, P. I. I. Hoonhl. two yam-s m even 1on2". A" drunken the country to await Q .= > a Q5: - 2S =7" i=1 u, s .4. cause by nflerlng m, a l, _ Binder-n and W. one. All slz g 9| and ‘i033: n Fillies lo 111111, 1,1,", .____.________ FORMALIN BMUT on 511m, A cheap but thorou 111 fectlve remedy. Gralii S": era would be wlse g1, m tum-111. '1' “1"‘°€...‘° "I m befm sa-ur-1..11:r-----= TF9}! BETTIE]; 31m" rea your gran 111, new Improved w m. CERASAN ‘11.'1-"."é'.'§'1'.‘.'.'°.‘§l.-'l1.§?' 11.. - pound treats 32 llllflhgh, PRICE $1.15 LB. '|'m_ ——-——--___ MACS PIG W0 POWDER RM It wlll abolish all trauq .1. 111mm and Improve 111g of your plgS. hi“ TllE 2 MACS 149 Great George Sir-m Mull 0 d G1 ' n1......':;- "-1-- . 111317111111 the mm. nzergpnfioafilgougdtob face the my; 1 a. 11 he w r niiiiliixrtrilieiiiuwii its wartime administration. 11m 31's.?“ .‘f.'fl“"1§‘.°“ 1113121111" .111‘, prompt txrm-plateness. . "Vi _ For Foot Ailments" cousmxr H. J. A. BROWN. DJ’. Orlhopedic GIIIROPOIJIST Ill Glut George Street CIIARLOTTETOWN. P311. Professional llards ‘J EMcLeod a Bentley g, A, nun-rum. n. o. Bnrrllterl and Attornuyl-nt- lav 1M Prince Street 1 ~ ...:.. ..».»_,- ~~r —-_{i| 11. B. llaanu 9 00- Clunani Account!!!" || Grafton Street. Charlottetown Phone sou B" “l Randall! I lhnnlnl. 0.!- ll. F. AlllllllBlLli. Oluktd Aoooulilli luhl-I ‘kw "1"" Qnrloflolfll |ev£s EXAMIIIEII cusses 11111111 11s. TAYLOR, 0911111 j/fKloT Corner Kent and 0'1"" s“ 1 Phone 1956 a mum by Amwl1""""" ‘Phone Residence 1°13 . ...__ . l\‘-“" I-i-mq,’ “my. t1bav-ou~1' llorneys-ut-IAIW PROPERTIES col.t.nc'rlql\'s L Chnrlottcown I 5 C’? PALMER o HA“ AM, 11. .1. IIASLAM. 11.11.. 11W , nhmusrpn. m“, Bank of Nova 511111111 II . El-ITSIBHT B. Jflhmmq Mtornev M ‘Lanna cmmifliig? Eilfléllflfjlutlifiiflfld ifinccersor l" 1 hub ‘faking: “1.""~'1’1'1i'°3"'3* Office II éoflonr “a” ~ Charles R. Mcoum; n A ll ltur. “Tféflasbi lkl Rflgy Bulldlnz. Charla Phone 33-1 ______ __i " ‘ F1;."l'ill A. l-argii CAR-METER. "'3- r. . 1 n2 Grefl 9‘°m sank»: I Phone l0“ n l _!', I llnoM-hh 13h ma, become n bone of con- | ur ca vm P‘ ‘ 111111 mun who have admin nl-fmll-M Irm- onumn-now N. P- " " A . LOANS on crrv as» W" Ill 1