Aoejririt Tlli CIAILITTETUIII GUARDIAN Morning Rally (Founded In llll) Prcstdentzjlleut. Col. W. Charter B. Mel-urn V Jrutdeut: J. ll. Burnett, FJJ. Secretary: Lteut. Col. l). A. Maoklnnon. 0.8.0. r sud Managing Director: J. B. Burnett, FJ-l. ldlto Anoclalc Editors: I-rank Walker and LteutJauA. Burnett, B.C.N.V.B. (On Active Service) “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." FRIDAY. OCTOBER l5. 1M3 No Time To Relax The fear has been expressed in some quarters that the coming Victory Loan appeal will be handicapped by the feeling of complacency which has arisen with the rising fortunes of the Allied troops in litirope, that the war is so close to its cud that there will be no further need of large Victory Loans. If there is a tendency t0 relax and rejoice, s'.trt'ly' there tnust always exist I feeling of grim dctvsrntinaliou to drive the last nail in Iliilri-‘s coffin as speedily as it can be done. This, must be the paramount considera- tion, and itothing lllllwl interfere with it. Thera- is itotltiug the >lft)'"1ll-i.-)|ll(‘> could do more to bring this about than by stibscribitig to the Fifth revenues. Will it be necessary to retrendron social service expenditure, or resort to borrowing again? Perhaps the question can be solved by a sound rehabilitation programme. Newfoundland has vast natural resources and the development of these should provide far higher standards of living than was possible in the past. Tillers‘ seems no good reason why, under proper man- agement, the country should not go forward with the rest of the continent into a new" era o! prosperty in the postwar years. — EDITORIAL NOTES - The welcome sound of the City Clock is heard again after a four months’ vacation. a m 4- a Sure sign of Allied victory when the waver- ing neutrals announce in which direction their sympathies lic. n- u- r \Vestcrn farmers can be fooled about many things, says The Letter Review, but no one is going to fool them into believing anything except that wheat traditig was suspended in \\'innipcg, to keep the price of w*hcat fiom rising. 1F 1F Prime Minister King thinks it intperative he should sit in at the Peace Conference. But he was of similiar opinion regarding the I932 Im- Virmrv Loan. "Sin-rd The Victory" is the highly up: >lngztn for this campaign, but it must be lll',‘,l‘L‘ lllllll_ zt slwgziuj it itiust be a prophecv made true. Fhi-uld the war} cnd come within" the next thu months. or within the next twoi years, it will be fivlluwed by twthcr Yictorv Loans‘ just ll.- lll£\‘>~;ll'_\' 1A5 the l>l'4‘.~(.’lll one, itist as im-l purlznlt as any preceding Loan. I Potato Pit-Storage ln hlalnv. wlr-ru the lylato crop is cstimalcil at 6;.ooo.nou bu>h<l-_ llicrc is tall; of employing nit-sloriluw lw lllCCi the shortage of potato-houses and the slow movement by rail. Pit-storage in “nine is a method of fifty years ago but it mav be tried. (me of the biggc-t growers in the Saint john vallev is rpzntv-(l bv the Frrdrtirlolt (JI/‘(HIFV as saying that. Ilcspitt- reports to the contrary, pit- MHYJZC wor vvrv well. The pits are scooped out of the Qrnilllfl. liuctl with straw. filled with! pr-tntnt‘ ull a pr ltrctlv»? C1>\’('l'lllZ of straw poles and earth placed ovcr lllt'n1. .\Ianv millions of bushels were stored this way a half century‘ ago and by present indict- tiotis swuc of the 19 ntilliozi surplus barrels this yw-ni" wiil be storctl the satuc way. The tilt-storage itlca has been talked up for the past several weeks in New Brunswick. and probably will be used onlv as a last resort. Mauv of the mozlcrit growers believe the potatoes will be iniurctl either from prcsstirc or from frost The old lllll(“f.\‘. lmwcvcr. disagrcgnatitl figure it is about the only salvation for a lot of spuds. Newfou nTdland 's Prosperity Were it nut for wartime transportation re- strictions, our trade with Newioutidland should be greater this year than it ever was in the past. l The war has brought unprecedented prosperity to the Ancient Colony. Never before in the colmliys hlstury- has it been possible to budgctl for an expctlditurs; oi $1,000,000 for education and 554200.000 for public health and welfare, nor would this be IlOSSllJlC now were it not for. the immense incrczlsc in revenue returns. But‘ these l'(‘ltll'll>' at due entirely to the greatly iil—' creased l>rlv>pcrily which the country has etijoy- ed under war conditions. The 5f. _l0hn's liveli- ilrfl Trlvg/rnlu, .\'ewfottnrlland’s oldest and best known ll(‘\\'~‘]3ftPCl'. exlnrcsscd serious concern as to whether this period of prosperity will outlast the w '. Prior to the opening of hostilities Newfuuud-l land had no ncczuilm to worry ovcr deficits, since | they were met by the British Treasury. Follo\v-' ing the outbreak of war. Newfoundland decid- ed to relicvc Uritllln of this financial obligation which she lizld twinned when Liovcrmuent by Conunissioit wa< instituted. In view of the cer- tainty that the burden which British taxpayers hear will have to be shouldered for some yearsl after peace l~ dt-rlzireil. cottld Newfonutlland con- tcutplzttc .'i~l,iuq tlui Imperial (itl\‘f‘l'lllll€lll1 later tn revert t-i the fwritici‘ artangetncn‘. of meeting, the cit-t of i1» budget deficits? The St. John's paper replies firmly in the ticgntivc. N0 citizen who ll" >L‘ll~t‘ of national pride, it says, bu‘. look; to l t-> the thy when the restora- tiwu of .\"v. it llttul to ll('l' full status of self- gui null lk- achieved. But such tesf pmt-ilnlitv u ll nnpm-t: cnrirspott<liltg financial . *l\liL'Jlllt1ll\. ' .1.‘ , “rd i -' tweutv lllllllOll ll'l\, mar runs ‘ I King. he Way — perial Conference, yet it was Prime Minister lennett who attended. ‘v >|< n- ln this war, as in the last, Army Chaplains have suffered a high percentage of casualties. In the British Army, there are 2,000 uniformed chaplains. Up t0 the nligldlc of September, eigh- teen of them had been killed in action, forty- one wounded, and one hundred twcnty-hvo taken prisoner. Six have been reported missing. ill It‘ i! Ill A wage ceiling which does not prevent such an intportltnt group as farm labour front obtain- ing increases is scarcely a contribution to pre- venting inflation. After all, when wages rise as in the case of farm help, it is not likely that the farmer can avoid raising his prices. and farm prices are the itiost impurtzmt factor in the national economy, at all times. ' i A‘ I Allan Ramsay, Scottish poet, born this date i686; published several collections of poems, but is bcst retuemberetl as the author of "The Gentle Shepherd", a dramatic pastoral of the realistic type,’ in 1740. largely through his efforts, the first regular theatre was opened in lidiitbtirgh; he revived vernacular poetry, and prepared the way‘ for Fcrgusson and llurns. "Let fuwk bode wccl, and strive to tlu their best; Nae tuairs retpiired-let lleztven make out the rest." a a a n .\'0 ztnlount of political skill can save labour, Quebec. or the Prairies for .\Ir. liiltg a: next election, says a Tittrontt» exvhzttlgt‘. The Prairies can bc won for .\lr. Bracken. In liC. and the Maritimes, they seem to have about cqttal chances. In Otttario, the iron-labor seats are more likely to support .\Ir. Ilracltcu tliztu l\lr. If Mr. llrackeit strikes the right note in his opening speeches, indepcndettt voters who are unwilling to sec a Socialist ii(l\'t'l’lllllL‘lll, or one dominated by a Quebec isolationist bloc. tilzty rally strongly tn .\Ir_ llrztckeu, as at least ltaviug a chance of a clear victory. >i< t1 =l< * Because of the ncccssitv of sending aircraft to the Middle East, Russt. India and China throttglt West Africa, British “lest African colonies have been intensivqtv developed (luring the war. .‘\(’rO(ll‘(ll1lt‘S were built rapidly — in Nigeria alone thereare thirty large airficlds, with control rooms. hangars, and all the scr- vices that go with them. Many industries have arisen for the production of building materials, leather and cotton goods. and cvery kind of woodwork; and local fruits have been preserved and local meat dricd, to scnd to Allied armies. Post-war West Africa itiay not ‘need all the acrodromes, but the industries and transport organizations will be of lasting benefit. w a is v ‘ Cattle breeders from Canada and the United States paid more than $40,000 for 47 pure-bred shorthorn cattle, picked from three Ontario herds, at a dispersal sale last week at Union- villc. Ont. The cattle were picked from herds tiwned by “f. _l. Russell. Unionville, K. C. tirny, Gormley and Stanley Douglas, Calc- tlmua. Biggest prices of the sale, $2,500 each for three ltead, were paid by thee Ontario cattle- mcn. The cattle hrotight an average of $940. 1GP lm-“e for the 5tzinlcy Douglas ltcrd. which a"“"'§.'°d $552 a ltead, ivas flit/Li. paid for a cow, Brmvndale Non-parcil, by R. Kelcc, Mary- ville, Miss bulls owned by W. l. Russell aver- ~'\l.'@<l_$I.I‘07 and cows, $1.077. Six cows sold by l\. C. (tray :iveragcd $l.3;'5. "Wt/hat ithlsvcountry i needs}; L tin paraphrase Tom Marshall's famous b0“ K110i. ls more hard candles. Try dollars-a sum out of all proportion to llre-ivarl — NotesiByi T [hen there's the farmrrette who mT-“tcnz; hi!‘ hands at bridge When- evci‘ $173625 are trump ~Branclon Sun. And, of course, the patriotic bride and grocm itiake the salvage depot their first stcp to get’ rld of the shoes and tlnvxarv. --Chri.=tizin Scl- cnce Monitnr. We have Oltlvrllll"! one man who lined has tzelultboui- better‘ than himself. She was n widow with four sections of laud and $20,000 ln Victory binds. —~Qttelzec Chi-onl- cle Ielctzraph. The proprletcr of an Edmonton’ ccffro shop zlcztltucs to lay a charge akalrst. a man who put his flst through a iuke box. Apparently a gentleman who rcccvnizps extreme provocation when he secs lt. —Ed- moutnn Journal The man customer In the neigh- hoxrliocd butcher" sllCp was grip- lne lllf‘ other thy. We haven't got tlu: lll\‘ Pore and we havent‘ got that l-' complaints were .. : "Yes, and m. n lat cf this nelgh~ sun‘! men around here ' either.“ -Mllwliukee Thus;- ri-rrnt traln wrecks have hn-n rclimrrl ut- m,» um- newfi hut Ihrv sbntllrin‘! hp fm-gnttpn There's n llne in this press about the probe now and then. but noth. lng to make the publlc feel safer. Common sense would seem to re- quire thnt these extra speedy pas- senger trains cut their time away down for the dumtton. Moving war suppllea and troops ls the 1m- portant Job, not whisking the pub- llc around at hlghlv dangerous speeds, I'd reduce the pace of the deluxe passenger flvers down to a crawl lf it will prevent these hor- rlble wrecks. Most of the folks demanding the super-service are not going anywhere important. — Dave Boone. ln New York Sun. The business of attachlng wolf falls to cars and blcycles has become a mon one, popularly supposed to prevent the carrler from meet- mg Dame Misfortune tn accidental guise. But. one cltlzen the other day thought for a moment that the fad had brought hlm no luck at all. The cttlzen was a blg collie do; whose mother perhaps had been frltzhtencd by a wolf. Whatever his orlgln, he was the possessor of a flne personal brush which he waved gallv as he meondered through a crowd of cltv shoppers. Then he spotted the bicycle leaning against a store front. complete with wolf tall. He approached lt. casunllv ie- Rnrtled lt. sniffed once. Suddenlv consternation struck hlm. He. took a startled sten backward and snan- oed his head around to look for his own tall. It was ln lts usual plow still flrmlv attached. Its owner strolled on. obvlcusly vastly rpllgvcd tongue lolllmz In a wlde cnnlne Rrln. —'I‘he Printed Word. t mmqzvree Y and Bet thorn to but ln the boxes you send overseas, lf you don't be- lleve lt- A recent news ltem reports that manufacturers can begin mak- lng hard candles ln some quantlty agnlti. That's really good news. A generation ago when the famllyt went to town Saturday evenlng t do the week's shopping. hard can? dles were a part of the rltual o shopplng. Father took a person Interest. Mother might pretend th such trlvlality was beneath her ri - tlce, but she was tolerant about it. After Father had bought the ker - sene a bag or two of grain, a. hammer handle, and a bolt for the cultivator, and Mother had swnp- Ded the eggs and butter for l, spool of No 60 black thread, a paper of common plns, a dozen safety plns, a red hali- rlbbon for Mary and a blue one for Allee. a rlalr of stock- lng for John, s piece of gingham for a new apron. ten pounds of sugar, a pound of coffee. a box of cocoa. and a can of baking soda the family gathered around the candy counter. Father llked th small round. yellow lemon drops. Each sLster spent her dlme for the rnlnbow-hued mixture which came ln the quarter-barrel keg, Johnny took flve of thr- fnt round cinna- mon sticks for flve cents and the other nlckelis worth ln green. rectangular p'~-1-ier1nlnt pieces. Mother chos- m orange-flavored flat disks. 1 mndles lasted A btx of chomln s" on the llvlng- 'Il"-l'f7."l1'l tnhlr triv prwihly hold nut more than one day. But ten cents worth of hard candles, carefully PUBLIC FORUM Iiootlaaabflnuk .\I|nlcn II -llhrloflctownlunrlc l limit in! ll TELEPHONE T0 WOOD ISLAND "WEBB-Y Slrr-Well Slr, I have at least suc- ceeded tn some information for the pifiltc from the Nortbum-l bet-land Illerrlas Illmlted on why the telephone ls not down on the who?! at. wood Islands so the publle can get the news. I know of the relu- latlons re phoning information about ships at. sea, but that does not atop ti: placing of a phone on the w arf. I may state that I rlld make oh- qulrles about the W" 07 “final” lng the head of the wharf with e farm at the top of the approach. even lf lt Ls a. rural llne, and was advised that a number of extra posts would be requlred at a nomln- al cost. so you ace I have been ln- {grestlng myself for the benefit 0f - e Ferry COMPETE’- Now thal: the subject has been queued the travelling publlc would like to know why there were only two trips a day made ln May. June and October. If. f5 during the spring and fall months that a. phone ls badly Mid- ed at Wood Islands and Mr. Match wouldn't have been called end wouldn't have to be a Drflphfl l! I phone was there. . , In l letter the Comclny states: "Mr. Home ls not aware of the restrictions about phoning "tn- formation about ships and ls a punishable offence." ‘than further down lt states "Mr. Horne should know Mr. Mutch ts not a prophet." Again "Had he been able to do so the information would have been given." Thls does not make sense; another reason for the phone being at the wharf. Among several people who turned back at l0 o'clock Monday morning were partles who had to be ln Hall- fax that night. and as the boat of- flcals couldn't promise anything positive they left for Borden. They were travelling from B a. m. to 8 p. m. to reach Halifax. which could have been avoided lf a Phone had been at the wharf. The Northumberland Ferrles lnfer that I have a grievance against the company which I have not as I al- ways enjoy the crossings. I was brouzht up to remember that the public had also to be considered. But if showinz the Ferry Service the necessity of a phone at the wharf ls a grlevance I have a grievance. I ncbe that 32.000 passengers have used that route this season. That ls wonderful but. the number would have been greatly increased lt‘ they had a phone at the wharf. Never mind a Dhozle at Carlboo for the present, as lt would prove too costly I am. Sir. etc. H. H. HORNE. Family Allowances (Orlllla Packet and Tlmest There are rumours that. as the first instalment cf a social security programme, the Dcmlnlon Gov- errment l5 considering “famlly at, the present. juncture ls the hope l forestall the demand for wages to meJ. the increasing cost of llvlug, and so to aid ln the Family allowarzczs are ln the Marsh plan fcr They take the form of a monthly allowance to towards the cost cf their children. come from Ottawa. the average allowance talked of ls $7 to $9 a Canada. month, which ls ln llne wlt-h the recimmendatlons ln the two re- por s. The case for family allowances rests on the fact. that, while it ls In the interest of the state that ren, the man who does so ls to some extent handicapped. ln the conditions of modern llfe. The re- sult has been the tendency to re- stricting famllles to one or two children, and to childles marrl- ages. Yet lt ls not practical to have wages based on the also of a man's famllles. As Archbishop Temple himself remarks, "it ls dlfflcult to say that every man, even though unmarried, should be paid at a rate needed by another man who has slx children”. This would put a stlll further premium on bachelor- hood, slnce lt would mean compar- altlve luxury. Slnce tne state ls interested ln larger farnllles It ls argued that the state should meet at least a, part of the cost. Of course, the state ls already doing considerable ln this direct- lcn. Public health health nurses befiln to take m interest tn the ch d before ft ls born: various cllnlcs. medical and dental. lend ‘thelr assistance where needed be- fore und during school years, and education ls free, even to the ex- tent of supplying books. But lt ls contended that his ls not enough. And enperlenoe. tn the form of famllles so small that they threat- en the future of the nation, bears this out. O I O It ls not, however, “ (G desirable w relieve patents of all responslblllty. or to make the total allowances a w en can t sufficient, to relleva hlm of the 5:. sue to work tn order to reoelve more income ln the form of wages. Slr Wllllam Beverldge suggests that allowances should start with the second chlld the flrst being partly for ooonomlo reasons, since, at 8 shillings a week it represents a l uctlon ln the cost of allowances of the enormous sum of £l00.000.'G'.‘ a year. Mr. Marsh seems w (prefer starting with the flrat chll . but he does that to pan lt over would be more desirable than other proposals for Xevblnrr the outlay wlthln practical llmlts. Llka Slr William Beverldlzc. he ls also part] lpl to grading the allowance ae- mvrdlflr to ace. on the ground that a child of l3 to 16 years costs Breat deal more to mnlnteln than nn lnfimt. Thus he would start lat l6 a month up to 5 years. and .110 an hlgh as $12.50 for boys and ‘elrls ot l5 and 18. The average he olaces at 87.50 a month. Prom the feelers oomlnf °_“LWE-_ _ “PPEYIEQLL-‘LL out of wfltls". , hldden and used on a regular scheq , dale. vsed to last n week. In these divs of enforced economy for many we'd be lzlnd to sec then-t back Ohrlstlan Bclencc Monlwr. . ...-....-,..,,$qr.... IAfiIf/IQI‘: wn“km bably the very reason that Government has been consfderlng beginning family allowances at the present time. payable to all famllles, rich and pcor. and the total annual payment to all families. 19-3. and poor. and the total annual payment ls estl- mating at $180,000.60 sscms hard to undersan placlng of all this money ln the hands cl th-s pubic for sorndmg wlll not dolca-t the very object the Government has lu mind. that ls to allowances" for children. The lm- hcacl oft‘ the tendency to lnflatlon mediate cause f:r taklnz ths step brought about by increased spend- w 5'- E In the reports that er or later. has declared the case for them un- answerable. ls wise for the Government to tn- troduce such a radical measure at fhls juncture. and m‘x lt- no with the price ceiling dispute. mav be oocn to qu-stlon, Though lt would appear that unlons that are men should marry and ralse chlld- poslmz the first definite move to- wards lmplementlmz the social sec- urlty for whlch hbour has been clavnourlnlz are taklnz a and near slizhtcd employment. and hlrh wages not so readllv available. the solo responsibility of the pnr- _ sack of cattle salt, some nails, a ""55- Th wlnds have stolen IE1 the nelda and towns. Unhlnsted the leaves and MMMNQ the red and pold 81'0"!!!‘- Nlpped the ears o bis-WM! Ind withered I-ll the "WW6" Then shook the ripened wd-r 1W“ tn the cool sveulul 310""- w October stands Ind aches Dhlliolglfl b23155‘ l“: acres a cobalt sky. ‘mien tints their flimsy u I“? sun-gold stolen on e Ill’. October watches. soundleI-l. ls l ma. "m? “dfélléll” t T0111 tibiae-then fades tn P1191‘ ue, The crystal nlr ls thln Ind 619" and stlll—above lt all. And we are loft. to wonder at the glory of the Fall. ——Lawrence A Smith tn ‘Phi. ‘llallllb “M9110 w m; m allowances wltb the first cshlld, buf, to limit them to llX ohlldren. This latter restriction l! doubtless designed to forestall the objeotlon that unllmlted allowance! would suhsldlse large farnllles in Quebec at the expense o! 0m" provinces. The $9 wlilch ls men- tioned at the probable monthly all lowance would mean that DEW-ill" with slx children would receive $54 a month, or $648 B i981’. which ls B5 much as a wldow now re- cetves ln a mother's allowance to bring up a family of slx. Certain- ly it would be a substantial addit- lon to low wage income». Income Tax Allnwancel Presumably the allowance f0 widowed mothers would cease or be modlfled, 1f there were child- ren's allowances. And the present allowance off Income tax of $108 l '05,: would almost certainly be withdrawn, which would mean that income tax payers would nothing from the famfv allowances as long as the present tax con- tinues. At present the anomalous situation ls that the Slim? 500N555 the children of the rlcli, but not those of parents ln too low an tn- corne bracket to pay income tax. The proposal to pay family Il- loilrannos (ces not meet with the approval of some of the labour uti- tons. They fear that such payment might lnterf-zre with thcli demands for higher wages. This is Since they wlll be a year. lt d why the rig power-unless, ind-ted. ln the that. thereby ll: may be possltle to case of higher brackets the bulk higher of the money ls taken back ln tax- Family allowances would. how- flght against inflation. ever, be a boon to parents ‘with included large fatnllles whose bread wznner ln both the Beverldge plan for soc- ls ln the lower wage brackets. Pro- lal security for Grrat Britain and perly made use of. they would go far tovmrd: ellmlnntlng the pov- paymerit rf erty that has so devastating an ra ents effect on vovtb. ' malntalnlng question that they wlll con‘: soon- Thern :5 not much Archbishop Temple Wrethcr. however, tt OD- selfish vlew. If fa l‘lv Pllowances wlll bezln now. w ‘lo themountry t~ prosperous. they would be a yzfllsettd tn clays when are WIILIIIFI SLEEP 00lll.ll|l”l' WORK Who! a rsllslb settle down has rail‘ M’: M IO I‘ I i nfrulnd, really Jbulafululiu. Tm-twflfi ~ -~ M‘ I u ing-nnvcr comfortable. llalfljah days _qyfl-fllld,ifllll| ud-atllowuk vhenlbcyncstlcdrut.‘ zllodtlbllidlcy Pillsfluida friusd—‘ Ilybcysi bidnc "Jhtglnllillliolllildvietll mlmlonllcltlmup-tlanluu ut Dodcl’: Kidney Pills I I Send for Sussex "and celebrate. Whether it's a wedding or I send-off. dfmk the toast with Sussex Ind it surely wlll mlki a hlt. For nlsh "' uuca the UALITY drln of the Marltlmcl- [EAIIERS/ifi YEARS It is a tradition with Penmans skilled designers to build into every garment a smartncss in keeping with the times. Since its inception in 1868 the Pen-Angle label has _stood for styling suited to the current mode, yet sacrificing nothing to comfort and quality. I y KNITTED PlllllllllilS. lIllllEllWElll ~ lltlSlEltY ~ llllllllflilll ' _ GREEK DERIVATION The word anchor orlglnatcd fiiom CANADIAN FLA X grown flax average‘ l? OF HIGH QUALITY better ln locllne number. In felt —-—— comparisons DEL“... -n'\! ---~~9 -~~-» ' the Greek “mm melmmg cf”! The quallty of Canadian flax m canadlan flax, tin- tune content or hook and the old Grecian an- eomparlson with that of other of the Canadian llaxseed was chore were ln this form. countrles ls very favorable. states the Domlnlon Department of Ag- riculture ln a report on Oll Seeds Investigations. Iodine In the oll eon- tent ls lmportant. In a study of four varieties of flax grown at 54 statlons from Alaska to Mexlco. the lodlne number from the sam- plea grown in Canada exceeded those from any other repklpn eXCBDlI u wes un- iiiisetriicfliiiiiiiii Asheoosinnarea wlth Kim: Christin‘ "“ "v " g Plains and Northern the services of Warburz. who ll " blflififfiegisn, where most of thelcredlted with saving me LAIOII’ clingy“ dlntn ' tn a summer illness. ID” b U. 8. ero la Ifflwn. "W 011191‘! “"115 m” d“ v M "m, "m" ‘m, "n, ' ' of experience and a lhulolldl retracting service. Call tn Ind discuss W" difficulties. Writ; or phone for appointments- ti. F. llutcheson AND SON I. O. IIIJTCHESON O- I. IUTCBISON somewhat higher. wnauisu KING srocxuoaiial oll. l2 - (AP) -—The Germans at the personal re- quest of Klng Christian X have released his personal phystelan. How Are Your Eyes‘? ll you are havln 110M"! strain — bu aches. l0" m - consult s Prof. Eric Warburg. arrested ln s reu roundup cf Danlsh Jews. tne Danish Press Service "elrl Qt’. laden . l Aunt l/irfaryf 1 MACS’ _ HAIR RESTORER, . .A delloltelhnporfumfld 9"’ [aeration w b reltflnlr Nlllflloll and bolutltlfl tb hair. ' lfirtom Grey or FM" to Ill original all!“ what-bar Black, Brown, It burn. ‘ cr_Au u; growth ‘hum t-lildl‘: II w era a I r fnllln and ls remarkably uefu In preventing dandruff and destroying parasitic hill’ killers. Just follow the film” lions carefully and vou W"! at the result}!- DQI bottle. _.-_..- MACS PERFECT WORM POWDER! to safe and effective. £31m ma: w. gallant some 110'" gmlghlng the pill boxes and clear- ing the way. Buy 5th Victory .,1.~.,._t.,l,,.». M. ism-a» ~- I-w M“ "i" “m” '°°" fifi-llttffrfm“ mania-iot- ywznrf“! harass. on you: don't ct 8m 0W0- “mo” Buy ma ‘Peed fink vipmq! A I rfanl! fllrmlel‘ b”- pcraton tor restrain: n: and panama In the slr ' children. . gfhghffif ORY LOAN ca: “as: '*t.::.~i.......-. Prlca 35o per bottle. mu oi-am Gtven Prom" Attention TIIE Wlfl MAGS _ m Great (horn 51"" Sponsored b)‘ THE PURE MILK _ CO.