-..........,_~_ Q-fi-wyw-m; c . a»; push.» ~,.... w; _ m». ..-_|- u! -u-—~.---- _.-»-.v--_.--- . _..-t_- u unkn-pl-n-os _a.s;..»»-/.-»¢ IILEE.-F_QI_TB ‘IhE llllf-IRLDTTETOWN G llllllll IAII Murumg Uaily (founded tn I801) rT-Ziticttt 1.11111. Col. w 01mm s. Mel-are Vice Preslilenl. J. R. Burnett. FJJ. Secretary Lit-ut. (Jul. l) A. Maclllnnon. 0.8.0. £01111: and Manning Director. I It. Burnett. FJJ. Assuuate Editors. Frank Walker and Ian A. Bllrlllll- SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail Ill P. h. l.. $4.00 per year. $2.50 for 0 IIIIIIINAA $1.25 for I; months. 50c fur one mouth. cit; Uclitrfy. 5.1m pl‘! pear. $3.00 for t. monthl- SLTS for if munthkssw “I ' " 1 ' L’. . A - P1!’ 1 - ....':z.-1":.'::.'..‘:".zti. u.» i.» t ---=--- ' 50c for it month:- “Tlte Strorzg/risfillciniririti/mi: Weaker Hull the lien/rest Ink." r-initariiiilxqglfillfl- Detailed Information Promised "ral crutcurrcnce in the . ii. ll. Hanson, leatler . iiou~c of Commons, .111, before Parliament » ral rlzsctrssion of the Gov- "Frotn time to time,” said 1c itatl announcements of :1], of vast financial , ziitcr all, no one has .- Cwililll’_\' just what are the rc til _\s being told what t» do, \\'e are never 2w is. On paper the ~ but it is results that s‘ the Opposition leader ' 3g any demand on the . 111, but weeks have elapsed ‘art-st platitudes have been ,. lilttlllllll of the press. The ‘ “.1 rtttctl of the number of t» 1;» overseas, of the actual ipplfes and material being pro- amount of duct-l, bt‘ it any, made in the con- gtrutjj .11 ' '4 guns, of motorized ctptipttun Wn~. .\l.-o it was desirable {L} l tion with regard to the ' the Xazional Resources Mobiliza- tion . , . . l1 vc s great powers in the Min- ister ot \\’ar >1 So far only a brief state- mcnt of the pt.. .pics of the bill has been sub- mitted. If necessary, .\lr. Hanson suggested, a secret session of the Iiouse could be held for the dis- ¢p_._.,,.ttt of sc attti |'1'.ll€I' questions of para- mount lZll}1-'l'i.'\lit‘€ :11 the present time. Better still, 11¢ argiv-tl, ifitrliatuettt instead of pro- mgrt in a furtntghfs time, could merely stand adjourned in antic tion of any national emer- gc-ticy that ll‘. cltt ar-e, \\‘itliout oitl-rutq any cottnncnt on the latter sticrott-iii-tt, Prime .\iini-"t<\r Slackenzie King ex- prcs-‘cti his aqrcvtttctit with Mr. fiansotfs con- tctitirwn that the liouse was entitled to fuller in- forrtiation on the Government's war activities, atni ltfitltllicll that this would be forthcoming be- fore ]1l'1'\I'1'-§"1li*\i'l. U. S. Bases In Nova Scotia 1n a lCIVllllQ editorial the Ilalifax Chronicle Qrtmnlcllls‘ tztv rztitly 1111 the tiroposal, now before the tniiit _ cottnnitttte of the U. S. House of Rcprest-titritives, that the United States establish an airplane and navy base in Nova Scotia. Strong argumenv, 1111: Chrmncie claims, can be cited in stipport of tltt- s-bcrne, to prove advantages to both tiatii-its. \\'l1c-titcr the bases should be equitipcrl, ntrtnttctl, and maintained completely by the Critctl S: es, or whether they should be provided attd stilclteti by (anada for the use of U. S. plattcs and ships, it says, is a detail of policy to be dot-bled; but the mutual, co-opcra- tive dcfcnsivt: effort is of urgent importance. Our Ilalifzix contentporary admits that the question is tlt-batable from the standpoint of in- ternational law, and that there may be complica- tions licczuisi: of Canada's active participation in the war and the neutral position, at present, of the United States. iut it argues that rights for military buses have been arranged between coun- tries bcfurc, and cites Great Britain's use, at the present time, of .\l<-.\'antlria as an important base for hcr hlvilllvffllilliln fleet, regardless of Egypt's pi-sitioti in the conflict. This contpuri-on scarcely’ does justice t0 Can- ada's status in the ilriti-h Commonwealth, or to the far-rtwniiittg ijfrllsvqlltllCCi of permitting the cststblislutttnt of cnil-lill bases in this country by a titrt-iqu ti-ttxct‘, llur llalifax contemporary re- calls that in tin» first Uri-at \\'ar, bases for air- craft and for n:1\.'1l urs-cls flying the Stars and Nript-s \\ ' -ll\‘(l in Nova Scotia; but that m1. zt-Tti r 1.1. ,.i"1l $tatcs had entered the \\.'1r 1:1 ilri: int". wit‘. \\'e recall that the pre- suit lit‘ \ii-~i-t~i- of Canada raised objec- tions ‘.1 u: i-vi-n lircat Britain control of the ll ll rug of itcr own air pilots in this country, on the gt tutti that it would interfere with our ituicpttrlc t r lll(‘ .\'ta1ute 0f “Westminster. Attmzing. If Truel Ilow lying tin-nay propaganda tends to defeat itscif is uvll illu-trau-tl by thc following ironic commit-n! fr< m1 lllf‘ (lticngn Daily News: “The (icrtnrnts don't hzivc all the military sec- rets, or at lea-t tin-y don't have all the tiaval sec- rets. Titt- czt-c of the ilrztislt aircraft carrier Ark Royal sltinvs‘ that the lriti-"lt have a fcw tricks up their slct vt-s, tot», ilcrr. as far as is known, is the first .-ubt11cr.siblr> wztrshitt, and while we get only nccrtsioital glimpses of what the Ark Ifoyal can do, tin-v indicate that it tnust involve several ncw llrllllfll-IIFS in nztvnl cullfitrtlcliufl- "\\'e know, fur instancc, that the Ark Royal “'11s stink on ‘Sept. 2!}. 'l'l1is was officially an- nuuurtd. with natural pride, by the German com- n"- d. It wzv :1 tolling blow. The Ark Royal, ‘s finest aircraft carrier, was done ttann (‘Wllllj the story, ltowcvef. till’- . owl's d.struction only sends it off to a '1 "i P-Iitil. "iltt- n1"\'t tlcvcloptncnt comes when an Am- ;r§c~.tt twval zittztcltc says he has breakfast on the .\rk i\’o_v:1l, :1 fcztt that smacks of Mr. Beebe and hfs l1:1ll1_\-t\l\.'rc. Later it is announced that the Ark Royztl hrts cngagctl in a long sea chase, ranging the Atlantic in search of the German pockttt battleship, the Graf Spee. On Nov._8 Mr. n , ' ' t captured a valuable prize, and in March it is an- nounced that the Ark l\’o_val is back in port, breaking water, pffiilllllillJl)‘, like Zlloby Dick. “Finally, a good I0 months after site has been sent to a watery grave, the Ark Royal appears in the news again, this time being credited wizh playing an important part in the fratricide at Oran, when the British turned their guns on the French fleet. "Now you tnight assume with some basis in reason that the British, when they say the Ari: Royal is still in combat condition are covering up. “On July If, hcuvcvcr, corruboratioti comes frotn an tuiexpccted ipiztrtcr. .~\ surprise witness appears. The Italians zimiotince with stiitzlble satisfaction that intrepid virle, Italian aviation has scored a direct hit with an ititrcpitl, virile bomb on an aircraft carrier known to be 1hr: poor old _-\rk Royal, smitittq a ntiqlityt ltlow a- gainst the very ship their allies sent to the bot- tom last Fall It calls for a little better co-urdin- ation between the publicity departments, pos- sibly, and the victory writers. but it writes a new chapter in the history of one of the wars tnost interesting warships." - EDITORIAL NOIES .-1 Mexico is the latest to resort to conscription. Uncle Sam being thus between two COIISCFIIJLIUII territories will have to follow suit in order "to keep up with the jonescs." k a k a G. B_ Shaw, play-writer and cynic, born this date, 1856: "Those who itiinistcr to poverty and disease are accomplices in the two worst of all crimes." n- u u n- Canada's lobster has won her world renown and this succulent LICIICIIC)’ front our coastal waters has, for many years, been considered by the majority of those in the Dominion a dish for special occasions. Now the habitual eating of lobster has become a patriotic duty. are asked to eat more lobster to lnlp the lobster fishermen because the war has cut through thc usual overseas markets. m 1r n- n- Addrcssing a Dominion-proviticial agricul- tural conference at its concluding session, .\lr. G. S. Peart, plant products division, said the expected price rise in fertilizer might start next month and was caused by the \\'ar. About onc- half of the potash used in Canada for fcrriiizcr came from Europe prior to the war anti now LX111- ada is almost totally dcpcndctit on the Lnitetl States for this material. The discount on Can- adian exchangc together xvith the 1o percent war exchange tax will tend to boost turiccs, he said. >0! ll‘ >l< ll‘ Princess Alice, Countess of Atltlunc, who will pay her first visit here t1c.\'t itionth with bur husband, His Excellency the Earl of .-\:l~.lnnc, K. G. etc., is the only surviving datightcr of ll. i\’. ll. Prince Leopold, Duke of .\lb:1it_v, cighth child of Queen Yictviria thc- (luotl. The Prinuss married in r904 anti had two children, Lady .\Iay Helen Iimnta, who married .\l.'1_ior licnry Abel-Smith, now with hcr two children at Rideau House; and Yiscrtunt 'l'rcntanton, who died in I928. 'l‘his province is more futttutzttu in the present regime in ltavinj; a visit front tin: muir was never able to make the journey thus far from Ottawa. a- : w w It is officially contctnplatcd to tinify all pub- lic appeals for funds for the support of what arc classed as war charities. Organizations such as the Red Cross, \'..\I.C..~\. the Canaciiati Leg- ion, the Salvation Army, the Knights oi Colum- bus and so on come to the public with separ- ate appeals, and the responses are lllVllflillJly gctt- erous, but there is necessarily in such a pro- cedure a great duplication of effort and organiz- ation which could and should be avoided. The new \\'ar Service Dcparttneitt officials’ are quot- ed as saying that by means of a tinitcd cam- paign these organizations could reduce their ad- ministrative costs and at the same time prevent confusion in the public mind, besides avoiding interference with the annual Poppy Day Cam- paign of the Canadian Legion, and other local appeals. It is estimated that the war organizations named could raise as much as $8,000,000 through a joint appeal. n- : a =1- According to a ricspatcb from Ottawa, Hon. I. G. Gardner, Minister of National War Ser- vices, said that the national registration ques- tionnaire . . . . was designed to ascertain what people could do and for that reason no informa- tion was sought that would indicate “con- scientious objectors" to n1ilitary' service. That problem could be met when the need arose, he told Mr. M. Coldwell (C.C.F. Rosetown- Biggar) who raised the question The rcply was a perfectly correct one under the circumstances, says The Telegraph-journal. The department of National War Services will have nothing to do with the actual calling up of mcn for military training. Nor is the registration about to be made solely for military purposes. The question of objectors, conscientious or otherwise, docs not therefore arise at present, nor will it arise in connection with .\Ir. Gardnetis department. n: at It will be recalled that when in opposition Mr. Mackenzie King kept harping on the alleged un- necessary expense of the (iovernmctit ctnplov- ing autos for ministers, beads of. departments, and others, and promised to get rid of thcnt should he be returned to power. lie did defeat Mr. Bennett, he did hold an auction of govern- ment cars, he did announce that every govern- ment-owncrl auto would ltear the (iifil/(‘FIIIIIPIII department's name in a conspicuous place so that it would be tised for no other than depart- mental purposes. Thirly, if our nicnitiry serves us arigltt, was the tiutnbcr of (luvcrttntcttt cars disposed of by the nt-w eciinomy-ltttrtstittg Printc blinister King. Uut his ccottotny atlvocacy in .tl':is respect, as in others, proved to he merely 1 pretext for indulging in an orgy of extravagan- ces. In reply to a quc-‘iiott by .\[r. (icorgc Cruickshank, the Liberal mcntbcr for Fraser Valley, the Pritnc biinist-ur admittcti that since the beginning of the war the (jovcrntticnt had purchased no fewer than 9,294 autos of the value of $10,373,530 for the use of various v 1.1, |_ _I 1' IIIU! Catiadiztits ‘ Governor-(ienei'al's partner, for Lzitly 'l'\v<:t-<ls-. mrltlcm 111w: ... r- . s. v.4.- .>t'),¢vl-_ T". NOTES BY THE WAY It. ls well lo keep In mind that u...1;cvc.~ Q1ILcICLl~GS may aevcicp Dévhttll tne Reta» UOVGIIIHIGHI and we Bid-Lil} Government Over IIILIDLETS involved 1n the capitula- 11:11 to uc.;r.any' and Italy these oo 11st contain or 1mp.y any reflec- uou up.;1 1.12 l-teticn p:op.e them- senes. ‘hie Hench people have always pascssed values that. have appeatct. :0 I119 British people, and tne courage o1 French soldiers and naval men were never doubted — {unnerst News. b1 The government. Ls to be com- nwuucu upon 111.5 latest evidence o1 progr.» with Canada's most presiug task. The will at t-he Can- adlflll pecple to serve ls znaxufest» 111g ttsclf 111 the response of first.- t-cunvcs and skilled crafts- tevct‘ they are g.ven the ‘Lly, '1‘1‘.e:e is still much to - o.e to mablbze Canada's full effort. I-o enlm the whole power of the nauon. Ait the Department of Mutnttors ano Supply, however, the leadership of Clarence D. Howe LS gearing results. — Oshawa. 0m- zen. The Columbia. Unlversft Preu has juSl. polled a nude y of readers for a List of ten book; which a. candidate for the p151- dency of the United States should read. The ten books which topped the ballots are the Bible, John Steinneckls Grapes of Wrate, Meln Kantpf, Charles A. Beards Rise of Ameixcan Civilization, Carl Sand- burgs monumental Abraham Lin- coln, Emerson's Essays, K511 Marx's Das Kupibal, Plato's Rlepub. 11c, Shakespeare's Works, and Walt l/Vltitmarfs Leaves of Grass. —W1r11upeg Tnbune. In the Illlle village 0f Sglnt Lin, about. thirty-five miles north of nlcntreal, Ottawa reports that res. notation work on the childhood heme of sir Wilfrid Laurter has been completed by the NaLlotml Pat-ls Bureau of the Dominion De. Darunent of macs and Resourves. The house in wluch thls illustrious C naclian was born has been set ‘ a- a itational historic site on the rctt1ttrszzriation of the His- tcric site and Monuments Board of’ Canada. ‘and 1t is to be preserved as a lasting memorial to one of the Dommlotfs greatest sons, - Quebec Chronlcle-Telegraibn. Up m 'I'0r0n!0, Acting Premier Nixcti has announced the ordering of a 5.11m, economy campaign af- fecting all Ontario government de- D-arzmc-nts. Pnblzc reactzon there Will be 11g11ly favorable and in the res; or 11:11:19. there Will be (and l») a tic and r the some treat- c;al capitals. The ' _.s: 1s bzuntl to be enormous and 1t mus; be paid, as much as pCJESJJIB, out. of the nation's rev- enuc. There 1s a dktmct limit to that and the mar the province rs the less the Dominion can We t11.nk that. as well, the 0.11mi. 1- snould dig out. their 11131111; 11 lks Bllld cut. their ex. p0. 311115 town t1 ve wa cs- s.b1e.-Ncw Glasgow? Ngbrs y p Th1- puffin Is t1 fiIIow about as b1" as a pvston who wzars an ex- " \c \\'11.tc waistcoat and a ailrd coat. H» has a brown rcutzd ltzs neck and a black ' Hts cheeks are laven- _l'1ls lnt-slhgcnit brown rnmned wi a vermilion and have a bright, blue spot, ‘e anti bclctv. He sports a <-.~qu.-_a11:1 tuvxily-cclcred beak. .1". tne 11:1 e and crc |;d mm of yeuztv. vermzcon and He stands very upright on ' o1 orange-colored legs and ks about as uhcuglt the whole d bclcngctl to l1.m. Indeed t; docs, 11.5 world docs, fcr you 5x he is so wise that he attends only to ii own business and never at. tempzs to interfere 1n that. of any- 0119 9180- He's a deep sea fisher- man rcally and spends most of the War far cut at sea, sleeblnz on me water and getting 111s living below the surface. He has no use tor G13’ land fit all except for ma: purposes, but oddly enough w en he does come ashore for that. pur- csehe must needs go to the troubm 0i digging a burrow under ground. His mate lays 11st- srngle egg in a, chamber at the end 0t that t/unnel and lhfil‘ Yflll-“tgster spends the first few weeks of its life buried 8-Way down there. One day when the parent. puffins decide time the yQullettei" is old enough to look alter itself they lust go away and dont cunfte back. The youngster 1s lmzzlm "11" 11 lime. of course, and lnfllly creeps out of the burrow. The hunger pains grow very pact indeed, but he cont get anyone to feed him so he makes his way down to the sea. MLnd you, he ha; 119v" oven seen the world outside the‘ burrow m which he was born until that day, yer the moment he P0321105 the sea he plunges 1n and begins swimming and diving and catching fish as though hg had been Practising for months. — flondon Listener. The ship news men had better 89% ready. Out. beyond Quarantine, l! they look tram enough, they will find a long line of ships, battered b)‘ storms and caked with 5a,]; spray, The captains will have my“- ling stories, tragic stories to tell; for these are the ghost, liners m from the Sea. the liners that have befln lost ln the war. New York wt never see them ain xoept, memories. The Chglilplfllfl ls t)‘: latest to have Joined the ghostly Drocossion. Was it lent you, ~01- WRS It really sight years ago, that she first snficd up our harbor? She was then the beauty of the French merchant marine: not. the largest French liner. but the lamest. motor Sh!!! o1’ all, She was gracious and lovely. and she kept a Gallic quqt. lty about her on all her voyages. It will be hard for New Yorkers to think of hcr sunk by t; mine m‘; "EH08 on the bcttcm of the Ba of Blscflv. 1t will be harder at 1 to think of n11 the other proud 1m- BPS, IISW ECHO Which Illfid b0 5511 uipthe bay with flags and pennant: flying. Their very names — Staten- dam, Columbus, Pilsudrkf - bring reccllecliicns of maiden voyages, n1 commit-tees of welcome. of looting WEbORts nncl watnhing crowds. Our own liner President. Harding ma a place in the guest fleet. for aha was srfld to Belgium and destroyed 1n the bsmbirtg of Antwerp. Some where In the line we than also find British ships 1n gray wax paint. “nth tLelr ted ensign: at. half-Inlet: the Citrfnthia. the Oalsdonzrt, mo Anfanin and the Athenla, the first of all the lost liners of tlna w", And In other port/s there Will on other guest liners that N:w York the Arandorn 61.11:. wlrch itssd to take Brltah tourist! t» Scttth America. ntrw gene with 12in strugztng pzfsarers in one of the most ghastly cf all sen traged- les: and the black-hurled Rawal- pzndi. which d/d its out. frr - an CHARLOTTETCWN G-UARDYAN (From the New “York Sun) The European war has contrib- uted a consnlerable addition to the stock o.‘ the world's slang. "Some newer terms," any: a Royal Air Force authority, “are ‘fan’ for ulrscrew, ‘station master’ for the commanding officer, and ‘spun-in’ for a bad mistake. To ‘pancake’ an airplane is now to ‘crack down on the deck.’ ‘Pins calls for ‘tearing of a strip’. oth- erwise to reprmiand. No longer dws an enterprising airman ‘win a wanted article; he ‘organizes’. When suuoles have been arranged, those supplies have been ‘laid on.’ If an airman Ls ‘fed up.’ he Ls ‘brown- ed off.’ If something displenses, ‘a bia foefielci Hlglivrayt heat-t of the Rocky Mountains was an engineering feat. _ tions the driveway ls almost 0,000 feet. above 52a level, It takes its name from a huge ice cap of 110 square miles which rests 1111611 (I19 Canadian Rcckzesi glacier in the world, outsde of the Slang Of ThisiWar lThe Great Columbial Icefield (Major Fred Bre ster in ‘"111’: Camdian Nauoztal 148821-1119? On Dominion Day. at ms MM- bsaka Glacier Chalet, a par 0X’ golden scissors snIPPEd B , nhbon stretching acrcss the w.de. even surface of R 1118b“??- a magtuflcent, Scent: drive officially open w the b01111“- white Then was this tiew Colum- To construct through the In some sec- the largest poor view’ Ls taken of it. Some- Arctic Cjfclg thing badly done Ls ‘a black’. The Let us mOlOl‘ over tnfs new correct method of doing anything National Parks Hignvratt. We are is ‘the right. drill.’ Bomb drop- ping to the P.. A. F‘. pilot, is ‘egg- aylng.“ And a "blornde Job," we are told. is a young woman with fair hair. The German airmen, says the same British authority, also have their slang, “some of it quite 111- comprehensible even to the most orthodox Nazi layman.” The fam- out. Messersohmltt ‘plane Ls com- manly called the "flying brick.” Other terms to describe Nazi air- craft are “bavhtub" and “trunks! All metal aircraft is "brass don- key"; a heavy bomber is a "pan- technlcon.” The general name for German pilots is “Emf1" and for observ- ers "Franz". An observer Ls also a "staff-goggles". A young airman is a “hare"; an we pilot is a "can- non"; an old pilot. ls called "peace- ful Emil", and a. crew is called a term meaning more or less a flying family. Bombs are “eggs" or "cl- gars." To open flre with a. machine gun ls "to bloat". Searchllghts are “glowwomisfi to be shot down 1n flames is “dismount. hot.” The weather forecasters of the Reich meteorological service are cynlcaly called the "false prophets." "Quisllngfi the “Fifth Column." the “Trojan horse” and "Blitz- krieg" are easily among the most- wldely known slang words born of the present war, and all four are likely to find a permanent plaoe In the world's language. ‘The name Quisling, says Weltwoche, a Zurich independent weekly "twill go down in history not because he was the spearhead of the fifth column vrhich helped pave the way for the invaders. but because his name has entered the latiguagcs of the world as a generic term for a new type of traitors who hope to win at least a. nominal power by surrender- ing their countries to foreign ag- gresscrs." Napoleon Andiifler (Exchange) The fact that not since the cam- paigns of Napoleon have so many European governments been over- turned and so many countries seiz- ed by a. milvtant. clzctatcr a5 1:1 the present. extraordinary chapter of son of the two chapters of history. Except for the military and pol- itical domination which ensued on bcth occasions, however. contrasts are as striking as resemblawes. Napoleon's conquest-g, occurred largely where the people of the conquered country were 1n svm- pa-thv with his policies. He freed great Columbia fccl son knows. high 11p in the mcutztaiits, but the day ls “arm. Wild flowtus pro- vide a profusion of color heHve-en patohes of snow and lee. We may see big horn sheep or‘ goats, on a distant. ridge. _ 55.1119 5,000 feet above us, again. 15 a t-tew world-a sve;rd1_v' world, unlike atiythntg we ever seen. mountain But beautiful have We stare wit-h unbelleving eyes. No matter where we lock -_ even to the far-off skytlines-evetfwhefe we see masses of mountain snow-treated eak=. their szrlcs n-gllt- ter with D\\'-l1fl1lg11lg ntassrs 0f foe. ‘There seemsno and to this Va.=t._ while Iflttd. dead land. —al1ve with But it is nct a It 1s very much alive veins of fire that glint in the sun. I have often been asked depth 0f the ice nackcri on 1 <1 the this I only k1 w the highway you EmrI~I may see towering ice-cliffs 500 feet high; almost the height. of the tallest. building in the Britssh Eimpire. I also know the Athaba-"ka Glacier, a part of the mzrltty T(‘(‘flt‘l(l, ccmes so close to the Columbia Iccfieltl Highway that one can get out of a car and walk in perfect safety upon its pitted surface. Yet, this glacier. itself, covers the five peaks of Mount Athabaska. And so thick is this 12c on the mountain top that its chain of fve peaks appear as one biz nmss of snotty Ice. I I I I This Aihatbaska Glacier is only one finger stretched out from the Columbia Icefield. Yct the Ice ls so thick it. crtwvls over both sides of the mct1r1ta;t1 and blots out its range of peaks. In those 110 square miles which the Icefic-ld COVCTS, there must be valleys completely choked by ice. Hcw deep they are no one knows. _ Snowy Dome Moun- tain 1:1 the heart of the Columbia Icefreld is 11.340 feet high. And glaciers cling all over it. So one can only guess the depth of the Ireflcld. The Columbia. Ioefleld ls a. hang- over from the Glacial Age, when the Continent was almost blotted out by a re1entlc=s shifting of bu- llvns 0f tons of ice anti sticw. life utas blot-ted out. 1 - 1 Nazi conquest his led w Comlparb agfgyptrus ted beneath its enormous All Evernlnig After teas of thousands of years, the glaciers melted and drew back to the Arctic. lumbla Icefield was left, so man might know scmetmti: of the vast forces of nature. The Co- Now, the tflllSlfllCflfitt of the Columbia Iceficld Highway tnakes it. possible for anyone to come and see what. the ivurld looked like 1n the Italian states from Austrian me Glacmt Ag£\__]‘l1al1‘v tvhonsqndg tyranny; the people of Holland were pro-French 1n the beginning: the mntaller independent states of the Germany as it. then was were divided 1n sympathy. A5 the price of military victory, Napoleon wrest- as Austria and Prussia, but. he would usually leave the existzntz goverrunen-Bs to continue function- mg. ' Ii; ls true, he created kingdoms out. of scme smaller states like Holland and Westphalia, over each of which he placed a brother of his own as ruler. But. that was a matter of personal ambLt on. cul- minating In the disastrous attempt to install his brother Joseph on the Spanish throne. Ilt. ls also true that. even in Austria and Prussia, ne undertook 1n matters of policy to matte I hegemony of h‘s vwn. This kind of domination went. 50 far as. in the later years of his under his own command by citizens of the defeated countries. In his Russian campaign o; 1812, the 000.000 was drawn from other countries than fiance. Even Prus- sia. and Austria contributed 50.000 as the quota. lm-posed cn them after thtraqlrtfiiefeaitluln field. 0 I18 e s, has yet been Viiible in the Nazi campaigns: hevemlelesé. the Gemmns have a of yterirs ago. awe-inspiring world. terrible in glrtterlng death. But grateful that the Columbia ft. c . ed territory from such larger stat-es tflll remain d M n take thcir rise from tn,- of the Cclutrabia Iccfir-‘tl And tliev entnty lllif) tlirco —- the Columbia south and west to the Parrittc- the Saskatchewan. ' rles to Hudson Ian-tic: and the ncrtlnvarti to the —-With career, to require military service Jobs for men bllflflfil in U115 wqq a DImFIQH-fi Research Advkcrv Com- mit-tee of industrial of Napolecnlq armv of 1a.! leaders has been Spinning and Weaving It was a world of bcauty _ - its in we nmv be “'35. Today one of the tt-ontfcrs Of OX!‘ modern age. ‘Phrce great. rivers of the was; mr-itin: IZIJClLTS. oreans River. running watering the pral- Bay and the At_ Athabaka, flowing Arctic. .________________ FOR FUTURE AID ST. DUNSTAN. Lmgland -- rcpt a ‘view to tfndmg 5111mm“ wldlcrs- SRIIQ-“s and air- St. and cnttnntrc- fcrmcd. Send me your wool to i, 5 vastl larger pmbtqn we; , I! Illln lulu handlsl m endeavor,“ w lgtulpose m: {pp-p and woven Into blankets. 1m.- conquered countries not. only p01- itioal restraint but their own so- cial and economic ldeologv, which the P601119 of countries like Nor- way, Denmark and Holland (not. to mentllon Rance) detest. Na- leon was boo wise to do this or did Nlaapoleon make a point o! destruction and terrorism of the civilian pop-titration, such as was lately visited on Poland. To match the Nlazil record in this regard, 0m! must so back t... the Thirty Years War. and even so. one must re- Wm be p nuamtber that. the particular horrors of that conifuct were the work of undisciplined armies. whereas 11p- to-dB-fe "Schreclullchkeit." i5 tit-lib. erately planned. threatened and carried out under orders 1-_-______... IlAHORE, Imlla - (GP) — Slm- ultaneous raids at 16 cinemas here were carried out by police in search of urlotts coins of different de- n nations. Indian Ocean, only to meet. its m» in the cold waters off Iceland. A11 of bhem were parts or the pellceful world that has vanished with them. They stood for friendliness and free communications bevween navcns They were good friend; wn: c" they sailed. 0n low-t n” s shall hear their sirens, and we shall remember them. - New 1..._ Times. What Goes On when’ Your Board Qomgestaff?‘ Viol, When You Use That Grand COLONIAL CLUB SHAVING CREAM blanket. burrs and dirt plckctl out, i T filllglif yarn medium, and doubled yarn. IS fine, medium.‘ 11nd 003756. also Imokiitg yam name. nddrc ers name and instructiuiis i . Durst-Is. Dlcked while es are: 23 cents for single yum, doub ed 26 rents pet- pout“! Blank- ct cost $2.001 u - - ‘ . Iuimdcred $1.85?!“ "uh and If u" II. lakes live pounds of worn per Wool must be well WZISIINLIIIJ he size of Put shippers Send by mall or freight. Freight aid on 100 pound lnl. IIIghest price for u-t-ll washed dry, . wool. "b11165! nrico for unwashed wool. Auto robes, bIankt-ts and Fancy Bed Throws for sale. WM. CONDO ' P. 0. Box 395 65 Qlibcn Street. V V”Charlntlol_r1_1vn_ _ UNCLE ZEB Shrervd in his time! SIN/Iii} 0'03"?’ °.'.‘...'.'L"’J;.‘.' . "Yws a Cll A N GE BUT "huh" to n In mum‘ - || Yrs E- L l NEVER - vioun crust/tn onus stout LINES 0N THE EXPECTED INVASION 1111031 _ Come ywwho of (which Heaven ti aver J the Land were with herself at strife. would take your stand Like gallant Fulk. d. by the Mun- arclrs side. And, like Montrose, make Loyalty your prlde- ‘ Come y€—Wl10, not less zealoum might GISPIBY Banners at enmity with regal sway And, Illie the Pyms and Mdwns t1 that day, 'I‘l1lnk tnat a State would lfvefin sounder healtn 1f klngship botveu its head to Com- monwealth- Ye too-whom no cllscreditable fear woud kee . perhaps with. will? I- frul ess tear, Uncertain what to choose and how to s eer- And ye-who might mistake fcx- sober sense And wise reserve the plea of lndo- if l‘ $ is Guplek I! ll‘? P0r'l|i| SEE YOUR NEAREST PIIIICO Elli]! nee- Come ysk-whatlnrer your creed — 0 '———-————- wa en Whateer your temper, l! Y0“! T0 EAVE CROPS Country's call; Resolving ithis a free-born Nation can) To have one Soul, and perish £0 a man. Or save this honored Land from But Bliiflgl. Iirgbgon and the British’ sword. -Wl111am Wordsworth. wtmon _ for» _ E. m, farming dmtrictg have been I-qu, ed with hand fire-fighting a“? ment for use In case the ~53 crops are set- aflre lyy qjfiug bombs from raiding planes. Professional Cards t? iii-i ll. F. AIIGIIIBIILII Chi-fiend Accountant I40 Richmond street Phone I‘! P.0. Box 1: i tnnirf’ ., . SWIM GAPS i ~ Why not visit our ICOIQkI-HII ; InsDccI. our stock of B - ‘\ l Caps before making your pur- ,1 Y chase. We have a complete stock of a Bathing Caps In the very , latest shades and ranging In and Attorneys-std." price from 25c In 75c. \ MONEY To LOAN See also our large stock 0! lguzil-Julolug 593e," l Sun Glasses priced from 15¢ , -_ ‘° 5"” t‘ ALEX w. MATHESON BARRISTER, SOLPCITOB. BTU. McLECD a. BENCTLEY W. E. BENTLEY. K-C. J. A. BENTLEY. KL‘. MACS "an; tea... marital." Charlottetown pltg-prngthens and beautlfles the M’ ALB'A_N""'FAW"ET"_' B.A.. LL-B. BARRISTER. SOLICITOR. ETO. Bank of Canada Building, MONEY TO LOAN i ‘ A dcllmtely perfumed pre- paration wh ch restores, \ - t U It will restore gray hair to Ill y ti. natural color and produce a i \’ rich and abundant growth 0| t hair. Price 60c. 1 if! Order by Mall Today. “fir. EXAMINEU Glasses Fitted J. S. TAYLOR Optometrist s New Location Corner 0| Kent m! Queen Street l lwslte RI’ G lgrenlng Apglntggnefrly.) Phone House 1013. ALBERTON OFFICE ._ Q ber1_E_v_cry_ gafurtlay. NOTICE Our Office and warehouse will be closed from Thursday, July 25th to Thursday, August 8th to allow the bookkeeper and his family tn en- ' Joy u well earned holiday. A Ilst u! our Accounts Recelvnble will be at the Canadian Bank of Commerce, Charlottetown. Any farmer desiring to makers payment on their account or note can do so by calling at the Bank. We have an excellent Inquiry for early Turnlps. I hope that WI‘ will b” able l" 5MP cars around August 20th. Get In touch with us as sue 11s your early Turnlps are large enough to ship. Thanking you for your Pltronage. Q 1m. EVANS l‘ srotuacu MIXTURE ~_ / t 4 We highly recommend this 9 1 preparation for people suffer- l ‘t Ing from Stomach Distress after eating, heartburn, Acfd t.» and sour stomach. If It ls the finest Stomach ‘y’; Mixture that money can buy its Evans. Price 55c per bottle. r11: rwo MAGS FRANK B. CLARKE Charlottetown IAR SAVINOO ' ‘ STAMPS i '" .-\ LTD. OLD TIMERS AND NEW TIMERS When the "l-litzhchoker” and moustache werfl all the rake our Tobacco got the okay of Island- ers. That okay ls still in style lodrty- Oldsfers "ml Yvungsters approve HICKEY’S B L A C K TWIST 10c PER FIG‘ STRAIGHT Manufactured by i 111cm s. mcnotson Tobacco Co. Ltd" Charlottetown, P. E. I- E. T. moss to oi). cJ