‘Ell-QED 73"”? 2:915.’ u"i""1*"f_‘7lfi 63ft! 22$ grant-t row? JillE CIILEUITTSTUWN G ll ARI] IMI Alarming Dally ll-ouitucd III 11187; bilateral iii-lit. ("of w CIIPSlIrS. McLuII V110 ITPEIIIIEIII. J R. Burnett. F.J.l. Secretary Lii-ul. (nl. l) A. Maelilnnun, 0.5.0. hn-JLLJI 4 111 Xluutlglng Director. J R. Burnt“, FJ-l. Atduflilll‘ liiliiiirs, Frank IV-alker and Ian A. Bllrllfll SUISSI RII"I‘ION RATES By Mail Ill 1*. n. I. MW n1 w“. $"--54I for": ""11"" --.-;;; .;1.0-I ncmun. City Hiiialnifcsr ysvttitogJ-‘illl l"! l! mmlnnl bl“: lul 3 ntunllls. 5m, c“ ,- 'f"-dliS-f\$~ P"! - lalnltiiaiiuiiiliitflnsdfiii»dial-r rear. Sl-W M 6 “Wm” 50c Iur 3 tnuntlts. i tlfcilriolgiyniilvetaker Um! the Weakest lllk." RIOS 11.1‘ . . T Ulil Home \Vcek F? g frtuu many parts of Can- iii- other rclfllivfi 91ml l_ilw'lril l.>lllll(l. If the gland behaviour, this should be one of the 11S fliilb" p. . ;,,i,.l ,,,,-,~t-~~l'ill events in lilmld l‘\'l ixt-lii-lui! llie Provincial F-X‘ o lilac liilislullillllfi bllcfwr“ ‘if pp, >11 was rcspoltslllls‘ _ mr ‘he “f”, , ,,, iipl HUIIIC \\ eek this l“ ‘ _ l" ‘i i” :, ,,, ‘ti ilie federal gr-"mb ‘Milli ‘i i uoiiucvil as a necessary W, . ,. lfcliilliii-Jii ulanagc- ti. . ‘ _ . - . _ ltic-i‘ ri:i‘:'i _l tltv .;l rlsli involved an P16 f 1-,’, , prqiirzittilne during the PM" l” ~ ll‘ confident that their w , be wclcolncil by Flflllll" lint w-ould fill a rcal .1; {if time Of SIIPSS flllll L\1 no pains or expense 1n iideville acts and 0th" i-i a four-day's’ horse -c‘;i the pick of Eastern _ “HI be represented. iii b» largely increased traf- iliis week. extra pr?- , p,» [nlNIOTlFIS to avoid ‘ma, Fxhibilion \\'eck l'll'll in this rogarrl. and it is , , rltifiklllPfll of this week's l'l"l,f'llg' will be unrnarred by any vi. t. pl‘: at l‘.'*‘l‘t" and J- -.l its a I1 ~ have s- .".'\\l‘l fic “linnipcg FY66 described by the Pr“; flifllk '11) as a "shameful situation" is thixlt E,,,,CL.,.,,,,,_4 we Lixltllfi of Japanese cotton goocs inzii tl ciiu ln the fOllmYmg tame mm‘ lic- ii. itii piiiiililsl over the nine- al i lziu. to Sept.) of each of the past pzirisi i‘. nionzh p 1911 193a 21:31:66 l Grey Fabrics 95333 931 3 ‘ Bleached Ftil i-lcs M085 4,802 Colored Filbrtcs 63:33? 5177 '46‘ vflhietsans 59,819 54.492 6'7- , h l; . ivnsgltfloths Bat Ma s 19 n25 33.324 78.558 Handkerchiefs 100.564 I07.l45 811.352 Quilts 1335 4580 184325 Shects and Pillow cases 267 29,634 299.853 Towels 42.509 113,609 319,988 This. slioivs that in every item listed but one (wash cli eltxl there have bcen increased im- pflrlfltillll\ clnfp IURT; and in most instances the iucrrzisc- have been substantial. In grey and bleached falir in sheets and pillow C8565 and towels, the iiii :i.cs have been phenomenal. dillcsc illlpi irls llrivc been at Great BIIIHIIUS CK- pense. 'l‘al,r~ 1hr i i -, itcm of cotton shccts and pillmi- cast-l, for itlustrative purposes. Ths follciivitig figures show Japan's increases and Gram Britain's dccrcast-s in pounds for the com- parative niii-r-llliiiitli period: 1931 1933 1939 Jgpfln 2s": 29.634 299.1159 Britain 22a.042 150,219 1211115 ‘hofigilrcs in that table spcak for them- selves in tunes loud enough to make the average (‘lll7(’ll siliiirm. And the fact that tlii-y are rcpi-csciitaiive of many other articles -?ll\' ni:i‘i<c< the situation that much more ElllllPdfflllt Last ailtuuiu the Federal Government passed a rcgilla Yin ilvilzitig coiupiilsoryi the marking of the n2. v- Illltl c-iiiiitri- of manufacture on a “pl,- niiy- ..i' (‘liillill goods. This left it up to the l. iiiltzzil l'.'iii:iili:iu consiuncr to boycott _l.'ip;ii,/~i~ qiiti I- ii lll’ choose. Unfortunately, t0- \\’JlTll\ tlii- ind iif Hi3‘) the, (iirvcmmcnt decided the lipplicriaiiiii i-f this l‘("__'llli'lll4ll‘lS was to be Zlllslllllllltl iui, ilifiv I, liilo. 'l'liat date has come ind gill", l limiting has been done to help ltllll-I .'-- s: -li:iiui iul situation. .\i :i l ‘lit iihi-u (‘zilriila is at \v.'lr alongside the \l-i:lii r l i-ii:iir_i~; l lune \\'llf'll it is highly im- portant ' l li"("ll chain's ability to raise 011l- siili~ (‘l . iipiiri. ll" ltcpl at as high a peak as l-o-F’ l ' l. iilii-u lhc whole of the i , 'l~~f‘(l by Japan's wanton - ii: ill (hurl ~al such a time as f1“l \- :li:\, l'i~ u ll‘l\‘.‘l'lllllf'lll should make -vir\ iill- iii lllltli/ll’ its home-front citizens willl \‘.'l‘.'ll"1i',‘~ l i .'|~~:~' in rilurllillg the world to -i'lllll_\ z ll -. lf i", is illiill\'l\lllll(‘ for the Iii-i ruin li i-ic in _l : -~i~ guilds entirely. tlli- l.'il-. i F u i1. ‘i wiuil- imports into this cotllllri iiiizil i h ‘Ii -'l\'l|ll \l‘ lllu-e ends. [llitlor lute Than Never 'l'llil'lv lllllm ‘l llli‘l!‘l‘ will be produced by C:iu:~.i'i:iil |-.'!\"ll|li‘~, llll‘ ("llIllll‘_\‘ is informed by Iliin, l", ll. lliiii i, .\-ll1ll~l('I' of Xliltiilirius and Filiilli, \\'iil;iiilit- u-iis, iuilccll. lull S<>ll1(\\‘ll.'21 -i i‘ . gliiiijiili lll" ili~l:i_i- is not the fault of ii lli'i,"iif:.i"lill'irs, llti- rcspnusibilily‘ for .. li. u i'l'.ll_\' iiiil bring eipiippcil with . 1 i\\, iliciil-i. Tlii- Tlirvilllll 'l'clc,;I'-‘ll11i l i ‘i ll i ir of Ill’ Kills; .'ululillisll'.'ltiiru. > ll i l.'l~ lt'l'!l :i fanfare of publicity ll\'l'l' i“ i;-iici":"i:clil',< Iirnlaltlirnt plans. all- oliiiuci 1W Jl'lll*(' iif (‘ominous recently, it is uirtc iu v" to l-iiil: llflCl-\' and discover that no lul-r l'.~u l" v :i \liu"'<ti~l- of fbc Cruwu was $11.11" :h:il l’ ~ l l‘l'illl ilivi-ii ns were not to l»? suppliml \‘.lll| fault, {lllll riniillicr, .\lr. How-e, was riiufiillul that lllJy couldn't be built satis- ('- this illd Home \\'<'¢l\' ‘ factorily‘ in the country zilrvivay. $0 confident was .\lr. ll<|\\'(‘ that it eiiillilift be di-uc, that lie ivtls peeved when some 11l('llllIl'I'> of llle ill)- position, llou, Dr. llcrbert .-\. llrucc, for ill- stancc, suggt-slctl llizlt a llauiillou firm could do the job. It is no tribute to t\lr. llow-‘s energy that a ‘tank a lluy is niiw t0 be llllfll lll Canada. "like credit must go to nlcuillers iif the Uplmsltloll who were astounded, as the Iloilsc of Conlmons record slioivs. that tanks were not being built in this country. - LUIIURIAI P-UJIIS —' a n- iv u Tomorrow begins the public celebration of Old Home \\'eck. v n- ia- n “livery prospect pli-a-cs" in this ideal sununer resort and even “n1an" in the plural is fairly pas- sible. a- i: George Stephenson, engineer, who made tanks land similar instruments of war possible by in- iventing the locomotive, died this date, I848. His “Rocket" proved the fastest and most reli- iable locomotive of his day and generation. 1F i I It It \ \\'e arc now told by the German prcss that the \'icli_v (iovcrunlcllt of (icucrzil Petain is “suspccW with the exception of Pierre Laval and Adrien Marquez and that this accounts for "the 'seetning watchfulncss of official Berlin, whose attitude towards \'icli_v tieverihclcss is coldly; dis- interested and qliizzical." 1k m iii ioi Franklin D. Roosevelt _Tr., 1's to start his law apprenticeship in the office of Garey 8: Garey, New York, immcdiatrl_v after Labour Day. H: is a graduate of the L'uivcrsit_i~ of Virginia, and is at present cruising as all ensign iu the Naval Reserves. The (jarefs are Democrats, but not New Dealers. a u i: 1- Local housewives tuust be prepared for changes in their bakery connections. To offset the added expense of the federal 15-ceuts a bushel processing tax on wheat, the Alberta Master Bakers Association has decided to elimin- ate luxury lilies and confine their balciugs to fewer varieties. Ready-sliced bread will be elim- inated for rluratioxl of thc war and a gradual rc- dllction will be made in the varic-tics of fiuc bread, although qualirv of the standard lilies will be maintained. Another economy will be effected through ilsing a cheaper but equally serviceable grade of wrapping paper, i F! ‘IK New British sales taxes on luxurics-—jeivcls, furs, fancy hats, silk tics—— have been set at 24 per cent; and on humble necessities -—clotbiug, shoes, pots, brooms, newspapers, books-at 12 per cent. In all this, said Sir Kingsley‘ Wood, Chancellor of the 11.. clicquer, he was regret- fully obliged to bit the little man. \\'liy? 'l‘licre were just not enough big men left. 11c pointed rout that iuconlcs in excess of the equivalent of $30,000 were taxed 90 per cent, leaving only $8,000. If he confiscated every salary iu the country in excess of $8,000, lie said, all he would get xvould be $280.0oo.oo0—ciiiiiigl1 m kcq) ti"; war going not quite nine days. This nlakcs us stop and ponder the oft discussed question 0f peace-time dcmagogilcs-is it the rich or the poor who benefit or suffer as the result of war? m a- >1‘ at Using about the same language as that of some newspapers recently quoted on the subject of “Fifth Columnists," .\lr. C. 1\’. .i\ltl<~e, British Lord Privy Seal, said in a stieccli the other dav. “The old-fashioned courlcs_v of war may ltave disappeared from battles. bilt it has been pre- served to a nausccilts extent in spccch. \\'e politely speak of ‘Fifth ("lluuulisls/ I’d call ’em traitors. I prcfcr the old-fasliioiiecl word, for its connotes just what we have in mind. “I do not think that there are many active traitors in this country. There are a few llritisll who ltave accepted the Nazi (lOClflIlC or the Nazi pay, But there are people who unconsciously play the game of the traitors. .\lcn and women who talk defeatism, who sow distrust and distlnityt." , >l= =l< in >1 How is the recruiting under the National Re- isourccs Mobilization .’\ct going to work out? An official of the Defence Department lately explained the intention was to give the uteri called up a basic training during their 3o-tl:i_v period in the 30 training centres to be established throughout Canada. The training will be of a character to provide a useful foundation for scr- vice in either the navy, the zirnly or the air force. On completing this training the men will be at- tached to some non-permanent militia llnit. 'l'hey may then be drafted for active service anywhere in Canada in any of the three zirulcil services as mcn are rc-qtlircd, or, if vacancies occur they may volunteer for service civerseas with any scr- vicc. Up to the prcsent there has been no short- age of volunteers for the navy and the air force. Both have large numbers of applications for lenlistulctlt on file. The men who pass through The training centres. however, will form a pool on which the navy, the army or the air force may draw for recruits, should lbc need zirise, 1K 10K ‘I! ill For a short period ill April prohibition in Plonvhay had no legal force This was the result of the High Court's decision that the notifica- llinus issued by the Congress liI>\'('l‘lll]'l(‘llI to carry out ils policy of prohihilioii ivcre “ultra vires" of the relevant ;\cl. The lligll (hurt (‘ml- siilcrcd it wrong to use that .\cl--lllc .-\bl<ari .\cl-—to enforce ]lf'llllllllll4lll, as ils original pur- pose was diffcrcul. llul lllir-ly folk who look- i-d forivnrrl ti» the curling uf lllc “drv i-rzl" were disappointed. fuuucili:ilcl_v after llii- lligll (burrs tlccbiou a liuvcruilfs .\ct ivzis issued altering llu- pri-lnilblc of lllc .\bl<tiri .\cl so as to bring prohibition within ll> scope and make v.'llid the ‘notifications that lizid just hi-cu ilcvlzircil illegal. The ('oli;{l'i'ss .\lllli~ll'\' llris for \L'\'l'I'-'ll llllllllll‘; . hccll lllll of Ilffiic, and llic Iliivurlliil‘ |Ilr\\' ex- ercises all powers “llll the help of (ivll Scr- vice advisers; but all (Zuvcuors who took over ‘from Congress Xlinistrii-s iii (kytiibi-r (IL-clonal [that they would follow tlit- nlaiu outline of lbe prcvinus Xliuislricis‘ pi licy. llnls prohibition has ‘been |'('-(‘r~fi'lllll>l\('ll in llouib.'l_\'. and a lllfilllllul‘ nf the lue Congress .\luu=try has expressed his gratitud! THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN ‘votes av TIIE wllv Europeans learn no better lhlll we do. We ucier tea-n t.» stay aI-TCI-Ki lmd they never learn how quid“? we can get strong. — Buffalo News. There Is an old Enlllsh proverb wcrth remembering In these days: "Money lost, little 10st; honor 10st. much ost, pluck lost. all lost. -To- ronto Globe and Mall. The man who does nothlnl makes no mistakes, lt is sometimes sald. O11, yes, he d085- He IHBKCS the biggest mistake of all. He does nothing. — Christian Science Mon- lt/or. The saddest thing about the downfall of France ls that Its gov- ernment no longer speaks for the txsopls. The words of Marshal Pe- taln come to us with a. thick Ger- man accent. -- New Yorker. Spnln placed an order some months ago with Germany to print Spanish currency. It was not 1on3 before Spaniards discovered dupli- cate numbers among the notes. Soon they realized that the Cler- mans had print/ed a duplicate set of‘ notes and were using them to make purchases In Spain and to pay for espionage. - Montreal It'l- nanclal Times. If this war has lhown u: what the machine can do aggressively It it can do defensively. Work on the Collins Bay flying fleld of the Em- plre Air ‘Training Plan ls beInB rushed forward with machines. each of which can do mow WOYK than 50 or 100 men and can keep n up “ammo; rest for 22 hours a day. It ls comforting to human vanity, however, that the machines do need two hours rest a day for, greasing and other routine servic- ing. -- Kingston Whig-standard- A Brltlsh naval expert tells 0! the peculiar transparency 0! ‘he Mediterranean wawfS. $0 m” he was able to trace the cable of a warship frcm the shin l0 m? anchor on the bottom. This makes it easy to spot submarines, and the fifteen Italian subs which have fallen victims to Brltl-sh forties in the last. two weeks suffered M- cordlugly. The blue skies of the Mediterranean similarly afford no shelter for such ambuscades as tho Germans find possible In the clouds of the North Sea. The Italian alr- men would appreciate a friendly bank of cumulus-Hamilton Spec- tator. The ulher day 1 w“ mlklnz w s retired colonel. a staff officer In the Kaiser's War, who has been dug out and given command of a Luna Defence volunteers area outside London. I asked him 110W he W115 getting on with n15 new command- "TOp hole! They're a grand lot of felloivs, keen as mustard-a bu. too keen, perhaps, The only flung that bothers me ls whether I shall be able to get them properly-Tam- ed before they shoot me. And 1.11011 he explained. It seems Fill“ he makes a llfibll. of drlvmfl around at night to the dlffeffill- posts In his area In a small, swift, two-seated sports car. He assum- ed that by this time the car was well known lo all his men. But the other night, while he was do- ing fifty or so alonl: a nice straight. stretch, a sentry stepped out from the hedge, where he hadn't ex- pected any sentry to be, shouted a challenge and levelled his rifle. Just. as his colonel was about. abreast. of him ‘There was no chance of pillliug up in less than fifty or sixty yards, and by that. time,,..“What did you do?" I asked, "Accelerated like mad. He missed me, Then I went back and ERVQ him hell for his bad shoot- ing, - Toronto Sautrday Night. The care that banks must exer- cise m their dealings with custom- crs is very well illustrated by a libel action against a British bank, wihteh had through lnadvertence, sent. back a cheque, marked "nsf", to the payee. When It. turned out that the drawer of the cheque had amiple funds to meet. the cheque, and that It had been refused pay- ment 1:1 error, the drawer sued the bank for libel, asserting that the bank had injured his crcdlt. A court in England decided thut the plaintiff was entitled to recover damages from the oank. — Fort wllliam Times-Journal, The lean, grim, tight-Upped Col. Francois de la Rocque might. have seized the French Chamber of Dep- uties ou the night of Feb. 26 1934. He missed the chance; his Crolx dc Feu organization was outlawed by the popular front 1n 1937 and he seemed to have been beaten In his long-connnumg conspiracy against the French Rtpublc. Now he s again In the news and In a new political ascendancy, wtlh but: Sny- position that he is the owner, or one of the owners, of the provinc- lnl newspaper Le Pctlt. Dauphlnols, which for some unknown reason be- comes the mouthpiece of the Vichy government. - Fredericton Gleaner. All through the woodlands then‘ days the saskatoons are hanging thick from their branches, purple- blilc, grape-like dusted with a flne wlllte powder. We went out. for them yesterday. The heat of the Jilly sun beat down upon us, as we skirted the fields, heading fur the berry patch. The great, reeling Manitoba sky was brilliant blue, and the all‘ warm and heady with the scent of drying hay and ripen- lflu 2min. In the distant meadows vi-e could sce the mowers at their work. We came to the wuodlots where- tho berry trees were hidden. A fcw stops ln-a search—-then the sight of the trees, slight against the poplars. hanging heavy with gill?‘ dark fruit. — Winnipeg Tri- l e. w Thane Islolallonlsls who have auc- ccedcd 1n inserting Into the cam- paign platforms of the two political parties dfelarnllons that no Amer!- can soldi. wlll be permitted to flrillt ovin. s mght appropriately lock ‘nt a m p of their country and CIODSZGPI‘ whether lt. can be effec- titvcly rL-feiidctl nl hcmc. How many scans cf thousands of planes, gum, hlfks 11nd trucks wlll be ncccssary 1f 1t ever ‘comes down to fighting enfmes viztli air and naval bases ln Alaska, Greenland, the Westl Indlrs. Mexico and Central and Szilth Amirrzca? Defending the Brfrsh Is‘!'s from Invasion wlll be child's p11 ccmpared to defending the sprawinz Unltcd States l1 5n invader s ever able to brlrg hla fowcs acrzss the ocean. — Toronto ls also beginning to show us what cm Farm Population Grows (Vancouver Province) The United States census, gust completed, has counted more ar- mers than for 24 years. Slnce 1930 they have Increased by two mll- llon against a drop of 1,500,000 In the twentles and of about half a mllllon In the ten years before 1920. The upward trend today Is therefore almost revolutionary. U. ‘S. farming population was high- est. In 1916, but the number on farms today ls less than then by only a quarter of a million. This despite the tremendous fall 1n wheat and other crop prices since the last war. Agricultural authorities think that by 1050 stlll another two mllllon people wlll be farming. Though the trek to the cities utlll continues ln reduced proportions and to medl- um sized towns, the excess of births over deaths In the country makes a net Increase there. ‘These figures show that, after all, hard tlmes on the farm do not necessarily reduce the number of farmers. Conditions then nre equally hard 1n the cities, with no openings for newcomers. In Van- couver, for instance, there was actual migration out of the city during the heart of the depres- slon. Figures for the Canadian prair- ies up to 1936, after five years of drought and 10w prices there, show quite blg Increases In rural pop- ulation and drops ln many of the es. Later droughts forced some of these obstinate runners out of the prairies and into British Co- lumbia, but numbers have since returned. For farming ls not only a means of livelihood, but a way of living. Those with love o! the soil In their veins might be driven from one locality but. wlll set up again In another. The Fraser Valley ln B. C., several districts In the Okan- agan, the Cficston district In the Kootcnays are filled with prairie and eastern farmers who have gone back to the land. Puced with Insecurity, many of them find the nearest approach to security and happiness may be obtained from a. farm holding. And despite the low prices of produce today, their condition as compared with the least secure In the cltlea shows that these folk have chosen less adventurously but wisely. Home For The League (Winnipeg Bree Press) ‘Ihough no definite Informatlonls avallalme, 1t a pears likely that. the remnants of e League of Nations organization are to find a wartime home In the United States, Its nun- polltilcal and technical sections have been invited to some to America by thrce allied institutions: Princeton University, the Prlncewn Institute ton division of the Rockefeller In- stltute for Medical Research. This would cover the work of the League as 1t has been carried on in the 11n- transit, health and opium sections. The political activities of the League are at an end; and their revival will depend on many things. Geneva seemed to be an ideal place for the headquarters of the practice this hardly proved to be the case. The Government of Switzer- land has been much less sympath- etic with Its aims and Eur oses than the League had a rlg t expect; and in recent. , ears theer has been a measure of In erference with legiti- mate League activities on the politi- cal slde. But a. choice of any other capital In the continent of Europe would have been still more unfor- tunate. , It 15 a rather Ironic circumstance that the United States, which was chiefly responsible for the founding of the League and then refused to home to this uprooted lnstltut. on, It may be an augury of happier times for the League, MERCYS WORK (Christian science Monitor) If the German armv has used for military purposes planes carrying British Afr Minlstrv communique, the offense is serious not only be- ventlon but because It hampers and endangers the genuine work of res- cue. The use of German Red Cross ambulance planes for reconnaiss- ance was apparently proved when two such planes were forced down at two points and the crews made ris- oncr. The log-book showed, a rit- Ish communique declares, that one of the captured craft had been used as communication plane b a Gen- eral of infantry. and was f tted with wireless equipment. Such Planes have frequently been seen flying ovq_ii1,mpvl°l'5i ftay the British. e HQVIIBJUJQ result of such a. violation of the Red Cross agree- ment Is to work a. hardship on the violators. planes have been forced down off the 15111811511 coast. and the Germans contend these have rescued friend and foe alike. if In distress. The British, however, notified the Ger- man and Italian governments that because of its alleged abuse planed bearing the Red Cross emblem ap- Iproach British territory or ships or arensofoperatlon at their own risk. i Germany evidently has refrained from repeating certain outrages whlch amused neutral resentment durln the World war; but possibly "19 mDtatIon of the emergency and the 111m of reversing the British blockade has led over-zealous lndl- viduals to Ig-nore the regulations, still, the proper operation of fwd Cross p es 1s a. nece -y function upon which the wmbatants should flzree and upon which there should be understanding even In the heat: of battle. .00 O 0Q '@§§.§.‘§.'.‘QQ§.'§C~| l How Are JYour Eyes’? II you ll’! huvlm sYIIIIIIIIIIII of IInIn-helduches, IOIQ eye: or] - f-‘tuunlf a 1pm;- u At vour service yllh yelru of experience PIIIJ n thorough retracting denied, Call In 1nd dlscuu your au- flvultlnl. 6. F. llutclleson I‘. G. IUTGIIISON. Telegram. I t X g n. r. IIUTOIIIBUN it a éévv ‘CC C vvv vvwQOQ ‘ soviet, Infantrymfln? ENGLAAU Her seed 1s sown about the world. ‘ Tue seas For her nan: patlrd theLr waters. She 1s klwwll In swamps ma» steam about the burning zone, y And dreaiau n1 me last Whllie IBM-S that - l For glory was Nluevah 5 Is nauglgr m: 90m? 0! W"? 8M o Ba n Nought; ifiin for all the realms that Caesar wo11—~ 1 One time of nus were more than all of Q1650- And she 1s very small green And full of little lanes all dense with flowers i That wind along and lose them- selves between Messed farms, and parks and fields of quiet sheep, l and very Low bels chime out from old elm- hldden towers. -_Geof f rey Howard. Problem In Gaelic (London Ere-i; Press) In a, war 1n which s0 many cstulzn lished faiths have been, sham“ - one f5 surprised at nothing alfnnsl. nothing. Yet there came a stun’ out of France the other (My ‘flllchl must have set. many a descendant- hardy Highlanders who settled Lobo and other sections of Upper Canada, wonderlnk- 1° ‘YRS the tale of three tall bearded High-g landers. separated from their lllyflttls‘ after the French 901111159 who “l l me aid of borrowed garments and their Gaelic tongue. nosed as Bur- 513,115, passed through the Geimun lines and in time arrived back m their native town of Ballachuhsh. There are three aspects of this re- rt which bemuse the llille under. first, W113’ “@115 1 _ H1 hlanders wish to evade the Gei- mlizns? Is not a trlo of MticPher- sons m. Macgregoys u; camerons or Ellfotts the equal of a Germs" "my corps? Second, how could anyone. take the swagger of a Hiflélllmlgler ~ tih .m e o a bred w me kn“ m‘ e Third, how Could men from north of the Grain- for Advanced Study, and the Prince- , anclal economic, communications, ~ League when It was chosen; but in - i enter It, should now be offerln a ' ‘ Red Cross lnsllrnla, as charged in a , cause ll, contravenes the Hague Con- Legitimate Red Cross ‘ Y l; n the wines the sweet spirit-lifting melodies cf the "pipes" to cheer the lonl! 11151" W i-‘Iyyifese are questions pertinent only {tiniest swim GAPS \ b/ I. visit our store and ii lvryhggecltfnour stock of Bnthlnl’ l‘ Capg before maklng your 11"" , chase. \ We have a complete stock of i- Bautflnz Caps in the very Q latest. shades and ranklfll l" price from 25c Io 15c. l‘. T54 If See also our large stock o! 0 Sun Glasses priced from 15B l. m $1.00. MACS 11 Z€“ partition wh restore!- strengthens and benullfles the hair, It wlll restore gray hair to "l ' natural color and produce R rich and abundant growth 0| hair. Price 60c. Order by Mall Today. l mun RESTORER. A delicately perfumed 1"!‘ ch l g STOMACH MIXTURE We highly recommend this i reparation for people suffer- n from Stomach Distress offer eating, heartburn, Acid and sour stomuch. x 1m. Evans l! It Is the finest. Stomach Mixture that. money can ml! Its Evans. Price 85c per b01110- ” 1'13 . l‘ TIIE two lllllcs Professional Bards b,-r‘-za - -.- [argesl 511/9 in Jfie Mérzkfzinesg/ n1: my GINGIH AL; ciciom GINOIR M; I SIONI GINGIII m; LIME RICKEY ORANGE“); LEMONADE filyfioff/e - fences Eve -1Vaw15¢ If" .... Icffifff/Ilfil IUY WAR SAVINGS stumps . , Wltliistisilf“ 1:. r. macs o» c0. LTD. to Highlanders, No mere "Sassen- lluc" could be expccled to appreciate . s i i . their full intent- Tlle Hlchlandel" 1s don girl, who has illsl lllllrfllgdlffiinfl lflmlnntions fora rlecii-o UI phwjc‘. a. mystic and the Nazi German [YE materialist and that's us close as _ _ tliev come to each other. Before we me qualified Lo solve these proo- lelns we tnust. read the history; of the Gael, and study the Slay, s eeulate on the Prussian and p011 cr the Spaniard, recapture the smell ofthe heather 1n August and tihe aroma cf a neat fire In the shelter 0f Ben McDhiil. Then. after we have re- freshed our EDIFPS with fin amber (lffllb distilled with the ivtmrr 1mm some cold burn cascading down the wild corrles of the north, we may be in a posltloit to lmss with erperf. much upon these essential probcms of race and tradition. Until then we leave tihcse matters upon the knees of the gods and the sporrans of all true Highlanders. ln Hickory are on the nose. - r- u '1, r i- '\"rznr“fl"I-l n u R-Hfifififif-‘fllf Montague, WOMAN IS PRESIDENT u‘ BEDFORD Eng-cor) — For the '1 first time, the National Union of f» Students hatchosetlvfLwoman pre- A Naturalisfs Calendar FOR Ing a short list of common insects. Brackley Beach On Sale at. THE SCHOOL SUPPLY CARTER AND CO. MARITIME STATIONERS WOOLWORTHS TRAVEL BUREAU GUARDIAN PUB. CO. Price 10 cents per copy WHAT t\ mcxonv, bTEn-"lfipl _ _ sceklnz a charged with bitlnlz his clrl EXAMINATION Flttlnz and Simplylng Gllmu Etc. II. J. MABUN Ol-‘TOMEYPRIST Office lluurs: 10 lo I2 A. bl 2 to b P. M. Holidays cw. by niipoiriimem Office Connected will: DRUGSTORE . ., . , Prince Edward Island A carefully prepared series of notes of Meteorological and Botanical observations made in the period 1910-1937; and includ- By BLYTHE HURST (“Agricola”), WJJ§LQSWZQJ§III§IIIIIII '1": - -Offlcen man friend ‘fl-“fl-HHAI P. E. I. I i i i i i i i i i i I I I i i i l i l ' l at Lowest Rate I44 Richmond St. monnlsu s. co. , n. r. Aliclllsliln l Churtercd Accountant; Eastern Trust Bulldlng Charlottetown McLECD 8i BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY. ILC. J. A. BENTLEY IILC. C. F. BENTLEY. LLB. and AIIorneys-at-Law MONEY T0 LOAN 1B0 Richmond Street TTWTBTTFTTITTTTETRZT B.A.. LLB. BARRISTER. SOLICITOR. ETC. Blnl of Canada Buildlnf. MONEY 1'9 i051; BELL & MATHIESONi MONEY r0 LOAN Cameron Blncli. Charlottetown. V‘ E. Island eves EXIIMINED Glasses Fitted J. S. TAYLOR Optometrist New Locnllnn Corner of Kent and Queen Street ' (Opposite R111‘: Grocery) " ' ,, Appointments. Phone House 1023. ALBEIITON OI-‘FILE ‘id . #- 1:. R. Brow & Son Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness‘ I and Plate Class Insurance Agent at Summerside. Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown A Bird in the hand is worth two- ill (he bncco slick with it. Most Islanders HlCKEY’S B L A C K TWIST 10c PER FIG STRAIGHT MANUFACTURED BY Tobacco Co. Ltd" Charlottetown Here’s A Pointer —F OR YOU— When you get acquainted with a real good l0- bank on IIIOKEY & NICHOLSON lmslll Oven Even ’