i... ii =55. i? R “m1: ciiiiiiiairrriuwu GUARDIAN Morning [Lilly ll-‘oundtd tn lllfll ri-ie-uzi-iit Lii-ut (‘in W Chester s. McLuu Mr: IH-i-snurnl; J R Burnett, l'..|.l @|.'1'!‘\'l.||). Lii-ul \'uI l) A llluvhlnnun nan. r1011" .1110 “Jllllillllfl lIm-ctur J It. Human. FJJ. Ass-man» liiiiiiiis riunk “other and Ian A Burnett SPISSFIHPTIUN KATE! By Mull Ill l'.l.l. s-Luii pm your. $2.50 lul b month: 5L5 1m I; uiunllis; 50c for one month bu» ilrlfltl) 5.11111 pm will; £3.00 |u| h niunlIl-l $1.75 tor 3 months; tILIo I01 on: Month. By Muu to other Pruvlllcta and U. S. A. $5.00 pa: yell aauiiuay fluid): s':.uu pcl’ rel-I; SWO luv I: mum-ho. GUI: luv 3 month: lllliiflllilll lllll)‘ uu Obtained l! u|||“||||“~ .\l‘\\l\ .\l;\'lll) llllll‘! aquuru, New Ian-hi Old “UIIIII i\\‘\\\ .\,,-.-...-,, (nrnvr 11in. mu \vII|llIlIIOI. Bunion; »\|\‘ll'ltgllllllllll fir»; Agwnry, I24! l'Iel UL. lluulrvill: .1 PIIH‘, .151 n»; hL, rum-in», howl sand. Clllllvllll Liiiim-r. Imiiiiii: \ Dill‘! \v\\n stand. nndburr 0111, lliii- l’ I - | ilim-ton N IL. lliu Ullllklllllllunll TIT/re blfriiiiycsl illemury is Weaker than III: II cult-est Ink." , , ,___.__ s.\‘1z;:ii.\\', APRIL 25, 1942. Lnrv blond Montgomery > ‘H; 1-1];1_v of .\l1"s. liivaiii blac- liijll -r knoivii zis Lucy .\laud Montgom- “i 1.9 {.13 ;i_< :1 personal loss by every - lslgiii l1‘l', lifclllfii‘ Uf "ANNE 0f .. l ~11‘ lili‘ ilt-ligliifiil series 0f \._1_,,»j, h,l\'\‘ popularized Prince ~i:.1ic< and clizirzictcrs through- '1'ii» li1l\\";i:\l l i Om “u, W H 31,-, _\l;i¢tlonaltl’s contribution to llul‘ vc l‘~oviiicc may wcll be said to have h,“ i, “u; givcii out of the fullness oi z. .il li_v 11in: liiimziiiy sympathies and l 4. l1‘ uclii. . Lime, she endowed the scenes of licr i'l hood a1 Clifton and Cavendish with tlic of hllllltlfllll youth. The charm 0f 11.», It - rii-il visitors to our shores in, h I 41l- woi-ld, Tlicy come to us e\'c'\ lli.l'-—-llll)lk_‘ numerous than ever since the ‘cs iimcnt of the National Park-to 58¢ “(ii-wit tables" for ihcmselvcs-to see the 5,1111] iliniis lilL‘ ldlivt? (if Shilling \VZIfCI', 111.; i111 in; ii~l and tlic lllltllllCfi \Vood. .\li.~. .\l.‘:;1go.i.cr_\- changed the locale of tile Anne stories from time to time, but there is something 1ici'i>11iii.'1ll_\’ fresh about her earlier (i.-<.-;-§p1§\-,. scour-g reminiscent of her own Clliltillvflil il;i_v~. viliicli mzikcs a universal ap- pciil. Mrs. Macdoiizild was a fine poet as well as fiction \\'lllt“i‘. llcr personality was a brilliant and fllflll_\'—lllit’llll’ti one, but the chief impres- sion ri-wwiviwl liy lllik-‘U ivlio were privileged to mcrt livr 1111s one of womzmly charm and l1oii1cly' ciiliiirr. She ivus dcvotcd to her home, and to all liit: iiswciatiisns which that \vord iiivukrs. lk-rlizips that, after all, is why she was able in “c ll\ such delightful characters and doinca-i illfllifllliS iii licr iiovcls. She also iciiiziiiicil devoted to her native Province, and took every opportunity of re- visiting tlic lslanil and renewing old friend- ships and making 1i<'\v ones. To zill \\,-‘~.i -iv llt‘l', wlictlicr personally or flu-oi; 1i r lllllfé, the 1i1e11ior_v of “Lucy liliiuil Xliinigoiiicry’ will remain an enduring povcuioii. Closing Rally Needed Noting 111:1‘. ilicrc is “pathetic misunderstand- ing. i-spccinlly in the minds of public men, about lll‘ ' .'i11di1-iicc=." the Ottawa Journal ‘ iioui" zipprni in the plebis- l public rzilly of the federal party l lu- hcld. It suggests that on this _ .. l‘riiiii= .\li1iislcr King and Mr. lluiisoii i111 l .\li-. (‘oldivcll iippcrir together 0n a platform ti" i lluiiirczil or (Quebec. 1t is with a ill-l gr _ iii.'ii political lciidcrs close their campiiigzis l gciiciuil election. They take 110 cliaiicc \\'.:lil railio broadcasts- Mr. King, in par- ticular. alivnys closes his election battles with a big lllflllll! in fliiziivu. knoiviiiu wcll that a last :i~.ii~ii-\\:’il~ uppriil is tremendously‘ ‘ill’ iii/iv.‘ iii :i r-ffvctiiw . \\.'<n1lil not ll similar zero hour appeal in this plclrdi lk‘ CilllIlllV effective? asks ilie Ottawa . ' t Wlllflll)‘, perhaps doubiv, call- ‘ inc of t';i1i:i<l:1's future war :1 gsiicrzii election? iii-i rctiiriicil from a pil- ‘ii-iqiiiii, i‘. was right that he . i iil.l‘1‘. llni it is cvcn more ‘.'.i':\". niorc-vii:il to our ivur ' ‘ ' ll now go to Quebec; go liiiii his Quebec colleagues ~ other parties and speak‘ iotism Jlllll common sense Only by :1 personal zip- ~.lino~ on 1i pli! form iii limit- (‘n11 lic do this as the hour ll('. i "i lo :in=\v< r lllIll tlic plebiscite is “ii-U’ Wilt‘ is ll\\llI‘!.‘fl. Canada at tlii- in i .-.il~ iii-m‘ illllll :i more majority t0 vote ' l: \\’1llll- :1 “Yes” votc so decisive and f‘1\'(‘l'\‘.‘ll"ll\|l'lQ ilizil it will resound in Der- lin nnrl ilonv- :in1l 'l‘iil<vri-:iii¢l in Ottawa. iTvlic Whirligig 0f Time it i\ tlilll<illlli“vl ili:ii tlic King lizis been pleas- ed to Zll']\l"I‘.4' illill ill!‘ iliilcc of llontrosi: be ap- pointed land liifllll toniiiii-siiiiii-i" to tlic (icucral l\.\'lsfllllrl_\' oi lil(‘ (liiircli of Fcollziiiil. ./\:1 L'ltl(‘l' for many _\'L'ill's of lllC (linrcli of Scotland, tlic Duke is also intern-steel in llomc Rule for Scotland. llc is sixty-three, and succeeded his father iii 10:5. lli- is not fully :1 sizinncli church man, but :1 lIPPlI Scots p.'lll‘i0f. fining to sca in tlic ilziys of sailing ships. he has liad a uni- que carver ii< tmii-lli-r and lizis been in many parts of tlic glolic inrliiiliiig Canada. in tlic Great \\'.'ir ill‘ ivzi- ilk‘ first volunteer officer in tlic Yniiwil Kingliun to hr mohilisctl. From 1919111 19:2 ilU \\-'l~ (l i1:iv:il .-\.l).C., to the King Iii 1930 lie iv:i< .i;-p~iiiii-il Lord Lieutenant of the county of lillll‘, 'l'li_- llulcc was the inventor of tlic first itilvlilfl carrying sliip, and he also tlosigneil and oiivivl tlic first sea-going heavy oil motor vcsx-cl. k iiF/illl '1 thing J15 tlic futc of any His- Grace's nomination to represent His Maj- esty the King as his High Commissioner recalls memories of the fighting past of the religious Scotsman. The High Commissioner's ancestor the Great Marquess of Montrose was executed in Edinburgh at the instance of this self-same Kirk when it was fighting this self-same monarcliial institution. The Marquess was head of the Cavali- ers who made war on the then Kirk leaders be- cause they disagreed fundamcntally with them on the subject of Church government and in other respects. Lord 'l‘wceds1iiuii~ (john nllCllilll) who wrote a brilliant biography of “Montrosc" and his times said the purpose of his book \vas “to trace the career of one whose campaigning ground was Scotland, wlicre antagonisms were fiercer and blindcr than in the south; one who did not drug his soul with easy lovaltics, but faced the problem of his times unflinchingly, and reached conclusions which had to wait for nearly two hundred years till they could be restated with some hope of acceptance; one who, nevertheless. had that single-hearted gift for deeds which usually belongs to the man WlIOSC vigour is not impaired by thought. Montrose has been called by Carlyle the noblest of the Cavaliers, yet clearlv he was no ordinary Cavalier; for at the start lie was a Covciiaiitci- and in rebellion against the i\'i11g—rcbcllio11 of which he never saw rea- son to repent, and to his dying day he remains a convinced Presbyterian." In tlic Whirligig of time it is the-heir of the Commander of tlic Rqvalist army against the Covcnantcrs, betrayed and hanged 290 years ago, who has been chosen to represent Royalty at this year's Assembly of the heirs of the Covenanters. -- bDIIORiIAL NUIIIS ... It should be all over today save the formality of voting “yes" on Monday. 1k v >I< 1k * Tlie pageant of youth will be tlic feature of tomorrow, not only here but throughout the British Empire~ a w 4- Should the railway dictators have their way, it means that six brezidivinners and families here will be deprived of their livelihood at tlic expense of Moncton. Why sliould this be tolerated? v The Most Reverend William Temple who has just been cnthroned 98th Archbishop of Can- terbury, is the first Englishmen to hold the posi-j tion for something like a hundred years, his two predecessors being Scotsmen, Dr. Davidson and Dr. Lang. v v 41 1k The educated man does all his reading for enlightenment and culture before he reaches the age of forty. After that lie reads mostly merely as an agreeable pastime, or, at the worst, to keep up with the Joneses. >l< x r a * The electric stations of this Province generat- ed in I941 over 1,800,000 kilowatt hours or 26.3 per cent more than during the preceding year- Output is reported at 8,666,000 kw. h. compar- ed with 6,835,ooo 'l 1940. Daily average con- sumption came to 31,000 kilowatt hOurs in Dec- ember last and to 23,000 in the same month a year earlier. m u- v 1r In connection with the proposed dismember- mcnt of our Provincial railway service by the transference of the accountants branch to Mone- ton, will Premier Campbell, for a similar alleged economic reason, agree to the transfer of our Supreme Court to Halifax? What is sauce for the {lbose is equally sauce for tlic gander. llut perhaps the Premier maly think sacrificing tlic railway will suffice to satisfy tlic hungry, cliiis- ing wolves until he himself reaches tlic safety zone. _ * >l< >l< >I< H, R. H. Princess Iloyzil (Victoria Alex- andra Alice Mary) Countess of llarmvood, U. C. V. 0., G. B. E., D. C. L. Col-in-Cliief hoyal Scots and Royal Corps of Signals, Chief Con- troller Auxiliary Territorial Service, born this date 1897; married Fcb. 28, 193;; Yiscouiii Lascelics, now 6th Earl of llurcivood, Personal A. D. C. to the King; has two children, lion. George Hubert, Viscount Lasccllcs, born Feb. 7, 1923, and Hon. Gerald David Lasccllcs. born Aug. 21. 1924; residences. 32 Green Si. London W. i.; llzircivoorl Ilousc, liarcivoorl. Leeds; ziiid lrigcrton House, Ncmiiakct; llLT fzillicr ivris George V, and licr brother is tlic prcsciii King, George VI. v v >s< >11 "Who slczils my purse, siczils trzisli," we are told on ivcll-knoivii authority, but lic ivlio dc- privcs us of our Provincial rights as wcll makes us poor indeed. \Vhy should our Govcrnincnt stand idly by and lct our confederation agree- mciit with tlic rest of Canada bc ircziicrl :1» so 11111cli waste paper. (iflultlilily but stciulily we are being deprived of our Provincial Zllllflllrllll)’, and our Provincial Government stands idly by, evidently being concerned about nonc of these things. Oh! for a spell of our old time public mcii who sacrificed everything personally that our rights and privileges as a frcc and iiidcpcnd- ent province might be*cl1crishcd and maintained. >1 l- v- An appointive Senate has hccii condemned many times since (fonfcdcrzition as a dcmo- cratic negation but tlic system as devised by the framers of tlic British North America .\ct has persisted, says the Montreal Gazette. At the same time tlic purpose of the Fathers has bccn dcfcziterl by, 011 tlic part of successive govern- mciits, a calculated policy of lowering ilic status of the Upper llousc as a politically independent deliberative and revisory body. 'l'hzit policy still operates. It is shown in the disincliiialioii to initiate important legislation in tlic Sucontl Chamber, in the practice of sending important measures to be f1Ii)l)('l'-Sl8lllp(‘(l by tlic Senate in the closing days of a session, in tlic lrcat- mciit of the Upper Ilouse as a linvcn for party scrvanls, and, as 110w, in leaving numbers of vacancies unfillcil as a matter of future cou- vcmcncc. If the Canadian Senate is lo be (lcnied the ‘responsibilifv WlIIClI the builders of Confed- crnlion intended it to lirlvc. llic rcsponsiliility of really checking and amending undesirable lcg- islation and of [irotccling minority rights, it should be either reformed or abolished. i m1; g_ (IIjIARLUPTETOWN GUARDIAN i NOTES BY TllE WAY The forty-fifth anniversary o! the wrecking of the t-roopimp Warren Hastings, and the army still honors me men who were In- volved‘ because c-t the lnzigiiuicent discipline they mplayed. lue troops Cbfllpflilid ccmpanes of me K1585 Rbyfll Rzlle Corps and me York and Lancaster Regiment, and a detachment o! the Middle- esex Regiment, 9t5 all told, includ- ing wcuicn and cludren. At 2 20 in the morning cf January 14 me ship struck racks off the Islands of Reunlcn in the Indian Ocean, and became a total wreck. The troops fell 1n on tho main deck, and at 4 a.m. were ordered to allmb down 1011c lsdders to the rocks Twenty minutes later disem- barkiiticn c-f the men was stopped, and the IVCLIIIEII, cliildien, and sick were passed down the side from man to man. Then landing was ex- pedited, and the imcle ship's com- pany. except two natives, were saved. - Sheffield Telzgraph, That Great Britain and the United States will hurl their arm- les and fleets against Germany and Japan Just as soon as they are ready and the opportune mcment comes can be accepted as truth. Political and military chiefs of both countries have no mare love 1'01" the defensive than Iris the man in the sircet But. to launch m ill-prepared attack that could 0t be pressed through to success wo ld be the ivcrst kird of wily- -— Ed- monton Journal. An American prrdicts that "after the war" cars will r1111 40 miles on a gallon or gasoline. Wliy not. start 1t new when gasoline is becomln increasingly scarce? _ Brockvtlle Recorder and Times. "Survey Show Fat Wives Are Best," says a Wcmanls Page head- linta-ft-‘s easier you see, to live with 200 pounds of curves than with 100 pounds of nerves. — Windsor Dally Star. We Americans must not fool our- selves. The f'a.~cists and Nazis are at work in this country, spreading propaganda, just as diligently as they spread 1t in Rance before The Fall. They are trying to undermine the morale 01f the American peODIe by ‘creating dis- trust of government, by spreading suspicion about congress and the president, by breaking down faith in victory, 3y poisoning the hearts of people tl-i vague unfounded fears. The other day a pamphlet came to theGazet/oe from Denver. It had no sign or mark of its authorship. It was a. deadly bitter attack upon Washington for not. going to the rescue of the Ameri- can troops ln the Hillippines. It was Intended to give suckers the belle! that {he president and the army and the navy and the alr force would rather save Great Britain than to rescue American boys under siege in Bataan. If you, Mr and Mrs. Voter, fall for that. kind c-f bunk. you are simply swallowing Fascist poison. This anonymous circular was one of the things ivhich the Nazis are spread- ing through the country. Its story is the kind cf stcry itiat licked France, because the French In too many cases halway believed the deadly things that were printed about their own government. - Emporla. Gazette. We predict with auful cerfulnti a yeiir of the most terrible and desperate danger 1;; which this con- tinent more than once will take on the aspect of a beleaguered citadel frcm which only with the greatest difficulty we will be able to maln- taln the steady flow c! supplies and men to the theatres of war. It ls not iinlikrly that. our coasts will stiffer their own share of the perils 11nd destruction of the War. Victory-mm‘ ultimate goa.l—tem- porrailv recedes The length and duration cf that retreat rest with us. Grrnicd unity and courage, 1 ism sfublzcrn determina- ini iaiicn and resource- . we will win this war. But in 12172 it. hangs tn the balance as It did in 1940. But we must close ranks and stand tcgc-‘her or the next (“glut months will spell not virtcflv. but. ruin. - Winnipeg F C2 Press. itmerlca. must Inok at the calen- d:r and must now watch the clock. She must not. be despairing. Neither can she afford to waste an hsur rr permit s, worker to remain "“.r~_ W: cannot kerp our eyes on the clzul; and lay dcvim our task and our responsibility at H1" end of forty hcurs or of sixty. This. we must PEQIHIIDGI‘. is March. 1942, not March, 1940, or 1941. Britain has been for two years 11nd a half at war: Germany for almost two rears has had ccmmard of the French industrial rcsrurocs. Is Britain to approach zliurstton at the time Jap-rui will .e getting oll and lrcn and Germany will be bringing into operation all the fac- lories and all the slave psiwer of all the Conquered countries? That: is 110 rhetorical queston. It pre- sents a (lcflnlte posdblllty, If we pemur pessimism to paralyze us or optimism to Induce us to "take It easy." we shall find ourselves fight- ing alone against a, caoallflori that can build Iiimdreds cf ships. and overrun our shores with tinks. rind scnltcr with clc‘ ‘I: of planes the last armies cf f'.'e"dcm If we letter or lcse heart. we are on the read to slavery. We are on the way to victory lL-and only if -— every American will so work that at the end c-f an Iicncst day he can say, “This day. ‘when; I 11m, I have done all I knew how to do to save my Country's frccclcm. -- Rich- mond News lender. The government would not resort to rationing gasoline if it were not ncccssary as a. war effort. There- fore, rationing shcuid not become a, contest between the car owner and the government to see how much gasoline cnri be secured. The effort should be In the dlrwtlon of how to conserve as much as pos- sible. - Petrolla Advertiser-Topic. Words do not these llmcs The gulled by the words of Goebbels and his propaganda chorus will some day kick themselves for their credullty But. there is one word that we diould kevnzte as import- ant tn this war That w.rd is “be- wlldcrvnent." Gradually bewilder- ment ls brifng transferred from one side to the Dfllfll‘. ‘Phat, movement has .11 milfliflily accelerated dur- ing i, e second year of the war. Dllflllfl the third year it will swing over still faster. Like a boomer- ang, bowlldennent will fly back to the place it. came from. - Johan- nesburg Tunes. moan much In fools who are STRAIGHT STEADY 10R .321: "m" The Great Crusade —- I942 i ' (National Education cfllllbll) There may be some to whom this Circumstances call old and 9'0""! war ts the same as any other war alike b0 this Great Orv-Bflde- The In all but its colossal cost and ex- mature Ind even the use“ mus" lo In which we shall strlvo and endure; no llte can re- we shall try to return as nearly as 170N118 chiefly the burden and th: possible to what we were before. honour of service must be laid. On But most must have realised by land. at- sea, and In the mt. "w! now that It ls not; so. It ls unique must crush the Beast today. M"! 1n respect to the Issues involved. It tomorrow 1t 1s they who must bullg Ls the outward and visible sign of upon the desolation of today s a horrlble thing that has ha ned battlefields. In millions of human souls. e are Home this Youth Movement. now at war because the Beast in human- 8PNlld far beyond Canada. and the ity ms revolted against Moral Law. Motherland. wlui Its appeal w I11 laughed at the Supreme Reallt men YOUIIZ people of goodwill to heal‘ have called God, and brazeriy de- the summons of our unprecedented clared Itself the arbiter of destiny. tlmé. 8nd answer It by dedlcatlnfl We are at war because the hand of their powers and their lives to the the Beast la out-stretched to thrust Nlheat. This ls not 1m effort In society down into a. blackness where create a new organization of youth. the higher element ln 1gp must but to awaken 1n youth a new splr- atrophy. We are at war defend It. fitted for the ordeal and labour the spiritual conception of life confronting mankind. Both young against perverts who frankly see and old are banded together alrensy man as an animal, and the world in innumerable organizations, fcr a Jungle where moral standards are innumerable particular ends. Let. u. farce, and those who can kill them all continue, 1f they serve have alone the right to eitlst. any purpose of good. What we need This war, therefore, cannot be to and seek la a common spirit to ani- us like other wars. It ls the object mat/e them all, a. spiritual “Order of of a struggle which determines its Chivalry" 1n which they may all be character. makes it mean or ex- one, and by virtue of wnlcli their alted, a mere fight. or a Crusade. strength shall be concentrated al- From the Eleventh to the 'I‘hlr- ways and only upon the redemption teenth Century. masses of men died of our stricken and unhappy world. in battle 1n order to keep open for Passion must be fanned 1n us,- pllgrlms the Holy Land which was the PPSSIOII to resist a" that. would he home of their religion, Today put the world back, and to back we must. suffer and die to preserve all that would put. the world for- rellgion tself. And those men of the wa-rd, as a place 1n which the hu- past did not see their enterprise man personality may rise in the as ordinary warfare; 1t was a Holy scale of being. Such a passion ls 1n- 3 War. and they felt themselves to dis usable. Only the single mind be Crusaders. soldiers of God, wea- an Intent stpglt of the Crusade ns 1n His hand, How much more can see us ough. whether today lterallv ls our warfare today a or 1n the years to come. We must Crusade, calling for the like high burn with a zeal for good beside splrlt of dedication In those by which the demonic enthusiasm of whom it is waged! those now menacing society will L1. moreover. a. Crusade to seem feeble Any less flamtn splrlt which the dying echo of the last will grow dim before the sruggle gunfire must. ring no close. It is ended. Any less exalted spirit will must. continue, In such an effort to- droop with successive difficulties 1n- ward a better world as has never to acceptance of evll things as lu- before been made The “blood and evltable- But they are not Inevit- sweat and tears" of these times able. The Beast: can be beaten. The have driven 1t home to all sane men Kingdom of God can come. that society cannot continue, as it This Ls our Great Crusade, and has been, We cannot go on with a today our great. do . A new world civilization so honeycombed. with Ls coming to the blr . We must not corruptlons that new evils are bred "cease from mental fight" till the from every new achievement of millions of our young, as they read human lntellec t, and pert- their own hearts. are able to claim odlcally the whole structure la that they are ready for it. rent by convulsions, destro lng life, "Now. God be thanked Who has wrecking ha. ptness, and ping out matched ua with His hour. the gains o izeneratlona-the ma- And caught our youth, and wakened tertal gains along with the cultural. us from sleeping!" Antidote (Winnipeg nee Press) As a. strong antidote for Allied over-confidence and ‘ "PM". consider this fact-the Nazis are still absolutely certain that they are acting accordingly. The Nazi dream of world mus- bery has as its goal a great Ger- THE TRUMPET-CALL sound the great recalll man core ln the centre of Europe Swift, O swift. for the squadrons surrounded by millions of wretch- bi-esk, e serfs who exist only to labor fcr The long llneS waver, mazed 1n the their Nazi masters. Hitler has not Trulnpeter, g 0m waited until completing his con- Hlther BIIQ hither the blind host qtuest of the world to start iesettllng “s; 1. Seldom a. week passes without Stand thou firm for a. dead Man's stories 00min out of wholesale s, e’ . pulatlon slit “In Europe. an)“ 1 d m ..a.m1ers are mov Fm“ figifiggf me own Poland and the liliralne by the Stand thou firm 1.11 the midst of the ~h<>usflnds- The Polish nation 1a 1mm “all ca: it“? n iftl“ be . - ' az r c as en o Standegghgiée yhe steeds 11nd the rld ‘Fm hfinmd: Mdnutcrtm {wanes Set the bronze to thy lips 2:5 sound 3g‘ ° B" 5°9- 1‘ 9m . ng the resettled German mmll A raurlguafum the whole world es In Poland. Germany has been Trumpistfr, rally us, rally us. mlLY ggceaiggtaéilitlizsbglll: ’ waacovgsaceore; smmd me great mean‘ th ,t Germans. 0w he discovers Trumpeter, sound for the last f‘ the“? “Lepliggmfeiatiefxléllknstryh: CID-B _ somldkimr the n" a m‘ “mew” 135112‘; gérfvjiiilflgestblfteneilflciihgntgrirtie "g5 ,, an i». m Mi». i» 4°“ “w Pm’ Nazis have now nlzed their mu fiwepi fir? world M‘ A dew failure in Holland so t e 11011111111- im‘s s e, ' all. m. was». lws~:1:..r11.s ?§.’..“"l1‘lé€'i“a‘lé1.li“§l“§ r “g5. i - Clear fiipm the heights of the holy §§§‘,§‘,,é“b,f§‘5e‘?‘§n"g§§§ m“ sow if, i» m» a mud pfiillltéflifiéffiill’ Earnest: 9'“- e- surrender. At the nd of t a sound for the tomb that our llves they have 6mm t; appreflfwyefllg . have beilraged’ full honor of Nazl favoritism. Their Oer bvrglltlen and abandoned many h“ denudggeeo; {Dog Trumpeter: sound tho t recall. 1 overrun p" rs’ m.‘ “WWW! rllly "=- r 1w- mllv axilliviilxbibiilififd-nlylfeslfiiiliiiigilibbi . Soundufiir the last Crusade gm mmclrselelsly m‘ ark Hinge ls being strl of ‘her Trumpeter. sound for the splendour gem“ ‘fo,hf,’e,“lgff,,§ltlel‘f“°h§fij o o Bound the music who» name l! iiifiiyuifiriiiiiivsfiriiiif ‘Rntllgiefiiidiislovakia aw- 1n no country 1n all Europe are Whores isfirvioe is perfect fmdom up M1313 Sllfllviillg 1:11!’ siglciih of luck v o con ence n vc cry. ey aie Th9 Ogdeé ‘M10159 that 711105 file mtgkltfgg no effort danywlieye to blac- - a e conquer»: pee .e w- Bid the imarchs of night withdrew. would expect ghlm u, ifpmev agseared T00 1031885119 dBSI-FOYBPS hB-VG wflrkfld defeat. Instead. they are zolng rap- l I ' sound for the last. the h“ of n” d y ahead vilth the Nazlficatlon of Wars 11%???” Sound ft?‘ that heights that our ' r _. fa ers , .;- When truth was truth and love was , V . with a. iiell beneath. but a heaven i a ve, Trumpeter. rally us, up to the heights of it! Sound for the City of God. _ -—Alfred Noyes. TUE WAY TO Better Grain Yields NEW IMPROVED CE RESAN ,1 Kllls certain Smut: and ollrr l w Iced-borne diseases by hath INSURANCE SERVIC ” W. It. IIIIIIEIIS Agencies Ltd. Phone 540-541 ..IT"“” l I l l l l 111 ;.., $6‘ .. NEW IMPROVED SEMEFMN BEL DI disinfectant Inr Seed Po Ines. If. ls n quldk. easy din lrentmrnt that el"nlnfllcl ' llnplpur and Ions of Ilmlr. 3 FORMFLIN IMUT 9N GRAIN A chap but lhoroulhly ef- fective remedy. Gnln powers would be WIIQ to not promptly In order tn have need properly heater before nowlnl. Full din-callous Elven with every ordm Price 0o per pint. TllE TWO MAGS m Grout owm Street Moll Orders Given Prompt ' Amulet». T0 the Electorate 0f Charlottetow], I most earnestly request that all Cilizeng of Charlottetown vote "YES" in the forth. coming PLEBISCITE, thereby releasing the Dominion Government from pledges which might hamper it in the all- out. prosecution of our WAR EFFORT. i t- dnmage to an automobile bu Ia NOW before an accident rates. llYNllMllll 81 Ofllices C” IotteI-o .. Earle S. Jell, AUTOMOBILE SMASH-UP - After the crash then comes the bIII for costs-not. only for t possible heavy liability for Injury or death involved In the accident. When you m and consider the number and variety of ac. oldents occurr g every day. It would he well to carrv full protection and safeguard yulur financial position. lul drivers become Involved uiibxncctedly. Policies Issued for the year or fur the season at reasonable Pill! Information submitted without obligation. Allison P. McLean-District Manager at Summerslde. Representative at ‘Leary. J. Martin Currie-Representative at Montague. Peter G. McEacher-n-dtenreae ‘ em- lino} i. any B. R. HOLMAN, Mayor. The time Remember most carc- 00. LIMITED Summer-ll’ Montngug "we at Victoria. Charlottetown Branch at New Haven A. B. CUTCLIFFE l Funeral Director and Embalmer —ALSO— Phone 633 Phone 7-11 Chas. McDougall, Mgr. 24-hour ambulance service at both branches Europe, oblivious, almost, of even the existence of the United Nations. There is no evidence to justify any muddle-headed optimism -about a. collapse of the Nazi machine. We have a lot move bitter fighting to do before that can possibly happen. Handicraft Opportunity (Financial Post) ‘Ifhere should be more than usual Interest 1n the Canadian Handi- crafts Guild Exhibition which o ens in Toronto on April 28. This wl l be the first opportunity for many peo- pie to witness the pro ress Canad- an and European re ugee crafts- men are maktn lri producing many hand-made art cles which we prev- lously imported. Now all these fas- cinating ‘goods are being produced 1n Cuna . and out of local raw materials. In many Instances, too, there has been a considerable 1m- provement; In design. In addition to a natural senti- mental lnterest ln the growth of handicrafts, this country has a sub- stantial commercial stake as well. If we hope to develop our lucrative tourist trade to maximum propor- tions then there must be a. comple- mentary development In handicrafts as tourists always have been the biggest buyers of local hand-mace rugs, bllmkets, pottery and similar goods. And because these tourists act as unofficial salesmen on their return home there ls also a big 0- tentlal ex urt market for Cans an handlcraf In the United States. ‘Ilus, Canadian handicrafts have 0.1- ready tapped. Never in the 42 ears of its hia- has the Cana tan Handicrafts G11 d faced an opportunity and responsibility such as hat; presented by the present situation. Previous Imports of real and shabby lmilta- tlon handicrafts have been cut ofl. Thus Canadian craftsmen are pro- vided overnight with all of the dom- estic market and an ex ort outlet In the United States. At. t e same time there has been an Infusion of new skill from the refu s of Europe. And, finally, wlth_ he_qi_1y coal n ever closer when hundreds of tho sands of workers must. shift f1 war reduction to peace, an lndust wlilc creates such permanen gainful and interesting employmen will prove almost Invaluable. i‘ LIBRARY CLOSES- LIVERPOOL-(CPI - Liver library, first circulating library be established ln Britain. Will C down shortly. It started in 175B vii %ogooks and now has more TO TEACH INDIA IJONDON——(CP)-— More thanl members of the National FIN ser vice and Clvll Defence Fbrce ha been chosen to o to India to ti: struct fire brlga es and ARI‘. per sonnel In vital Indian cities. r" RADIO SOS IDNDON-(CP) —- The Royalll! Force Ls to be supplied with sets for making SOS calls l dinghles. 100 PER, CENT CONTROL All varieties of paper in Soltll Africa, raw 0r made-up, are uM. the Controller of Paper. Mlnarfl’; kllls pain. “ U328Q138XW WORDS OF (‘HALLENGF "If we do not give ever? ounce of our energy l0 war effort. we might yet 1069 this war: but If we do, then. with God's help, we slmll con- quer and once more freedom. peace and justice will Ir: ours." Captain A. Kcrkhovfll. Royal Nslflierlands Navy- OUGDTGUCCIDITUIZFOUDOOQQ 92?" Sea-Power Will Win And ln its modest field our tobacco has many wins to Its credit. Every Island community h“ Its quota of people who use Hickey ’s Black Twist MANUFACTURED BY HICKEY £4’ NICHOLSON Tobacco Bu. Ltd. Charlottetown if