vm-tnuaofl-BQ l ‘ f v . g.- - \ . t: ,- | " _ ill y’ t- l3 i ; -‘ l‘. . '. i lt- l t ' ‘ J n '-'b\\'.'."-'.\FL"-P‘-\J-FJ- ‘.51 , ‘_—blbnfinl—@_bl_5hlilflflJfl§lI_Ik-I _.Yu aii-‘t-r-"Z-I yr.‘ I J-‘Qifufif-‘s ‘v ._1.~_~_s..<~:r,r-' "' a".*..-.'.*.'.~.-..-.-.r.-.rz ,__,-__,_l~g_.f_g‘g*h,...s-.--.. . t- arm her allies in the ivai" against the Axis rill: i ciiiiiitonsrowii euiitinuiu Inf-uh; Dell; (Founded In 18'!) President: unit 00L W. Chester l- Vla-Pruldunt: J. l. Burnett». IJ-l. Secretary: Liuut. Cal. D. A. Mulflunon. 0.8.0. Iditm and Dire-nut: J I. Burnett. IJJ Aloeuta Editors: funk W and Hut. Ill a lluruetk I-UJVNJ. (On Active Samoa! ‘The Strongest Memory in Weaker Till the Weakest Ink.‘ FRIDAY. JUN! 23. .19“ Footnote To History According to .\Iajor General Lord Mottistoiie. speaking in the House of Lords, a pacifist re- solution passed by the Oxford University Cn- ion back in i933 had a "decisive influence" on .\lussolini's decision to take, Italy into the war. Lord hlottistone asserted that Prime Minister Churchill had given him this informa- tion. The resolution passed by the University's debating society. which consisted of a refusal to fight for king aiid country under any ctr-J to|’ cuinstances. had had a “shattering effect" British prestige on the continent, he said. “\\'e have actual proof now that Blussolini was s0 lffected by it that he definitely came to the conclusion that Britain ntighi he counted out.“ If this were the case. .\Itissolii'ii's nlisconcep- lion must have extended to Canada also after Prime Blinisiei- Mackenzie King spoke before the League of Nations convention at Geneva a year or two afterwards. Mi‘. King had lhcn a magnificent opportunity to assert Canada's dc- termination to work with Britain and the rest of lite Empire for the preservation 0f world peace. I-le took the very opposite course. His was a frankly isolationist speech, in which almost the whole emphasis was placed on the absolute power 0f the various Dolninions to decide singly and completely their own actions. How could Mus- solini or Hitler have failed to interpret such a statement as evidence of Canada's unwilling- ness to fight for Britain or the Etnpire under nziy circumstances? In the cazalcigue of unfortunate utterances. that speech of Prime Bliiiister King's will sure- l_v occupy as conspicuous a place as any state- mctts made by a crowd of irresponsible under- graduates- Iceland Celebrates- It was a British peer ivho said that. if Eng- land was the Mother of Parliaments, Iceland could fairly claim to be the (lrandmother of Parliaments. And the suggestion is not far- fctcltetl: for the "Altliing" was established in the year 930. when a group of libcrrv-loving Nor- wegians fled their country rather than submit to the I_\'l‘Z1l‘ll‘l_\' of the monarchy. and founded a republic on those inhospitable shores. The re- public lasted more than three hundred years", after w hich lapse of tint? the Icelanders acknowl- ‘ . the smereignty of .\'orwa_v. In i338. wh:1i Norway was united with Denmark, Ice- land became a dependency of the latter. In 137.; a new cortstittition was granted, and in tli: year i893 a fiiriii of hoitie rule prevail- c'l. In 11118 the CUUlltFy became an autonomous SlIifP. though still owing allegiance l0 the King o.’ Denmark. 'l‘ltis arrangement lasted till De- cember 31. 1943, when the Icelanders by the er they would continue the union k or sci up a separate state. Hit- ‘. d flit‘ question for them by occupying ' The republic was re-established. and " have just voted for a democratic con- n of the most liberal order. The restora- : of the retaublic was celebrated in Iceland last $attirday~ on the Plains of Parliament. amid the rain g of the liOPlllZCL‘. Prior to the outbreak of the present war Hit- ler IilZ‘.(l€ serious efforts to set tip a base in Icc- l. hut he was rcftiscd permission in establish ziirfields which. had he been successful, would have tiiidotihtedly given great trouble tn the Allies. Ins-lead. the United Nations enjoy the advantage its strategic location provides‘. Because of this the task of defending the vital routes" to Britain and Russia is greatly facilitated. The Mutual Aid Report .\lti t ital aid hy which Canada helps has now been operating for more than a year. The first report of the mutual aid board. cor- aring the period from .\Ia_v .10, i043. to March 5i. i944. has shown in QTCZLICI‘ detail than has lctri available before. wlicre Canadian supplies 111d ziititiiiioiis have been going. In that period. ti board expended t=/.)1.:.oo5.c<>0. so that the ..0ll-fl0lli'.l' appropriation granted by Parlia- ment last year was almost exhausted. The new appropriation fnr $800,000,000 will carry on mutual aid. including $07,000,000 for the UN Rltk following $10,000,000 out of the former. \\.'itli the current ivar appropriation approv- ed by Parliament, Canada will have spent on the war by March 31,1945. more than $15,000,- oo0.ooo. About 34.500.000.000 of this amount represents costs of supplies furnished to allies both by mutual aid and other financial devices used in earlier phases of the war. This may be shown by these figures: Aid to Britain. 1942 31.000.000.000 Repatriation 700000.000 Interest-free loan to the United Kingdom 100,000,000 Purchase of U.i(. assets in Canadian plant; 203,000,000 Private repatriation 100,000,000 Mutual aid, 19B l.030.000,0ll0 Mutual std, 1944 833,000,000 Tfllll 84.500.000.000 Somewhat less than one-third of the Canadian budget costs for ivar. therefore, represents pro- vision of assistance at Canadian expense for Allied countries. The chief recipient has been the United Kingdom. But the arrangement has been by no means a nne-sided one. Britain has bought more war supplies and paid for them in the past year. than Canada has furnished free of charge. The mutual aid tn Britain was "lagcs are like this. Canada might find quite an fi,®O. to Canada. The list of explosives, 39,149 Bren guns. 78,585 transport vehicles. 16,183 wireless sets. 534 landing craft. 9o vessels of 10.000 tons each, and so on. The list includes military clothing and food supplies. To other countries, mutual air assistance iii- Australia. and $4,101,587 to China. Other des- tinations were $874,000 to the West Indies, re- presenting flour only. and $482,000 to India, representing ivheat only. The flow of war goods" on mutual aid basis to Russia. Australia and Cliitia is increasing and shipments substantially exceed the figure given by .\Ir. Howe, which showed only accounts paid by March 31. Sub- stantial mutual aid orders being filled for the French Committee of National Liberation will be shown in accounts for the present year. All of these accounts, though paid for out of the Canadian treasury. represent substantial wartime employment created in Canada. .\lr. Howes report provided the first detailed ac- count of how consultations are carried out with British and American strategic and economic authorities in deciding where Canadian mutual aid will be sent. EDIIURIAL NUI t5 - Lord Clyde, better known as Sir Colin Camp- bell, British soldier, died this date 1805; as com- marider-in-chief during the Indian mutiny he cleared Lower Bengal of the insurgents. re- lieved Lucknow, pacified Northern India, and organized successful campaign in central dis- tricts; for his great services he was created Field- Marshal, raised to the peerage, and granted a. pension. I i U U Apropos of what Premier Jones told the \\'o- men's Institutes about drinking throughout the country, a lady correspondent. writing t0 the Guardian on a business matter. included this comment on existing conditions: “If all vil- army to replace her dead and wounded if only they did not give them so long to unfit them- selves with alcohol before examinations. \\'hat can we do to down that dreadful curse?" 1K ll ll t Divorces granted in Canada in 1942 show- ed a 25 per cent increase compared with 194i. The 3,081) divorces granted represented an iii- crease of 028 over 1941. All provinces with the exception of Prince Edward Island. Nov-i Scotia and New Brunswick showed marked iii- creases. New Brunswick had a decrease of 18. Increases 0f other provinces were: Ontario. 236; British Columbia. .215; Alberta. 64; Saskatche- _wati. o3; Manitoba. 42: Quebec. 23; Nova Sco- tia, two and Prince Edward Island. one. I i Ill it Clergy of the Presbyterian Church in Cati- ada are "not lacking in grey iiiaitcr." but need adequate training in theology‘. Rev. Dr. \\'. O. Alulligan of Westmount told the Presbyterian General Assembly in presenting the report of the board of education. Dr. Mulligan reported tlicre were 86 tninisters in the chaplain services. During the past year 23 ministers died and only 1o had graduated from the church colleges. He urged that colleges facilitate training of clergy. “We have the grey matter. all we need is the trziitiiiig." lie said. Kidding that Presbyterian slan- dards of education are higher ihztn in some other commuiiions. C I! Ii I At least 25 candidates of the Cooperative Commomvmltli Federation will enter the next Quebec provincial elections. according to rcli- able information given to the press by it high ranking CCF party official. following a discus- sion of the change of the French translation of the C.C.P. party's name to “Coopcrtive Federe" without mention of the word Commonwealth, which in some French-Canadian sections‘ of the C.C.F. “led to misunderstandings." The C.C.F. the official stated. will nominate in the near future 10 candidates in the Montreal and QUE- bec City districts while the rest are expected to be appointed En rural ridiiigs and the Rouyit and Abitibi area. t Writes .\Ir. L. L. Golden in Toronto News: “Humphrey Mitchell's new try to get soiue sort of ivorkiiig arrangement that makes sense on‘. of the mess on inanptwrci- can't succeed. The formula is wrong. Goodness kitqws. the or» ganiwtion of a nation's m:ili10\\'¢1‘ fOI‘ W111‘ 15 tough, even if the original plan is based on rea- son. But attempts" to dcal with such all over- ivhelining job on false principles are bound to lead to disaster. The correct tiriiicitiles of man- power use in war are simple enough. 'l'hey are to put every person in the place where he will do most for the winning of the war. Their bits: 1i i is the understanding tl-iat a nation at war needs m fighting men, needs ivorkers in essential indus- try and transport, needs a certain amount of civilian production, and needs foodstuffs. How else can a country at ivar make effective use o1 its nlanpower but by ensuring that men who are more useful there. be, or stay in the war plants. others in agriculture and stilhotlicrs, the fit- test and most capable for fighting, m tlw forces? But a manpower system based on a refusal either to put men in. or keep men out of. the forces. is bouiid to break down. And ours has. as has been obvious for llotig. long time. Since we have what Mr. hing likes to call a voluntary system for active service, certain results flow naturally. ed for the armed services. To do that you white-feather young men out of essential in- dustry into the active army. In that way. Y0" certainly don't keep them ivhere they are mos‘. useful, for it is clear that a ‘highly skilled techni- cal man can better serve doing essential research than he can by sitting behind a desk in the \\ 006$ ish purchases in Canada mounted to $1,149,- The report made by Mr. Howe, as chairman of the mutual aid board, gave both a‘ tabulation of actual goods furnished and the cost of them included 41 Lancaster bombers, 102 Mosquito bombers, more than 60o other planes ‘mostly trainers. 551,900,000 rounds of ammunition. 2,014 universal carriers, 92,- 648,000 pounds of chemicals. 17,536,000 pounds- eluded $23,282,000 to Russia, $20,959,000 tn N Men have to be obtain- m _ jijui: Cli-IARLOTTETOWN aunitntim Notes By Tliii Way: 1m wn s we. ook ._ . on“ 8m I bit um Tor It wu the Oblnmuml tin. geiucus feJow. who lnvcn the envelope that ma. Before um evervthlne wu u bubllc 3136508810!“ postcard. A i-Nllld t flew Montreal xmfwkngd ludutoap: brouiht down by n cop. But the '5 what the luv’; for hen turkey The Uulloil Still. Britain. Con. ad: and the rest of the British Ominlfliu last var turned out new planes at the rat of 14'». no: hour. No wonder evil! on magi-t; 53g“ that some wly to ersure world bme n81? be fouudpbault Ste. r. lfllelenov Expert: A mm with- out 1m of of his own to wreck, Liaison man: A man vc/u hire to do the work of another you don't like. Executive: A uran who make; quick decisions and ls sometimes right Conference: A Rroub of men who o ll’3i§’”<i§§i'l.“2..'l?t‘“‘“‘ “"l,.°°li‘.,'§." n 08h . -Well Street Jourfial. c Pilv the booi- tailor. l; the npeai 11f Thomas Richard Henrv in The Toronto Telegram. He measured n. man for a suit of clothes and told him to come back in eleven weeks for _a tizv-on. He said he oouldnt net it ready sooner. During the DOUtlds and the tailor had to start over again. A screnmlnz shell la a ncrebmlnl shell witch bays no attention to the FEILIIOUQ label ef the people in its course. Cold. hunger. weaxlness and wounds know nathlnz of sect- arian divisions. The Padre 1s a min- istering servant of Ohrlstianltv. the friend and mentor of the lfldl-Vlfillll fighting g , a vital l1 between the fist-innit mm and home md all that home mum. And when men Ire face to face with the ulti- mate experiences of lite and death oniv the fundamentals nutter. - i-iallfax Herald. i Western, by I few hours. The Slrus was of t0 tons burden, left Cork, Ireland on A " 4, and t 11.11 ground l Hock in the lower bev of New York 1a days later. She not of! and en- tered New York harbor next. day. The Great Western was a steam- ship o! 1.340 tons. loft Bristol c April 8. and bet-tiled in New Yor harbor a hours after the 81r- ius. Both stubs encountered bad weather, and the overlie speed of the Sirius was 5V; knots-st. Thomas Times-Journal. The plfldd! of modernhtic archl- lecture is that it insists thnt func- tion shall honestly assert itself. but all modernlstic buildings look alike. It 1s always heavy rectangles with sharp edizes end ions of Ian. There are modemletic coun y houses which might be smell biscuit fac- tories and there are small modern- istic garages whit-h mlxht be Lune country residences. By the old architecture it. is often hard to tell a college from l. church. but. the new architecture proclaims start- ling resemblances between a mrale centre and a lzarment centre. — New York Times. v Mr. Maugham IS ‘l0 year: 01d, but 1s still a nne figure o! n mm. Ha says ned still be playing tennis he hadn't overheard a spectator murmur as he quit the court a few summers ago. "Gui he plays well to: a gafler nls age!" He dashes abcut. tram one party of the right. Dwpie to another. in much the same iasnton as’ me rlllLOL Templeton he tnmpoons in "Tne Razor's Edie.‘ I prefer small paroles", he toll: one reporter. "roux 1s a wonderful mim- ber, six ts all right. ancl eight. will en. After that. its not a party; it's a rauuie."—.isennett cert ln Eatuz. uav neview of Uzeruture. Furly large forest fires have been raging in oanadas fur north-tween. Qlfiafiloflhj ivimm rive days mare tunnel titan was cut by 143 saw- lnlus uululg tile past. tlirea- imnms. Huolhfllng to toresters. ‘fne lust bbllliu 0A urim tunnel‘ in we rttllle mver block was amuu; me areas wubw out by lnc names. auman negligence is likely me pri- inazv cause u. tins fll-"Jbukdlki wast: 011a it is a. irigiztlul price to pay. l\anlulli can 110.11 and restore. but sne can not seep up wit-n ms: '1 uluiiuerlr... competition. - hum - ton spectator. inAI-‘au nnu vet we havens always been in me nabli. c. divining 0U!‘ given from our surnames. m... one signature uiruie ki/Cllicvllofl oi’ in- Hfismiflet-flv Iii-t 11 nuutce 11111.11. 'AU8 tittee wnu Ila-Q inmate name. sis-ten tnenl.‘ manna IXCXAIV L452. cnuiccs olgnucct.“ we uiiu tic-belt. ztrcat. ram». file custom u: win-mi me inmate uuttal mans come into vogue unui alter the ulvli war. All or our presictenw up to that. tune, v-tzi m: excepuan o1 Jmtbe h. Polk. were uiown sunpty a5 uootge wasnirigton, AhGXOW Jackson. Zac- hary HIM} lnon H1011] came ulvssts b. urmc. Rutnenurd B. BHYBS. names A. G cn. Writers and actor; ngyg .1. Will's preferred two simple reasons. t ooune , Henry adawortb wnslellow and ztltlbh Wllao Im- orssn Ind James Russell Lowell. but they were exceptions-u. obvious. _1.Y. Wu sowi- Manet: X. Bulnmui. anemic-me inttlat, as well u thg 111141118 nlmfi. is an extravagance, whirls. But we wouldn't mini: of teoommenulnk us AUUULADU in Min- nesota. wnere everv Jcnn Peterson and Georle Johnson covets that middle t. or J. An iaentitviim mid- §'..'f..i,““..‘l.‘é....i.".""“"w “fir: . — nn Star-Jaimie]. f n la don ' not; ' gabbfi. The 3:111:01“ " "' 1 In? b one no l: ..E.'.F'..“.'l1”ll2l?.."“ “at: 3E. .......""'"""‘--i._- wit; up: that wtmdullmut- nun-u In» n- nu: $13.». " I be flown M hill-hilt. NWI. lhélllh Mfmklbll unsum- be -Dot:olth éwngver the ceiling. ~ out“; ml eleven weeks the man but on twelve ‘D if character-it at hi; tueetings. Doug- btrlctly American is the middle to l-fflflld. Lind b0 0h especially 1n these days of one“. M Are you en "l hunt" pgrgqp? drouth. he otumoloned the under- s0. swp it. These peopl do 1m. tic-the rme was lnlteiy meme amount harm with their nne of the men-and his wnulna Mllfigfl. "I u m“ _ d. lento developed at Blank was a fir’. Ilnndou college Mi: stei- M4116 his N mu. ' been! tnfvernltv coon wen n bl; following. that Mr. Blink vgtu mine w be let C-oidweii hsue him, and invited gyxgnmggbhlgtflrmmfi’ m ‘guilt: hkn 1gp the 0.0.1. fold. 1 conversation. An o '0 Wm“ 80 ed. in flue amount with ti}; vim axuberlnco with ~ which mki l Plibuc ronuu i mention wu made of " mun- lztnz wheat into grain-alcohol and syrup". Now. there may be a llm lted field for whoever-comma n- IOM the lines indicated: but, deer . w there are hundreds 1 0f f men. wom- en and children all around the MINI. 1nd with when valued at a twirl!“ ‘fr? é°i‘°.'l‘* Fit’: Q .V l1‘ . e ver a William-Port ttr, or Vancou- lll! field ls O flu should look the livestock lndl m plain t situation es- 0» a v a a o- ca of Banach: an plin- r/brturtlitv there whole “dehfvdntlorfl lcchrd-que, as a Lied to nrm meditate) to get a be tar be into Sukntchewapkv. or some ur " duatrlelimtion", ln the Itvestoc business. and aimed at frown: tchewan‘; ho: pro- duction and pmeesslnx on a. wer- mamenr. rather than ui emeruency or war basis I wold-d endeavour to speed-up, deepen and widen the wheotetrc-n-i. rat er than retard or divert ~at flowing gold". I an Sh". etc. A WIJSTEINDR. First C. C. F- Premier (“H B."l.n the Mnntpec FR: Prfil -l Who is this men Douglas who been setting Saskatchewan's crested wheat ma: afire? Saskatchewan know, him well. So does the House of Como-M: at Ottawa; they have known him for n e years as e young mun well able to look after hlnuelf in debate or on tihe platform. He was never a pulleuf of punma. and it no longer ‘surprises anyone to hear this foicn- er Baptist n-itn ' on the S00 llne calling his cppon- entc 11mm mines. Abcut, the warp- est were the word.‘ he once applied to u then member of the Saskat- chewan government who had ex- pMBSQG his opinion that the Rev. T. O Douflas was a liar. Immed- iately chalengln; the speaker to a public debate. Douglas wired: llll [NDURIN mirror of the heart. Sb choose a guaranteed perfect in colour. cut. flawlesa quality. i‘ innit" REMH ). . '1 lI'A"/' i _. \ C. W. PA GODKIN “Hill Willi“ /)/'n.:ivni(" ' \ Long after wartime‘: parting: are no mitts. the exquisite beauty of her Bridal Wreath Ring will recall treasured memories of romlnce- Undlmmd by the years. a perfect diamond is the only worthy lflfllfillflllll Pl/(JMISI OF (i LOX/l‘ {F + Bridal Wreath ' brilliance and TTERSON JIWILLII Gent Genre Street BROS. SUMMER-SIDE. P. E. l. Diamond 0rd Welltllng Eli!!! ' “Unless he l; a coward as well as q heeler, he wlllytcoetptf‘ . Like the Dominion Minister of Agriculture. with whom he cori- stantly tangled In mrliament. ‘runny Dcuslu is short-about five feet slx inches. Bu! in both oases the stature is deceptive As Jimmy Gardiner iprlded himself on his prowness as a soccer player and on In ablilt/y w take care of tcugti lls can look back at his record in the xlnz i-lna; he was once amateur lightweight champion of Manitoba. He still puts on the gloves now and linen to keep in shape. and rounds out hi. exwrclbes with rowing and swimming His wirv little fmm; has brought him Lhromidh a anxious election o lgn n, well is the biggest- may better-and he keeps the spring in hi; step. He has the ad- vantage of youth on his side, for Douglu ts still under 40. Incldenlully. Cisrdmeir bot/h C13 F and $1M Credit i A Tribute To The Press tMontreai Gazette) A fine tribute to the work of the press in gathering and lmbllshins the news of the invasion has been paid by Prime Minister Winston Churchill. Speaking recently In the House cf Com 1 he announced that. he did not intend in make l detailed statement on the oper- ations in Frat-ice. as all the points of Interest. had been fully coyereci bv "the excellent reports furnish by cur able and upright press " certainly the invasion his pro- vided the press with the greatest task and responsibility in its hu- tory. All the skill; and ornnlzat- fans gradually fanned in the ex~ ls 21 years hlsaerilcr but that hardened warrior can abet any man a mu. le of decades and slug it out with lot-ta the political ropes. On the platform he has an ebul- ilence quite unlike the crisp but dour performance of the Minister lie-ad flung back. one hand on hip. changing mood, swiftly from gay even brood humour (for e minister of the gospel) to 520:1 when he mentions big business 0r the in- effable Grits. If his sallles make a hit with the crovvd-thev genenally do-i-1e can spring them at the next wri. This ls the method followed in show bualneu, and it work, well on the hustlrigs too. In the Douglas speeches of this campaign that in the provincial field. a; distinct from the federal tie is careful to oifcr a compar- utlvely mild programme of reform. There's little mctnzul socialism in it. The ell-operatives, rather than the state, are to explore industrial 115g] hr , flex and on; the municipalities are to be ute k111i!- pln in the public health set-up, with the provincial government offlrlfil lzrl-ntc for the hiring of local demure. ‘me tanner l5 to keep running his Own show (the worn "collective ls missing mm uh: C. OJ‘. campaign. I O O So far Douglas bu made his reputation a. an orator and n de- bster. He has 41.1mm n skill u an energetic political 1e er He ls lete untried the adminis- n of ubllc If till. end there- lffera xvzn hi; national leader. com trill. ln d . J. Ooldiweil. who wu g Regina ee lny job. end was a contradiction never new to travel hell u fut the 5pc] - n! defumltctv “etcmeu. Mr. Churchill doe! not favor the Building at Ottawa checking on pay and allow- ances." . $723,753,000 during the period in which Brit- 00M News-Argus. sumzeeuon that Brit-Mn be referred the "elder country" ln- of tigambznfliu Omnggmand prime er‘; ‘lute fi instinct are fault! . Un- eu w are badly- deaelv lbout uni oount-rlu to be- I35‘! of Agriculture. I-Ie stands with his ‘h perlence of generations are being rought to bear to meet, the R989 opportunity’ Wlth this prospect, there has been careful planning and preparation. and now that invasion i. under way. the new; l5 being brbufl/ht out within the full scope permitted by censor- to. But scarcely less important: than the fact. presented ls the manner of their presentation. The war-re- porting cf our own day ts following the traditions of dlrwt and human observation early developed in the Crimea bv William Howard Rus- sell. the enterprising correspond- ent. to the London Times. who Wu one of the first to report hlsitory in tho making with all the vlvleiness and human detail of the eye-wit- ness To those engaged ln this adven- turou; servise belong the dangers QUICKIES “rmitiTiit-rigiit aim-n: rut funllv lfo fps have like eder eaters to us were Germany and Italy. — Pebqbor- ough txunmcr parlance bu llu|ht elm. The yan chad should granted emmplislnnah. lln um! uiioylmt .4 fiat-LU bladder ma... revunl fur you with a. Giulia Want. 5"‘ lhmkfnll tie-Yr ti. “ca” w n, 1mm“; in 1935 51in ut. "tey ave e rewar r1 e that was the ivw’ of the mut- Bw- filw°°§ a , n1 Credit ii-erisins. and D0118!“ the tribute of PM“ showed a streak o; garinlncs‘ when Churchill they have the recognition ~@ewedeW~"e*"e"°“:aasria:r%t:varc~ now. cf all ' Judge I ngge_of_thel.r_ef forte. nd achievement Arid Minister men. in a P°51t10n t0 thi- accuracy and ,‘ it'll-ll?“ IE. Around“ time” luau. u‘ ullodootirwockifillil: yield the They an, too, if we avoid tho ' melt u ‘ " Plilu. cite, Headache, Rl‘ Lulltuda, lauclilupmdinugy whieluooftu: altui fbonuound“. Foranrlulfaeenbry Doddfilflioiuyfillshnvebeonlnlhlnen and women to hop kidney: and teodordel. Ifdaum or the uh you Mm udder 152$’ I25 mulug l0, u health and n use Dodrl’: Kiley Pills today! Swift Baby Chicks We will have Chink: avail- nble for delivery- June 20th. 23rd and 37th. at reduced prices. Write or cnll SWIFTS Chick Hatchery Charlottetown By Ken Reynolds no If someone‘: offered All" only feats IDN in MM! Every bled MAPS FILE A ufe and efficient for Internal and pita. It he highest. quality Ingredi- entl, therapeutic; vsfue bcmlblnefleot In Gel l wt» Melly. Pflce He. TllE 2 MAGS 149 Gt. George Si. litany Stoniaclis Relieved ' person who l: emu. wlth p: in the flag. h Ind bowel: Dr. I u’! Munch uunnit time! “T35 tlnul pgvenlc 11:, ‘bu! qt. II g1 u y". nctlannluctlv. of the stomach. noble dgatllan ml tmprom g5; DON'T DELAY —— OIDI YOUI. T BOTTLE TOD Price 85c A"! OINTIIEIIT uterus! ilnudeonlyof remarkable for thll out tu ha: 2 It ; I It ls utfluent. olden llyen prompt nttent on Professional 8am McLeod O Bentlo! I. IINTLII. I. Us l. 1L BENTLEY. It c Bouillon up!‘ Alumni-ol- I l“ Plhoc lend M. ALBAN l. A. LLB. BAIIISTI-Jlf. SOLIOITOI. ITO. Candle n Oomnem Ill» "lmwiggmim Youflguuelnbfilebltlnatq cloud Abdtbuawflortlanml-khtat-buru flueunmdmoonMm-egu thermal-touch Norltigcoutflzlmémfeechqgm “ma-scrimm- Butmzthlnc ever burnout..- w done. '":'.i..':..".i.." 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