QA_GE_FQJB THE . OHARLOTTETOWN GOAROIAN blaming Dally (Founded In I857) President: Lieut. Col W Cheater S. MGLIIO VICJ-Pffaldfiflli .I. B. Burnett. FJ-l- Secretary: Lleut. Col D. A Maclflnnon. D.B.O~ Llftur and xluiiaging Direclor" J. R. Burnett, IJJ. Associate Edit-its. Frank Walker and Ian A- Bllrllfll Sl-BSCBIPTWON BATES By Mall in P l. l.. $4.00 per year; $2.50 for I mutt _ $1.25 fi-r 3 montnl; 50c for one mouth City Delivery. $5.00 per year; $3.00 for 0 inonlhl $1.75 fur 3 months by Mall In Canada and U.S.A. $5.00 pet year Saturday “ct-kn: $2.00 per year; $1.00 for 6 month; 50c for 3 munlhil. Th0 CIIIIFIUHPIUNII Guurdlun may he ohtllnod I llutitiliig‘: mim- agent-y, ‘time: square. New lurk; mu boulll .\r\\l IIKFIIPQ‘, ctirm-r Mill: uni] Winhlnylnn, BOIIOII AluIruDi-llunl he»: Agency, l2‘!!! Purl Sh, Iunlranll J Elna, as: liuy 5L, IH-mtn»; how: Slum], Chateau Louver. Otunm; \\lIlII"I an“: Blllllll, umlhury. Ont; llub Tubman filinp, Slum-ton, N. IL; l-Jlh-n Rubertnnn, Arnhenl. N. I. f'The Strongest Memory IS Weaker than Ill Weakest Ink." 'l'lll'l{.\‘l).T\Y, .\I’(EI'ST 7, 194]. Ilrtiviiit:i.i| Museum. The qui Wu of it l'2‘i>\'lll'\‘l(ll Museum is re- vived in ti ziy‘. l-liriizii ctiliiiiiiis, this time under thc auslficv- iii ‘ lltiutii- the Lieutenant Gov- eriiiii- Ililil ii ti ciiuuiiittcc of citizens v who i.i\-~ \ -:ctl to tltivclol) public opin- itiii turd i i'i iii iii fZ‘.\'0l‘ of the move- lllPlll. 'l. . lit-iu $illlllll{‘.l.('L'I by a ftirtiivr l-lt: l\"'\'. lfllwiti $ittipson, of (iricu l‘- I-Vitil-lll, lli>\\' l'\'\'l$lllllg us. A kccu t-iit rs (‘i l,.toric interest, .\lr. Siwgi- the great advantage, l1'~i‘ll tlzi- l it-:':it iiliiiic, which the ]':'ii-t'::iti \ iitiiii :1 \\'(‘ll~(‘f]lllpp9(l iiiii-viiiii. i the educational \".iliic of - iiii. l: will Ii <tiuie yczirs ago atten- tiiiii \\'.'is c . -'iIllllllllS by .\lr~ llar- lllll l. .' ' i"c 'ii-' illlll .\ll'<('lllll, Ottawa, to this std-pct. .\l:' S-iiiih wzis particularly in- tercstcil in arch -. and he expressed thc (ipiiiFtiti llltli a -s_iu-,i-:i i..c scarcli of old Indian czutipiug i ills tiii the lslzuitl would yield niziiiy eviiltuctis tif aboriginal occupation, not nicri-ly stitiie toils .'iiiil wi-iipous sitch as have liccn li-llllii from lllllt‘ t0 time, hilt possibly pottery aiztl otlicr rt-Iics of prehistoric culture. \\'li.~i.t \\:is iit-til-cil, he urged, was accommoda- tion for [l lllll- ii crillcclitin. There were then, and are t. ttitlirv, many interesting and valuable rv ‘s di-pi-r-eil throughout the Prov- ince iiliicli ciiizlil thus he brought together. \Vc alrcadr hiicc a gti id ciillt-clion of relics of politi- cal iiut-i . i iiiii- (liiifctlcratioii Chamber, but the flklwlldllii ion tliure is iiistifficieut for J. miisz-iiin- .\l:i_i'-r .\l'i Illltllllfll‘ strong advocate of the ltiii-ciiiii lll~i'i' iit, is a lllt‘lllllt‘l‘ of the interim (‘i'illlllll‘i‘i~' iitiw t *l‘ll‘.‘Il_ .\ itii-ctiiig of this coni- niiiii-v I ill‘ i~ iiziiititl by lll(‘ Litruteuatit Gov- eriitir riiic. tlii- siiiiiiiit-i‘ lit-liilrrvs. It has liiin sugQc-"tcil that a third story to Prince of \‘.'.ili-s tTtiZli-gt: might be constructed as a iiiti-"ctiiii. lii thrit case tiiight it not be piissibl/r ti> Ulllltlll :i.s-i-t:iiii"e from the Federal Goveriiiiiiut ttiiviirtls a priijcct which \\'0uld be of iizitit-iiil as utll as provincial importance? Tilie Will‘. of ctiurs is and should be our first and forttiiiist iTlll-‘ltltiitlltlll. hit there is scope for much viiliiililt- iv-irk for the interim com- uiittcc ti» tlii iii ilt-vcltigiiiig (itiiuitiii and collect- ing lllliilll iiiai tin this siilijcct. We are the only Province ivllittiit a public museum, and the fact has llCPll iii»it~l i~,' Olll‘ siiiiuiii r vi h rcgrct on iiiatiy occasions by Japan's predicament iifwrtlirifil iisiiallyi well informed pcriiitlicnl . .- Japan's iiio-t obvious lack. 5110 pr _ ti» pcr cciit of her peacetime ncctls. i til< for the rest on the U. S , thc ' I.- I us: lll'll<'§, British Borneo, I.'ii'ii .'l. butler the Ftritc Department pi il. iti l\"l'll Jzipziii from moving into l'. S. tIir l~'i-t li.» llli‘ st-nt Japan 16,086,- ooo libl. ti _ lllllll illlll pt-triiletiiu products in 1'5"», llggiiuititi lihl. lrist yt-ar, about 1.150,- ooo blil. .t iiii 1' this ywir. Until last week, ja- paii zil-ii: it i,.\'t.t~_ot,ii tiius (around t4,000,00o l)l‘l.l a _\" " ' Ill 13:1» lfiist liitlics tuidcr a con- tract iifirli .. lliiti-li. That contract is now siispt-iii ‘ll. "For . ~' t-l iritlit-lrjr, Japan is 38 per ccnt (lt’li£‘lltli"tl iiiipii-ri- tii irtiu orc, pig irou, scrap. In l')_‘,'i i . l1‘.'il' _l:ip:iii priiitctl statistics on trivial-i 3 llll'iiili\‘il iiootiywoo tons from thc 1' , ll .i . tlit- l'ililllillillf‘i, Malaya, China. "CripfiGF is t'l\.'lili'llll" lll Japan in amounts barely wlfii. ~_ f»: ]-l"li'tlllll‘ iii-i-tls. Last year Japan iniprii-tril i_;ii ‘jti liill- of rciiuctl copper and scrap fitiiii i‘i- 1'. $.,1illll'l' litrgr- supplies from Latin .\lllil“.ti'l (now partly cut off by U. S. pfC-CilljllhJ‘ liii}.'i1»:-' prtigrriiiis licloiv the border). (Other lm-‘c ll'.'ll zils of which Japan is short include fiifll ll'lll"i\' tiiiiiugll for peacetime re- quirements», 75m iso pcr i~t~ut of peacetime needs), tin (Jo pi-r taut of ]K‘.’l(‘(‘lllll(’ nccdsl. altimiiiuiii, ltllJl. iii-rt"i'i'_v nuil phosphorus (al- n-mgt niitic-il, l'l‘lrl\t‘l' flliilll’). Of such import- ant alloy iiitkil. .1< IIlllllIlHYlJ’, chrome, nickel, mangaucs~ iiiit iuiig-tcu, Japan produces scarce- ly any at r-ll. “Of the riiw cotton on which its great textile industry il pit-dc Jitlvitl must get all her sup-_ plies from liiilia. tlic U. S . Brazil, Peru, China. \\"ool must l\(‘ oo pt-r cent importcrl from Aus- tralia. tlio l'iiiou of Stilllll Africa, England. "(Of total Japanese imports the U. S. normally supplics ovcr 30 per cent, the British Empire about 2o pcr ccnt. Already Japan's in- rliistrv llns lli‘f‘I1 qlnlVt-il iloivn by stoppage of Il. F. sliipiiiii_iit_< of scrap, machinery and scarce dogma |,,tl;,l.-_ lltirrtvvi-r, the biggest customers for 7,1“- ,ill< and ftllll‘? exports through which japan gi-ts ftiri-‘gu exchange are also the U. S ($I03._z||,nn lflst l-rarl and Croat Britain. In the early l-nrt of World \V:ir ll, japari found g profitable customer in Germany, which pent its No. I traveling salesman, Hemulh W°hmlab to Tokyo this spring to try to streamline Japan- ese industry and arrange shipments over the Trans-Siberian Railway‘. But the Russian war has cut off that trade, and japan is more than ever dependent on the U. S. and Britain. "It was to end this dependence that Japan conceived hcr schemes for a “New Order” in the Far East—with japan in control of all the rich natural resources ‘of China, Indo-Cliina, the East Indies, Malaya and perhaps even the Philippines. The East Indies produce enough oil to supply Japan in abundance; Malaya. produces a third of the world's tin; there is plenty of rubber in Indo-China. In the Philip- pines arc chrome and iron ore. China has iron, coal, tungsten, mercury, cotton, antimony, some lead and manganese. The East Indies have only metal japan would not stand to gain in sub- stantial quantity is copper. But raw materials are useless in the ground. They have to be mined, transported, processed; and there lies Japan's most serious lack. She has neither the technological know-how nor the in- dustrial machinery to exploit the Far East's re- sources in time to become a serious contender for international power. To use East Indian bauxite, Japan would have first to build aluminum plants and a power industry to rttn them- “Japans steel industry, geared to use U. S- scrap instead of ore, flotindered badly after scrap supplies were cut off ten mouths ago. To exploit China's iron ore_ Japan would have to chant marine to carry the ore, build a tre- mendous battery of coke ovens and blast fttrn- aces to turn it into pig iron. Although japan has controlled Illanchuria for niiie years, she has been tinable to swing any substantial increase iii Mqllglllll-igt’; iron production. China's cotton is a short-staple variety which Japan's present textile machinery is not equipped t0 handle. "In China, war is not the best R irvflch l0 raw materials anyway. Thanks to guerrilla resist- ance, Japan now gets fewer raw materials from l “conquered" China than before the war. Simi- larly, if Japan moves into the Dutch East Indies she will probably gct less oil than she has been getting. The wells are mined by the Dutch for destruction at a moment's notice. The mines could put some fields out of production for six months to a year, might ruin others perman- ently." EDITORIAL NUT ES 1 i. Sir Granville Bantock, British Composer, born this date 1868. He travelled round the world as conductor with George Iidwarzlesi Theatrical Company; succeeded Elgar as professor 0t music at Birmingham University; became musi- cal critic of The 'l‘imes; his IWIHQYOHS mm- positions include “Omar Kliay-y'an1,”_ "Atlanta in Calyvlon," and "Hebridean Syuiiphoiiy." in iii iii iv One of the most noteworthy things about Bristol is that it has a famous endowed uni- versity with 25S professors and lecturers to an average of 1,000 students, or one teacher to four pupils. It also has one of the fiucst equipped public hospitals in Ettgland, and at lczist two ls- land nurses on duty there. iii io- n ia- Cauadian soldiers aboard troop transports arc quiet compared to the Auzacs, according to a British seaman who has sailed with contiugctits of both. lle was aboard a liner that took part of the first Catiadian Division to Britain and also on one that bore thousands of Australians and New Zealanders to the Middle East. Of the Canadians he said: “They're quiet on the ship . kind of shy like." Of the boisterous Anzacs," he‘ said: “They're wild, they are. You never know what to expect next. They took halt the ship for souvenirs." i iii Mr. \Villiam R. Davis oil man, who con- stituted‘ himself a peace go-betwcen from Hit- ler to Roosevelt, has died in Houston, Tex, at the early age of fiftyi-two. His philosophy was summed up in the ivords “it is good business t0 join an opponent when you know you couldn't beat him.” After his ill-starred adventure into international politics, Davis took over the gas field at Rincox in Starr C0lll1ly and opened it to prolific oil production. Last year he sold a half interest in the field to Continental Oil Company for $6,000,000. iflii Six hfOfltlCilSls per month are made from Canada to France under the auspices of the Free l French Movement, four of the speakers being‘ French-Canadians. This regular series of broad- casts, some of which are made directly from Canada through Boston, and others by tran- scription for use over station WRUL, Boston, began early in July, and according to present plans will continue itidefinitely. Among the speakers were and are Premier Adelard Godbout, Cardinal Villencuve, LL-Col. Georges P. Vanicr, I).S-O‘, i\I~ C., former Canadian,‘ Minister to France, Jean Dcsy, newly-appointed | Canadian Minister to Brazil, Rial-Gen. L. R. l LaFlcche, D.S.O-, Deputy lvlinistcr of Nation-| al War Services and Mrs. A. Simard, of Quc- I bcc City. ' ni 4i is Ill Both tourists and residents in other parts ofi Canada are being asked to co-opcratc with thc , Government in curtailment of the usual con-' sumption of bacon and other pork products, through the means of printed cards, notes on menus and the verbal suggestions of members of the staffs of various hotels and restaurants. At l the top of one menu appears the following:| “The Dtitiiinioii Department of Agriculture and Canadian Bacon Board have asked us to assist lll reducing the constiniption of pork, bacon and ham in Canada so that more bacon may he sent to Britain_ Please co-operate with us by select- ing other meats from this menu." Would it not be more economical and save bother were the menus merely to omit baton and pork, leav- inx izatwfli to. ask £0: iliemti ~, C w i bauxite; New Caledonia has nickel. About tl-icl I over we shall see a large movement I the Dominion of Canada. There _ _ _ _ , I they may escape many o! the hard- mtiltiply her mining facilities, expand her mer-l l Incidentally, THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN NOTES BY THE WAY Lord Haw-Hut wlll probably do- clare that. British airman who es- caped by dlsgulstng himself u an Ara-b Woman was no lady-Jroronw Evening ‘Telegram, l “Corsets lo mam; your mntan" .advertlses n New York department ‘store. At least they cannot suggest. painting them on llke stockings. - Edmonton Journal. Look: u l: the day 0| the old school tie l: paaslng ln Britain and tthat brains rather than her-edit will fit a man for important posi- tlons ln Britain, now that. the dip- lomatic corps have been opened to lcareer men without. pnvate tn- ‘comes. And we have seen members of the corps who seemed to have little ualtflcatiorm other than the old sc col tie. - Niagara Falls Review. Four hundred wire-netting traps have caught. a. quarter of a mllllon perch in 12 days from Lake Winder- mere and they are being canned so Jwiflly that wlthin a month sup- plies will be on the market tn large lqitantltles. It. Ls epected that ln a . two months’ season 50 tons of good I protein tom wlll be extracted‘ from Wlndermeres hitherto despised millions of perch. — Nottingham (Eng). Post. There can be no manner of doubt that when this turmoll of war 1s of population from all free ocun- tries lnto such a favored land as ships and drawbacks incident l0 European residence. Moreover, the rapid industrialization of Canada will draw more and more industrial- Lsts from other lands, whcse capital and labor wlll find ample rewards 1n a country where raw materials are abundant and accessible and WllPre climatic and other condi- tions favor a maximum develop- ment. —— Canada's Weekly. The umespondence between Slr Frederlck Pollock, the great English jurist, and Mr. JiLstice Oliver Wen- dell Hclmes. of the United States Supreme Court, which has just been published, lends itself t’) apt. quota- tion by reason of the pungency of the observations about current events by the distinguished letter- writers, Here is s1 Fxederlck wrlt- mg to Mr. Justice Holmes under datq of March 24. 1924. about three publi: men. "Certainly the war has not made public men either wiser or better; I d‘ hope lt, would teach them a little w sdmn, What we have is polish without backbone like Asquith, or energy wtthzut. know. ledge or princlple like Lloyd George (who l5 lying low Just; now). If only Winston Churchill hcicl ballast, he would be worth the lot. His genius is too fllghtiy", The experience c-f 17 additional years having added the needed ballast, Winston Churchill is nc-w “worth the lot"—u.sing that phrase to include most. of his p0. lltlcal contemporaries ln Great Britain. —- Winnipeg Free Press. If or: drivers would care to listen to the advice of competent engineers they might; learn Some- tlring abs-tit using less gascllne. And that ls by driving slower 50MB . PUBLIC FORUM nu coll-n l: all! l‘? W flung“. by aounpoldon: OI quolllul: 0C lllfillfl- l. Ohulotuwwn Gandhi Ion I01 ‘ loonllull! Oldvno All OP of onnllwllflfl- PROVINCIAL MUSEUM COMMITTEE Stu-Will you kindly insert tn you: paper the names of the Com- mittee each of whom ha; consent- ed to serve as an interim commit- tee looking toward the establish- ment. of a Provincial Museum for Prlnoo Edward Island. The purpose of thla commltwo l: to develop public opinion tn favor of the move- ment and gather helpful Informa- tion and make at record of the same, so that when those tn sun..- ortty can secure the necessary means the desired goal may be more quickly reached. I am, Sh‘, etc, B. W. LEPAGI Lieutenant-Governor of Prince Edward Island Government House, Charlottetown, Aug. I, 1941. Commltleo of Volunteer Ollllens Mr, A. J. Matheson, Olcary. Hon. Thane A. Campbell, LL. D., Premier. Mr. W. A. Blewnrl. MLA, Char- lottetown. Mr. John Gordon, Charlottetown. Miss Carrie Holman, Sllmmersldr Rev. Monsignor Mcbellan, pastor st. Paul's Church, Summemde. Dr. J. Claude Elmwon Summer- side. Dr. J. A. Clark, superintendent Dominion Experimental Station, Charlottetown. Major Fred May, 8t. Eleanor: Right Rev. J. A. Murphy, Rector, St. Dunstarrs University. Rev. R. V. McKenzie, st. Dunn ~ slurs University. W. F. P. Bradley, Assistant Pro- vincial Archivist. Major O. W. Campbell, Depwy Provincial Secretary-Treasurer. B Graham Rogers, supervisor P E1. Travel Bureau. (Mrs) Fannie J. W. Mulch, Clrr- lottietown. ' Prof. J. H. Blanchard, Vice-Prin- clpal, Prince of Wales College. Hon. A. E. Arsenault, Judge of the Supreme ‘ourt. Mlss Laura A. Young, Charlotte. town. ‘ Mr. H. B. Chandler, PEI. Pub- 1=c Libraries. Hun-Kindly glve place In yo! crowded columns to a one-time lg- lander, now a. cltlzen of our nelgh. boring republic-who tn common Wllh hosts of Islanders gnd tour- 7 I941 i . AUGUST SALE of lVlEN’S SUITS Starts To-ilay. Get first choice. no Suit in the store reserved $25. and $27-59 Suits Clearing at $I 7'95 $295" Suits clearing at $22.00 $32-50 Suits Clearing at $23.50 Hundreds to select from including Hyde Park, Fashion Graft, and the better makes. THESE PRICES ARE FOR OASH ONLY. HENDERSON & OUOMORE lsts feels the need of a gathering of the essentials of yesterday, tn a museum for the edtflcatlon of the citizens of tomorrow. The globe- trotter finds in practically every land the world around. the domes- We know tihere has been a gcorl deal printed about. that one time and another and we dcubt if many drivers ever pa‘cl attentlin to it. They were n t interested. The fig- UYBS Riven here are the results of pfilClilflll tests all of thcm mndei with the some car, a rather largel one. If you are drxvlng a smaller car then the figure: can be changed to suit your case, but. the ratio re- mains the sanxe: Miles per hour Miles per gallon Twenty . . . . . . . . . . . .. 22.7 Thirty . __ - Forty Fifty SitXy S: ven ty . . . . . . . . . .. l2 5 The wear on tires at. nigh speed Ls also tiiucih greater than when driving at a slower rate, —Peter- borougih Examiner. Indians, tourists and churchmen plume End electrlt! “Km- The l5- alike, paid tribute to the memoryl bmfitor 95 0f MOTSQ. Bell and Edlson of Rev. IL-bert. T. Bundle, when s. nre there. ‘There you may seq the mcnumeiit W85 unveiled recently tn the wwusite of Banlf Nat orial Park. This pioneer, after whzm Mount Rundle was named, was the first white man to camip where Banff tcwnslte now stands, having recent New Y°Tk wwld’! F1111‘- Th6 preached the gcspel to the Indian tribes along the Bow River ln 184145661 and may become fully known Tile monument, a three-ton block oft in Degrbm-n, thanks m l museum rock taken from a mountain in the vicnlty, stands ln the grcunds of the Ulliifid Ohurcti in Banff. e unveiling was performed by Rev.l J. M. Fawcelt, president of the Alberta conference of uie United the printed P1186 "the short Church of Canada. Frcm the Cree Bible used by Rev. Mr. Ruiidle on his first visit to the Indians, the 23rd Psalm ivas read by Chief Jacob Two Young Men of the Stoney Indians, Rev. Mr. Rundle, at the age of twenty-nine, ls reputed to have been the first. mzsslonary to minister t» the splrttual needs of what Ls now the Prcvmce of Al- berta. At. that. time the vast terri- tory from the Red River to the Rocky Mountains was inhabited by many thousands of Indian; of tribes often ho"t.ile to each other. A fewl hundred white men, who traded’ with the Indlflfls, mitt bllill. fortisl along the waterways as centres t.) which the Indians might bring their fur catch. - Quebec Chronicle- Telegraph, ar away, Amazing, coming from the mn- with V0153 low m‘ mum,‘ ‘um _Mute thtnas tn azaleas aentenoel to me. isar Star. ts the following para-kph; wave; 1n usually judicially lark, of the Wind- chine of the minded W. L. C graph: We wlsh the champions o! l conscription of manpower make lt. clear whether they also ,devlces, methods and programmes lof Government ‘iform and thrill tlc utensils, the agricultural imple- ments, household furnishings, the crude efforts of a beginning sgl. ence, left-over tools of Industry, the and educatlon. housed in adequate building; on spacious grounds. Why not have Prince Edward Island tells its story $0 all 60mins ln some such way? Origins ever interest. Curiosity ts ever asking questions. The museum ls the best possible answer. The splendid citizens of this tour- lsts’ paradise sprang from worthy progenitors-that all should know. A well known auto manufacturer at Dearborn, Mlchlgan. has made the world his debtor by bringing to- Bether ln his home clty the be- Enninss of the telegraph, Lela-- hXstory of transportation from the split. log drag, pulled by an ox, tn the most modern airplane. This ex- hibit dellghtedlnullltudeg at, lhg Past of the United States may; be sclentlflcally arranged and gener- ously Supported by one genuinely interested citizen. There we may find more vlvldly set. up than on and slmPlo flnmlls of the poor," and of the cultured oi- uncultured rlch. such world-wide collections lure, ln- ths ublqulttous BELLE ISLE [The m iii-mt damDh! on ltho MISC! Someuileazie the dronln: breaker: wind-swept rank and roll would met: wlld foam from the to! on Green and shone mean the conscription of wseltftJAnd cold clouds huriy down this F)!‘ instance, would the prescient. of l a gzlzl mine be paid $1.30 per day? Not. lri the palmlest days ‘d a soaip-box performer ever orate just like that, with n mob appeal. there ts probably not one gold mtne president. tn Canada of mtlltary age, and the b such men have ls to produce the wealth to pay ten thousand| soldlert; thclr $1.30 per day. A; for conscription of wealth, unless the country goes completely Red, lcok at. the tax schedules. Even Mr. Clark of the Star works so many hours a day for the Government and his com/puny certainly pays tribute tn large chunks, almost. tn- digestible chunks. -- St. Cathartnes Standard. l M Knwkarelt I aoillhl nut lhe- $166 town's sole whlte lnhabltant, lhelPl Engkh commissioner, This earnest young official -- ruler, on behalf of the English Raj. of all he sur- veyed _ was discerning Justice tn the dingy courtroom. 1L was a scene the beat Somerset Maugham tn- 1 bradoc Wltah- gaiiuaae: of winter from the e. The lonely rock: of tunielnd Bella Where ugh-marks hold their lm-l nrtnt. i-iurd ma more, l Behold blpe hem‘ mithward I‘ n3 lo As when the Norse God: wlkh t-hel: mils unfurled Came crowdlruz down the lea-lanes ml on mt Antl tiraffldfld on the hllhww: of the world. l -Alfred Goldswort-hy Halley. dttltrn. A punks, flspplng lastly overhead, kept the moist tropical air _tn circulation. 1t was manipulat- edbynrope tn thelund: ofa by Attendant. Ho:- tnbe and friendly, the commis- sloner welcomed me lo hls home, when we s m the evening talking war and eephtmt: and listening reverentially to the BBC brzulcut. from faraway London, .. Dally News. MEN'S WEAR tourist. will be done. One most prominent 80.000 C. O. S Your scribe has been triformezl in legislative affairs said tt. would —_—— Mid delighted by days Spent tn already have been under way !f 110N901‘ " (U?) — Wmlzolll" museums ln Mexico, Cairo, Tokyo, and tn a host of cities tn the old world and the new. He and an tn- numerable host of others, long to flnd such collections in Prince Ed_ ward Island. authority and under authoi-‘ty, 53y tt should be done, and burial: reviewing their cases 60.900 men tn Britain have reclaimed at conscientious objectors, and abriii 45,000 )m_a.ve been dealt. witli.___ Hitler had not. gotten ln the way. Each passing year takes off those who know, and h‘des the thlngs we would hold. Minty 6t yesterday‘! indispensable; are unknown, or fast. disappearing from the sight of the majority. Devlces for card- - I Relieved l Iv porlon who ls troub- led wl n: palm. Ifllll’ stnm- nh 1nd heartburn should ll’! I bottle of "Dr. Evans stom- lch Mlxture" and see niiW quickly It wlll relieve all dis- treulng qmptoml. Dr. Evan: Stomach b11101" taken at meal limes, not only evenlg bad effects from Pl- t ll promotes the function- u ll nollvlty of the stomach. iss- dlgestlon and lmnriuvl Cltlzens contacted who are ln sometime (Continued on page 8, Col 6) l‘ i’ ‘W tho lpplllto. Price 85c P" -_ i DOING- ’ i‘ . i r nouxwoons \" i‘ ' 11w - comm Z i‘ ' LIPSTICK ‘ 4 mazmu FEATURES l. Lifelike red of 1W1‘ "l" l. Non-drying but lndellbll- 3. Silo for wnsltlve lips. _ l. Elamlnllcs "llvllltlk u” ' Prloa 75c and 51-35 We carry a complete of Max Factor Buulv 011W’ ntlonl. Call and m: them- I NOV ‘SCOTIANJ -/ HALIFAX,'N.S.l Service of metropolitan standard-I'M lplendldly appointed xuest roomn, :11 with tub and lhowgp-Qg unsurpassed cuisine lervlnl lea-food: o! the proving. u a specialty-n modern fire-proof structure with (h. latest fire protective appllances-dmmedlntely adjacent to railway station thus ellmlnatlnl taxl and baggngo transfer charges. 9. ilock BORE BACK ‘.' l! :0 we have one of the but remedies m offer. namfl! BACK - BITE TABLET5 In tally flecllve for lum- bamfegclntloi, neuritis. 01"!‘ c 1nd other farm; 0' rheumatism which iii-din"! treatment! fall lo reach. Only 85 cent: per box. THE TWO MACS II amt 00am lfml Mill Order: Glven PNFW‘, Altentlon. ‘ I Rate: from $3.50 per day. Ask any C.N,R, Agent for booklet or write: Manager, Th; Now Scotian, Halifax, N. S. “STRAIGHT FROM SHOULDER 1s RIGHT Y0" can talk that“ way to old friends abvlll an old friend. And we think many Islander! consider our tobacco a very old friend. And ___ may we add a good friend. ' i A H I C K E Y ’S BLACK TWIST CHEWING 10¢ Per Fig Manufactured By - HIOKEY 8i NICHOLSON Tiilimii tlo-llil- °"#"""“°'“'