11!}? 17.9‘? us” ciuiiuirirrowii GUARDIAN .\lm'lll' ~ lliklly [Founded In 1881) ..'ni: Licul. Col. W. Chester S. McLure ‘vhf l"l*al‘llttlli J. R. Burnett. FJJ. ~ - it Col. l). A. MacKinnon, 0.8.0. mg Director. J. R. Burnett, F..l.l. Iirinik Walker and lan A. Burnett I ‘.'..ii~. _ l.‘,ili~r~: ,- L lisKilllFflUN IRATE! $1.00 per year; $2.50 for 8 months inunths; 50c for one month i 1;. n Ill) pi-r your". $3.00 for 6 months 5m.) ioi I; niunihs; 60c for one Month. i;\ _\l.;‘l in l ii ..il.i um] lj.5..»\. $5.00 per year Salmon, ' t») pi-r year; $1.00 for 6 mouths. 50c for 3 month: .'....iy: ~'. i.i..i.iuiii may be obtained l! , Him-n Squnre, New Yuri; Old 1 nrln r ullk and “mntslnglun. \i-~\~ Jgvnry. 1'11! Peel BL. i l:.\\ .\|., llrrulllir; Sh“! liluml, l m... “itllvu \I\\I Pilunil, sudtmry, i...|i_ “uuvlun s. u; Ellen liilllvlfllun ,.___.__________ .' Humor-y is Weaker than the ‘HKui/cr-st Ink." i it\‘-.l‘\\', DlATkhHliTiR 29, ism Allied Man Power ‘all at Washington has just xs as to the manpower :11: Axis respectively in the air and on the ‘tws an advantage of two to <, who can muster, 56,- ~ .45 of i8 and 35, as . 3.5 zouil of only 28,500,000. L c: do not include the enormous wrr resources of China, lndia, “s. wJ.‘ age would soar tn r mobilize the entire tlluiC of China and 1mg the Netherlands Indies i r then the total Allied SMIOUS total 0f 163,- " 35 years of age. in ilicsc age brack- and is barely sur- i: a . 1ft‘? w. 1S a1 . 1 . QLROOO, . 13,1 piss of lillfiéla, which totals 23,574,000. C a:"._l ‘ncr l)0miriions,——but still ex- c 10,273,000 nien in the some .i5: iitcsc totals, Japan's potcn- 5 placed at 10,839,000, Germany's ltaly/l at 6,440,000. of the Allies in material re- s, industrial organization "wortation facilities and poten- tial ~.-..ir ~15 even more marked, although prec‘ e- ti;-.. s are in the nature of the case im- In steel and iron the Allied ~ 1o obtain. ‘ : Beast rwo-to-one. In oil and gas, n Fxxc-to-one. In base metals it is . to one. The American industrial ._cu!ial capacity exceeding that of rope. and Great Britain's alone ..~‘~iit to that of Germany, while that k c‘o=ely' that of either of the great . rs. if this is to be a war of en- superior staying power of the Allies azter of serious question. 1S2‘. Hindsight Not Sufficient Would that we had s: Ottawa a government with foresight equal to its hindsight lAn exchange notes the fact that we had a great call to lrms AYYER Dunkcrque, and AFTER Greece fell we were told our recruiting system would have ho be strengzhened. And now AFTEI. Japan has moved in the Pacific we are told that the Gov- ernment is planning to set into motion a scheme if selective service. Similarly we are told now that the gasoline supply sittiatimi will be weakened by the events in the Pacific and that we are to have gas ration- ing next April. Next April sounds like years livay ln this yvar of fast movement. If there is even s posvliility of gasoline shortage for our essential services and for our armed services, why haven't we been building up s resin-v. gll these last many months in which the Govern- ment has hccn mumbling about saving gasoline but sav q rc;irccly' enough to have brought any inc iiwi AJPFC to even the most lavish of con- uniers? We know how fast the Japanese moved on. December 7. And we know how slow will be ciiwvi of ‘lllc firiverrimcnt’: long over- xc $1‘I\'.C(‘ sdiciiic. Our pace of war is ¢=l»\:~ii~._v trllflllwlP/l, and our long-range plui ‘Si; li eizlicr non-existent or bogged down once 1i rr l‘ T "a ll": dcSlcs of those in high places. l! 0",: 1» to act Arriiiz the other fellow lief prolong this conflict into an H‘? v- i years and so many reverses that no: ck/Ii fie last battle which is tradition- ally our: will be worth winning. Ships In Six Months, liihlders are winning the race with u-rs arid niotorships of 10,000 tons, - “~ll lziilu-irics lillllftllfhflffl now being n: ‘ll‘.‘ laying iii ilie keel to tlic final ‘, ' . Jiri uzulcr >lX months. lndccd, s of ilic hull and so on in distant i’. flllll ;i%\f'l!ll)llllg them at the " llili liiivc bccii reduced to five . ~ 4 hint llriiziin turiiccl out ships Zllll ii is .~pcv<l that has decided ~'r-w.-< ny about whether the hulls : p~ ~llil1iil bc rivctcd or welded. 1 only quicker but it saves steel, ~ ~ . v. i2. .\llll'C stccl is being saved ~ll.‘l‘('lC for small craft. lluiulrcds largo. lizivi- been built, releasing til iiipliiiililvrs from the barge l i v. -:l. nu iiciviirgiiiiig tonnage. ; .~ . v .1» i-nini-iiiiuiiiiig iiimn the wcll- I ~' w ui‘l‘ltillillli\'n types (if vessels which llriiidi sliipbiiildcrs had already l'<l'i wcrc [ircparcd when ivar crime f. r m: "‘.{*‘ll~ w production. The Admiralty fl ill‘ \\~l'll m llicm for so many tankers. Chi-Hill Crzrgi) liners, coasters, dccp-sca H‘ i 111.1911", {lllll sizniilardizalion has triumphed. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN HIIagpipesTITn Libya While regimental anonymity _is still observed with rcgurd to the Battle of Libya, says an ex- it is learned iiidireclly that there are cliuiigc, A: a. matter of fact lliglilzitidcrs in the fray. there have been Scottish battalions in all the North Africa campaigns, down as far as Ethi- i-pia. It is in this great nrugglc in Libya, how- cvcr, that the prcsi-iicc of the Scots has bscome known through incidental reference to the bzig- pipes A dispatch from Cairo stated that between lulls iii the gunfire. the sound of the bagpipes could be _ heard putting fresh heart into their ct>1111'flLl€S-_ A later dispatch told of the joy with which a High- land regiment heard the skirl of the pipes coining from up in front. That was a prearranged signal that a certain point had been captured. Iii olden days, ii is recalled. bands used to play tlie regiments into action. The colours of tlic regiments were carried into the fight, too, and the music and the colours were great sources of in- spiration. \\'hcn these customs were abolished, ilic liziudsmen either wcntiinto action, too, or acted 2h‘ strczvhcr bearers. 1t scenis, however, that the Scots’ pipers go into action still, to inspire and encourage their coni- rades And probably there is no sound the Italians and Cicriiiaiis more dread to hear. Arniy Costs Increase A graphic picture of the startling increase in the cost of fighting, as compared with the last war, is presented by \1ctor Sitiou, head of the 0rd- naiice branch of; the Defence DCpdFllllClll-I llc states that in the last war the transport equipment of an infantry division consisted of 4,300 horses and I53 motor vehicles; this time it is no horses and 3,500 motor VClVIlClCS of I60 different types; the cost plus upkeep of ihc equipment in the last war (for infantry division) was $2,000,000 {Or 8 year and this time it is $12,000,000. A year's cost of a cavalry brigade in the last war was $3,500.- 000, and of a tank brigade in this war $32,000,000. .~\ year's cost of an armoured (livisioii in this war i; $155,000,000, while the total cost of the Can- adian Corps in the fiscal year i9i6-i7 was $143.- 000,000. ~. EDITORIAL NUIES - \Ve enter the lzist lap of Nineteen IIundrcd and Forty One. u u n \\'ellaiid County, (Ont.,) Liberals have refused to allow their candidate .\liss llelen liinncar to withdraw hcr candidature in favour of the newly appointed Minister of Labour, Hon. Humphrey Mitchell. I I i l They have no patience with so-called con- scientious objectors across the border. At Newark Norman. A. Chilquist, 32 year-old actor who issued statements of objection instead of register- ing for the Selective Service Act, was sentenced to three years in a licdcrzil pcnitciuiziry and rc- bulicd by Judge Guy L. liakc for luck of patriot- ism. I ‘it! Badges bearing the emblem of the Maharaja of Mysore, distinguish the pilots of one R. A. F. squadron from all the others. The emblem repre- sents Gandabherutida. — mightiest bird cvcr known. In a cable to the members of the Mysore squadron the Maharaja said: "I beg you to wear the badges for my sake. I wish Joya, or victory, in all your contests. Happy hunting among ihc Nazis." U Q U I In Sydney, N. S. the stores for the most part observed boxing day an a holiday, smong those closing being: Merchant's, McCurdyk C. D. 5., Jacobson Ladies’ Wear, Wright's, Boiiiicll's, C. Roy Mason, MacDonald and McKnight, Brown's Jewellery Store, F. C, Bezanson, C. P. Moore, Robert Simpson (Eastern) Limited, Vogue Fur- nishings Limited, Bishopk Shoe Store, Thompson and Sutherland. Here the Provincial Govern- ment Offices closed. I U U I Britain has infonned Japan that she will abide strictly by the terms of the poison gas protocol of the 1925 Geneva Convention and has asked Japan's assurances that she intends to do the same, it has been disclosed authoritatively. The JNashington Conference of 1922. in which Japan u well as Britain, the United States and several other powers participated, provided in s. treaty for abolition of poison gas in ivarfare. The (Scncva Protocol of July i7, 1925, further extended the prohibition to all "bacteriological methods of war- fare.” The prohibition against poisonous sub- stances first \vas embodied in international law in the Hague Convention of i907, s m s s That Roumanian royalty is continuing to be democratic in afiairs of the heart is evident from the report that twenty-year-old King ‘Michael has lost his heart to eighteen year old lrcne Malaxa, daughter of Nicholas Malzixa, the Roumzmian armaments millionaire. and friend of his father, ex-King Carol. “As Crown Prince, Michael was often seen driving in his sports car with Lulu (his pet name for Irene), Carol encouraged his friendship with the girl. But \vhcn Carol fled Malaxa was arrested by Iron Guards and has not been heard of since. And Michael has gradually been cut off from till his other early associations. i t Rt. Hon. William Ewart Gladstone, British statesman, born this date i809; commenced his political career as a Tory under Pccl who appoint- cd him Vice President of the Board of Trade; hzid the distinction of being Chancellor of the Exche- quer in both a Tory and a Whig Government; as such he has iicvcr been equalled in his ability as a financier and as a matter of exposition; he bc- came Prime Minister in i868 but was defeated at iicxt election and retired from politics until the late ‘scvcnticsfin i880 elected member for Mid- Lotliiuii, and his piiriy hiiviiig been successful lic again assumed tlic Premiership and tried in vain to seltlc the Irish question; his social policy was highly =ucccssful ; and when he died, the Conser- vative leader (Mr. Arthur Balfour) spoke of him as "the greatest member of ihe greatest assembly, the world has even seen.” Today Winston Churchill may be ilcscrilx-il as a greater than he: “Decision by majorities is as iiiucli an expedient as lighting by gas.” NOTES BY TIIE WAY Great Britain has asked Japan for assurances that poison gas will no» be used. She may receive inn assurance, and it might have some values-s I curlm-Globc and lvfail (Toronto). Britain's shlpbullderl no win- ning the race vrith the U-boau. Large steamers and motorship; of 10.000 tone are now being complet- e from the laying of the keel w the final cost. of paint, in fun under six monhha. Indeed, by making part4 of the hull and so on in distant, worshops inland and assembling them at the shipyard, the six months have been reduced Lo five and a. half. Never before ha; Great. Britain turned out. ahlps at such s speed; and it. is speed that, has decided the peace-time controversy about. whedier the hulls‘ of big merchant. ships should be rivetted _or welded. Welding is not. only quicker but it saves steel, so welding has won. More steel ts being saved by the use of concrete for small croft. I-Iimdrcds of ferro- concrevte barges have been built, releasing hundreds of skilled ship- huildcrs from the barge building yards to work on ocean-going ton- nage. ‘Ihere they are concentrat- 1118 lkPon the well-tried standard "K011011131" types of vowels which many famous British shipbullders had already evolved. ‘he slupyardn were prepared when war came for M’! expanding producticn The Ad- miralty passed the word Lo them for so many tankers, refrigerated “T80 11mm. coasters. deep-sen “MINDS: and ltmndardisatim has triumphed. Vi"?! Pictures of the new military and air forces used in the drive amuse Libya. will soon be shown here in twvo short films made by Patric and British Movietone News. Opening with shot-s of weary mud- bespat-trml troops foot-slugging in Frmice d-uring the last war, “The Empire's New Armies" games on to the immense variety of swift mobile weapons wiui which the fight ln North Afrioa is being Wag“! 90-day. and includes shots of the parochuiists now being trained in the United Kingdom. Amwg the arlllleigv viveapcris shown are the latest, "ack-ack" guns, with A.'I‘.S. women manning the m. dloators. The other film, "RA F. —-Actionl", traces the development of Britain; air im-n since ti“ 1m war. To see the flimsy scpwm, Qflmels Of the early days of alr fights ls to marvel at the spirit of the pilots of these "old buses." Later sequences show the evolu- tion of fast, planes, guch u; i110“ Whlcl’! won the Schneider trophy permanently for Britain, leading up to thrilling pictures of actual bat- fle=. uiken In the alr with a minia- ture film camera. Britain has made herself rs. nponslble for the welfare of 50,. 000.000, Peifhe in the Middle East, suPplylng them from various 5cm. ces with industrial row materials, coal and 011 for transport. and public utilities, fertilisers for crops and f00dstufl5—l00,l.00 “m; cereals are now on their way them The Work is carried out by the Mlddle EB" Supply Centre, which, ‘Wm heflfilfluflrfers at Cairo, serves m} areal! ZoOmOCO square miles, twenty-five times the gize Blilflln herself. The centre co- ordmates the supply of all gqqda "d 1118M: the best. Dcsslble use of Shllifplhz facilities. n, works in “We vo-uperat-icn with the United Kingdom Commercial Corporation ivhich has branches in ten eounl tries-Turkey. Persia, gi-riq, syrla. Rllwtine. Egypt and the Sudan, as "l1 8-! l" Spain. Portugal and Iceland. The Corporation no; n, PQPWSBRWTJVe 0n the Middle East, 51191313’ Centre, which in tum maintains close touch with Mr. Oliver Lcvttelton. Minister of 5mm In the Middle East. and with the lnbendantrGeneral or in; 135mb 11111113 in that Nsion. ta of the U.K.C.C. in Egyip, Iraq, Syrfa, Palestine. and‘ south Africa have recently met in Cairo. under the chatnnanship of Lord Corllsle, 1° 135M155 the important questions of transport and ctr-ordination. Hostel tiownl no springing u l-hmlihout. Great, Britain around the new factories, same em covering a. square mile of land, for "Wkins munitifins and other war material The factories have to be built well away from congested U!!!» . lead 0f travelling long distances b and for- Wwfdl. 0m now 11W on the spots in hull built in parts elsewhere and assembled where required. along with canteens, rferigerated stores, EYYIQPBWWY l1 bale and shops. MW‘ the WM‘. all then buildings w-h down snd put WP and are s considerable tom's buildlng bill of £1,000,000 n day. Army camps and aorodnmes are also going uip all over country. and or the “Home Front" there are air-raid shelters. first- nld u, rest. centres, eunergency ho 1g and feeding centres. Even lempvrflfy flhflps are put in “blltzed" towns to carry on with- out. inte food and oner- essentiefls. In Cov- entry whole rows of these shops were run up for the bombed-out traders. Practically s11 this wu- ttme building 1s under the direc- ticri of Government depsirtrnenu working thr'u h iiie Minis of Works and Pu llc Buildings se up abclu a year ago under the direc- tion of Lord Rielth. ~ 111M Process p3 oger 250 gannsknin h the United m; om. xper en t th Midland Agricultural (Esolleage with elaht pairs Dairy Bhorfhom piers pefgsllilfng t5 and; - cw. owe at hose f with processed straw achieved over the '71 days of the trial an aver- a . f . . '“§.'.‘".'.’.° Eilhibhf. “i 11b? lib dayxolr of 64 bpetrtélgntl... over given recev ng un rem straw. en more striking were bhe results from a test. with 20 young dairy cattle 1-20 months old. at the Natlona "lfwllllilzle ‘ for‘ waearchkn fa Dairy- nsr. ac 1 o e an a van soda processed straw with the ra- tion increased 1.17 lbs. a, day. agpyinstb .47 lbaimfiorl eschlgne fad w- si-weoa- n co war only. a izaain of no lever than 148 per obtained in centres. and’ trials cznflrrn mrplng go improves the feed! value of cereal straw. chaff an caving; that, t-he products can be used to replace part. of the hay corn or roots in ratio-o for meat and milk production. The woes- sing plant of concrete cr brig! can be erected by local builders st I "fist of about (30. Running two l‘:‘llf'l1€$ a day it will produce 1,400 M- °! "m" W19 from 4001b. d the ‘ tlon rm distribution of = The Casgrains (unoouvu Province) Hon. P. F. Cassi-sin. secretary of state 1n the Dominion cabinet. for some years. nu been appointed to the Quebec Superior Court- w at:- ooed. 8m. Alexandre Ohus gram, who has died. Now, it fl ro- ported from Ottawa. he may be succeeded the House Cousntm: by his vrlfe, Madame Marie Therese Casgi-aui, vilio has been offered the Liberal nomina- lhem in public life and they have not all been on the same side. politically. There was. for instance. Hon. Charles Euaebo Casgraln, vino sat for many years in the Canadian Senate. representing an Onaarlo district. He was a Conservative. And there was his brother, Philippe B. Casgmfn. a noted historian, who represented Ulslet in the House of Common; from 1872 w N91. He WE; a Liberal, indeed, for many years the only Liberal to hold a seat in Quebec below Quebec City. Hon. Charles Eusebe had s son, Thomas Chase Casgrain. a distin- guiiued lawyer, junior counsel for the crown at the trial of fouls Riel, attorney-general of Quebec 1n two administrations, chairman o1 the International Joint. Commission and. postmaster-general for two years in the Borden cabinet. It was his son, Hon. Alexandre Casgriiin. who was a member of the Quebec Superior Court. Philippe B. Casgrstn also had s. eon, Joseph Philippe Baby. a well- known civil engineer and financier who was called to the Senane in 1900 by Sir Wllfrid Inurler and sat there until Izis death ln 1940. Hon. P. F. Casgraln was b mem- ber of the Conservative branch of the family and read law in the office of Hon. T. Chase Casg-ralri. But: when he first. tried his hand at polities in the general election of 1917 Quebec was almost solidly Liberal, and it was as a Liberal that. he was elected for Charlexois- Montmorency, a scat his fairer- in-law, Sir Rodolphe Forget, had held iis a. Conservative for l3 years. Now, Madame Casgrain. who helped her father win the seat as a Conservative and helped ler hus- band win it as a Liberal, is expect- ed to campaign for herself. She is s colorful and vivacious figure and a lady of progressive ideas. ‘She led ilte fight for women's rights in Quebec and won. Vlihcthcr she wins or not, this time, she will add llvelincus and sparkle to the cam- paign. German Disaster (Winnipeg Free Press) No commander-in-chlef is ever dismissed until things are some: VH7 badly indeed, and this is what makes Hitler's dismissal of Field Marshal von Braucnitsch an event of out- standing importance. It Ls now ap- parent. that. the retreat of the Ger- man armies on the eastern front 1s not. a. calculated manoeuvre of the Nazi high command. 1t is a disaster to German arms, the end of which ls not. yet. in signt. Hitler's stair:- iuent. that he is himself assuming command, together with Goebbels desperate appeal to the civilians of Gernianv to provide warm clothing for the army, is proof that Germany has suffered its first major defeat. In 1936 Hitler got. rid oi von Blomberg and. von Frltsch. because they were not. loyal to the Nazi iaariy. They were replaced by von Kcitcl and von Brauchitscn, the former as head of the hign cam- inand, the latter as commander-in- chief. Both were up to a. point. “ iltlcal" generals, chosen more for their fidelity to the regime than for their skill. Von Keltel 1S nothing but. a yes-man. Von Brauchitsch was said to have ability and, on occasion. was brave enough to talk back t0 Hitler. Now only the s-man is left. 1t. does not do to a tiwh too much importance to the move which, in H11 probability, means that von Holder. chief of the general staff and said to be the abiest. military mind in German , is taking over. But this in itself is mportant, foi- it means that. the " olitlcal" generals have n foun wanting, and Hitler has been forced to turn back to men whose value to him hi not. based on party fldelft . Nazi dominance in Germany is pro ably weakened, as the nervous rotcstatlons in Hitler's message to he army clearly shows. But both Nazism and Germany have suffered s staggering blow. Let us not be misled by this news. Germany is still strong. But let ul be greatly and justly cheered by the proof that there is trouble in the German camp as we watch the frost-bitten legions staggering bank from Moscow. This is not the first time in history that. a. little corporal has led an srmy in retreat over the Russian snows. straw, enough to 5L! ly 38 animals with 50 lbs per hea orally. and it only takes m hour's light work to put. through each lot. How Are Your Eyes‘? If h Vin to n 443".‘- iadflfifi-E; eyes or dlnlnea - consuls u specialist. At your service with scan of experience and a thorough retracting service. Cull In and discu- your difficulties. ti. F. llutchesnni I. 0. IUTOIIIBON O. I‘. BUTOBISON OOO-OQ-O-OOOO-OQ-OO-OIOO-O-Q C Say to Your Grocer TI Want BRAIIMIII ORANGE PEKllE nu‘ You will enjoy its superior quality .rvYvvvvvvvwvw"yv" WORDS OF CHALLENGE A naught A Bu! Io: A People Al WI! "Some pomp foolishly ll»! that time i: on our Mo. It h not. Rather time is on the side of the GermunsP-Grut- imcrmeitzv. 1941 ROyaiIsZnk of Figures Total Assets Ranch Canada Q at New Peak Record of 51.075.090.900 — "Mk Dwain Up $97,500,000 — Profits Slightly Higher t“ ouml- The Annual Bnlunm Shflt 111d PIN“ U!!! IKE AMI-UH!“ 0! Th9 ' Royal Bank u! Canada for the year imiin N‘ m; shanmholltigls‘ "J Equality Of Sacrifice m,“ ‘fukflgniglfl u?!‘ 3am cticall ll POT“?! 93 85- (Hallfax Chronicle) prgssets yliilcreased almost. $120.- On Monday President Roosevelt signed the bill extending the pro- visions of the United States selec- tive Act. to all men beween the ages of 1B and 64. Under the new law. all men between these ages must: register, and all men between 20 and 44 are liable for active military service. The only persons unaffect- ed by the new provisions are those aliens who have not yet taken out their first papers. This Ls compulsory military ser- vice with a vengeance! The mili- tary draft in the United Stale: is obviously for service anywhere, not merely within the territorial con- fines of the country. In Canada, the Government's strongest argiunent against com- our-sow mlllmrv service oversea: has been the urgent and funda- mental need for preserving nation- al unity. The theme is one with which we are all familiar. Nor can there be any Canadian worthy of the name who would do anything that would threaten or harm the national unity of this country. The point on» vlilch many people do differ i; whether or not the im- milltary service would really con- stitute n. threat to national unity, or whether it would cement more clorely han ever the bond which binds us all together in the face of a common danger. Some days have passed since the Air Minister announced the Gov- ernment's intention of setting up a system of national selective ser- vice for Canada. Under the law as it now stands it. la clear that national selective service for Canada cannot mean the sending of Canadians to fight. overseas against their will. From this basic distinction be- tween our own law and the law that is being out into operation in the United States springs the seed of possible friction. dLword and recrlmlnntion between the people of our two country. Unless there is equality of sacrifice as be- tween Canada and the United States. them can be no truly suc- ceuful coordination of the military and economic might of the two countries. Canadians are now faced with‘ ll~e grave choloe of deciding be- tween s. policy which will almost certainly create problerm in our good relations with the United States. and n policv which. ‘many believe. will result in lnterrml dis- cord here at home. In such cir- cumstances it: will require real leadership and trulv statesmanllke qualities to decide wh‘ch course adopt. Will the Government c-ntlnue its “no oomnulsorv mill- 6‘ tin-y service out of Canada" and EXAMINATION fitting and Supplying Glasses Etc. ll. J. MABUN OPTOMETRIST Montague. P. B. l. Office flours: l0 to l2 A. M. l to 5 P. M. Holidays etc. by nppolntmenl Office Connected with DRUGSTORI IIIIKI“ I‘I1“Q EVANS Srzmach Mixture l! t! if if v Every person who ll troub- led wlh [as in the stomach and bowels should get n bottle of "Dr. Evan's Stomach Mix- ture," and see how lllckly It will relieve all dstresshig symptoms. It also promotes the fune- floml nctlvit. of the stomach. built: digest on and lm oves the ppe ite. Recomm fled for Indigestion, uyspepsin. Sour Stomach, Heartburn, etc. Don't delay. Order your bot- tle today. Price 85c bottle. AMMONMTED BRONCIIDAL COMPOUND Relieves acute Bronchitis. Spssmodle Group, Bronchial Cnhrrh. Cou h: lllfl Coldl. Prlel H00 bolt u. COD LIVII OIL For Infants and growing children. There ls nothing ou can Ive children who are nellned o he “lllcketyfl that will build and llren hen their bones uul bodies o "COD IJVII OIL” liable: thrive on fl. 1f In like mnahlne their bodies. Bus the Cod vei- Oil mun eon- taln the WM roportlon of vltunlnn. e u and recom- llposfil the hind téut h soloing- os tested an connquen rellalIle and effective. I rue rwo MAGS, lll Great George Street Mall Orders Given Prompt Attention vvvvvvvvvv 000.000 and have reached the re- cord total on’ 31177519001300- usual, the liquid tfon ll strong. with quiw iea ssete t0- Lilng 1.918 ties to the public. Included in this total of Liquid Assets are notes and depositswevdlh the Bank and Dominion and curities valued It 83712311959- Tobal Public deposit-s likewise reached a new hltlh "8"" 01' an Increase durinl! $97.546.1g8. In spite volume of withdrawals use of Victory Bands public savings in understood. have $902,000,000, the ycarof of e lame for the much isst summer, Canada. it risk endan in: Canadian-Amer- ican underfindhig. or will the? adopt selective service measures such u those adopted by Waslllnl- t/on. at. the pmslble risk of lniurinl our own nmional unity? ous year. Call 1 M WING mum Til,“ ‘l’ f creased of nuses and other mew slnoo not only regained their _ rum hlch mint, mic wtuauy 5'13, an increase over the figure q g Y." l“?- L‘ glolrlnledflho od under my,‘ mi s2 mm comm", wiiii $229,151.21’! she'd. in iii. vans to clues, town: 1111,1133: polities show blight o01iyumt£i°n_ were we -ma 11.311144 nobwithetand increased o m, ing costs duo larger s f, up W805. cost of living i». rs. Aifter providing for tax appropriation for bad undadoqfi ful debits profits ootallod $3.986.- 000. Ou this amount u“ usual dividends totalling 53mm 000 were paid, $325000 was n‘; aside for the Pension Fund 3°. ciety, and $400,000 for depmi‘. tlon of Bank Premises. The bai. ems of Pmflt and Lon forward amounted to an fnszeus of $10.92!. PLENTY SETJEM-UP ". Howling 1| participated in 11,. 000.000 persona annually mwmg, country. Dependable light at low Cost at The Windsor social matings. m. ‘Ill! MEN cl ulfuln naturally stop convsnlon‘ location and Its well- ostablislied reputation for courtesy comfort and service. The Windsor ls recognized as the proper place for business and dsur on common saunas l ll-DIRIO RAYMOND IIIIIDINV III W/unln llllllllllElll because of its MANUFACTURED BY iiiciiri Ann iiiziioisoii TOBACCO C0. LTD. CHARLOTTETOWN