JANUARY 14, 1942 the edge on you. gest bargains we ever had anniversary sales. 10 Costs taken from this fall's and winter's regu- Eaiftiiifi _ _‘7.95 Dresses, Skirts, B‘ - , Sweaters, s ei lin g at 2 per cent discount for t h e s e days only. A table of long sleeved blouses stripes and dots regular $1 I i Mr. Harry Iiieh . 7th ANNIVERSARY Thursday, Friday, Saturday Don't be caught napping and let your friends get Mark the dates on your calendar NOW-we'll be ready and waiting to show you the big- in our already famous 1 group of Coats clearing at 1 -2 price Ba la nee of better coats 1 _3 n" at - — -- A special rack S of dresses at 1 loo Broken lines of slips, bed jackets and gowns clear- ‘“‘ 59c u--——— HANDBAGS $2.98 for - - 10 only wool faiile skirts reduced to — — —$1.00 1 table cotton house dresses — — — --98c Cash only 25c Hats- fur felts and velvet 1-2 price. 59c 1 table of wool felts at — — — No Exchanges Some Early for Sensational Savings “THE GLORIA ” THE CHARLOTTETOWN G_IJ_ARDIAN Visiting here FEW“ RUNS m. H Rich, Maritimgxgur Poofmetgd, $03: AND ton, lifs been here for several days and P111115 to remain until Sntur- dill’. Mr. Rich reports that his F company has received a lgrgef number of pelts this season than A last year and Prince Edward Is- 0 j land business is included in that increase. Locally the Fur Pool is p (ppresented by Mr. W. Chestcr s. the probable McLurc. L Asésed concerning ren 0f m indications gremgyrrkfiiltt-‘plégvggl%rggieiist ziivkeizimnilslbydippinlrour b-st mink has been very weak, m. A Mo; I Lg? Th“ ll|=ii51',_ the buyers would no‘. pay n hdm,,',§“,f|,,,,",n: ie rzc ~ . - M11? 3150251211; ha’, rtmsizgeesxiqfiul in tour stockings ofl‘ reninvcii establishing a 806a connecqjm in perspirsllon which causes the Argentine. The peome a. that runs snd holes! Silk stock. country are very partial to d“ db llllllflflfllingsurcenbnl gel‘ foxisnd were among me largest h::-::°1‘,' 4312'" 111‘ iiyei-s n Norwa" riort the - , ' - m" f-"i “we gave them Sig‘? shlpenents 11:; stockings Issl longer. 868541111." Sdhld Ml‘. Rich, "illid iLey $0 Dcasc our brokers th - havfinbloced much larger OEAEFSUIZI maarpawfikaflsJ/olfs‘ 1942. Mr. Rich also has American and Upper Canadian connections which helped him in obtaining u 111L111 avemize for the peltries handl- ed for several seasons. Bflievilia ltiat business and p‘.ea5_ ure should be combined Mr. Rich accepted the invitation of friends to visit the Curling Club and he enjoyed himself immensely there, meeting some former competitors of New Brunswick rinks. Installation of Trinity United Chufgh Masonic Lodge 7 0fficersatS’side At the regular mectln f Hlr izndnlli-ebéigon Lodgel No. § $1. F. $3 rM - . e annua iii- . ti T‘"*%,—-~*=j:i - officers took place, Pfifll/fflxfizllialll 2111511 abomd “.1? '1 1e Baker 9195mm “m1 1mia1led i116 a Royal (Igllllligllllllic) §1c1>li‘l:]1zv[l1§'i:y “eggfioféfgéei or otflcers_~_ bog.‘ on coastal patrol. g R0 T T t - 6 5111111111 recalled a warning y ' mm‘ W'M' Elven last November b V‘ John Arthur S.W. iniral Percv Nell fy menu- l-larry lVIttCFflYlflllfi J. W. Canadian Nav tlfist o the Rom! n. T. Dodds Trcas. mom soon b: o“ rsllemy 1,],‘1’°“‘5 B" R- shmrpei 55°15" CaIiadimi coast Nllfv ‘o the H.B. Bernard, Chap. an; L Maodonéld £1 atniiter An‘ G3- sheen- s-D- time ‘that enem gliibmarin e sa-me KG’- 511111Va11 J-D- operating off Nexvfouridl des were 38mm N1°11°15°11 55- No other enemy actiognhas been g-s- Cm111°11i '15- reported so close to the Criiinrlinii c“ H°°k§n LG. coast since this war began Sever-l J.E. Iiiorrison 'I‘yler. submarines were reported ‘i0 imQ}. s "Pvrgeehed 113w» in o- i... ea war BhNlnie ffflgffil sfildiers who got vivrere sunk I); Gaerixilildwbgr-bggitghbg? ea o e too h thizdayhliuddlddpbeliinldi thatyewdllerdf {Sffiw England was‘ l“ 1917 "m1 a iiiy oiisc iii full view of us, but, Mast of n ., . l.‘ , . < _ 1e SUTVI\OI'S aIIlVUIg Elzixecfgtifid 139101111 591711311 m5 here today bore evidence of their Q3; G°"“‘“‘f,,§,““"°d 1‘°'“'“Y- giiialiTiitriii-zfi“ié'irsoi°i.iiii°bz§g 111i‘; mus} ‘3‘,f§‘§§,maf,d £115,121,}? gags; most of the deaths occurred dur- observation post said his entire pla- m3 1'1“ “T111119 11°11“ 1n ‘~11? 1156- toon had been either captured or 13°51?‘ when Waves bmke 0V" 111'! killed. He. llflCl been alone in g house 113E110 Croft and foi'med a shcail". Ml day lllltil captured in the late 0f 10c on many bodies. afternoon. Two torpedoes sank the ship, one WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 14th .30—'Ilid-week S " . ‘and ivieaiiamiife “i "mm 94 LOST IN (Continued from page 1) GEIITIIAI. GUARDIAN This Qnlllllln ls reserved for nsvs of Ioosl Intel-sot, but ndvsrtlslng of s sows] sstnrc may ho tniiutpd n: | Mlts n word, strictly psysblo l.- sdvsnnn. CONDITION IMPROVED -—'l“lie coiidltioii of Mr. Wlillbllli Moran. pnnclpal cf Union Commercial Col- lege, who is a patient in the City Hospital, was reported to be im- proved last night. It is expected that lie will be able to return to his home in a clay or two. Till? CANCELLED - The pro- posed trip of Hon. Flt. Lieut, the Rev. T.H. Bussell Somers, MA, s. T.M. to Halifax was cancelled shortly before the train left yes- terday morning. us was also that of Hon Flt. Lieut. the Rev. A. C. Freiri; L.Th. resident chaplain of the R.A.I". They were to have left to attend a. conference of Protes- tant Chaplains of the Eastern Air Command. The trip was cancelled because of the funeral of six air_ men, killed in the plane crash at. Soutliport Monday, which are i0 be held Thursday. --——iV Temperance Committee llolds session Prince Edward Island's four Fed- eral members will bc messed to sup- t at the coming session of Par- iament, a. pro ram of wartime re- strictions on tie sale of liquor. it was decided at a meeting of the Continuation Committee of the P. E. I. Temperance Federation held yesterday in the Y. M. C. A. This program of restrictions was presented in the Dominion Cabinet ast October by a deputation of :1. persons representing Cardinal Vill- eneuve an other leading figures of the Roman Catholic Church and of the Protestant Churches in Canada. The President. Mr. J. H. McFar- lane, Bedeque, expressed regret that Col._ the Hon. J. L. Ralstons slight illness while he was iii Summersidc. had prevented a deputation from waiting upon him. Plans were completed for bringing the views of the temperance people of the province strongly before all four Federal members by interviews of deputations or by letters from the Secretary. Rev. H, E. Shaw, New Glasgow. and others. In the matter of law enforcement the meeting mingled praise and criticism. A resolution. moved by Ml‘. James H. lVlcL/ccd, Hampshire. seconded b_v Mi‘. W. G. Darke. Hunter River. expressed appreci- ation to the Premier and Mr. C. St. Clair 'I‘rainor, Crown prosecutor, for the absence of fatal accidents this war. the origin of which could he traced to liquor. a condition believ- ed to be the result_of earlier action against dniiikcn drivers. It was ieli. however, that the number of men in the Royal Canadian Mounted Po- lice charged with enforcing the prn- liibition act was inadequate. Rev. G. C. Webster, Charlottetown. advised approaching the Provincial Government on the uiiutter. Rev. Geor e ‘Tilley, Cavendish, and oihris critic zed Citv Police for allowing PAGE THREE IlXllllELl. HOUSE I GIVES YOU BH- TIIE FLAIIDII The special Maxwell House Cofiee roasting process brings out all the full, rich flavor of {Ivory IIJCIIIII — roasts ii evenly. iliruugli mu] ‘mug 1- 1101i W118i you get iii iiie famous blue Maxwell House tiu . . , 9 Moi-s flavor. ‘Ibo Maxwell llciisc blond contains h1ililund-grovvn, Oxfru-flclvor “lug, i No flavor can snaps-It's nulsd, roaster-fresh, In 9h. famous super-vacuum fin. 9 No waiting-Maxwell House is °1"""|Y FPQIIIIIy ground for both msfhodl: Drip and Regular. GOOD TO THE LAST DROP! . -___._ .;- 1» —_~.—.. . .= NON-STOP izatioii. _.. .i 0v“ ll. they placed the former Nlggru called uDOn an Q14 Austrian traitor Seyss Inqunrt. De- f; »' received hm m To combat Nazification (By Harold Fair) liberiitcly refraining from changing 10¢ the administrative system, he mcr -- rm; l_v superi iposed Germain ofiicii iyfciiiiiviii nil lllliillClptll and p: viiiciJl i'ep.c bodirs \‘.l (iisbaiiiied Ill favor 0i those consist- ing mainly of Netherlands Nazis. Since the occupation! about 130,- 000 workers have been ‘ to German factories. iiLnucd i-i o ;ii a ciir way ix you.‘ HMIMOD?’ .. There was a moment's silence “anskrmd during vrhicl-i the caller gazed ivide- eyed at the IOCKIIIE figure. (Canadian Press Staff Writer) The war made jnsslble some re- .. ,.. ,. _. ,, _ LONDON. Jan. l3—iCP>-siurdy duciioii iii the NltllCfliillllh pie- lmDolf‘, Cfikjtqff“ Molog ,,“11-" iroiii within ivai" uni-iiiplnyiiiciit iiuiirc oi‘ 300,000 f " ‘ -‘.,° m‘ 5*” 11 d“ “11-1 ‘"1" d9 Netherlanders str 'e their country and without at the but tin-re still are iiiorc tliiiii 100.010 ‘y, Nazis who overraii the _ _ _ rosperous land and seek to harness refusing Jobs in Germany 10s’. tlrir t to Hitler's new order. While British-based Netherlands air and naval g against the common toe. lblllfifffs at home seek b_\' sabotage ICl'("( and passive resistance to ‘ v _ Nazificaticii, the Netherlands news d1‘ loose iii iivcstoe. Di 5t re rts. _ $5.... mbbom ‘people were not sources in London said sabotage fooled by efforts t e b made to win their acquiescence to 1W0 COWZWIH subjugation. Considering the Neth- erlanders “of Germaine origin." the invaders distinguished the country’ ' -—' —~ A from neighborirég‘ France and Bel- (‘so {Ilium-it's for dandruff. gium by establ g _ W: .' explained HHFFIKAII. ‘yo’ know B Bi t. He sold me a silver w ._ch cheap. an‘ if 1 stop loving like dl=, dzit watch won't peaceful. Ffigiéicred \\'0l‘kil.'.&§. Although iircii subsistence allowance and ration cirrus. thousands have turned down 11 co-cpcrzite this form of "slave labor." l-f Nctlii-r- tin-l; (if ll d. iisuulLv ' ‘ 'i ilic slaughter (if iiiuirl. uni t5 . Ii any to reniorc perspira- i iriarks irciii almost any ma- ..l is to dump it thoroughly with 10.. place a piece of blotting pa- r over and press with s. warm If an old stain, repeat the combat p: iiiforniriiioii Tutltlil‘. s Germans first continues unnbnzcil. Telephone hm..- " and lfllWl-Diitlll . \r> ll"_'ll fzircad .o .i.>le liiics. (long, niiik should he. pzistcurlz. c<i_ior the siiine reasons that cow] Irllik is pasteurized say health d“. thorities. ' of some (i guard lll(.§ lng a civil organ- WW-n-v- 4 _ > av :_-;——.—._—-.;_ It. P CHEMISTRY HELPS TO WIN THE WAR His South African captors gave hitting her on the starboard side drunks to roam the streets almost at . -.-.--u- '.' F. i IIINSMEII iiiincii § 'i‘.HE NEW DOME é FRIDAY, JAN. 1s. I, Dancing 9:30 to 1 '1 Admission 40 cents L-482-l-12-3i. EXILED KING (Continued fioni page l) =T the cause of a war, and further- more, he liad no territorial ambi- tions, considered the Alsace-lor- riiine question completely a thing of the past and had no interest iii the Iron Guard Nazi organiza- tion of Rumania. All Lies "It is now esisy to see that. every- illlll" lie siiid wiis untrue," Carol muliiied. “Ono should believe al- ivriys the exact contiiiry of vihal. ll(‘ says. Proof of his duplicity was the assassination of my Prime Min- islet‘ Armand Callnescu (Sept. 21, 1939.! We know for certain lliat .11“‘_J.’SQ‘Z1L_.‘Y ogmmglled ""11 BIRTHS ROSS-At Pinettc, Jan. 11_ 1942, to Mr. and Mrs. Baxter Ross. 5L, a 1114113125.? SILLIPIIANT -—- MACEACIIEBN — At the Baptist parsonage, Charlotte- . 1o. 1942. by Rey. I. J. , Robert G. Siiliphant of Hunt- cr iver, P. E. I., to Hilda Audrey MacEachern of Charlottetown. In Memoriam In lovin m morv of our Mother Mrs, Angug Campbell, who passed nwsy January 13f i, 1938. God knew that she was sufferin That the hills were hard to clim . So lic closed her weary eyelids, ” And whls ed. "Pence be thine. Aw! In he beautiful hills of God 11y t c vsllcy of rest so fair Sonic time. some dsy we know not h We WIT] ronlliet our loved one there. Inserted by Ismily. N. D. MacLean UNDERTAKER EMIALMEII Charlottetown and North Iviltshlrs Ibons I40 crimp came into Rumania with the connivanoe of German authorities. Describing the events that led to gisddeparture from Rumzinia, Caro] "It was a personal sacrifice which turned out it be useless. If 1 had any idea of what was going to hap- pen. you may be sure I never would have left." H15 Bovcrnment took stern mens- ures to keep ilte Iron Guards in check, but after the early Ger-mm; Vlcwmis 111°)’ 0110111)’ asked liini for the powers of government on the grounds that they were the only people in whom the Gemians had confidence and therefore the only people who could maintain a gov- ernment. - Wheil lie refused. they rcvolfierl and Carol, looking for a strong iniiii to master the situation, chose Gen. Ion Antonescu. Twenty-four hours after Anton- escu took the onih as Premier, Car- ol cliarged. he "went over complete- ly to the Germans and instead of mastering the Iron Guards. which mas hi; mgssion, joined hands with em.’ Aimed at Massacre "Mr. Anioiicscii guiiraiiiccd niy party safe passage by offering w aucmpany us personally as far ns the border," Oiirol said. "but the day we left he sent word to the station that he was not feeling well and couldn't come along. "When our train reached Timi- shonra. the last station on the Ru- manian side of the Yugoslav fron- tier, it was to find the station crowded with armed Iron Guards. Instead of stoppiniz. we sped through. and the Guards fired a volley nt us with Mauser niiiomnfie pistols of German make, which fiic 24 heavy shots without stopping. If the coaches had poi. been of metal, the Guards might have ac- complished their purpose, which was to massacre the whole party." The Guards followed the train in trucks mid had a fight. with Yugo- slav frfntier guards who Wouldn't let them pass. Carol declared. NEWSMAN SEES (Continued front p toll. Yet by raid-morning the south Africans had cleaned out most of the caves overlooking the northern section of the mile-wide sandy har- bor and shoreline iind had occupied practically every building left stand- n in the town. y nightfall. ilic battered Axis forces had been isolated on the narrow north lip of the harbor. Bur- render or extermination appeared their only alternative. The operation. still in progress. is a costly one. A Transvaal company advancing down the sage to the saliim plain has ha several (‘e-sv- sltiea from a machine-gun which opened fire from an undetected cave in the rear. Another company captured 40 Germans only to lose them ivhen n patrol taking them to the rear was ambushed by s hidden machine-sun nos . As I write this shell fragmenls are whistling around our observa- tion t on a high point ovcricok- ing e northern end of the harbor A German artillery battery. shelling s ‘Prsnavssl platoon pinned in th r0010! 300 yards below us. is th source. South Africans scurry iiloim iii flats below us in ones and twos The dive into the sand as slicll crsc shout them. him a tin of corned beef which he and another to port. The first ex- llf 11111151113’. plosion killed 15 Chinese sailors in This wnr has been nohpleasure the fdcaflle, two qooks, three "5 111T B5 1 11m 60116811105. 116 Wld stewards and the ship's doctor. The mo. _'I‘liis 31 year old Nazi who won't fight any nioie is a farmer from near Frankfort-on-Main. He been in Africa. seven months and it was his first campaign. _Llke other Germans. lie expressed disiziist with his Iiziliaii partners. Until tho clcsiii-iip is completed. the British forces must make a 100 mile detour to act. supplies to their forces some 500 miles away in the Beiigasi area. m o: Japfltdvance (Continued frgn page 1) section and the dmlftlfifillléllls iieliis. (in London. published reports were that an important announce- ment ln Singapore was imminent- possibly concerning the large axial reinforcements which are so need- ed there.) (Indications of stiffening British liiiid FCSISI-IIIICC were received in a Singapore dispatch to a Vichy news EHO)’. This re ort said that Brit- iegulara an Australians landed at Singapore during the last few weeks are now in the front lines and that the majority of Indian iind Malayan troops have been with- drawn to the rear.) A correspondent of Reuters news agency described the withdrawal ss "one of the most. magnificent feats in the history of this campaign and he declared, too, that an an- nouncement wiis momentarily ex- pected which “may change the Mo- layan situation considerably in Britain's favor." Vlfhat this might be he did not indicate. Telling of the British retirement to the south. he said:- “For nine hours the main north and south road. was crammed with our troops and transports. nil of ivhicli were taken back almost with- out. inisliiip." (The Japanese made their now customary claim to "swcepi vance" in Malaya, but roun about dispatches via Axis channels st- tributed to a Japanese embasy spokesman in Thailand a somewhat less confident prediction. l-ic de- clared that Singapore would fsll— within the next two months. (In Chungking a Chinese spokes- man cgaln bespoke for his country ii full recognition of the great neces- silv of ho ding both Sings e and tlic Netherlands East In ics and iigalii declared that inn was ready to throw hcr vast manpower resources into the whole struggle of the south seas.) llu-lllode Beauty Parlor island's big-gun and scattered air (luaranteed 87 permsnents for $5; $5 permanent!» Si: Ind $3.59 permanent! for $2.50 during .Isn- ulry. Experienced operators. N0 students. MRS. W. If. POOLE Phone 43 'l on Lute IQuClt-ISIIY WANTEIr-lMMl-JDIATELY (MRI. for housework. Good “ages. l5i Cumberland St. L-iai-i-iz-ii. poin "i This was the first word that it had second crushrd a gunner, jolted ov- erboard by ire first explosion. a- gainst. the side of the ship before it drove into the hull and exploded. The estimated 69 other deaths were caused by exposure or drowning. A 19-year-old Canadian. I... J. Hughes of Vancouver. Richard Sut- tcn, l7-_\'€I\l'-0l[l English junior midshipmen, and a Chinese were the only survivors on one lifeboat. Thirty-eight other Chinese perish- ed before a rescue came. “Some of the dead men we P11511- ed overboard." Hughes said. “The others we kept to give us some shelter against the cold and the water which sprayed across the bows. soaking us to the skins." Describing i-he torpedoing, Hughes said: "It was earlv evening ulien the first torpedo struck. 'I‘hei-c ‘K33 no warning and when it struck the deep tanks (where fuel oil was stored) the ship started to settle. One of our gunners was apparently knocked overboard by the explodon because we next saw him struggling in the water near the foot of the port ladder. “ll:- was still t-iicrc when the lock- out yelled down from tlie mas: that another torpedo was heading our way. Two chaps on the ladder scrambled to the deck. The gunner didn't make it. The torpedo struck him before it continued into the ship." ILA}. displays New punch in Malayan area (Canadian Press) ~Royal Air Force bombers. dis- playing a new offensive piuich. yesterday blasted both ends of the railway which feed; troops into Malays, even while the Singapore broadcast a late British communi- que reporting that “in western Malaya the withdrawal of our troops to positions in the rear has continued." From lower Malays the R. A. P. attacked Bingoro and Kondora in the Thai-Malay frontier area witn tons of high explosives which Ieft flames amid the railway in- stallations at those points. Burma other R. A. l’. bombers blasted the northern m- minu; of the Krii isthmus railway at Raiburi, o0 miles west of Bang- kok. A rniliway train was blown up there. and two Japanese planes were damaged in another raid on Prachuiipgirikhanri, s point on the rune railway some miles south of Rsjburi. Another Japanese plane was shot down nesr the Burmese island of Tcvoy south of Rangoon. The slngapore broadcast also told of British ali- attacks on Port sweetenhsm. 25 miles southwest of Kusls Lumpur the crude rubber cspitsi abandoned by British ground forces in their withdrawal. Port sweeteiiham is s strategic t on the strait of Malacca. fallen into Japanese hands. SOUTH WALES. N. Y. South Wales is the name of ii LASAS-l-ll-Ii. WWII in New York state. will. This condition wasnot tolerat- ed elsewhere. Suiiimerside is much better policed in this respect. Til.“ subicct of wci canteens iii. iliv fill‘- nort. was also (liscuswcl. The ll'.‘?(l rl drastic action in closing places oi illegal sale. was stressed. Rev. G. C .Webster and Rev. I. J. Levy of Charlottetown were ap- pointed to intcrvlevir IIIGIPFOVIIIVFHI] Government regarding this qursticii. They were also asked to iirgr- .11:- PFOVlllClRI G0\'f‘l'llIll(‘llL to ll‘li1(I' positive rcpresciiiatioii to ilic Do- minion Government regarding the wartime liquor restrictions and Illll". add its voice to those of the Federal representatives. everal present expressed llic oi:- inim, 11mg the Government. of a Prohibition Province should bi- ex- pected to tzikc this action. Siiicr- it was stated that Prince Edward Isl- a-nd has contributed to the armed forces the largest quota in Canad" according to population. and that these nien sliniild have i116 protect- ion ol as adequate liquor liiivs abroad as at home. Whit; Sailors Sail Chinese A “funny |ot” AN EAST COAST CANADIAN PORT, 3a,, 3_((;pi-“Those Cn- ese are a funny lot." B 51111" 171 1‘ navy league hostel here sold. W111i‘ trig to a B19113) 0'1 9111119“ 00123: chant. flors in the home ‘I: “me miffzf frclnafier tlllerll‘ #111111 “'13s? s 1°" S1 ddcrdtsume 100 1111165 C11 1-119 NW1‘ Scotia coast. "When 'whiie' sailors set out "1 q, jam like that they are either lmbblinl over with 10v 9r 810115111“ about their wash liwkfi 11° 9;; Dlained. "but those fellows V2141“ k mow any feeling at. all. frhci" 00 like a, hunch of wooden idols. His description was apt. Thou!" suilferinl. the Chinese never be- g" by p, muscle flickei; their fee as. mew stolcslli’ 1e t? tam writers and nurses help em but. never made an effort to,11f’1l‘! Ihgnygglves, Only their "S95. lllllldl" ing and roving. indicated their in- terest. officers from bhl wrpedced 111111 said that was exactly the way the)‘ dated during the 20 hcrribc hours in the lift-boats. “They WEN" - afraid," one snid. "but they seemed to have no incentive to live.’ "In the lifrboats they 5M. in wat- er up lo their shoulders, moaned n bit and then died. Some illmpfli overboard before the going even began to gel. touch." This was beyond the understand- ing of ihc=<~ stubborn Englishmen whose WiIl-iO-lh" made them fight on, even when tlii- colds seemed h 1x. they could admire the Orentials their lack of fear of death, but could not appreciate their fatalistlc acceptance of it. However, only one officer was downright caustic in his remarks about. the way the Chinese behav- ed. Ho said he ordered the ones izi his bcol to _bnil and they beg- ged off. complaining cf som arms 0l' other ailments. Oiio said he hnd nothing to bail with and when the officer told him to use his hat. he replied that he couldn't do that. He would iiccd ll. whcii Iie ursiit- fISlICH‘. Ni’lll(‘l'lili"(l\ indies lvis an esti- imiiczi Ifplilil‘. iii of nearly 7000i,- (100 pc....n-. including moie than s million (‘Animus You Cant Win a War of Steel WITHOUT u/p/zz/ric Acid 0 previous war ever ate up steel at such a rate as this one-with its guns, ships, planes, tanks, mechanical transport. It is l. war which simply cannot be won without steel. And this steel is made with the aid of a. silent partner-Sulphuric Acid. Its job: to rc- movc "mill scale" formed during forging and annealing, and leave s clean working surface. In Canada, since the outbreak of war, C-I-L sulphuric acid plants at Hamilton and Copper Cliff, Ontario, have worked overtime to serve the great Canadian wartime production of steel. Thus industrial chemistry is making possible the freighter and its protecting corvette, the mechanical transport and tank, the guns and planes. Snfibarlc Add i: on: s] many C-I-L Pradsm d Induihial Genliifry wblrb are siding (Jrnsdab war eflovt CANADIAN INDUSTRIES LIMITED 1. of?