THE CITARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN and will be beaten, although the cost will be heavy. The Times concedes that the task ahead today is probably stiffer than at any moment in the first great war. With japan and Italy on the op- posite side, the alignment of forces is less favor- able. But in the last war Russia was driven out of the war before the United States entered it. This time both these great powers are in it tn- gether. While the news from Russia has been consistently bleak for the past two months, there is little chance of Russia being driven out of the war his year, although Germany may make more gains. If a second front cannot be established this year, it will be estiablishcd next spring and, although the way to victory may be long and dark, the Nazis will in the end be beaten. Elton FOUR g i TIIE ciuniorrizrowii GUARDIAN lilorniiig Daily (Founded in 1887) Presirlmeiiti Lieut. Col. w. Chester s. MoLdre Vice President: J, R. Burnett, FJJ. Secretary: Lieut. Col. i). A. lilncltinnon. 0.5.0. Editor and hlilliiigliig Director. J. l~- Bllfnfl‘. FJ-l- Associate Editors: l-raiik Walker and Inn A. Willi!" 5l'BS(‘R1P‘l‘l()N RATES By Mail in l‘.l~l.l.. $4.00 per year; 52.50 for 6 monthl. $1.25 for Li months; 50c for one month City Deliver; $5.00 per year; 53-00 "If 5 "will!" $1.75 fur 3 uioiithsn Mic for one ‘Math B M ‘l t flier Provinces and U.S.A. . P" l9" Sziurdtlly TYgekly: $2.00 per W1"; 51-00 l" 6 llmnlhl- le fiir 3 months \ may be oblulned It fiiiies Square, New York‘, Old South Nous Agen , Corner Milk and Washinllfln Boston; Metropolitan News ABBIWY. 1243 P!" 5L- Montreail; .i. Fine 354 Bay SL, Toronto: News Stand. Chateau laiiiricr. Uttairii; Wolfe's News Stand Sub- bury Ont: llub 'l'obueco Shop. Munctnn B. __ "The Stronqest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink." nioxiiav, surrealism: 14. 1942 The (Tliarioticluvrn (iunr ' Hotallings News .\i;e — EDITORIAL NOTES- During a political campaign an angry candidate strode into a newspaper office. “Look here," he cried. “You've been printing lies about me in your paper." “That's right,” replied the editor. "l know it, but ~good night, man —~\vhat would you do if we told the truth about you?" Delays Are Dangerous - It‘ i i There were ii i l1~il llill> iii the declaration of t7iii=ei"v;iiivc party gTOUP - ‘Ill l'iil't llope laSt week. he Financial Post. . l gathering which '. ".\\I "We demand im- ,~.....gription of the inan- ‘ for‘ the armed services for iuwrlil." and after prolongctl . wrriniiciit uttered this "lie result was an over- ilir an all-out war effort. :'ii~ lM-t, appayetitly chose Illllt‘l'\\'l\‘t' because, so far . ' ii‘ military" service is coll- . "l Zllllitlil exactly the same z-i- li"i~:‘e the plebiscite was ever It is announced by the Canadian High Com- missioner's office in London that the Dominion's fighting forces, enlisted voluntarily for service anywhere, now total 430,000. Of these the air force accounts for 110,000, the navy 30,000. and the army 290,000. These figures are exclusive of the reserve army of men called up under their age groups for training. Between 600,000 and 700,000 men and women are engaged directly or indirectly in munitions production in Canada. I! 1K war poiicv by 1' which lll 1 i. lust 1n.» ill i. fill"- suiimi. l. u"- ‘i ‘ iveiii incdi;i:t~ PU“ Q1‘ tll‘ ~. ‘luiv in ll'.\' pi". Oil lb ' "ll \' The Society of U. S. Restaurateurs have open- ed a campaign to urge diners to conserve food and t0 substitute oysters, plentiful this year, for meat when possible. ;\ special bullctiii stiggesis that menus carry the inscription: “Food will wiii the war ——eat plenty, eat wisely, but without waste." Paul llenkel, society president, said restaurants, anticipating meat rationing, are bi:- ginning t0 "push" spaghetti, sea food and other non-meat meals. have seen little actual Llll_\' iiiiuiite they may be the invasion of Europe. illlllltlliillly made clear by the llil‘_\' Ollllll be seriously if not I by the laclc of fully trained v i It has been intimated, in the House of Com- mons itself, (says Printed Word), that some young fellows are doing such valuable work in non-combatant activities that they should be praised for any disincliiiation they may have t0 join up. But it would seem as if a realistic view of the war situation demands that the armed forces try to find a combatant job for every man who is physically fit and young enough. And the more brains the better. The only exceptions might be highly-skilled munitions makers, and then only if older men, oi- men of lesser physical standards, could not do the work. t it iti is It is refreshing to have a member of our Great Silent Service stick up for our way of life com- pared with that of the Germans and the japs. Speaking in the British llouse of Commons re- cently Rear Admiral Beamish, M. P. declared: “A very great advertisement for our system, and the worst advertisement for the German system. is that we, an unprepared nation, have managed to stand up against the calculated might and the ferocity both of Germany and japan nd that they, notwithstanding all their prepar. ons, have made major mistakes which will listen their downfall. I am not impressed by the comparison one occasionally hears of our system with that of the Germans." i i kit-r has intimated that when . . .5 become engaged with the enemy we iiiziv hive to fall hack upon military 1i ue \\'Illl. that long it will be a lift‘ :1». h». izuc. Neither Great Bri- .. d Status dared take such a miracle ,: u.- tain nor the L‘: risk. Canada in this war is just as menaced as either the lfirii-il Sin s or Great llvitain. \\'e have just as nziicli at Vfillfl‘. if we ever hope to do our full part to dsicu l our own way of life, then we must prepare ti. hght with no strings attached. This is, as Prc ' Jill Roosevelt has declared, a global uiir we a... izgliziiig. It is nation pitted a}, iii-"t ii: fin. \\'e tzuinot expect the individual citizen m i.i'...~ iilk’ i-cwpoiisiliility of deciding what he illtllliil or sh iuitl not do to help. The \vhole country lllll~l ope-vine as a single unit. Relic-f Shipments Continue The nccd for \\;lr:i1 clothing in Britain, especi- ally for Cillill. refugee: from occupied countries and lJUlllllUil-llll‘, llriiiiiis, has reached a critical point and ihou-z ~ lftcc severe suffering next \\'iiucr. .\li.-". .\ ioiiy l. “ii-e, chairman of the Brooklyn Ctlllllil tee of the British \Var Relief Society, said ":i_ widespread but mistaken belief that cargo space is unavailable for shipment of relief .~iippli~s has ri-stlittfrl in a substantial de- crease in ui .< ll llie society." She said the belief \\.i. i'.i<: r. ~iilt of a misrepresentation of Prime Minister Lhurchills recent statement that Shippi “r space for lillSTllflilCOliS gifts would be curtzi in favor of uii ‘tary goods. "Tire Brit- i>h .‘.liiif-tr_v of \\';ir 'l'r."inspoi"t is still providing us wiili ample shipping space for necessary ma- terials," Mrs. \\ s; explained. "Our relief ship- ments are dcfiii ~ly not discontinued. Over- coats, wzirm tlFU-QCS, heavy underwear, sweaters aiiil all l<iliil~i of suli-taiitial garments are iiced- eil iii large qiriiitiiics, especially for children of two years and upward." it!!!‘ Britain still leads in \\'ar as in Peace. Maj. Clement Attlee, Doiniiiions secretary, said at Aberdeen, Scotland that in the provision of war materials “the old lion has done the lion's share of the work in these critical years." At the 5am: time he paid tribute to the contribution to the British industrial effort of the Dominions, India, the colonies ‘and the United States, Two of every three British people between I4 and 65 are engaged in \var work, and Britain now is pro- ducing two thirds of all her needed food sup- plies. The four freedoms of the Atlantic Charter is the “government's postwar aim" but all rc- cognize that it is of the first consideration for their atllifiveinent that we should utterly destroy Hitlerism and all that it represents. 1K i‘ i 1K The Duke of “lellington, Britain's best re- memberedgeneral, died this date I852; son of Lord Morington, he joined the Army under the purchase system and passed through several regi- ments until at twenty-four he comuianilcrl the 33rd Foot, still known as the Duke of Wellington Reglmeflt; W85 engaged in Continental wars un- der the Duke of York, then sent to India where he distinguishctl himself; i'CL‘lllli‘tl to (‘llllllllilllll an expedition which had for its object the expulsion of the French from Lisbon, in which he succeed- ed ;. was then attached to Sir john .\Ioore's Army in its operations against Napoleon; he conducted the defensive operations south of \\'atcrlo0, and on June 18, 1815, aided hy Bluchcfs army, coin- pletcly dispersed Napoleon's forces aiirl occupied Paris; his later career was associated with po- litiCs, being Prime Minister in I828; as a soldier Wellington's talents are best seen in his StlCCCSS- fnl conduct of the Peninsular War; as a states- man he holds a high place for his moderation, hi. Strong sense of duty, and his perfect integrity. in ii v n The 130th anniversary On Sept. 7, of the Baitl.» of Borodino, turning point of the Napoleonic cam» paign in Russia, brought from military observer- at Moscow the comment that the (ierman iii vasion now will fail as dismally as the i812 at» tack._ Col. Nikolai Podorozhny wrote in Pravda that in many respects Napoleon did much better than llitlcr is doing today. Napoleon, the col oncl said, eovcrcrl the distance from lVilno ‘J hloscoiv in 80 day's. Modern German strategists, he a dded, once said motor» ized equipment would overcome vast distance- iii Russia. and would enable the German invaders to move forivaril faster than the Russians coulil retreat. llut the Germans, the writer said, have failed to confuse or.riin past Russian units. "Only wretched rciiutaiits of Napoleon's army recrosscd the frontier,“ Piiiluriizliiiyi (ihservcd. "\\'c have more possibilities for attaining victory than our forefathers hail. but also our difficulties ‘. (lQslliiC this, Germany can on the road to it are greater." Historic Paralieis In {l l"\"‘.lll article uu the second front, vvTliCli ‘Imcil iii lliu London Times from the , i army ltllltlll‘, bed Star, General Shilovsky, a nieznlicr of the llus-izin general staff, recalled t3 ll ii;i.\'_ with ilh- iirir, tier-many kept 80 div- lfi/Itts ill ‘Hi v- -.\' silt‘ launched her great oiii-ii-iii v, ‘il ti: ll. i115 iii the west. General Shiloiz-liy- \il'<.\\' ll iiumbcr of interesting coni- PflTlF/‘ll"l~ lli‘l\\'t‘('ll the first and second world war. lior cxatuffi-I ’ - in I'll I, lili-illwll: wi-rc approximately the i'£'\'t‘l'~.' of l ll.l\. |' ~ tii-rmans had attacked on the win-t Ililll ih~ lfll-slillh. to force them to divide thi-h- finccs, lilltl \illlt‘l\' iii the cast. This diver- siuu >ill\\" d llw‘ tiarmrui wilvzmcc to the west. en- Illlll"l l‘ '>1i»~u:llir_ - numbers of troops ill liur-ii i '1 " w iH- niius at the Marne. v mi iipvitilioiis in Galicia forced lopt p-nitioiial warfare in the ~l :\vii years of the war, hovv- t'l llil4l(‘l' independent plans \‘.il'.lt l» i: r . - with tho (ivrmzins. lt \\ n», lillili ll ir||_<, at (iliantilltv, that a uiizii d phi?! oi‘ utivi-lllllll on all fronts was \\'I-l'l~,t‘1l out. tiviwriil Shiloix-kyr strongly urged tho \\i-‘ 1' of iwwuiviliiig thc war plans of the liiiiml .\"i1"'i~::-, lillll the 'l'im:~< is inclined to —l liv Sub-mph‘ the iii-vii -~ \\'<‘~l. lli: a rwr, ll‘) \l i. " t» iiliishlll limes, he writes that (Ln ‘ifill l.u lvziihirihs la~t rlvsp ' te hid for vic- tiirv in l'i|.\‘ -_i-i\<- tlic imprvssiriii 0f great . 'l'.'i ir ‘ii-rim tho lh-rmzins trumpeted to li - \'-il"lf uh" l. Fri-ii when the (icrinans sv- il vjiuzi llll‘ lir iii. of iuiiii-triirilic thc British ;i:il liiiw-‘irli l» '31: riiiiimwiiil dill not think that llrcil‘ iiiiil l-Tiui- wiuld he lriiiiii-hi-il until ioir). Such l‘ h. t'~- il lli:\(‘ far-a of the (irrmziii of- fiiriv- l1] l'l'<i X iv: thry arc agraiii citjriy-iiig succm. and ~ iiiiius: iiiuvli ivrriliiryg but the les- “l til lilswut‘ i» i‘ NOTES BY TIIE WAY The final accounting ot the New York Fair portraying the world of tomorrow stiows a deficit of $19.- 021,432. O. K., posterity, take it away—-Vlctorla Daily Times. No more pleasure driving is ll- lowecl in Great Britain. Theoretic- ally the same condition applies here. It is one of the most. graphic illus- tration; of the difference between actuality and theory. -Winds0r Star, Nazis in Canadian internment camps have their wet: canteen, a swimming pool, good meals, deck chairs to lo in and one “bat- mnn" assigned to look after the comforts of every five prisoners But we might. offend somebody if we inquired whether Canadian pris- oners in the hands of the en my age being treated as well-Windsor S ar. It speaks well for the careful manner in which Canadian rail- ways are operated and for the ar- tention paid to their roadbeds and equipment that the period of ax- ceptionaly heavy traffic through which they are passing is marked by so few serious ziccitlents. This is thi more remarkable when it is re- cognized that mayn of the men now engaged in railway work may be classed as "green hands.” -Brock- vile Recorder and Times. What is the tlzillgcr of inaction‘! That Russia. without our active aid. may be knocked clc\v_ii or even knocked out. and that 200 German divisions would then be switched from east to west. Those 200 div- isions represent. about 3.000 000 men. That. is the measure of the risk we run if we do not plunge witl: all our might into the Battle of Europe. It is a two-fold risk, (ll Can the Germans invade this is- land? Perhaps they can, It. is a chance we must, never overlook. But that danger will be greater by 4,- 000.000 men, if Russia is destroyed as a combatant Power. 12> Can we make o footing on ilie Continent of Europe? Probably we can. But that probability will be less by 4.000000 men 1i Russia no longer engages the main strength of the Cierman army. ‘There is the problem in broad out- line. as it. is seen by the British public. —Daily Express (London). The next ten years will be very eventful ones in the history of the new party (C. C. F.) We certainly do not predict its disappearance from the political arena. We do predict n very considcrbale modi- fication of its ideas. a growing re- cognition of what is practicable. and an increasing skill in the manipula- tion of the electorate. But it will not remove injustice and inliuman- the British a favor. By brandlnroutelde world" on one’; own little it_v from Canada. and if it ever gets the rumors loudly as false, they are into power it will probnblv not even culling them to the attention of the want to .»Toi~onto Saturday Night. German people. Maybe -just may- be Buffalo Courier-Empress. After 15 years hf_riarish visiting in farm houses, ranch houses and cftv homes. there have been certain thoughts collected in mv mind on Parliament without delay or discus- the bookcases I have come across, sfon. Each petition for divorce is ' them the subject of hearing by a stand- and what I have found in Most of the time, of course, it basing Senate committee been bocks. unless some strougniin- finds favorably on the application ed housewife, with no love of lit- the committee's recommendation in to make a the ordinary course. is accepted by china cabinet out of the solitary the Senate as a whole, passed into for law by the House of Commons It the feverish outpourings of Knth- ls when n Senator or Member kicks strong-man against this placid routine that the The most absurdity of the system becomes the contents apparent‘. of bookcases is their iinpcrviousness week when Senator Murdock re- to change. for though there are pro- sisted vigorously the passing of a bably thousands of new books pub- divorce btll. He as a member of the fished every year, the great maj- divorce committee could not accept orlty of bookcases indicate that pub- the decision of the majority in a lishers went out of business about certain case, presented a minorltv 1920 0i" even before that. But then. report, forced a debate, He lost of there is something rather irnperish- course, but he brought a little near- able about a book. —By Rev. Dud- er the time when Parliament will refuse to devote hours to business that belongs to the courts. — 0t- erature, tins decided receptable previouslv reserved lcen Norris. and t-iio stories of Zane Grey. noticeable feature of ley F. Kemp in Calgary Hcraid. SIR SAMUEL LEONARD TILLEY (1818 - 1896) 0n: 0/ tlie Father: o)‘ Confederation, was born in Ga elown. N.B. Starting n: clerk m 4 drugstore, be i]! business in 185$. From i860 i0 186T t! was Premier of the Province and was prominent in organizing the conference 00.81:: tnnon Ibo Maritime Provinces wbicb widened inn a db- cussion o] (Lznadrhn Federation. H: blld var-ion: pordnlio: in tbs Dominion (Iabinet and was Lieutenauf-Govemar of New Brunswick from r373 to 1878 and again from I885 to 1893. FAMous Rosebud is justly famous throughout the Maritimes as the most satisfying pipe tobacco any man can wish for. You’ll understand its fame if you buy a package today. Rosebud PI PE TOBACCO m: MARITIME SMOKE“ FOR OVER TWO GNERATIONS FAllETfEll. T0 BAGKAGII Her bani seized-sh felt niiienblo-oo pop —|lis eouldifl In "bothered" to [o out- last contact with her friend: uid wu lonely. Her sister advised ‘ her to ish patch of land. Few will take Dr. Eflias’ doielul [mruxcsfimiztlcms eertovsly. The United Nations are fighting for the preservation of civilization and de- cent standards of life. When one fight is won-as won f; will be- there ls little chance that the ideal will be permitted to disappear. Poor as the nations and individ- uals may be, ways will be found of maintaining industry and trading. In his presidential address to the Canadian Political Science Associ- iitlon, which has been reprinted in —tlie people wil get. an ides..- Divorce bills usually go through and ff it That happened Gandhi chosi- tiie— worst possible tawa Journal. time for his ultimatum to Great Britain, ivitti its threat of open re- volt, if not. accepted and all because he hoped Etiglnnd would be so anxious for India's help that she would yield. What he threatens finitely easier: the verv thing Jo- pan's cynical Prime Minister, Gen- due l° eral Tojo, was calling for recently m“ when he said "Japan would hesitate to co-opcrate with pendcncc, But. no matter‘ Gandhi and Toto say, India must Japanese forces That. is why Great Britain is making ready to deal speedilv with Gamlhi and his followers lf they precipitate a revolt, —-Provldence Journal. German radio stations are busy these days denouncing rumors and that isn't a bad thing at all There are several rumors that the Germans nrc bulv denying —fli‘.(l denouncing. They denv reports that Field Marshal Erwin Rommel is ill or has been wounded in a plane crash, angrily denouncing them as of British orirrin. The Germans are denouncing reports that German tank crews on the eastern front are being locked inside their ve- hicles to assure their fighting to the last. The Germans are also denying and denouncing reports that cooking fats are being produc- ed from the cor-pros of air rnid vic- tlms hi German cltli-s. The rumor- clenouncing huslntvs flDDflNliilV takes up ii lot cf time on G-erman radio stations. lvfnvbe the rumors are fnlse. Maybe they are of Brtish origin. In that case the German dt-iilrrs and announcers nre doing E. C. JOIINSIONE. C. L. l. Provincial Manager SA : Incomes have Increase... Now is the time to imnk sure that your fnmily i: protected with Cash, and t Guaranteed Income in cas you should die. The Dominion Life Saint,‘ Continuance proizrsmm. pays $500 in cash at death and‘ $50 ii month for fiv years. The cost? A savini gLonIv $1.56 a week at an Let's talk this ov-er. Thor is a Dominion Life Dru- izramme to flt vour lncorri rind circumstances. Enquire ntt l‘l-il5 GRAFTON STREET Ottawa Maligned (Eastern UJPODICIC) Q meant vtsiltzrlr to wiygn means chaos, perhaps civil \var_ in a5 ed l5 "P" ‘m ° c Y» 1 India, unless Britain acts quickly 581d that [it could be likened to tm 0r and effectiyclv to hold H118 country 21815:}??? B-illllm with U16 IIImM-S l1’! together". Tint, cf course, s the very - . thing the Japanese ivuiit. the situ- llvllm dfmlllfdfind the ‘lmclal Me ntion that would make invasion in- “f-‘uld dill/e W" t0 dlslrrtiégltflllway the newness of much of life, and it. no, would be kindness for visitors to India keep iiwriy and let them work out. and help her in carrying through l0 i118 bfisli advantage their multi- her ivlshes," for immediate inde- Eéldrenlli dunes lllfli NB Klimt 119°“ . 9 . “hi” an these officials iii-e aiming st remain a base for United Nations the 58ml’ t8?!“ 5° hell) Canada operations against Japan and for W1" ‘he preventing a union of German and Same 0i them Work at 07°58 P117‘ Maybe it has to be same official the war, and this The population has more the Canadian Journal of Econcm. ics and Political Science, Professor Humphrey Mitchell, ct McMasler University, dealt with the question of post-wru- "monetary reconstruc- tion." He smke of the fatal mlstakeswperpel-rated after the last Great. at, observing: “How in the wofld, how in the name of all that is possible or im sstble, are we going to pay for ill e war? We have no; paid for The first yet. and this one is going to cost. far more.” Which is pessimistic enough, in all conscience. As for the cost, President. Roosevelt told us last night time the United states would spend one hundred billion dollars in the course of i943 alone, But Professor Mitchell does not anticipate that industrial activity is going to cease as a. consequence he war. On the contrary’. he points out that. it must be paid lot‘ by the toll of men and women la- borlously building up Qvrhat h“ been cast dovm, and so ‘creiitenhe new wealth which in tlmefwal-OWS iip the debts of the ow- "1 l5 opinion, the war will i: paidrforsclniy mmrrroved processes. i‘ "We ' entitle management of industry. by new machines and new tech- nrqur; new materials. greater factories and bill!" 511498. by Bl}; services and great new hlthwfly-‘i- But before these new PFOJW“ B" S undertaken. there ls the neeesslt airing the damage “use - f" rep quoted: “An John Stuart Mill is ma... riih. in. blthlflli - - Illilllifilifild onerly relgirimkher unto vru :::::';r..:....."~....'ar“"‘“‘... Say GOODBYE TO IIOKICHI will Doddk Kidney Pills enemy lays waste a. country by fire and sword and destroys or carries away nearly all the mov- able wealth existing in it; all the inhabitants iiie ruined. and Yet. 1n a few years after, everythtr¥h ls much as t; was before. . . . 8N is nothing at. all wonderful in the matter. What. the enemy de- stroyed would have been destroyed in a little time by the inhabitants themselves; the wealth which they so gaépidly reproduce would have need to be reproduced and would have been reproduced in any case, and robabiy in as short a time." Pro essor Mitchell re. minds readers that restoring costs money, and asks where this money is ooming from. Rejecting the dlcredlted method of inflation by the issue of floods of paper money, of which such Ylraglc ex- amples were furnished after tho last. Great War, he suggests. since there is not. enou gold for the purpose, the soiut on to the per- plexing problem o! what to use for "hard" money is to be found in tho m‘ llllMllllllll ASSURANCE $MPANY poses imd run haywire. However liters are times when the actions are unaccountable. One that» st/rlkes Us as foolish is with regard to those tubes that hold tooth nos-lie shav cream. If Jackass starve again to leotur people over the radio about. these tubes, some one is going to scream. Why in the name of common sense don't, they slc- these tubes st the source? Instea , they ermft. them being shfPfXid as ln-rl vldusl containers all over Canada, then howl to have the people return them, fer the tin is valuable. Would it not be n sane-r notion to seize the valuable tin and tell ttie manufacturers of those propri- etary mixtures to find some other container. They are only of’ oom- pliffiilrlVély recsent introduction. ‘The content is not essential but the tin in the container L; essen- lnl. Then stop all the public blather about. them, forbid their use and take over the tin at once for war purposes. Back To The Land (Hamill-on S sci/uteri There scents to considerable diversity of’ opinion among the ‘earned, as there certainly 1s among plain folk with no pretten. dc-n-s to special knowledge. as to what is likely to happen when rehce has once again been res- crea to this chaotic World. The loamy Oglnlcns expressed by Dr. rims El s, s professor ln an ‘men-lean university, are in a class y themselves. We are going back a “great-gieut-grandmols” days ceordin to him-and even earl o e O s e rr; to t e very beginning, in fact, , ‘iitien Adsm delved and Eve pan," Poverty will be complete and general. There will be no nore motor-cars or radios or wash- ns-machlnes oi- refrigerators. ten will have to build nun- own SAFETY IOR YOUR VICTORY BONDS Your bonds are valuable and should be protected from ossible loss through theft, fire or g rnlslaid. THINK OF THI RISK] The cost of safekeeping at , the branch of this Bank I most convenient to you i: m.“ small. or“ l Account and Main 3.5:. fThrifl for Victory The. of NUVA SCQTIA- Established IlJ2-0v_or a Century lorgko BRANCHES IN PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND Charlottetown Alblny K Montnlno Olen; More! Summon-side Victoria We appreciate the response to our ad. for more Hogs. During the present scarcity of Beef and other Meats we mdences ummn “m need more Pork Products than usual to supply local de- wjhus may can ,5,“ inlliféuflrg; mand. Compare our net returns with those of other rp- étéf putrpcse, Trunking o..." own sources and prove for yourselves that it pays to bring or 2o rci , The ggroieesii-l, 1.1 lglgeggll“ send your Hogs to us._Do not overlook the fact that Hogs his i. vwm o; Cmpuimry as,“ delivered to us are killed promptly and extra shrinkage ~ultural ins ructlon in the gghoolg, nyoided_ - "as pverptire it. tile pould have ‘CYS Bbifll 08119011 Yy, urging and annlng, and g’rls i l , s - 1M find sewing.‘ as ilirfgifiy" wvdyalfo & “keep the wolf from t-he docr" and remml" “dependent v1 t-hl i or/ULQ wash SUMMHKTIIHE ls m“, Like some old-ruin When gamma oigedoiijiiraci. Seems ummer‘ 1 ‘ And the uflalrs biriiciiiiiifim“ As lnfllilbe uiiiiiui... a O 0 n oi- Biiiebuivi glitueiiieiiml Gm“ Her Bees hav fl titi l-ler Blossomselflre i: diiifmhm‘ Elsie-until we almost weq; So plausible they seem, Her memories like strains _m n Orchestra is dum , Violin 1h mo, Null’... Ear and Heaven numb, —-Emlly Dickinson, monetlzaition or silver All ' tsblimment of a. "unlvirsiiiie ii: metallic standard," with emphag‘ on the universal. whether eltilfiilfiht. or “managed 0y." m‘ who. it may be “.111 fnd favour when the time Cdme; it 51101114 HOt be beyond the \\".l of experts to discover some mm,“ means of getting the wheels o, ,n_ iiuatrv tumble Eeisiiiip (o, tiu-ning for destructioni Tile i2: sons of the last war, at any m, will surely not. be forgot-lien or ig’ nored when these Vliallv lmnormni questions have to be d _ “Bled Ilttlnl m! Qllblllyinr Glssles ll. .1. "iiiiiioii OPTOMETBIST Montague. P. E. I. 0M l! i i0 t 12 °° 312'. i». if " l‘ Who The Add Holidays m. bv npnoi t Office Connected writfimm DBUGSTOKE Professional Bards MeLEOD s. BENTLEY l W. K. ‘HENLEY. K. C. l- L BENTLEY K. C. Barristers and Attorneys-ot- Low MONEY T0 LOAN l“ Prince Street lilorrellandfiompaii ii. F. AiitJlllBALll Chartered Accountants Intern Trust lllllldlfll Charlottetown ALEX W. MATHESON BABBIUTISR, SOLIUITUR, 3T0: Money to Loan Colleeticiis Office: 90 GrcaLQeflgoiyjge-L M. ALBAN FARMER B-A». LLB. BARBISTER. SULIUITOK ETC. Umsdlsn dunk of Commerce Bil‘- MONEY T0 LOAN. =.,.__._.____- ARE YOU TROUBLE!) WITH LIIMBAGD SURE BACK If so we have one oi the best remedies to offer. namely BACK-RITE TABLETS Especial! effective for l.um- bsgo, Sciatics. Neuritis, Joint Muscular and other forms of Rheumatism which ordinary u ‘ fail to reach. Price 50 cents oer box. GASSY STOMACIIS BELIEVE!) Every person who is troub- led with gal ,in the Sttimfltlll sud bowels should get a lint! = of Dr. Evan's Stomach Milli-l lure llld sea how lllllfkl-l’ will relieve all dlstrcssinl symptoms. Dr. Evin‘: Stomach llllillilll,“ taken st meal times. "t" ° l prevents ull had effects from but it promotes the fung- Tlfisnal activity of the Slllilifll: i assists di cation iinil inpirovg the sppe lte. Price 8a cell per bottle. Enos Prim Sales. PH“ 95° and 59o. 08o value Der-nor! h“ Powder and Toilet ivater 59°- csmiuiin lmnrflvfll m"““ Balm 35o. TIIE TWO MACS Mull Orders Given Prompt Attention How Are A Your Eyes’ ., ptoml ' on no hggmglgdm ion é. u, - consult Y p i l It | - g“. 4:: nissln soeoisliut. At your nervlc! 9g uperleiice and rofrsettnl service. g." ||| sud discus! dlfilouitlu 6. F. ilutcheson i r. o. nurvflisfl" o. I. aurciiisst)" x1135‘ U! 7"" :1 thoroull i ‘ your ullii