gigs rout: THE (menu rr'r1-:1_tg_w~,__ gt _51_<;_;.» s» TiiE CIIARLU_I'TI'E'IU||.I GIIARIIIIII Morning Daily lFounded in I881) President: Lieut. Col W. Chester S. MeLnre Vice-President: J. R. Burnett, F. J. l. Secretary: Lieut. Col. l). A. Maclilnnon. 0.8.0. Editor and " ' Associate Editors: Frank Walker and Lient. la A. Burnett. I_I.C.N.V.It. 10p Active Serflcc) “The Strongest tilemory is Weaker Thu! the Weakest Ink.” Director: J. B. Burnett. IJJ. scrimmage‘ 17,1944? ntassacre. ' ll scheme for another world war." Lest \Ve Forget \\'riting iuvatt Otttario exchange, a veteran 0f tlte l'trst \\ orid \\ ar recalls a matter wltich 1s atntitmg tn the credit o1’ all cottccrtted. and wiucit 1t is to be iiliiliWl utll be rrntodictl .15 spun after the pre~ent uztr tts lht\>liil(‘. l11 Scptetttit“, Ill-ht. the llirector of the , _ . . , _ Am“. 11,151,“, .11 hvcmm m 1 prcfacc to the the only satisfaction 1 ltavc, and 1t ts not always . _ . t . _ __ ._ _ ,. _ _ _ .. late Mr .\1til1"ew .\l:tcpl1:t1i's tttcriictti ltistttrv. gausfadol-l’ l” rchomng m mo" “ma “P1101 "iilrt- ili-t-trtcttl Section of tlte lieueral ' * * ‘ stair was 1t'~1'\;:.‘/t-1l in _int1e, 111:1. lt wzts llull. i‘. I. .\. Lltrdiu, "the Siv Fox" of . , . 1,, _,,. - _ ' > - _ . . -. . '. . ‘ihlilstti it) i it.) l t-nntt. uttlt tin. tttsl. o! coi- {Quebec Ltberztltsttt, does 11ot behevc 111 bttrttntg l~*ll‘t_('\ itttt» ' 1'1~:1tpt’el1ensi\'e llisttvry {or uft" :tforesttid utedicq "s intended l . ntedicnl znerz. -:~\ littq all pttpt-tis. cuttecrttitzgg . 11 the t irettt \\’ttt'. 1014-1918, and Id tlte l'L‘4illCll1rll of tiu- tnass Iii evidence ftti publi- for The last lap of Christmas month. U l =5 l .\ wcll-kttuwtt citizen sans: his boztts so long as there is hope of erztl party surviving. lie says he Liberal bettrltcs. 1F 3 ‘ii U l Andrew Celsius, Swedish “drear November", "Since will agztittst Rlaclcenzic liittg, but tw-ntain On the physicist. this date i701; was professor of astronomy‘ ttt abolition of German war industries, 88 per cent favored control of Germany's oil and essential ores and 90 per cent favored the prohibition of any German arnty or navy and control of all German use of aircraft; 4o per cent favored the (icportatiott of at least 10,000,000 “guilty" Germans for segregztiiott; 36 per cent favored sterilization, attd 10 per cent were for plain These things tttttst not happen again -—- the tvtatt. British people are deterntiucti. again to uttot? the Titties’ report, "that 110 Prussian tnilitarist shall ever again have the chance to dream and EDIIURIAI. NU I ILS C.B.C. is now tnouopolized by propagalldisls. the Lib- \'t>lt‘ then tltc born smile his satisfaction on learning that a new traffic law in Vancou- ver states back-seat drivers must not interfere with the man at the wheel of the car. The idea might spread. Toronto Globe and Once upon a time. a Spanish king sent his page with a love note to mistress. along wltn his rln for safe conduct. The king's rval waylaid the page, seiz- cd his note and ring: he corpse of the page was found in an alley, whereupon the irritated king is- sued a royal decree, prohibiting the killing of, or interference with his pages. thus diplomatic immun- ity wae created. -- New York World and Journal. The Odessa Public Library. founded in 1829, has reopened af- tcr a latisc of three years. The U. S. S. R. Bulletin reports. Before the war the library assessed over two million volumes, rare manu- scripts and old editions. A large part of the books wore saved hv thc ltcrnism of lwo library work- ers. Kttdlneh and Korehitt. The Maedonalds score -'\nrl justifiably ' pohttmcnts. . . ‘ Herald. With the nttmitts! of llua tttt-n- 1 cf Edutottt. t there ore 111v, ultis 1 f‘l'ill‘.£'l'S ttf the i1‘ Alberta, though some of tits-tit stiell the name differently. y _ '- Wiillliifti in‘ l'p.~:tl.'t front 175d to 1744: lte tuettsttretl iitc ttre “:2,']‘,~‘,',,r,“;‘l°,'l (fllomi »‘\- i? i 1i _i- i. l'- 111' the .\lc:'idia11 in Lttpizttni: dcvisetl the ceuti- lililllililu '\""‘l i""“‘ “ii ~ milk" “lb grade thertnotnrtet‘: ztuthor of tnztttv works on _ “l lililiiblicli ii‘ "'31 > ‘ ~"~’ W415 iii-l“? i511‘ ztstrottotttv trttttsiztted into almost evcrv lfuro- \-,~ -ilt]’i:l\ ‘fturid inf] Armistice tutti l," \t:1:-' . e liistorictti Sec- pmn language I , tnovio ltnucs at l ti-‘t h:1d lllTll t" 1 ti ' l.'l\i\' of producing the " * " " n: ' ' l ltE-t-vt. t tc is civtfiltCti. ulntosi The Prime Xlittistet" \il_\'> he did nut ht Lt <‘-\tit-I*l\\" 1111i services 11f '1 11,9 rettntrits 11f .\ir, \\'iift"e.l intkirttix, “lticl; ~‘i"'3lc ‘ll “ i .*'~‘i' ‘if ti“? “i117 it he tnovcd .\lltilli(i be extiuttqvtl frnut Iltntsatrtl if . , or .1 c. l” “i“i"i"'\“"'i i i ii “l” iii?" ii "because of noise itt the iiott-e at the time." Csnsuillllli“ Ehoiim i” ill“ 4*‘ “l 5i‘ 01' "ifli" Iie tnigltt ltttve Itdtllitteti also "lvccttttstt the itritt. . . ‘iLTilYI-ilih “it ‘i iii" "l“’i"l"'°' tncutbcr sp-tlw tn Frcttclt," ulticlt \\;t.s' perittttw " ill" "luff l‘ “'4 “ l_“"""l""" ltett-nc ‘v- ~19 1t. : i ' . ,1“. ""‘\e‘ " ‘p, "“é“‘i,‘1',l:} Si, ,_ Six 1n '0 tears 19.1.0 pJt-se-l tttttl .t is now .213 w a a a1 i years sittce the .\rn1i toricztl Section \v;1.~ tr the ltistory. Ye; 1:. 1' first has yo: set-n titc hob‘. Czntrtdzt alone of the the Br. .\< thitrg~ stand. sh lftupire, Hts ye: t’: tirodttce its _ _ _ 4 _ “Til on the ceiling, but it's awful hard on th I131“!- ijl"! Blllfll" lift-i Z1 ivlll defies ‘l! ers. 'l"l1ey cznftread them standing on naval, llllillfil‘_\‘, n11", s~c1al and statistical vol- and I don't have no ladder high enough) times; Australia, New Zcnlattd, the l'nion of a w =0- a ‘ Sotttn .\t_rtca and Ncwfouttdlatttl all got put Peopte in Engtand are again to b “W” SYOP-(‘S FTJY“ 512°- -\"ill'-'lilfl$ ill5l°rl°lll ted to dance “in the wee sma’ oors avout the record, in particular, is notable for its compre- hensiveness and high standard, comprised in twelve volutucs. In startling contrast with the pitiful record of our .\rn1_v Historical Section. the IIistorical Scctimt of the RCxkF. has already produced its first vuittttle for the present \var, carrying the story‘ of the R.C..~\.F. overseas to Attgtist, 111.13. The \ir Force, has thus accomplished in 12 tuontlts what it ltas taken the .'\r1t1_v 26 years s1: far, and possibly many more years yet. If the .~\1-111_v Historical Section is to be entrusted with producing the story of the military side of the presettt war, after the last war has been disposed of, then at the present stiaii-like pro- gress the lads who are now fighting may ex- pect the account of their feats to appear not earlier than s. century or two hence. Three Mountain Peaks Three mountain peaks in the Peace River Block are to be given the names. "Churchill", "Roosevelt" and “Stalin." So, British Coluttt- bia. will tnztrk the achievements of the three most notable men of our day. The peaks are all tall peaks, marking the stature of the statesmen whose names they bear. They are all about the same height, too—— 9500 feet. So, there can be no lteart-bttrnittgs because one of the statesmen is put in a posi- tion to have his peak look down on the others. There have been men whose names stand out like mountain peaks in the history of the world. It may be that Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin will prove to be such men. But whether they do or not, at least we shall have mountain peaks in Canada honored by their names. Those "Decent Germans" 4'47 A London correspondent of the New York Tints: traces the changing British public opin- ion in the matter of the Germans. The British, he said, accepted the 1940-41 blitz and its des- truction of civilians as sontetitittg to be ex- pected of tuodern war. 'l‘he bombing of Cov- entry and other Cathedral cities did something to alter this attitude, but even confirmed and detailed stories rtf (icrmzttt atrocities in occu- pied cottutrics left 111.111)‘ tlutttsnnds of British men tutd wontcu who sztitl "there tuttst be some good ticrntztns." The flying ltotnb, says this correspondent, citangctl that attitude i11 a week. and the Brit- ish people began to rcztiizv that “there would d 33 since the Ills- dutv of producittg " volume since the tvetnittj; ntttiotts of help the wttr effort. have had to end before tnidtiigltt, will cotttitttte ittto the early l1ours—-with proval of the tnajority of the police c by Darwett (Laucztshirc) lation of 37,000, ltave been ztblc to g0 ing after midnight. I‘ l i U their took him and his fellow delegates not Montmartre and Montparttasse, gave When they took him to the station to impressed him most in France. He Russell, executive officer of the 36th Infantry Regiment, third Armored on the decrease. veterans of previous campaigns in Af those areas were friendly 11nd only many it is different. the new r11ie. but they are doing so. Tb it isnit worth $65 to excltattgc words Hitler. a a c o and culpable than fair rtud responsible. be no peace n11 cztrth uutii the t rntatt tuition that had t-tttploywvl it \" reudcre<l itnpotcttt ever lo wttue war :|t;:1it1." Titen cattte the V-2 rocket bomb, lite (h- 11:111.” “itiggcst psycholo- gical ltittttder ltt flute", 11nd the final proof even to litosc \\i111 it-ttl ~:t:d "there must be decent be held rcsptntsiidt‘ for tlu- znzts of its tnilitarv leaders and its scientists. Sn the llritislt tnd:t_v_ ~-t\'.s the Times writer. '1- detttttttilitig ivtrd, ~11 1'11 ternts for ficrnttutt". ' 1w votes 11111 :1 d-tttlttftti guide to pititiic npittiott, but tin: 'i'intes tells of a poll of 3.400 readers of the I/tttdtnt Svnttluv Dir/tale]; which produced this result.’ n3 per rent were in favor 0f .\ilied orcturtli-ttt of li<‘i'l'1l-lil\'- T‘) it" “f” in favor 11f 1't-y1.'1t'.'1ti<»11~ and Tr’ ll"? will i" favor of partition of the ifriril. Furiltcrtttore. 7t pi-r rent titfltlgltt G?!" m:u1v's schools -l'ltlilti b» ~t1if<~1l ltv forr-ig11c1'<.. find-fit per crui titwugitt lierutttn lttbvtt‘ sitouirl rebuild Europe. Also, 9.: pet‘ cent. fat trml the Gerutatts" that ti;<- wl1ult~ liertnztu nztliott must, ing of Dottato Caretta, Fascist vice-dit- hvginn (‘deli prison, on September 1S, pub- vindicatiug Car- Tltc investigation showed that he even took the gravest risks to favor anti- lisitcd :1 report completely rett.'t's character. Fascist prisoners in the Regina Cocli. accusation scrcatttctl at him catuc front tt pzttitt-logicaiiy’ itystcrtcai zttui tltztt he lvtd dime uoiitittg l0 prrn crowd. 'I"he conrlttsinn of the cotunu that it was "a typical mob crime." "As for Car- retta," concludes the report. "the Colllrllifi r-stnltlisltctl that he was a capable and verv hotl- cst functiounry, inspired by sttttiitttettts of hum- nuitv toward prisoners, and 1t has lteen prov- ed in the clearest wnv that rlttrittg the occupation ("nrretitt ditl \\'.:1'f‘t's (si prodigol. "est risks, to favor ._!____. even at the gr’ prisoners." It does not do t0 take titittgs literally. coutttty tttercltattt wrote to the \\'artin1c Prices‘ Board: “I don't like to appear like I wasn't c11- opcrating, but I just don't see how ceiling ytrircs g I ltave pasted our prices |“~ twal." Dances, which for the past five y/ears licensing tuagistrutes. The first more was nmde ntagistrates, granted an extension for a. works dance tutti] 2 a. m. This is the first time itt the war that the young people of that cotton town, with a popu- “Some years ago," said Mr. Vernon Bart- lett, M. l’.. i11 the iiritislt llottse of Commons, “I was prcscttt at an ittterttatitittztl conference of agricultural experts in Paris. One of the German delegates had never visited Paris be- fore, and the French went very much out of way to make a good impression. Tltcv round the agricultural areas of Ifrancc. but to best champagne and the best Burgundy, took him to the best shows and all the rest of it. off and say good-bye, they asked him what ltad and would not express art opinion. One of them said: ‘Surely something about France must have impressed you.’ Finally, he said: ‘Ycs. I was impressed by the small size of your pigsb" l I I I American soldiers in Germany are forbid- den to talk to Germans. To itait violations on the part of members of the armed forces, the artny intposes fittes on guilty soldiers. the amount running from $25 to $65. The crime of fraternizing quickly became known as the $65 offense. According to Lieut.-Col. C. I‘. there are few infractions 110w and they arc American soldiers who are Europe were accustomed to talking with civil- ians alottg the path to victory. Civilians in liberation from their Nazi masters. But in Ger- It may be difficult for the American soldiers to get accustomed man so gullible as to fall for the oratory of Mob law, as we know front experiences in the Southern States is likely to be more drastic ing to a. cable from Rome. the Allied Gov- ernment Commission of iuq i v into the lynch- in the cottrtroont c custom- tlte floor. e pertuit- probably the hicfs and who on danc- ouly all him the soc hint hesitated, Armored Division, rica and awaiting l0 cy know with a Accord- cctor of that the wotnatt. who illt‘ F-Sifill is sinu has ap- dttttet-rtttts to c.’ s. when placed in 1111 irrcspottslble contributes nothint! . , s of childhood. but does ti" an :1 fer " instinct ...t 1t otltctwt. ' a tltiltlls ntind were centred .011 wltoicsotne pursuits. Public op- inion will support the board of controls recommendation that the sale of these air guns be prohibit- cdr-Hamllton Spectator. t 4 . Recent demonstration of a has body constructed entirely of ply- wood, including cven the chassis frame parts, made n bus weighing a full ton less than the convert- tionnl steel-bodied one. But. al- though this mny point the way t) saving of weight and metal. bus builders nnd operators shnttld do slow and remember the old wood- en railroad coaches. They were light. but they splintered and col- lapsed terribly in collision. wreak- ing a savage toll of passengers- Boston Post. For some time chemists have been working on fire retardpnts for such inflammable materials ns clothing, lumber. etc. Now they propose that walls, ceilings, doors rind window frames be coated with fire extinguishing ntaterials. says Thc Des Moines Register. Possibly encouraged by the re- sults obtainccl in wartime fire fl htlng with dry ice, a new paint mxture includes calcium carbon- ate and a resin made by treat- ing paraffin wax with chlorine. When exposed to high tempera- tures, this coating breaks down chemically, giving off carbon dioxide gas which, being heavier than air and incapable of sup- porting combustion, tends to smother the fire automatically’. If desks. pianos and other furniture are coated with tltls new compound. it may save wives a lot of agony by siientt extinguishing the of- fending fag. Plans for the early release from civilian war work of women dc- slring to train for tcaclting were announced by Mr. R. A. Butler. Minister of Education, Women would now be eligible, without re- striction of age, to enter on a training course for the teaching profession lf they were not im- mcdlntcly required for employment. essential to the war effort. Though release could not be guaranteed to any particular applicant, because essential work had to go on, any woman in civilian national service could now apply for admission, either to 1t one-year course of train- ing under the emergency scheme. or to a ttvo-yenr course nt an ord- inary training college, or to star‘. on a university course, if that was appropriate. Staffs were being selected for the colleges to be es- tablished under the emergency training scheme and would. so far ns possible, be given on the lincs of the emergency scheme for ll small number of men and women released from the services because of disabilities, and further courses of the same type would be started for all suitable candidates coming forward-From United Kingdom Information Office. Intelligent consideration of hous- ing policy leads straight into town and country planning policy. The two things cat-mot be separated. Only a person uninstructed in the vct - rv bvtntusc without. it. ltttilrlitv: producer; results injurious to dwel- lers in tovsn and country‘. Hou. s West’. port of theyfabrlc of towns. ivhcrtevcr you build ltnuses you arr prorluclttg some kltttl of rtrrantzctttcnt, good or bad- or tt- the - Gcrmntt tmliticzti iiotee By The Way’ No doubt many a husband will from the East ‘Hottsttm 1'; tugcttt lei. us ihvfy (|-¢~~i..~~._ pm- 1111-11-5 _ the desperate sltoritiizc _ for thnt oi nthrr nnttotts; first. and thctt romc back and 1th.“; {mm “m, s,.|f_.;,p;[g_~,. 5m], deal with phtttttittg," 'l‘ou'n nud flu fling-n 1n the ,_._..,...n» unrlsin" in country phtnninu is thrttttzltifttt w; qy ' ' guldattrc and buihllttv: zll-vvlnp- m and i1. ins been fotttttl 11cc- PUBLIC FORUM EDUCATION DEFINED V Sir.—-The discussion now aim!"- iug m th:_columt1s of The Guard- ian regaitdutg the relative EmDOTi- ance of Latin and Science on the sctzool curriculum must be of great. interest to readers. I quite vieyvs of Mrs. Fran that more Sci nce should be taught in our public schools. and that this sub- ject has much moved practical yalue ev ‘ in educational o children than has Latin. Certainly a person to cope with as a means of tr annalyze situation-s and difficult problems in life Latin has ti" more. Derhaps much less. use- tttlticss than tnosi. other su ' ts on the cttrrit-ttlutn. And as ttilitv subject in a country like uttrs which is largely devoted to agriculture, fishing. trades. and business. it would sccm that Latin falls for be- hind Sclcttec. It is t‘ of c ll ZOl l-lf‘ \'Cl'_\' a l.‘ lil 1 ttul 0 t‘ Thcrcicre 1 .1 e i ue siren in of the ‘Liv and trying to . hv do we 1 loose ttud :11- . . tlvlllll at their own irte wtlLs, rind so let them llVE! 11...)‘ lur ttte present: ls 1t itoi that. we wish ‘to ptiptire them tot‘ itv- ing the lite we know they will iiva tomorrow. next year. and here- uttct- tit _u world to come? And ngtttti. It this proposition be true how can ttnv uue CX-llililll the cut hie 0t our sons in fir. services. now "itvtttg" in veep cold holes tn the ground of ll lonesome and foreign country? Surely tiles-e boys tire not ‘ltyinw’ in tne bKTlSt) Llcwey ltati 1t_t llllild. No, they a" ilillll.’ for their own and our‘ tututc inc ’It1er tujc uritcticollyt tic-tut to Joys and activities of 11101 press-tit lite. and tire living only 1n ilmlflvfltlon of a better day to come. With these boys unct wftn their parents as null. "living" will begin again when this terrible ordeal ot blood and sacrifice has ended. it, Mrs. Frank examines again Brvi- Dvlvfiyls definition of educa- tloti, she will. I hope, .o1nc to rcc- 021112." tt :01: what it; really ts. naunclyza rather materialistic con- Cpptifln of the tncttuint: of Educn-r tton. She interprets it to 111111“ Rruwtlt; as 1t 1s hero worded it could very well be interpreted ntetttt SiZl2TlZlll0l1~iilG moral and intellectual stagnation of the beast. Animals live 111 find for the present. M811. it much tugher and nobler a rc-itool l'l)t.lll lfLllllillH, armed tomplntlnz He still wonders what is out there beyond iltc rainbow. and his obtlctlve in ltic is only wenkiv described bv the poet when he writes about. “The vision that never was on sea ' i Di fll The cuttsecrntion and the poetts dream.“ If _J_ohn Dewey had wordzd his definition somewhat as follows it; could be allowed to pass: Educa- tion is a preparation for future liv- ing as well llS 11 process of living. 1 am, Sir. etcl. D. J. MULLIN, St. Peters. l2 Tit moi- ntttv Sulfur-r: is tutu-h more i purtttttt No tlnllbt a uood l~' ltunt- ot tit Lulu it, BUY CHRISTMAS SEAlS! r demands We trust that the allies l!!!’ only can nee a year-turkey and l9"!- corela emd cranberry aaucoi and And on!) once u 1N1‘ 4° you go‘ n letter onclolill tho aoola iiici ll" UP- Chriaimue Souls. lnawor iho iniiori Chrlli- mca Saul: mnita poaaiblo iba your-round flqhl elqdnli Till?- arculolla and no your oilt lo nil humanity. r i What better way la nann- ber Ha Iirdtday? ‘ict ' 1 G ":1 . In the East. Polish mile-filler?‘iimttiftitithxiib totalltarian- they werp later disa-rmcd, 11119115- 1 raise-s vlttirm p, ml! the Brit- orted, executed or deported bY| ‘.1 state. lt looks as if. contrary t.» the Atltttttic Charter. the exist- ”; treaties 11nd international dc-i the military help to l-llg allies. We trust than this crhnc will not hap- tsn We have put ~u- trust in the trellng of solidarity among the a1- be able to resist the spreading of disunit-y on our side by justifiable Independence Day. will remain faithful to the com- com tradition of their Western civil- zatlon and the ethics of Christi- anity. We trust that they will fulfill their treaties, and We feel sum that they do not want to sacrifice their new generations ill- o. new war. For Dflwe based on in- Justice cannot be lasting. That la why Poles do not. cease their strug- gle despite the moral presslon tryrliideriwhifih they live Int tircsent. Montague. P. I. I. at s w y we read amcs every ' day oi u}? fxptogdgsnq: pd". 3011;‘), Office llgulrrslg ti»!!! A. M rmsnayan ommotfi " Kettles aréd oriactrpxiflcepifif the Horlne 94,113“; etc" by appointment rmy an e cv an pom! fl- lion tn Poland. mt ts whv Pol- 0m" °"""°'=‘°“ ‘m’ DRUGSTOBE. ii. J. MABOII OPTOMETRIST Fitting and Slripolvllll Gill" I‘. lsh units, acting on the orders of the Polish government aided every- where the Soviet forces on the Storm indws We have ready for delivery-primed and glazed-the following sizes: 4 Light 1o x 20 4 Light 12 x 20 4 Light 12 x 24 4 Light 13 x 26 4 Light 14 x 28 4 Light l5 x 30 L. M. Poole 6' Co. Lumber — Building Supplies Phones: 171 Charlottetown .011 despite u» rm that’ those whom they aided We want| our record to remain to the end, _, of the wnr as clean as it, had been <;ncy Poland is to pay Russia tori from the beginning. We are film" ing on. true to our traditions 11nd obligations. We trust that W6 Sh!“ reach our final goal which always m5 been a free and lnddfiendent ‘ 1.»; who, ltt heir own interest, will Poland. t wit); those feeling the Poles-all over the world celebrate this years i Poland Celebrated Independence Day (Ottawa Journal) On the 11th of November, i918, Poland regained her independence after 123 years of foreign occu-i potion. On this day France, Great. Britain and the U S.A. tri- umphed over Germany in the West. At the sacne time the ris- lug Polish state checked Germany and ltrevcntcd the joining of the Bolshevlk revoultlon with the communistic upheaval in Germany. That is why the Poles celebrate apart from their National Day on ‘ tit,- Ilrcl of May’, the tiny- of Nov. Q 11th or their independence Dny. t The most essential element. in the lta 1000 years of existence is the striving for freedom. which the Pole. value before nil elsc. “Flee citizens in their politlt-til idcttl itt their uucc great stnic i11 Europe. The strug- gle for liberty was tho cxtnesslcn of this same tendency, when the Polish state W113 cottqttererl and gtrtiitlottcd by the Gcimttns 11nd l =’ 'lllS '. lit.- Pnlos ark flcltilttt! 11-, fk—lz&k'f;‘k"ll‘ftlil iffriélii-fit . t W. New Fnginnd a, i1.’- » p,‘ uosrnsasr! ll.i e will inst ncthn s tmrs. If vonr .l doing this plzttttting had’ ttcrl reasonably good 0t" rtvzttlts. yntt might. ctvtttinuc without wor lng tnurlt But that is not the Hottsintz v." hon‘. plnunittr: ll] produced dovnrstnilntz results both in town 111111 country. And I don‘t mr-ztn just spoiled the ltndscnne. I mean smtltnr: the livrs of the people we are tltlultln", olnttt when wc unto the trr-tnrniwus importance of ltnttsittz. -~ l“ J. Osborne in Municipal Reviewi life of the Polish nation duringg’ n fro: state" -tl1.ls wtts § 9 The Board of Appeal from Civic Rates and Assessments has set Monday, December 4th at 9:30 A. M. in the Court Room in the City Build- ing in Charlottetown, as the time and place for hearing all remaining appeals from Civic Rates and Assessments for the current year. J. A. FULLERTON, City Clerk. WANTED Young man 16 to 18 years of age for an ap- prenticeship position in Summerside in an es- sential industry. Opportunity for permanency and advancement to a youth possessing initia- tive and ambition, good health and Grade XI education are required by applicants. Initial sal- ary sufficient to care for living expenses. Atwlv— NATIONAL SELECTIVE SERVICE To MARITIME ctiittft .4 JNC [ON SAFT. JQHN," IN. OIIAILOTTETOWN i 7,00 A. M. 11.3.‘) A. tvt. 600 P. tvt. - (‘Moncton Only) NEW GLASGOW l.00 P. M. ‘ago One Way (Plus Tax) RESERVATI¥aJSkENIIgORMATIQN_ PHONE 540-2061 AIRWAYS EM! ____=;| ‘i. F. iiutcheson 8t Soil OPTOMETRISTS “Specialists in the flt~ ting of glasses for the correction of ocular de- fects.” 53 Grafton Street Professional Cards m M ALBAN B.A.. LLB. Canadian Bank of Commerce Bldg MONE BARRISTER. SOLICITOR. ETC. A ALEX W. MATHIESON Money BABBIBTEII. m imam McLeod 8 Bentley w. n. scum-mar. n. c. .1. a BENTLEY. 1c c. Barrlatera and Attorney-at- Law I54 Prince Street FARMER Y T0 LOAN ll. ii. Duane o 0o. Chartered Accountants 58 Grafton Street. Charlottetown Phone 2080 B0! 7-47 Randolph W Mannlnl. CA- to Loan Coliecllonl Office: 90 Great George 51"" souctrott. W» murrciiand 30min" ll. F. ARBlJBM-ii Chartered Account!!!" Eastern Trust Buiidinl Charlottetown Attention Swine Breeders uztrti Now is the tlnn- in -- against p“; . WORM moat eflecilvl market. using the Lily on the MACS rro-wotur TONIC POW/DER It will thorougitlv ttimlilsil all traces of worms mid l" rove the health of voill‘ nlli oe 35 cents oer lh MACS AMMONIATED BROTT ' HAL COM POU N D Believes acute lirottchitlsi lnaumodic Crcuu. Catarrh. Coutzhs III Price 50 cents a MN" ___j_ MACS FILE OlNTME-‘tfi A f nd efficient Wm i for ‘hifet-‘nal III“ "wfll 11 It t. made 0IIiV o! "I zit...“ t.,~;-.~:::::r will"! I Y . ueugtirrfatngnrerlgtu bgglrelafé: In three IR." m ' 3 hes 2. whiff“; lube n t. utrtnrwi G,‘ today. Price so cen s- nts 2 M95 u’ fir”. our" street M GI 1n PM“ m" orflgi-teniidn