Assessors m: clulnionnowu GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Founded ln IBIT) President: Lieut. Col W Chester 8. Mold!!! Vlcc-Presldenl: .|. B. Burnett. FJ-l- Secretary: lJeut. Col D. A. MxcKlnnon- 0.8.0. Elitur and Managing Director J. B. Burnett, FJL Associate Edlfuls: Frank Walker and Ian A. Burnett SUBSCRIPTION BATES By Mall in P. L L, $4.00 per year; $2.50 for 6 month $1.25 fvr 3 mnnfhl; 50o for one Imml-h city Utflwtry: $5.00 per year; 53.0w for 6 months $1.75 fur 3 month! My Mall tn Garland; and U.S.A_ $5.00 pet 1Q! Iaturduy “ct-kly: $2.00 per year; $1.00 for U lllilllilll 50v fur 3 monthl- Uhuluttetuwn Uuurdluu any be oblllnod I uutullun‘: Au»: Agency, ‘Flinn Bonus, New lurks 0|! South ha»: AKl-uvy, turnou- llllk and Wnhlngton. lloltull fljulfuvillllllll mm; Agent-y, WM Peel 61.. Ioutrocll J. l-‘lno, 35A llny on, Tnrunlui News Stand, Chluln ltlurlor. onnwn; \\u\Ir\'| so“; uuuul, Butlhury. Out; Hub Toluene allllp, uuiitiun, s. 11., Ellen Bvb-"rmm. Amherst. N- l. f‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker than m Weakest Ink." lflflTli-ITTTTCLY 1a. tau. The A National Emergency colplrclioii with the price increase and cur- hiu lit ill iii: hours of sale of gasoline, it is in, libl‘. "use iuezisiircs will not of them- $k‘l\l‘\ t l rm, lllt’ 5o pri- cent decrease in gasoline :~;-' It \\il’c"ll ls‘ llBCCiSflYY as a war meas- l'i,~ ~,i\:l. i lllllil come from voluntary con- ;iil:lliuiis being primarily de- - cxprii-"e of service stations. - ‘.\.l'» - iii “inch gilsoline can be sav- ih' at Zl more uniform rate of tioii of "hop-skip" starting and tc" in of leaky engines and driv- l Il absolutely necessary. have been lillllllllllill Government controller l": g glvilll wide publicity through the ‘e liz-"tztl on the rcconiuirilrlations of i-xpi-vfi. lt is emphasized that every and grcziier measure, we must re- lflll oil llv the thousands of gallons i-uis plants. our tziiiks and armoured ‘lag planes and bombers, our cor- ._.il illtwfillllli ships that ply the vital sea- t the driy of victory may sooner be s is 1m appeal which should require CtvllllllClll or argument. If voluntary .ii cannot be obtained, the Government tir: for the liccessby Q imposing strict ' lions. That means an expensive .c setup, illore red-tape, and in- l l Llllllll. lt should not be necessary, anti ivill »t be necessary if every motorist real- ires ll‘= or lit-r individual responsibility in this matter. all glfllfir TSTiII On The Statutes A v: tit ll\ Suturrluy Night reminds Prime ‘ ‘r .\l;i-.~l,~iiwie King and others who may be (‘lill-‘Cflllllfill that we have already a {l l:i\\' on the statute books; a law pre- - rlczlt‘ flilll definite. It is not the much (‘l isctl l"i'."ll'y' Service Att of l9l7; that was rep ilcil- It is a. law passed by Mr. ffiiwgg~ l'f‘\‘t“l‘r"ll leader, Sir Wilfrid Ioflllflfil’, and it Es inriirpw-ali: l into our Militia Act, thus‘. “Suvliiui S: _\ll iiitllc inhabitants, of Canada, of htrcn years and upwards, and un- -i\".l the axe of t-"g der s l), n»: exempt or disqualified by law, and bciil; l . l subjects, shall be liable to service in the l ' lloviilell that the Governor General may rt llllfi all the niale inhabitants of Canada, capable of bearing arms, to serve in the case of a levee en masse. "Section 63: The militia. or my part there- of, or any officer or nlan thereof, may be called out for any military purpose, other than drill or training, at such time: and in such manner as is prescllbsrl. “Section 64: The Governor ln Council may place the militia, or any part thereof, on active sci-vice aziyirliirre in Canada, AND ALSO nrtvouo (L-iritim, for the defence thereof, at any time _ ‘ _, ilagnc about that. Th: Government of Lllll l, ilvclariilg the existence of an emer- Elvliijl‘. u". call any of us bctivcen the ages of 18 v i (=0 to l ‘in the militia, can then call upon the lo serve anywhere in Canada or beyond I . :i —l ribtllc continent of Europe, or in 1' filllt. or again-i japan or in Russia. i, the Military Service Act of 1917 was a le-s stnnigi-iit law than this act passed under Sir \\'i‘.' l Jlllfiffl’. Yet it does not seem to have 0cm .,.;.-:l so nliirh opposition, and it is still un. rCllifilll" . Hill's Message h vi s an inspired speech which lVlr. William F. l , ll-ziiiwr ll. 5- Ambassador to France, (llllvwl illlillf illl’ l'lli\'('l'.~‘il_\' 0i Montreal on 1'»: 1p.- ll'l\'. ll<~ slltllfl‘ iii French. The English tluv Ili l‘ l‘~lll‘ll lll .\lt>llll‘f‘lll newspapers makes ori- l\ 9i ..i-! \\'l‘ llJltl in our llullllfllfifl war cab- llu". ~ ilv luv»: with llll: vloilltcncc of a llullitt. In a Bil. Jill" l» llll‘ spczikrr compared the Nazi llurili-s l» ll»: liiiliili- who ravngcrl this country in I'll-lick twhiiilal rials. “These savages," he said. “at .i= ("To i- lii us as the Iroquois were to I\l;i‘-wi-,~~ ‘it'll’. lll. viii-ago from Quebec to Mont- rczil lu~ l‘il"‘ iliys. .-\ Nazi in a bombing plane (‘Jlll l‘L‘i1-‘ll llllizlrlfill from Berlin in leSS than a (lay . . . - No man, ivliite or red, at that period \\.'ls Rllllllll riiiiiiqli to bvlieve that life could be llvcil ll >lllliiill\' ill the valley of the 5t. Lawrence, so l~ ii-g as lllt: llOtlllulS were resolved to massacre r-r (‘ll-i '\l' Zlll lhc whites. Rut today we find some ni~ ii \\il-l llYlW‘ not yct rcalizerlhmv the earth has shriivk. r ictiiii prople who are stupid enough to lilflli; iWt-y \\lll be able to live tranrluilly in our \'\':--'<~r'i lltllllsllllCll‘ even though Irlitler and hi; Nil/ls vi ‘lllvl lhv rcst of llic earth." '11 l~~ r will of ilir lwi-plr: of France, Mr. ll "l l “vlnwl. :m~ hoping and praying for u l‘ '3'» \li'~~'\‘. llv hail llitnsc-ll no doubt what- -'>~ l" W" olllcwlll". lie qllfllcrl in this con- ll tlri llll iiiorablc ivorrls of Victor Hugo's: . "-*“l‘ uiiiv bi‘ (lHlTC by those who rule at _' \l~ltllCL' and abroad by threats, what- ever may be done, by those who consider them- selves the masters of people and are only tyrants of consciences —-the man who fights for justice and truth will always find the means f0 at- complish his whole duty. The forces of evil have always come to naught. Thought always es- capes from those who attempt to stifle it. It can not be repressed. It changes its form. The torch shines. If it is put out, if it is engulfed in dark- ness, the flame becomes a voice and night cannot silence a word. If a. gag is put in the mouth which speaks, the word changes itself into light and light cannot be gagged, Nothing can enslave the conscience of man, for the conscience of man is the thought of God." -. EDITORIAL More? - Rt. Hon. Ernest Lapointe, Minister of justice is touring New Brunswick unofficially but in his official car. Can it be the Prime Minister has sent him to the blaritimes to put his ear to the ground with reference to the conscription issue here? n- o n- x One of the consequences of giving Government contracts outside the Island is seen in the reduc- tion of our Income Tax returns. Also the fact that other provinces show an increase is damning proof that they have big war contracts while we get only enough to ksclxona or*two men occupied. Fatal drowning accidents at our beaches are comparatively few, and the sympathy of all will go out to the bereaved in connection with Mr. Emmett Quinn's passing at Cavendish. “lednes- day. He was of a quiet, unassuming disposition, highly respected by all who knew him, and a competent and successful sales manager in Hol- man's furniture department in the city. is u u Rt. Hon. Malcolm MacDonald took the "high road," while the Government reception party took the “low road" on Wctlncsilay, and the MacDon- ald party reached their destination “before ye". Just another misunderstanding between the Mac- Donalrls and Campbells, which had its origin at- Glencoe. 4- : n- a Australia's Commerce Minister Sir Earle C. G. Page has announced that, despite a reduction of refrigerated shipping space for meat to one-third of that provided in the first year of the war, the government will buy the entire export surplus of quality meat, wlietlicr it is shipped or not. The government also will subsidize the processing of uriexportablc stirpltiscs to guarantee minimum prices for producers. v m s s 4- George Bemis ivas arraigned the other day in the police court of Tottenham, a London suburb, charged with violating the clothing rationing rule by allowing his wife to anticipate on her coupons. He explained that she insisted on having a new dress for every few dances she attended. He was discharged with a warning, but, before he left the court room he observed to the magistrate in ex- tenuation of his offense: “My wife savs the. clothes rationing u-ill not stop licr going to dances. She says it will be an excuse to go even as Lady Godiva" $181k! _As_previoilsl_v announced authoritative sources disclaim knowledge on the subject, but Britons generally would show scant surprise if they were informed soon that the United States was mov- ing to acquire naval or air bases in Northern Ire- land. Qutside official circles there is ivirlcspreatl discussion of the possibility that such bases are under consideration. In this connection it is noted that the best-sheltered waters on the north coast are either within or adjoining Eire's (Soufhgfn IfflamYSl neutral waters. An intimation of Eng- lish expectations came in an editorial in The Eve- flmg Slafldflrd, owned by Lord Beaverbrook, Min- lsl" °f sllPplY- which said that "occupation of Iceland may be followed by further acquisitions." u a a in lane Austen. English novelist, died this date, i817. She had difficulty in finding publish... if" he)‘ bwki. and full recognition of her genius came in more recent years, though at the time 5w", Tflmyson, Coleridge, Macaulay and others were enthusiastic admirers. Hei- chamnter; are drawn from upper-class English life, and reveal themselves without advertisement; showing re- markable gifts of humour, satire, and exquisite discernment of the workings of the feminine ‘mind. Her novels include “Sense and Sensibility" Pride and Prejudice," “Mansfield Qark," “Emma." . a w c a ' ‘:1 must say the west is far ahead of the east in its demand for conscription from what I have learned so far,” Hon Mr. Hanson states, He predicted conscription for Canada but said “it may fame foo late." Prime Minister Mackenzie King s_Liberal Government had already accepted the principle of conscription in the National Mobilization Act. “If the welfare and the safety of ‘the nation demands that conscription shoulil be implemented, then it must be brought in," said Mr. Hanson "The responsibility rests squarely upon the shoulders of the Government, and it is up to it to shoulder that responsibility and to face the issue srlilarelyn" 4 4 u a The revolution in Montreal Civic affair; i5 hmlgmg lwpcd for results. A surplus of $1,086,- 901 has been reported by the Council's financg director, Mr- Lactance Roherge, in hi5 annual statement coyering the city's 1940-41 budget yea,- -—all of which, but for about half of the first month, ivns spent tinder suzrrainty of the Que- bec Municipal Commission after the default of .lay, loco. The budget ——a revision by the Commission of one left it by the Hoilrle-Savignac administration and which showed an apparent de- ficiency of some $7,ooo,ooo—was balanced by dint of slashing of previous expense estimates, new taxation authorized by the provincial Legisla- ture, and an appropriation of $i,_-;i9_147 of pa,‘ surpluses as revenue for the term. llowevcr, to months unemployment relief were inclutlcrl in tlic estimates for the first time at $2.000,0oo instead of financing it by borrowings as in the past, al- tlloilgb the city got a moratorium on sinking fund instalments and on interest on its own bonds‘ held m that fund -aboul $4,5oo,ooo- ~- . \ rn_i_:__q_ri_riiu.o'r'rl~:'rowiv GUARDIAN i ilonas BY THE rm Now yo IKIMIW “l0 IIISIIQ i0)! 0H why l-lliler decided to dzcla-re war on Russia. Senator Burton K. wheeler, champion of the isola- Llonlsts. told s Hartford, Conn.. Am- ‘eilmi Firm rally, um "I-Iltlcr u laying the game mapped out for gun by the cold dlspaas onato Ens- ltsh diplomats." No mention of l-Iltlers need for grain. oli and other materials. N0 mentzon of the unscrupulous bte of treaties lwhlch Hitler hlnuelf alleged the Soviet was guilty of. Hitler ls lust s. pour. innocent man manipulated by the Machiavellian British diplo- mats. We always suspected senator wheeler had wheels in his hem. Now we know ‘it. - st. Thomas Times-Journal. For the lufuN of Canada ff ll advised that industries be located ln smaller centres throughout the country. rather than crowd them all ln the cltles. It would mean evener distribution of population and would tend to better living conditions. In many of the smaLer centres there are vacant industrial plants that could be alllllzed Ind could be secured at a. 8W8“? N- dnceu figure, Some of these plants could be used at. the present tine for production of war material, and the Government would do well to lease or buy these rather than erect. new ones. Just “'11? 1W8! 150501198 are being buill when there are Idle factories standing ls a mystery t0 those who are aware of this-fact. Decentralization of industry l8 growing, and the Government should follow this trend. - Lls- tmvel Banner. The Postmlstress at lluntlnlzdflfl. 3,0,, reports that. she ls continually receiving mall addressed to soldiers stationed at Huntlnldml. P- Q Advice has been also received from the rcstmaster at. Head- quarters. 8.0. that he Flu“? ‘W’ quently recelves mall addres ed t) different branches of the Armed Forces stationed in Oanadll- 1b appears that. these missendlngs are on account of the fact that the word "Headquarters" ls included in the address on the letter, For ln- lstunce, quite-frequently mall ad- ldressed to “Headquarters "Staff, -R.O.AF._ Vancouver. B- C- m» ‘been nilssent to “Headquarters, ac." _ Post. Office Bulletin. n wiiuia be qtranse 111M"! l! l-mlers mechanized march should be halted by the vast. unyleldlflfl spaces of the Russian earth. Napoleon's legions starved_ and trcze on the steppe-s. and the 0"- man; who claim that. i116 Red Army u "broken". reported B“ week that. their advance in We Ukraine‘ was slowed “D by mid and snow. It. ls not straflfle K11" Stalin speaks like a muzhlk relylnfl on t-he power of the earth. 01' m“ a. wave of rellglous orthodoxy and old-fashioned patriotism sweet” over the Szvlet Unlcn. For what-r ever the immediate fortunes o wnr, these are signs that the fate of Russia. of Germany. and the ivorld‘. will be determined last. by the inevitable rebound 0i human nature and the hulrwn spirit. - New York Tlmei Walklng through the streets of Belfast a boy 100K911 up. as B11 b=Y§ do, at. a British tighter plane PR5- sln overhead. Then he dashed for a p one bsx and rang the nearest RAJ‘. depst. "There's a Hurricane just, going towards SO-MKl-E-Oh he gas . “I, think it, ls going todand. tout-only one of its wheels 1s clown". He runs of! and dlsnlllleflf- ed. The next day the RAF- new?» Bervice reported: "The alrdrome authorities made immediate Phone contact wlni the pllvt and Warned hlm of his danger. With-In a few minutes of the boy's call the plot. succeeded ln lowering the wheel and made a perfect landing. And they added: “That's the rlsht kind of fan-qulckwlttled aria observant- We'd like to know his nmtte- The lad probably saved lila life. -—L0n~ don Dally Mall. Keep tires mt the right. nlr ll"!- sure. 12f you charlie 3 W9. WW3 the glr after a few miles, Change corners at hikh speed; m“ WEB" tires faster than antlilng else. Never slam on your brakes except to prevent im accident. Have wheel alignment. front and rear, checked regularly. Glve your tlres peronal inspection from time to time. Dont drlve boo mt on hot, dry NM!»- Heat speeds wear. Start. gently; don't spin wheels and grind off rubber. Don't biunp curbs. No tare will withstand such abuse. If W“! car begins to steer queerly pull off the road and check tires. —Mlnne- apclis Star Journal. We have been k0 f well posted 0n Germany's use o pnyoholwv W undermine the mcrne of the ylctlmlzed, The method includes false alarms of attack fcllcwed by false overtures of peace; panic- mongerlng by humor and panic- creatton by terrorists bombing. But we have liad little information about the other and equally effl- cient phase of the Nazi application of psychology — the bclsterlng of morale on their own slde. Arms alone, superior though tho may be, do not explain the ll tnlrig success of the Nazi soldier. He 1141s the wlll to win. By what. condi- llfllllllg was lt instilled ln h‘m? Considerable light on this ques- tlon ls now przvlded ln a survey of German military - p=yoholcg cal documents issued by tho O-mmll- tee for National Morale. Attached to the Gel-man High Command, we learn, ls a Psychological General Staff. Its experts prescribe unl- fomis that make privates feel like powerful warriors; they counsel officers on how h keep both the friendship and bl‘nd obedience of their men; thew devise tests to prtmotlon and specialization. Above all, the psycholoalst-counselors lm- bue the Nazi flrrhler with the lde; of attack; the word "retreat" ls rle- rberately left out of 11's menuals iHere one infers. wlll be a vulner- able paint in German morale when l the war machine meets lta flirt net- ‘ back. As ln the case of the tank and the alrnlane. which Gemini strut.- levut- bnfmwed mm minim aria lAmerlc-in inventors to tum Into thdr chief striking weapons, the Iwnr zasycholm so effectively ap- y oiled bv the N~zls ls not all of tfwefr own making. The flndlngs of Am- erican. French and Rusmnn lab- nratcrrws offererl the starting point to a rllsvrted end. _ Elma, of ,, . >1 i1 lmerlarn osychakg whom th- German confess Dance 0f The a Meridians (New York Herald-hurrah) Vlfuat constitutes the Western Heuusphero and whet-her Iceland la or ls not within ft depends as the President uld Will-idly, on the last geozrspher one consults. It ts a. metaphysical Issue, on a Dir with the flmous question about the angels dancing on the head of a pln, and with about u much N- levsncc u» the urgent realities of war and policy. Yet because of the Congressional restriction providing that the National Guud. reserve officers on active duty and Selected Service men "shall not be employ- ed beyond i119 limits of the Western Hemisphere’ this riddle la injected lnbo more Important I1- fnlrs and the nation u set tracing meridians of longltuds and tang- llrig its brains in such‘ absurdities as whether a National Guard antl- alrcraft, battery posted tn western Iceland could be bent. to the ena- tern half of the Island, or, ff l0. whether It could be equally be sent. to Dakar. It ls an indication not of the du- trabluty of delimiting the heuris- phere, but of the utter unpractl- callty of the Congressional restri- tlon. ‘me Iceland garrison is going to call for a large foroe of all arms —not only because we are In honor bound to the Icelandic government to make 1t strong, but. because for the sake of our own men, we must send them ln sufficient strengtn to be lmpregnable. Bur. under the res- ‘rlctlons with which congress has hnmstrung the new army. what. have we got? There Ls one marine dlvlslon on the Atlantic Coast, fairly well provided with auxiliary troops; the Army lies managed to maintain two regular divisions with only long-service troops and offl- cers. but the vital auxiliary services which they would require. like all our other infantry dlvlslons, are full of reserve officers, National Guardsmen and Selected Service men. all coming under the Western Hemisphere provision and all limit.- ed to one year's service. Icpland has made plain the urgency of Gen. Marshall's blunt request to Congress to remove both restrictions, Congress shied like s frightened horse at the political difficulties of acceding to ft; but surely lt must be clear now that thls ls not a political matter. Is ls a matter of building an army, and the first; requisite tn building an army. the first principle of ele- mentary justfce to the men Includ- ed fn it. ls to build an army caoaole of doing the lob for which it ls called lnto being. ‘The actual, though unintended, result of the various enactments ls that we are not, getting that kind of army. What we are getting 5s an awkward and needlessly cumbersome mixture at of short-service and long service men and units, some free for use on such vital defense tasks as Ice- land. other; under an uncertain restriction, of which no one can know the meaning. It ls already evident. that the great mass of them. under the one-year service term are not going to get the train- ing necessary to enable tl-em to protect themselves in moiern battle: and they are not going to get the experienced officer corps without. which lt ls tantamount to murder to send men into action. Congress may shy at Gen Mar- shall's request. It. should, rather. feel horror at the unintended con- sequences of turn at once to the task of itself revising the system Into a form wh'ch. Wll] the maximum of fair- ness to those in the ranks and with the least possible addition to their burdens, will be practically ade- quate to the practical problems o.' defense as the changing world sll- uatfon presents them. ON AN OLD SONG Little snatch of ancient song. What has made thee live so long’! Flying on thy wing; of rhyme Lightly down the depths of time, ‘Telling nothing strange or mre, scarce a. thought or image more. Nothing but the old, old tale‘ 0f a hapless lover's wall. Offsprlng of an ldle hour, Wliencs has oomo thy power? By what turn of rhythm or phrase. By what subtle careless grace, Can thy music charm our on! Athei- full three hundred years? landmarks of the human mind One by one are left behind, And a subtle change la wrought- In the mould and out of t‘ “‘; lasting its own work andl ' Iceland (Sydnny root-loaned) Iceland. occupied by United States naval forces Monday, ls a. volcanic Island plateau covered with glaciers in the norfinern part. fringed with pawns and meadows tn the south. and exam-l with deep flords that urn-m with flab. The island llu between Greenland and Norway about 725 miles north of the normal Atlantic shipping lance and about: 2,900 mflel from New York on a direct lino. The oldest surviving demoora , "tn the world-her National Althlnz has had a continuous existence since USO-Iceland has been l. re- public since she severed her tles with Denmark ln May of bhu you. On May l0, K900. I montt. after tbs German invasion of Dinmnrk, iloelmd was occupied by $ha Bri- tish. The British forces are esti- mated to umber between 60.000 and 80.000. some of which are working the cryollto mines In the northern part of the island. Cryo- llto l: a vital war material. The 110.000 Icelanders have I strong cultural affinity with Den- mark through long historical ties. Before Iceland boon-me a republic, the Dania“ King served as Iceland's monarch. Despite the wuntry‘: iso- lated situation and its barren terr- lan, tits people are comparatively well-educated and Iceland's capitol Reykjavik, a city of about 18.000 persona enjoy; most of the conven- iences of’ the modem age. The island. which is about 300 miles long and about 200 mlles wide, was settled by Vikings in 874. In 1263 lt acknowledged the sovere- ignty of the Norwegian King. but preserved its local autonomy. 1t came under the Danish crown lri 1381. and ft, was In 191s that 1t be- came an independent state with the Danish King as its monarch For some years before the pres- ent war numbers of Germans made vlslts to the island and established strong cultural relations wlln the Icelanders. but after the outbreak of hostilities ln Europe very little Nazi ldeoly 1.2M penetration was reported from Iceland. On March 25 of this year the German Gov- ernnment extended its blockade to Include the British-occupied Island. The Brltlsn occupation, undertak- en as aprotec ve measure. accord- tng to the British. was formally pro- tested by the Icelandic Govern- ment headed by Premier Hermann Jonuson. But since the arrival of troops and equipment, Iceland offl- clals report, relations between the British and the Ioelanders have been cordial. and the British have not interfered in Iceland's internal affairs. The British are reported to have moved planes and much mechan- ized equipment to the island. Tlriev have built substantial barracks for thelrtroops and have fortified stra- Use MlnanPs for bites. TlIE new“ mu 0f mutt-um Created by Max Factor, Holly- wood's Make-up genius who for ‘years has been chief coa- ‘ met clan to the screen and sfnzo profession. Max Factor prepnraflons an In u large way responsible Iui the splendid complexion of tho celebrities of the lcreen. Fun Powder — — — — — — 75o and $1.35 Max Factor Foundation Cream — — — 75c and $1.85 Mn Factor Cleansing Crcnm ————-—75c and $136 Max Factor Pancake Make- Mnx Factor Mtrlnlent ——— ——— 75c and $1.35 Max Factor Dry Skin Cream -~-—— --— 75c and $1.85 Max Frfor Skin Freshener - - - - - - 15¢ and $1.3! Max Factor Make-up Blend- — — -- — 75o and $1.35 Max Factor Brllllanflne 75c Max Fmlor Powder Bllllglsl Why not cull of our store and have u: show. you. this complete llnu of make-up preparations? FREE! By snechl xnnn e- ment with the hmnul ax Factor Make-up Studio. Boil;- wood. you are entitled to le- oelve your net-noun eomvlsnon analysis and Color Harmony e-np Chart: also, copy of Max Flcfork Illustrated make- up Instruct-on hook. “The New Art of Make-up". Be sure to [at one of these courtesy cud: when you call TllE TWO MAGS eglc coastal points. More than 3.000 .‘ miles of Iceland's roads_aro paveil. I JULY 1_8, 1941 Noll-lea v nm t- WLVI and (llgferbliljilh ‘ilfilfélhml- bound suffu- lf the st. Lawn.“ nrolect u completed. Even it... .3?“ 11;“ bums able to divert. to on 0.3:} on: or mm °l "my; shank-l °f Int! rial g d “m” “Ml wk Escape Clause fllewYorkfilmnsm-‘Ng t4 lwr tome ofthe rams! n. 5.0mm, “'1 . ln- finity of the wu- ourgaaratiom m, set-leis penis viii h "m" in tlm near futuxwflii: ‘délilw omit-ate the moat. careful ex ' F1" lltfiliaww. noed and 1n glllxmmentsflbe hard-Iv more Explicit It] kl In tbflnlimlle ' clsufo supplies. u m” E 5 r: F; s 3 i sf‘? if .sr§ um- "in M‘ s-s-s-e-t-s-s-t-ss-l-s-ss-ss-s-ss-s-s-sss. ATTENTIDN MR. FISHEBIMN The lobster season is over and we trust it has been a successful one for you. Now that the cod and mack. erel are running we to give you this gentle reminder we are ready to serve your completa requirements, n; come in today and get your supplies. Here are a few items that should interest you. 2 3-4"- ”-3 1-4" mounted mackersl nets 150 meshes deep, corkwood by the bale or pound, mackerel lines and jigs, cotton tarred lines snood, hand and trawl lines, 5 thd. fine steam tarred Plymouth Manila rope by the coll (used extensively by the fishermen for trawl lines), ringed tinned hand and trawl hooks, Plymouth Manila lobster rope, (all sizes) Maple Leaf Spruce Oars and Rowlocks (all sizes), Marine paints, all sizes and WIOYS. Union Jack Copper Paint (all sizes). Black Dia- mond Rubber Sulfs, Black Diamond Rubber Boots, English Woolen Bunting Union, Jack Flags (all sizes). A. KENNEDY & 00., LIMITED WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Prince Edward Island's All Year Round Marine Hardware, Ship Chandler-y and Fishing Supplies Store, 32 Lower Queen Street, Charlottetown. v Phone 117 . P. 0. Box 243 rbé-b-lvl-‘fr-ki-lsdr-fr-l-de-k-kt-b-k+éiwt~fe7fvl l PENSLAR Big One Cent SALE This big sale of Penslar Remedies and Toiletries starts THURSDAY of this week and ends Monday of next week.‘ There are many wonderful money saving articles on sale and you would do well to fake fldvfllllflke of same. Call at the store and see the different. Remedies and Toilet Goods-You will be convinced of the genuine bargain. Remember only a limited amount ‘of these goods offered. Every one you buy means two you receive for the same money. E, A, Central Drugstore Sole Agent for the Penslar Preparations Say to Your Grocer I Want BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEA You will! enjoy its superior l I49 Great George Street quality‘ l Modes of reasoning pass away, Tynes of beauty lose their sway; Creeds and causes that have made Many noblu lives must. fade, And the words that thrilled of old Now seem hueless, dead. and cold; Fnncyls rainbow tints are flying, Thoughts. like men. are slowly dy- lng; All thing; perish, and the strong- est. Often do not last the longest; The stately ship ls been no more. The fruizlls skiff nttuns the shore; And whlla the great and wise decay, And all their trophies pus away. Some sudden thoulht, some cure- leu rhyme, Still floats above tho wreck: of Tlrn e. i —Wlllhm ldwsnl Leaky. L i enlisted la the committee for Nat tonal Morale. Their purpose t. aid vie Government. not ln dupli- cating tho lender-dwcipllned pay etiology of the Nuts, but In bulld In: a morale because of l pound bask: ln Individual liberty. klnd of morale wn l Th1! in we Allied vlc lonq run 1t. shoul be this to technical lltcrsture‘ factzr 01100 llltn. -. n" York i tedneu m nowlTlmog. can will be belie} ts American telling factor of 1918. In the lllng L. - 10c - Manufactured By HIGKEY ,8: NIGIIDLSUN TOBACCO C0, LTD., CHARLOTTETOWN ~ WHEN UNCLE SAM SPEAKS - THE WORLD LISTENS,—- ROOSEVELT GETS AN AUDIENCE ; When he “talks out.” m the United sum. Indium’ l yvlio say a word for our tobacco likewise get a hearing because Hickey‘; has a place la the Island scene HICIIEWS BLA CK TWIST OQO§OQ‘¢v‘ ‘ ' Per Fig l