\ c. ._-.. nun‘ s1»- Ham flfil“ ma‘ run-a vrr rrrr In‘ u» sat.‘ i!!!’ Iru- nun-e‘ ..-....._...r~._.._ Pfiiidfiit i TIIE GIIAILOTTETIIVIII GUARDIAN Inning Dill] (Iflllllll ll Ill" LAI i C W. CBC“! l IOLIIO ‘M3121’. nuiiinuiui. l. AIIIIIOI nu. Ion-our]: LhuL 00A, l). A. Ill flue!- 9J3- ldlun- 1nd lalllhg Dirndl“. d. I Blnlll. IJ-L Lunch“ lidllnrlu ems wsum. m! “my III l1 Burnett, ILOJLVJ, (0: “the lonln) SUBlCIIPTIUN Ilfg». I . -‘.. In! in P. I. l. “J0 per Illll 1" 1° I’ on: nu a Inllhl; We l" iii "I"! a” our." “w p" you; “M! for I _II|-I $1.1! [or l llllllflhli lilo (or one null l; loll to othu Pruvlnoee and UJ-A. 86.00 ill I‘! kinda; simm- cu» on nun 811W l" I I'll"- llla {or I Inlth _ The Chnlnltelowu Gunilla: In; he ohlalnld ll loam-ifs Nun Annoy, Than ltlfllfl» N!" 7°"! m‘ llulth Rene A|elacy, Corn: Milk and Wuhllll" 30'"!!! lntropullul hows Annoy, 120i Peel It. llonrenh J. Illa i“ Boy lb, Toronto; New: Mull Clinton! IJIPIIII Ottawa; Wolfe’: hows sued Undhlflh “"4 B.‘ Tobacco snov. lonuton. N- B- “The Strongest Memory is Weaker. Th" the Weakest Ink.” FRIDAY, JULY 16. 1943 Safer In Their Coats All over Canada these hot I111)’ daysi comics-s citizens are in the majority. But "or Qn‘ Parlfa" mam Ilill at Liitawa. .\lr. T. j. OI\Cll'l, Lib- erril member for _l\'an1l00[>_5. mfidehl :1“ phi‘; the (ither day to Spealcer Glen iu t_e ouse) _ Qontminic tor pernihsion t0 sweltering 111E111 61b to take off their coats. He referred to a pews}; paper report of a minister in an Ottavia c 1:0 permitting his uiale iwrihddiers to remol‘; t er Cont; “I know the Government wou W6- cmne it," 531d _\[r_ O'I\eill, and the ptilople 0f the country‘ as a whole would welcome t e news that members of the House of ComrnonS had taken Off their coats, rolled up their sleeves and gone to work." llut Mr. Speaker turned :1 (leafiear and those tiiembers WhO Tenmined i“ their seats kept their coatspon. h I-low iuaiiv actually did rem-WI. fl" "Port 3mm}, not, There is a ‘notoriously slim sprink- lii-ig of members in their seats durinfil the ‘dog days. Perhaps permission to sit 1n their dsbirt- sleeve! would encourage I larger “fr? irlcoef" Qn the other haiid,_it might lead to al in 5 other irregularities, such as calling urlPafllarrlenr‘ an, nanqgg and goodness knows what. Ourlls. land members, who rarely if ever 0P“ ‘tglr mouths, would probably 110i b4!‘ tempted, 111 think of the effect on such a biihgem" men" ber as Mr. P011110: who already gains dto 113v]: filled over a hundred pages of ansar , muC of it in condemnation of Defence Minister Ral- ston, and is still going strong! Mr. fqilchellk Intelligence T6“ “It is of Course, the right of a Minister Or Dgpntv ‘Minister t9 remove unwanted employees." says the \l0ntreal Gazette. “In PfmclPle- there caii he no quarrel ‘with the list fiwefli t0 1:31;‘; ment by Labor Rlmisterhlitche , o_ sev n '4 I lll-(‘Il who have lcft Natwflfli Selefdlve Sen!“ Sin“, pup,“ Little resigned as direct’? purl Artiiiii- .\lacNamara took his place. 00 e“ (‘retails were given for accurate judgment 0i the various cases. "Ilf1\\".‘\'€r. it still appears Straw ‘rm 5° ‘my nicii w- uld leave 50 tlmCkl-i" Ma-ny of fthémivaclli PQWjtjllikfllifll, known to the editors '0 3111b as intelligent, eonwfiwl" men- Jrrdglyrlg by I e {(0)111 Mr. Mitchell set before Parliament re- ccutiy, National Selective Service is not cmbB-f- ram-ii by a surfeit of these qualities. _ _ "There is, w”. 50m? reason to be Suspmclus of the .\linister's judgment m the mattelr ofhin- telligence and competence. I701’ exam? c» ‘v en the name of Dr. Goklwin Smith was brought up. Opposition Leader Gordon Graydfi" referred to . _ _ v , Dr. Smith as ‘an unusually intelligent employee- “ '\\"i1o said that? asked Mr. Mitchell. I have my own opinion.’ _ y _ _ _ "Here is Dr. Smiths academic record. l73ur in his Arts course at the University °i “as” erg Ontario, he was University Goldh Messllzifi and \\‘0f‘l the Carter“ SChOlELTShIP,‘ t es h y r. Scholarship and the General Proficiency c 0 a ghi After taking his Master of Arts degrce gt University of Toronto, l" first studied in England and‘ then went to Cornellhto berltlg: gtie5t of the lelluride Association t ere. Tglluride is a foundation which invites outstand- ing students to Cornell f0r “VWYFQr Perwdls’ In his two years at Cornell Dr. Smith not 011 Y took 11h Doctorate of PhilosoPhy- but also 11°" the (iuilford l‘riz<'._ 111e- -\1@§§¢11x§r P?“ fig} the Boldt Irelloivsliiti of lhC'Ul’llV€f51ly.' _ t. won in fact. evcrv 111"“ for which he “'35 ehglble ._t11’¢ first timerthe feat had been Perrormerl since 13¢; gince he left Cornell D1‘. Smith has ,-,,,..i,, hi;[ftl'\' ‘ll two American Universities, most recently as zis-ociziied professor alt 0&6’ t): the outstanding collegespf the Midde ‘Ca, to," 5mm He has published numerous articles and one hook, and has had two more books ac- CCPIQVI for tiiiblication. _ “li .\lr. .\lll(ll(‘ll will not concede thatthis min i> intelligent, will he give 115 hi5 oPmron of certain intellectual giRmS WhO 5H" serve the Labor lhtiariiiteiit?" Fine Red Cross Record "In Priitcg liihvard Island, ninety-five p91’ can, of the gcltool populatimi is enrolled in junior Red Cross, a percentage which. according to our lflftlflllfllltlll, is not equalled by any other province or state anywhere." This signal tribute appears in the 811111181 1'6‘ port of the Canadian Red Cross Society for the vear i042. and is certainly one in which all concerned in the work of the Junior Red C10“ in this Province mav take legitimate pride. The organization numbered 16.012 last year, vyith 523 branches. Prince Erlward Island Juniors rouiribiitvd the large sum of $3,276.41 to ihcif (‘rippled Children's Fund and Junior War Fund. Four (rippled (‘liiIdrenY-a clinics were held at wbirli :3,“ iuilii-iils were examined and 3R dis- ISl1Jil'L'P<l-—2O cured and i8 improved. fiver 4.- nQQ flr|i('lll\ of clothing and comforts for the armed forcw and civilians were completed and shipped overseas. I l The report includes details of P.E.I. Women's War Work, Canadian Red Cross Corps, Em- ergency Nursing Reserve, and Red Cross Cani- paign in which $73,000 was subscribed-almost double the Island's original objective of $40,000. Dealing with the Blood Donor Service, the report notes that the objective throughout Can- ada this year is 12,000 donations per week. Al- ready almost 9.000 donations have been received in one week of this vear. "It is our ardent hope," says the report, “and one towards which we are working daily, that in every part of Cau- ada where clinics ate practicable. ...bef0re this summer we shall have our Blood Donor ser- vices so well organized that we will be able t0 provide all the blood. needed to meet the tragedies of the battleground.” The new clinic which will be opened shortly in Charlottetown will pro- vide all our citizens with the opportunity of coit- tributing to this vital phase of the war effort. Among other interesting features of the re- port is a comprehensive review of the activities of the Canadian Red Cross Society in New- foundland by the assistant commissioner, Miss “one. Wilson, who is 3n well and favorably known here as Red Cross supervisor and 01'- ganizer. - EDITORIAL NOTES- It did not rain here yc-terrlay. * 41 41 * Montague surpassed itself for fine weather on race dav. n n1 1n n1 Nobody who ‘is anybody is talking politics these days except allcgedLv noii-ticilitieiznis like Mr. St. Laurent a 1o- n1 a1 Prior to the invasion of Sicily President Roose- velt advised Pope Pius XII that as Allied sol diers fight to rid Italy of Fascism “the neutral status of \"21tic:in City 11s iwll zis of the Papal domains throughout Italy will be respected’ The President's niesszigc to the Pope given out at the White House. clearly held forth the pros- pect that the invasion of lite Italian island of Sicily would be followed by similar operations against the Italian mainland. a1 n1 n1 41 In Canada there are over five thousand his- torians who are tlic district correspoiitleiiis to daily newspapers. Lr11l(ll(1\\']1 outside their dis- tricts atid not recognized iti their districts as historians, these people have, says the Printed Word, what every anibiiitiiis author longs for- an absolutely loyal following of readers. As a class the historians of the "peii-iiiizils" stziiid iii the very first rank. according to surveys of “who reads what" in the news zipers. They have the secret of literary success: they write about their readers. i 1K 1H * Lord Plumer of llcssiiies, liritisb soldier. died this date 193:: served in the Sudan \\‘:ir; took part in the South ;\fric:iii campaign; the Great \Var greatly iiicrczisetl bis l'(‘]7lll{lll(1l1 as :1 general, and he held llllllllfllllll eoiiiinzuids. iii- eluding the 2nd Army iii l-‘raiiiee; after coni- manditig the army of the Rllillt‘ for a time he was appointed Governor of Malta, the defence of which he developed on modern lines, latcr was promoted Field Marshal; for his ilbtiiigiiishctl services he was awarded the (Brand Cross of St. Michael and St. George, raised to the peerage and received a grant 0f $150,000 from Parlia- merit. 1K * 1k 1A1 Apparently our Navy lads crave ziciioii, afloat or ashore. Three elderly ladies, following a bard day at Red Cross, relaxed at a movie, says the Printed \\'ord. During the feature, which lack- ed perhaps some of the speed and rhythm de- manded by t0da_v's ywiuth. one lady tlroppetl a valuable ear-ring. After fuiiihlitig around her feet xvithout success, zuid fcariiig it might be stepped on, she notified the others. All three leaned over and began fumbling, heads bobbing in a variety of eccentric tiiotious. .-\t last one of the ladies lit a match. .-\s its light located the missing trinket and all three dived for it, the sailor appeared from somewhere and crouched beside them. "Hev," he said, “if this is a crap game I'd like to get in on it.” n1 101 =11‘ =11 Here are the salient paragraphs in Mr. Brac- ken’s speech which roused the ire of Prime Minister King, who, however, did not disprove them: "I do sincerely challenge this Govern- ment to abandon fortliivith its negative, partisan policy with regard to manpower. To give politi- cal considerations priority over the national in- terest is intolerable and uuforgivcalile.... _ “Why is this double standard of military ser- vice bcing itiaintaiiterl?...'l‘he men (zombies) are out of agriculture, out of industry, out of the war and out of everything but the public treasury.. . . "The Government would tell you that these (labor) shortages are the proof of our total ef- fort. Could there be a itiore shabby attempt at deception? Is it total effort when more people are employed in luxury trades than before? Yet these are the facts.” 1r 1i- n1 n1 Axis aggressors have been check-mated in their mad drive for control 0f the world's raw materials and "we are now assured of a continu- ing supply flowing to the fighting men in the form of finished products for war," states Mr. William L. Batt, vice-chairman of the U. S. War Production lloartl, in an article entitled “Ra\v Materials Solvency.” It appears in the July issue 0f hliniiig and bletzilliirgy, tiiagaziiie of the American liistitiite of .\liiiiug and Metal- lurgical Engineers. in relating how the Coin- bined Raw hlaterials lloartl of the Liiiifetl Nat- ions has stabilized the situation regarding critical minerals and other raw materials and organized the world traffic in siicb COllllllfiflillCS so that they now flow to places where most iiccrk-tl in an orderly fashion, .\lr, P-alt siiggcsts: “l-Ixtwri- ence of the board in lltc last year has clearly slioivii that it or sonic similar international agency’ can also do much to solve the serious THE ciiAizLo1"r'c'ro" wu comedian Notes By. Th: Way -___-_ TI!) million women no boln: conscripted to do war work in Italy. replacing men on the farm. No doubt they W111 assist 1n the cultivation of olive branchm-Moncwn Times. Wllih the Data-tit rlots over. Am- ericans should now have a better underscandmg of Britain's prob- lem 1n India. What. happened g-n the auto certtrv when race feelings caused an outburst of lawlessness on a big scale for tble continent would be small fry f4; what would dus if the British pulled out and left. Gandhi 1n confroL-(New Glas- gow News). Magistrate Browne, o! aomnlo. 1n sentencing a man to one year def- lnlbe and three months indefinite for stealing six tires remarked o1i the seriousness of the offence, adding that. since the firt of the year more than a. thouand tires have been stolen 1n the city. The magistrate is right all round. A stolen tire today may mean hat the victim has to put. his car up for the diu-atlon. as for the ordinary driver tires cannot be replaced. Thieves who steal auto- mobile accessories deserve condlgn nmushmeiit.-—(Montreal Gazette). The News has made dear its ills- belief that the community can take time out 1n the midst of a WBJ‘ for local experiments ln solution of the racial problem. For the present we shall have to rely simply on force, preferably Federal armed force. t0 keep the unruly and criminal ele- ments 1n both races cowed and peaceable. But it also ls true that we shall have to llve with this ra- cial problems for a. long time. There Ls no time like the present for study- tmt it and arriving at. amelloratlve measures to be applied when the op- portunity arrives-Detroit News. The war ls making a real valuable plant out of the sunflower. And its importance may continue after the war ends, for 1t has established a useful place for itself ln the maklnz of oils and other materials. Moose Ja\v‘s federal member J. Gordon Ross. has 500 acres of sunflower Ln crop this year. Last year he had a big crop, too. and he sold almost all of it foi seed. Sunflowers are easy to raise in the prairie country. and if it becomes a marketable crop. be‘ cause of the uses to which it is new beiniz put. farmers may set aside an acreage of it a; part of each year's prcductlon. Keep an eye on the sun- flowers. They may prove a source of revenue for farmers in many ar- eas when other crops lath-Goeth- bridge Herald). The New Jersey Agricultural Ex- tierimeut Station at New Brunswick has given up its attempt to make better hens than those created bv nature. For 16 months 350 hens were kept in an artificial world of 26 hour days, each of l4 hours of light and 12 of riarknes. But the cxpcrimenters learned that the hens so blessed by science did not lay any more eggs than when they scratch- ed around In the barnyard. running from dog; and cooks bearing hatch- cts. The New Dealers who propose to make over the world and all the tieople in lt mifzht. learn a lesson from New Brunswlclcs experiments, but they won't, Instead they will tirobnbly point out that subsidies and time-and a-lialf for overtime weren't tried-Cleveland Plain Dealer. My admiration for Mr. Churchill is almost unqualified, and I appre- ciute the gesture of the American troops in this country who have de- cided to erect a lasting memorial to Anglo-American friendshin by elect.- ing a stained glass window fn a v11- lage church-with President Roose- velt and Mr. Churchill as two of its symbolic figures. But somehow I cannot quite visualize the Prime Mmistei" in a stained-glass window. Mr. Churchill's face epttomtses the spirit of Britain at war, but I should not say that its dominant expres- sion is one of saintly contemplation. Stilt. perhaps that is not an insub- crable obstacle, After all, there are “IQITIOTS whose worth is fttttngly conunenwated in stained-glass. and helmets and body-armour have an established place in symbolic deco- ration. Neither Premier nor Prest- dent would look amiss thus martlallv garbed. Of course. there is the Churchlllinn cigar. That. would nev- er do ill ecclesiastical glass-Leeds Yorkshire Post. ' What was practised tn 1914-010 pillaging of houses, cities and, as far as German turns could reach. of countries-has been repeated more brutally from the Atlantlcto the Don. The Americans pronounce Pol- and the outstanding example of confiscation of public property: it was a still posser outrage that a million and a half Poles were driv- en from their homes and everything which they possessed handed over to German settlers. By huge thefts of food and materials frcm France. Belgium, Holland. Norway and other countries their peoples have been reduced to misery. Yet this Ls less than half the story. German depre- dnttons are designed to rob Europe not 011v of property but of produci- tve power. Machinery, skilled work- ers and sclentlflc equipment have been carried oft to the Reich. Th0 long proclaimed Nazi policy of re- duclng the population of Europe to hewers of wood and drawers of wat- er for the I-Ierrenvolk 1s in vigorous action now.—Daf1y Telegraph and Momma Poet (London). Farmers are real optimists. They plant in confidence and reap what the elements provide. aided by hard work. l‘he.e is ever an element of chance. N-J matter hrw car-fin the, preparations or how sldfful the cul- tivation, the harvest. depends largely on rain and sunshine. Yet the world depends upon the tamer for its food. It is rather startling that" the runners all over the world would no on strike during the planting sea- son, starvation would follow for tho mpulatfnn within a few months. There is never s surplus of food that would tide the world over for twelve months. Because all the world depends on it for substance fmminz should be a profitable oc- cupation. and whatever nld the governments can give should be rendered for tlhe safety of the world. Happily in Alberta a total crop failure f; unknown. Some crops may be scant. but others are up to average and in these parts we have learned the value of diversified farming. Fannersi are busy now Dlnnllmz for the fall harvest despite unfavorable price: and conditions. It. looks like a flood yield this jvear. The faith of the farmer ls the stil- vatlon of the world and may the reward of the tillers of the soil be raw materials problems that will exist in the l post-war world." happen between Moslems and l-Itn- no", Potatoes Not So Snooty Now. (Montreal Guettn) In New York when votnwfl were retailing for five cents apiece a few weeks no and which then practically disappeared from the retailers’ buts, there 1s now a flu-eat.- ened glut. thanks to arrivals o! car- load lots from the soul-hem state-s. Just. as bhe vlcwry gardeners 1n the Empire state were about. to dig the little fellows in their infancy from t-he ground comes the advice from the Food Distribution Admin- istration to let the sleeping tubers lie and buy the imports matted. fanclne to feast ln the twink- ltnz of an eye. In Montreal and other Canadian cities the DOtBiD has been the most bashful guest at the table for a month and more-many households dtd without. them perforce. while others who had a pull as steady customers with the grocer were surreptitiously handed four or five from beneath the coun- fer as a favor. Glmy be to the‘ murphles. But yesterday Amerlcanl potatoes appeared here as 1n New| York and all morning customers- weire seen emerging from the shops‘ with ten-pound bags, 1n many ln-| $111085. Fawn now on they should be plentiful. By its scientific name, solarium ‘mbemsum (scents of tuberose n.1- most) the potato is an aristocrat, a. native of South America which the Spaniards introduced to Eur- ope early tn the sixteenth century and which Raleigh brought to Eng-i land in 1585. Potatoes, tobacco and the noble metals, Sir Walter kngw, good things when he met them in faraway lands. That inveterate master of humor. the late W. S. Gilbert, wrote some lines which are appropriate to the potato situation: Then a sentimental passion of a; vegetable fashion must excite your languid spleen, An attachment a 1a Plato, for a bashful y0uf1g potato, or a not too Pateneh French bean. ‘Iiiere are peflpie tmssionately m. tachrd to the potato-some men eat five and six at dinner and, some of these goui-mands get to 100k like Potatoes-the Saskatche-l wan 22am tubers at that. Their sufferlmzs are eier now that pot- atoes are bCfIIHllIXlLZ to arrive in volume. Curiously enough, potatoes have all lc-tit; been plentiful in Brl-l tam. where fhcv approach the table ln every conceivable form, with andl without their Jackets. and from‘ soup to Die. Lord Woolton. tho food commander, is responsible for this affluence of every man's root vege-i table. Pttatces, potatoes, potatoesj haPDY condition. I . N0 Tourists Now ——— 1 (Ctilgnijv Herald! There is n touch of l1‘011v in the fact that the completion of the Trans-Canada highway from coast to coast at long last hits been de~; layed until an era when gasoline‘ and tire restrictions prohibit. tour- Lst traffic almost entirely. For many ytczirs the realization the dream of being able to mot- or from one end of the Domlnlon to the other without crossing into‘ American territory was eagerly. awaited. It was delayed because of the enormous difficulty and cost of constructing a highway across the Rock and Selkirk mountain ranges and of completing a rocky and unpropritious stretch of road ln Zflsrthern Ontario between Heaist and Geraluion, 153 miles in length. The long unfinished section of the Trans-Canada highway be- tween Golden and Rcvelstoke around the Columbia River bend was finally opened for traffic three summers ago. but owing to the war and absence of service stations it has been little used. The missing gap tn the highway north Of Lake Superior has iust been completed and declared open for traffic. When the war ls over and restric- tions on the use of tires and gaso- line lifted, tourists and commercial traffic alonp the coast to coast highway W11 be heavy. The Trans- Canada. highways will offer tourists 501210 of the finest scenery in the world and it. will. as well, do much to promote closer acquaintance- shlp between the east. and west of the great Dominion. Yes, It’s T00 Bad (Hamilton Spectator) The Very R/ev. William Inge, erstwhile "Gloomy Dean" of t. Pours Cathedral, still lives u to his mournful reputation. His Pam- entatlons over the “ruined cathe- drals of Luebeck and Matnz of the Church of St. Gereon at Cologne, of the house of the painter Duerer, of the beautiful patrtctau mansions in the Italian towns of Genoa, Naples and Palermo," whatever the effect of them may be in the Allied countries at which they are direct:- ed, are well calculated to give com- fort to the enemy. Goebbels him- self could not have done better. Writing in the Church of England. !1_9WsP5Dg‘l_'._t_l1e_I)e_an_e_xpresses the BY-LAW TO AMEND THE Be IT ENACTED by the Charlottetown as follows: of the following: ‘The said Committee is fu lzed to set up slow signs at. duced its speed below that 0rd section, namely, vehicle shall tion, even to the extent til such entry can safely be hereby, or by Sections 56 or 57 this By-law limiting speed at abundant.—(fledlcwlck Community Press). ‘ butcher and l NOTICE TRAFFIC in the CITY 0F CHARLOTTETOWN The By-law to regulate traffic In the City of Char- lottetown is hereby amended by adding to Section 58 there- maintaln the same as long as said Committee may think fit, all of which slow signs shall be clearly indicated by printed lettering so placed that it may be read by the drivers or op- erators of the approaching vehicles which are intended to be slowed; No vehicle confronted by such slow sign shall enter upon such intersection without having materially re- lfkmlles per hour, and every such delay entering of completely stopping, un- with traffic on or nearly approaching the intersection or withfoot traffic thereat; provided always that vehicles entering such intersection from approaches not. confront- ing them with a slow sign (or with a stop sign) shall not placed under Section 56 he relieved from the requirements of FROM: T0 I» I- ‘ ___ . JOY "£33m F‘ uitufwimmes’ 1 10v: ' f battle, éienszavettai straw 11 I “thy. altadows steal 1N!!! cwurltmgh but m‘ m, n, manning-BM". iGreek a mallet: 1w 111"" mm”- ' cfiflhb the cloud-twill“! V" iei. drift. lnbo 00m- isicen 1% vglelllliryouflr: Wm‘; ma s mna - -= a <1 h above W11- l" °“°"‘ if. flit o w.» vwr ID118- uiin of your stnslns 111189"- some or “the men like me WhO 11381811518 ends in $18111“. m the sigh of the KY5"- _Aubrey Herbert. belief that "when the W8!‘ ll W" we shall be very sorry Ivr W11" ‘f: have done." We dent. have to W11 nu alter the war w deplore the necessity for such destruction, which. as the Dean well knows. would be scrupulously “Wmedhrr 1t. were possible to bomb mill ry targets without occasion "Y in‘ tlfctfng damage on other buildlnfli in thelr vicinity. The 1111111111"; ‘>1 such damagels relatively 116211811116 compared to the devastation wrought on industrial arena busily engaged on the production of wir- llke material- The Dean writes almost as t! the destruction o! cathedrals" and "beautiful patrlclan mansions the deliberate aim of the Un 1B Nations, to be atoned for by Pen‘ ance 1n sackcloth and ashes. I! he wants a. legitimate exmnifle 0! wanton action of’ this kind he must tum to the Luftwaffe, whose alr- men actually seek out churches. schools and public buildings: 1185- troying them at low altitudes, in preference to military N11915- There ls exultatlon tn Germany when such raids are reported. Wm‘ never a suspicion of remorse. What of the Dean's own cathedral of St. Paul's? What, of all the other CM’ churches. the clones v1 Ecclesias- tical architecture throughout the length and breadth of 1321181111113- ruined beyond repair? Britain l5 not replyln 1n kind. but sums W the best 0 her ability 1111 historic in raiding operations over Germany and Italy. "If bombing of Italian and G431‘; man towns ls a military necesstt)’ says the Dean. "t suppose there l! no énore to be said.” tznddghfflnfijzi‘ cee to say s. Bren a - Sureiy, he would not dispute £119 necessity? It is obviously a matter for the mtlttarlsts. not clerics, tn decide. Since the Dean 111191185 hi! willingness to abide by the Judi!‘ ment. of experts, there is. indeqi. "no more to be said." What a D11? he did not follow his own dictum: MATS HAIR RESTDRER ' T111 A delicately rfumed pre- paration wh ch PC5101?! strengthen; and heautlflee the hair- Reltoree Grey or faded hair to H5 original shade whether Black, Brown, Reg] or Aub- urn. Preveifli Dindrufl and stops falling halr. Price 85c ?5% thrilling — A hugrunec Io bring you gallery and canine hardness. Pllfilnfl 7!: 00 ‘CJD. uiisq Fruqrwm tun. lcli Bubble! ‘LIG- Fofl Tflvldfl 00¢ OH ‘L1.- numg Ponder SI-M Yuk ‘QI- SUNBURN A, a protecllnn lllilll‘ sunburn use: Tan 0|] — - — 50o and 30c Petal Tune Sun Tan Oil _ _ _ _ _ - 50o and 80o Tan|el—-————500 TIIE TWO MAGS 149 Great George Street Mail Order: Given Prompt Attention BY-LAW TO REGULATE City Council of the City of rther empowered and author- any street intersection and inarily allowable at an inter- upon such intersec- effected without Interfering of this By-law or by any sign in tersection s. Ieol/eafldytfie i P C afelazhe of Gooc/lyousekeepzhg/ SUSSEX Ginger Ale is more than a re- freshing drink. Actually it is a food — for it supplies the need of a ‘tween meal snack. Service men, war-workers and business folk all find Sussex is a welcome energy pick-up. Hospitals also approve. So the modern housekeeper follows suit. Do likewise. Keep Sussex-"the QUALITY drink" always on tap. Wartime limit: the supply 0/ Sussex,- bu! Sussex QUALITY 1 nnain: lbe 14m: ‘rm: QUALITY mun smc: lass” a. POPE CLARKE, Acting Captain Telephone No. 1487-1719 NOTICE At the present time, about 29 men are needed i0 Put the Army Service Corp up to strength. It is expected that training for this unit will start during the present week. Interested recruits, who are eligible" for this unit, kindly communicate with, OR in your chores. Good work deserves a reward. Reward yourself with a comforting chew of l-IICKEY 8s NlCil-IOLSOWS “BLACK TWIST” CHEWING u. F. McLEOD. I Lieutenant, i Telephone No. 422