-..~.~ no ~11“ 5 vrr-‘r rt" n: 2:] 1 r L__ r111: ciiitniorrrrowit ttuilitniitii Alert-tut; Daily tFounded in 1887) Pres amt. l.ll‘ll\. Col; '11‘. Chcstet- s. McLurg Vice PlTslLlflllZ J. R. llurnvtt. F-J-l- , Secretary: Lteul. Col. l). A. Mackinnon, 3.5%. Editor and alun-cgiitg Director. J. L. Burn: I n-eh Associate l-Liliturs: Frank “alker nlld l!!! A- W" uusstzuurrtozv RATES "i i511" lt'.f.""°““‘" Uuysiira iii? isliltiogtizriviioiiriitnlh. 551-3133.‘, ‘ll-Elli’. ‘Eélltliii ‘£2. P532315 ‘till; "$2351.? ' c for 3 months "' . , . . . (1,. - ' my be obtained at. lrlzfalliliiilshlléi-iilg"hi; u‘ llllmli-Is Square. New York; Old south News Agcttt , (jurner Milk and Waahtnlmfl Boston; Metrtipitlilltti News Agl-‘DQY- 1243 P?" 5"- Mutttrcal; J. lfinc 354 Bil)’ 51;. 'l'°_l’°"_"°i_ New! “S”: Chateau Lituncr, Ottawa; “olfes News Stand ll - bury 0nt.; llitlt Tu . co Shop, Munclon B. "The Stronqesf Memory is Weaker Weakest Ink. '1' usmv, stat-autumn ts, l9 "Credit" For Cattada? 01;» the lf lli\l lli::itl:i ~‘_i.i.t i> lU live and flourish, p;lt"l>l"li:;tli-1ii 1111' '. tlii“; l-olatiouistit must g0; 1n- tl-1~1i,-it1'ti;. r. qt xvii: iziu~t grow. .\ll the more ShUChllL", ii:l-11_ ,1}, p1,, tilobl- {llltl .\[ail, is tltc cra§~'li\_"\ ,,ii.I 1': ‘. 1v of tlic statement b)‘ .\ir Mhpqli‘ l'»i.t.- 1.. l1 litt 1c lllllit be "Cauadiaitiza- l\’-it..l .\ir l-‘orce by segregating ti: .ti t'.ii:.til"t tvill get more “credit." -- y :' tliqlit for "cicdit"? asks l >1" it is ltciitg fought to iiatc brought death and (lfigfldlflltill in it w-n... flllXlUllS for peace, free- dom and scctlu i‘ 'l‘l1c~"l- are thoughts that ought to occup~ tLc iii ial of .\li". l’ott‘vr_ Not the ques- titiii of w t".t'illl, zliid liotv much. ll4t_t\ j-tlll tlic .\ir Force for llllllil tif ll‘- lli-l taizlll l:. crcilit? .\:c ting. t-iiciiiig tltcir lives for credit? llave thc vcry choicest young men mct the eiteniv iii air ctliiilial just for credit? Or have thcy fought 1131i I ~ thl-ir comrades front Bri- tain, front .\u~tr , f-rniii Ncw Zcalatitl, front all parts of tltc liiiipitc, to SLLYC tis from oppression? To save our lii-pcs of building a better world. Sllllllilfly lltc‘ Monti-ca! (iazctte comments that if llic att§iuill~ ckpiw-s-tnl li_v .\ir Minister Power l5 to g-wcrn ilit- tilicfililttlli of all the Canadian fighliitg .~\“.\lt't‘5. llic Navy. tlic :\ir Force and the ;\l'lll_\', the rcstllt is likely to be an unseemly scramble f-ir faiiil- rritlicr than a. co-ordinated effort it»; ticiort; 11' tlicrl: is ito coordinated ef- fort. if tlirri- is llitl CllllllllUlfl and constant co- opwatioii, ttc will wait :i long time for victory, indeed, lll.'l_\' iicvci" zicliicve it Other lloiiiiiiittiis are not pot-hunting. They arc conliibiitiuq c\"ci"_vtl1i1ig they can in a coni- nioii crtl-atlr, nit-l ttiil llt‘ satisfied with the succws of tlil: crit-i-lc. Australia and New Zcalzuid aic not ruling out "look at me." \\7lty Slittttlt] lIl‘l'lilIl.: .\l1'>\'t* all, why SlIOIIld the firSt of lllt‘ llri llWltlfIlltIlN Illlt‘lll]ll to advertise he." ttar liioii ..1it \\'Il_\ tillicr than that of dccds? (Ll-L's Anniversary Th, 3;}, _i,~ airy of The Canadian Press, w-hfqh llft'l“'lltl 111;. llllllllll, prtivillcs the 0p- poiwiniiit to :1 fir lit llllf oiagaiiizatioit on which Caiiatlinais lll-t-ll)‘ tilt for the news of the day. l“articli‘..li"l_t- llliS ll ~" bccii the case since the out- break iii war. \'ivid stories of the exploits of Cjltifitlliltl ll\ll'l‘\' ovci".<t‘zi.< ltave been brought to tho pcoiilc .lt l1 11w, (lll tiutslziiiiling example bc- iiig lllt‘ “tic iili"'i";l'iv.- of the Dieppe raid w-rittt-n ll\ ha» Xlitiiiv». Ll’ war correspondent gtttqcltutl ll] tlic (Iltiatlilln ariii)", now in Canada for a ltvicf lr\"l'i‘l4l lifter ltaving flown the At- hihih- fttlltllfltdlg ihl- rziitl. llotv .\ir, Munro cov- ercll his a»- giiiiiliiit and liotv his story was dc- ll\'t‘l‘t‘ll liv llili cniiatlillii Press around the allied 1.1.11.1, l. l..;,1 1., t... illustrated brocure which has just becn publishctl. This is but oilc of iii:ln_t' rcportorial achieve- nicnts 11f which cl‘ is justly proud, Since it evtilvctl iii lot; 1, a yqwllll of a nicrgci" of prev- lOttsly tirgiiiitctl ll\'\\3 gathering associations, ii has sticccctlctl iii providing the people 0f the Lloiiiiliitiii wiili a llt‘t\‘\' service unsurpassed for accuraljv, Wtiilltfvlltll-l\\‘IlC$$ and spccd. Its ll‘.(‘llllt hip liii\\ Villlltflflx 9o tictvspapcis (a tiiajtirizt 111 Sic tllli it», published iii the country) and it 1k Ills!) ;llllL‘<l with The Associated Press, the grctt <"~t-itpt‘i":1li\"c tictvs gathering associa- tion of 1.100 rlailv nctvsinlpcrs in the United Status tt Icll 1>p:",":ltt's i111 1t tvorldwvitle basis. .\.- iilr .t\ tllt- l.inii:iit clctitciit is concerned. The Lliiiadisiil l':".~~ ha; liccn particularly well sen-cit .\ir, g], l". ll. l.iv<'.~.'t'v, former general tiianziql-i". ~r Illl tvziitipll- which has become typical 111' t‘ .. tcciiiii/zllioii, 'l'hc ptcscitt (Jll-lfilllly of lfllliilll llic giiirrztl manager, .\ir. A, .\lc.\ ‘l and lill- QVllllkll superititcndettt, Mr. Gillis l‘ui"l"cl‘i. 1ii.i_v ln- specially tnentioned, de- vote their (‘llt“i' \ Illltl iztlciits to the work of 1 \\'Il_\‘ \\'lllt‘ll provides i1".- -1.lil. Clearing Brazil 51-47;’, tlllffttl [lltj conflict against two t\xi l'1it\n:"-, ~.’1l'1'\ 11f (ivrntatis and llfllllllli ha“. 1H.“ ;,;|,.-,.-.1 tutti 11nd plans ‘arc being :arrictl tint \i1 cvactiiilt: all (iCflllZlllS from the countrv} Q1l,'l_\l,'ll ;ii-c."l<. llritzil at war realizes the rlangcris of :1 fifth Wlllllllll and ilS fiflvcfflmfifll lillvc- 1111 cl". 1:1": ~, l‘. ll1‘\l‘l' ll.il :~lll(‘(‘ (ictttlio Var- ipt. (1ll'l_\ 111k ’\(‘.'tl' Ulillllltttl down on the activi- tic. of l".-t..~i.1 Qttillpx‘ ttilltnttt vvctt awaiting any.“ m, yrutlthioh. 1,_-i'ni"c the intcr-Americatt Ctiiifcrciic: to curtail .\.\=\" prop Panda in thfi ,\m(-,-h,i.-_ I1 i. :th11n~t fitc ycar. ncc the ln- rv|','1lis[,'[ irirt), which liv-"tl "n lklllm" gollli “as iliwilvctl bv lhvsitlcittiztl dccrcc. . The .i\vi< wtirltcll ltaril ill llrazil. The SO-Cflll- :i1i "l" »ltii1i.~~" in lhc tlircc southern tvvrc to fnriit 1hr iiuclctts for a "'l';ii1 (i.~i"t11:111,"- llttt Pffiillllnl Val" ‘,1 hilly-cl lllt‘ Fascist plan in the ltuil- 1 _-_1.-it1‘t} ‘THIS-ll schools, and llfllllllfll 1w wiltiltidl courses in llfiflllf-Illom in‘ 1,1“, [intlu-iiilwl militias no longer rlrill iii t‘iti '11: iiiii- I't"1lllll\, The flow of 20m of (lo! ‘ll\ 11f t1.-;iii.-iii l7ll~lIl(‘>5 ltouses and banks into ilic Hllllln of Ntizi :tu.vili:iry' forces has been (‘ll lit‘ llrzizil stopped. The skies over Brazil have been cleared of German-owned Condor planes. The activities of the 'l'ransocean News Agency have ceased to stir up sedition in the republic. Brazil's fifth column is doomed to failure. President Vargas as a c0titetttpoi"at"_v remarks, has already won the first round of the battle. Hitler's Bottlenecks The Stocltliolitt correspondent of The New York Times reports that the gravest difficulties now confronting Germany's military leaders are manpower losses and lack of facilities for pro- ducing heavy bombing plllllPS. listintates based on trusttvitrtli_t' sources in t‘; llcich capital, this correspondent writes, "are that ttp to the end of June this year the Germans lost some 1,800,000 men, killed and missing alone, and that the num- ber of inctt permanently iticztpttcizttcd either by wounds or frostbite must be at lcast half again that figure. To fill these gaps by new conscrip- tion and transfers from the ranks of civilian workers, atid to make Germany's industry pro- duct: the masses of new equipment required for Carrying out the plans of the gcitcrals, are the niaiit prnblctits which the (icriiiatt leaders must solve and which are Causing lhctn grave concern, in the frank opinion of qualified ntilitary ob- servers stationed on the Continetit." This is certainly no overstatmcttt of Gcrtnany's gravely acute itianpotvcr problem. The estimates given relating to Germany's military casualties are based on Berlin's figures and are certainly rnttclt below the reality. Nevertheless they indi- cate, that the manpower of the Reich had bccii reduced by at lcast two and three quarter itiil- lion men tip to the cnd of Junc last. llcztntvliilt‘ Hitlcr’5 itiattpotvcr requirements, both civilian and military, arc greater and more pressing than they have ever been, and cotttinitc to increase steadily. — EDI TURIAL NU I I:§— New building erections at otir two airports would indicate the authorities arc satisfied peace is not on the ltorizoti, v w v a ‘Merchants and others in town and country are waiting to see what the new 56-hour week implies. a- 4- »: v Mr. Robert Patterson, the American Under- Secretary for War, discloses that the United Stat- es would produce more than 50,000 aeroplanes this year “by a ltealthyi margin." >r v v >1< Births registered in cities, towns and villages with a population of 10,000 and over numbered 10,722 in July, deaths 4,201 and marriages 6,518 as compared with 9.543 births, 4,330 deaths and 6.1m tnarriztges in July last ycztr, sltntviiig iii~ creases of I2 per cent itt births, 7 per ccnt iii marrhtges and a decrease of 3 pct" cent lll dcatlis. U i i i The new chairman of the Fxcciitive Board Of the Boy Scouts Association is .\ir. R. C. Stevenson, C. .~\., Montreal who succeeds .\li. J. F. I\I, Stewart, Toronto, tvho held the posi- tion for eleven years. A member of the board since its inception in 1931, Mr. Stevenson is pre- swlent of the .\l0llll"(‘Zll District lloy Fctiut Coun- cil, and chairman of tltc 5m $cout Committee and llo1iorar_t' (ottiiiiodoix- of the Royal Si. Lawrence Yacht Club. n- u >1: n: Speaking at Johannesburg, Mr. Stuttaford, Qouth African Bliiiistcr fol" Connitcrce and In- dustries said that armngciiicnts had bccn made for the United States, the United Kiugdont, and South Africa to btty practically the whole supply of tea in the world, and to apportion it having regard to previous requircntcttts. It will be noted Cattada is not in the dcal. l’! 1F >91 A‘ A parent's occupation has 11inch to do with the size and weight of the Canadian child, Dominion Bureau of Statistics records show. A Bureau publication (lctailittg the finding froitt an examin- ation of 78,000 'l'oronto school children iii 193p, revealed that the children of owners and t1ia11- agers and professional workers are the tallest groups, while the childrcrrYof unemployed and pcnsioned and rctircil classes arc the shortest. The study cited the findings of other similar studies that on the average, “with heavy em- phasis on the word ‘average’, " tlie tnore intellig- ent student as measured by school progress 5nd other tests was larger and more nearly perfect physically than his less brilliant fcllotv. 1r v James Fcnimore Cooper, American novelist, born this date I789; did tnore to put the Unit- cd States on the literary map than most of his [ircdeccssors or contemporaries, as ltc wrntc foi" ltoys and ltad an cnornioits follottiiitg in all parts of the world. Who in the last tlircc generations l5 has not read "Last of the Mohicaits," “The Pioneers," “The Prairie,” "The Pathfinder," etc? llis stories which have been translated into litany languages rcvcal great lIIVPIIllVC‘ factilty and picturesque and descriptive gifts: “A soul, — a spark of the never-dying flame that separates titan from all the other beings of earth." , 4t v a The upward movement in food prices in Alis- lralia has been small, due to the fact that the country is fundamentally self-sufficient. War- time Shipping problems have had an adverse ef- fect upon domestic food prices, since the com- modities arc largely on an export basis. Groceries have shown an increase of 20 per cent; dairy products 1.5 pcr cent; attd meat products 7.9 per cent. Allowing for appropriate statistical weighting, the aggregate variation for the group has been 3.7 pcr cent. Rents ltavc been remark- ably stable, having advanced by only 0-0 P" Cclll- The rcductiott iii the number of men by enlist- ment in the services has resulted in a dotibhttg- up of rrcttpaticy by tvivcs of servicemen en- deavouring to ccnttomizc, which has almost nulli- fied tho iniprovcittciit in the ability to pay higher rent liy tvagzi-cariirrs liencfitiitg lhrottgh increas- cd comings from war industries. The most Sllll- stantial risr in the llricc index has ltcen in cloth- ing, which has advanced by 4L4 per cent, c0m~ prising bcttcr than twin-thirds of the total ad- vance since the bcgiiiiiiitg of the war—0f 12-3 per cent in tltc retail price index. NDTES BY TliE WAY The Norwegian Government has issued u challenging statement on the broad aims of its policy tor peace It disclaims any further lit- terest. in those projects for a north- ern union on which a 100d deal of eloquence was expended a few years ago: It. declares Norway's attach- ment, to the Atlantic alles, Great Britain and the United States: and it reserves for Norway, lit the fitt- ure ordering of international tcls- tions. the important", function of standing as a bridge between the Atlantic allies and Russia. The spir- lt behind this declaration ls unmLs- takable. Those who have defied persecution to kccp their churches and schools pure from "Nordic" teaching of Germanic tincture are utterly determined to place Nor- wegian independence henceforth on a plane where it, will be beyond us- sault or challenge. Its background will be provided by the principles of the Atlantic Charnter, embodied, as the Norwegian Government fore- sees. ln new international lnstlt-u- tions. —-(London Times). A step toward countering the Slllpplllg stiortuge, preventing utt- ttecusszttv slttktttgs and relieving some 0t Central mttericafs economic troubles is indicated tn Lin; state de- parunettvs announcement that our sovernnieiit will finance Immediate construction 0f an "all weather" higttwtty from the railltcnd lll Mex- ico to tile Panama Canal Zone. This Project docs not take the place of the lnLcr-Attterlcatt Hlglttvay, auth- orized by Congress last December It is an emergency measute, intend- ed to prontone the movement of ttelght. and the possible movement of troops. It will probably be built on the theory that a road with butttps ls belt-st" than tto ruaci. After the war there will be time to lay the centent, and look at the scenl cry. We are learning to move fast in these matters, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nkcaragua, Costa Rica and Panama have al- ready given their cottscni, and sur- veying has been begun. Existing gaps In the tifglttvay. as indicated In current; handbooks, make one wonder at. the estimate of 625 miles of new rOad as itll that, is necessary, but perhaps our southern neigh- bors nave D0011 at work during these past few months. Perhaps, also. some roads that no tourist bureau would recommend can be used The Darlen jungle, north of Panama, will be the toughest stretch. One counts on American engineers to do the 10b, once it is ordered. We do knotv how to build roads.- New York Times. 'I‘he_ War Production Board ls 011111101118 dotvn drastically on the amount. of silver available for in- dustrial taut-poses. With imports the present your estimated at i15- 000000 ounces and d-ettizttid plnccicl at; between 145,000,000 and 150,000,- 000, the board has stepped in to ration the supply. Industries work- ing on war orders. companies tvltlt Dljlorlty and preference rating and friendly tiatlotis uiritig silver 10v cutting: lturposes are now, or soon. l Dc. ‘llllllllljlOllZlllg the ccututjys gullllfé itttpurts. ‘lllls cull. we Oil 0t the supply of silver bul- ll0ll to Lite stlvct" lticltistry is going tu work scrtotts hrntlsmps, 1i is "u- tng to tiieati closing tlttwit IIILTHV plants and it is going to ' throwing many t\'0:i' out of then" jobs. But ttliltt make.» this; pM-ticu. lat" Dffisltcct otuclislucatlctt and dis. employment. different. and far more deplorable, tittiii any other 51m. nttott of the kuiil is that in Ln case there is no excite lot" it. wlia solcvety Plus lll§L‘!Y1}!l0)'t11(3ltt_ i; and geien 1t occurs lllllt‘ scent to have _ eti_ caused by the tvat" Dill. ilclilailj‘ ll will be attributable to the fall- tnstic silver legislation of tLle las" decade. The fact. ls, of Course mui there is no genuine shortage iif sil- ver. On the contrary, tltcre L; a Vast Sllflllus of the tticial that could be released ovct" tiight if the A1. XIIlITLSLLTILlDII and Cottgrcss liad tlti. kllmptiott to atmiuoii p0llllCS~ mm" Off the Yvke of the sliver bloc and wipe the silver purchase act. of 1934 oft tlie statute books 1r the domestic silver production i of 70,000,000 ounces a year were 1711f“? “lilllilbl? ll ""5 Only wottlu en‘: [9 mlllmly l0 "Wet its require- iets but,‘ ttotild pet-mu, a muph wider substitution of silver for badly “wed @0009!‘ than has been pos- Slble thus fat" in the war effort Why l5 the domestic production not available? Bvcause llll(lCl' the silver purchase act. it was provider! that Trvttsurti Inust accept. all Am. can-tinned silver tendered l: at a fixed price of 71.11 cents an ounce. This ls slightly more than double the open ntarket price of 35 1-8 cents an ounce paid ltere f0“ lmDorted silver. In order to obtain my Dnrt of the (lotitestlc |)l‘()(lug_ U011 01' its otivn country, ln other “@1115. the American silver indus- try would have to raise if; bid Drlce on the metal more than I00 per cent, scmethtng which lt can- not. do under the general rice veiling law and which would, be thoroughlv llld0lOllSlblQ evnn m m" ence of that. l . -~ i Herald ‘Tribune. aw New York A 57-year-old minister who make; ilfigfipgilllzte ratartsltt tho bns-cmcnt of ~ t‘ a Finest llill ls SDPllCllll! his motitlts liolldav tvorkin l2 hours R ‘lfll’ on lllS‘ ntachlneg He “Ara? ‘Rep’ Percival Mackenzie. , FY m! for more than two 39575 f0 BEL the Ministries to use my Services and niv tools, which nre worth liuiizlrctls of pgunds I {have rolmd a MDT-mil‘ which ls only 0° glad l" (‘YYIPIOY them." he quid "Several of my congrcgnnon have; offered to help me. and I hope to flnd time to train them. I have bod been interested ln machl my life, “I work llll l’ anxiehveaitilii <lFODDlniz and I nm proud to do ll If all ministers with cmntv r-hurchi’ es would fallow my Qxnfnnje in: “Md °f mflklntl Stwechet abotit the malt-Ii (pee t? come. it. would be Newt?" T9 he D- —London Evening Mr. Gladsiun, M" r _ mlttedlv neither“ a flnratlcvlallsgcnlllls nor a skilled accountant. But. he its 5010mm“: much more important than either. so fitr fl! a radio l5 r-Qiq. cemed. He lit a man of wide inter- ests, culture and imagination who knows radio and lht‘ radio needs or the Canadian people. Accountants may bi- said to grow on every bush in every province, But it ls only rarely that a man of Mr. Murrav’: cnnoclty and QKpQyL ence in the orrznnlzntlon 0f ritdlo can be found. Mr. Murray, consid- rrlntz the handlrm: tmdcr which he has been compelled to work --p0- lltlcrtl control. divided authority 11m n weak and not verv czinitbli- hoard eovcrnors -hv\< done vcrv well for Canadian radio, He has not izlven the public evervthlntz lt wkhcd, A board of nrchattqcls could not do that But he Ins ac- romnllshcrl n. orcnt dcal. and. olven the ortnortunlty, ("and accomplish a great deal more. —Vtincouver Province. THE ci-15.1~.'.o'r'rt—:ro\vt~1 '"?*T\RDIAN PUBLlC FORUM ‘l. u upon II Ill air-exalt»?! b1 corresponds“: OI Internal. Ibo I GARDEN THEFTS Slr:——It would be of interest to many to know what. penalty is 1n- volved by children neallni and de- stroying vegetable gardens. The llt- te sneak thieves, SUD-ll 1M0 0m’ I"- dens and pull and destroy our veg- etables. They come by dfly 8nd Q16)’ come by night. Just at this lame can is their objective, and as they do not know the ripe corn from the corn not. properly developed. they pull lndlscritninately (any kind» and throw away most o1 them. The names of these children are known~and the parents. but we hesitate to pru- secute, as we would like t0 rf-‘lleve the parents are not taware o. the facts-but we now give warning lf any more vegetables are stolen we will prosecute for Whflwvef M8 “1- ready been taken. I mm, Sh", etc, - VON CLURE GAY COMFORTS FOR NAVAL MEN Sin-As was noted lti The Guar- dian. there have been a couple of meetings called and an 9H0“ niade to form a citizens committee for the purpose of providing Warm coats and other needed articles for the crew of the Hit/LOB. Chm‘- lottetosvn. There was u meagre attendance at those meetings. but the en- thusiastic few who were there guaranteed fifteen coats and sug- gested opening a. subscription fund so that others int/crested might. contribute to the cause. So far, the only parties heard (apart, from the meeting) were two societies whose contributions will be duly acknowledged in the press. No subscriptions have been received from any of our citizens. Surely it cannot: be that; they are not interested ln our navy or 1n- dlffercnt. to the welfare of the boys who are fighting our battles On the stormy seas. These lads work ln all kinds of weather. in rain soaked garments and in icy cold. and surely it ls up to the city of Charlottetown for which the Corvette was named to see that. they have at least the riecesary 601118 l0 b11006“ "0 comforts. For our own credit, If The fear that» for nothing else, we should be as generous to them as the other cine-s are to the ships named for and sponsored by them, So-some- worth one-seventh of b 11 value, h said a with a good already gm.” so far?" body start the push l A I am. Sir. etc. Wm be IL OTHER. SA ons M soldiers at the front, tliiswtnter, absolutely unknown. the writer received the reply, "The -__-i Nazi authorities ought the houses car and goods-wagon loads from By-Their Fruits— (New York Titties) The frcst ls not yet on the mnpkln-not by quite a Slllell, we be found, even furs." D hope; but. the fox grape ls on the vine mid the lllc bush. Most of grrcn, for, unlmg the table berry, their lal-e, They rfach their prime in time to fatten the birds for their southward journey or for the Win-tor tiere at home. But Bhey make the late Summer wcods t1 face of dscovery. The fat. berry cluster of the Jack-in-itie-iaulplt is already showing signs of its ultimate lac- quer red. The dcgwood of the breakfast- <hcwy blossom lifts its frul-t. to ‘he war slllllfillOll?" suit for fCllglng; the pannl-cle dog- tvccd and the red csicr, of (tumbler enthusiasm bloom, are already flaunt-lug wax- wtiite berries on blushing Solcmonls drops Ln the wind. Dark, heavy umbe-ls of the eldeibeny are al- ready past, their prlnle, but, the lnkberries and the purple bounty of tho pokewe-sd hang deceptively cntlclitg. Bittersweet has fat green fruit atvaltlriw only the frrst to split. its cuter hull and delight the eye. Berizoln, which cast a yellcw haze ever the lowlands with its tiny Ap- rll blossoms, is ripening the fat berries that. gave it, the name of spine bush, and Great-grandmrtlt- er may yet (itve to do the same. Almost unnoticed, the lowly par. t-rzrltz-e berry ‘"1135 among the sha- dows with its green dewrlrops that will rzleam so valiantly red against tllw Wlntcr snow. TIE-icy are all 1n fruit, the num- belies: vlbttrnttms, the sucwberrtes, the wlnterberrles. the bafbea-rles, which yielded fragrant "wax fotr backwoods candles. ‘They won't. reach their height. of beauty fotr another month of more. but many cl’ them will b? lzleamlng 1n the Wccdlanzls long alts-r the leaves a- POlllld them have blurred with cclo-r and Bone their Fall-time way. Autumn berry L; on surdly grateful for the them are still present. stems. everybtdy would be glad if the war seal diutgles tiny ear- could be ended scmehcw. . s‘ ' . . . . and face thorium: W”, Sure the war cost: money. Paying for it will be tough in the months ahead. kt’: accept that fact-and face it. Now la the time to sharpen our pencil: and figure what our taxes actually are . . . how we are going to pay them . . . and how we can adjust our living habit: to get along on what's left. This is a job for every patriotic Canadian . . . a job that mult be clone now. USE THIS BOOK T0 PLAN YOUR SPENDING A special Wartime Issue of The Royal Bank Family Budget Book la just ofl‘ the prcu. Use it: to stretch wartime dollars. Available on request, at all branches. TlIE RDYAL BAllll 0F DllllDl earns. Many are fimrrle “l; much dismay $1M» 'or 1n alread about what Ls thougt t Germany mtg use w ry g y their savings. the war. L1, ls feared that. the money wlll bcoome Germans might. sink to the level of coolles, and have to build up When lite-writer told a frletid eveiything that has been dea- that the Reichsinark a-brcad was frayed. This tear binds many to lts normal the Nazi regime, alarmed, “Have we "'1 was very surprised to lealm that, almost nobody knew anything To the question wheblter there about the reiprlsals in occupied enough woollen goods for tetrttories. The case of Lldlca was the money he valueless ls widespread. 0.11.11. EARNINGS- lo search those who brought MONTREAL, Que, Sept. 11 — everything would The gross revenues ton" all lncluslvte Canadian Nat-tonal Railways sys- Thte people of Germany are ab- tem. fC-r the week ending t» smallest 1942 were $7.307.000 as A minute quatitllyi of compared wlt1l1»$584'1.000 for lhe tea, coffee or chocolate, or a piece same week of 1941 an Increase 01 Fran-cu". There season comes of toilet; or shaving soap semiecl $1,460,100 or 25 peaoent. ' Just stmb riches that, the recipients did not know how to their KILLED INSTANTLY thanks, -l— ‘The shops are empty. Desirable DOROHESPEIZ. N. B , Sept, l3 goods are intiarlaby ticketed _ (SP1 __ pie. Kenneth Wheaten, “Rewrvedfl Nciltorjv darrg to F3. stationed at Ft-ederictoln, was ottestilcnvrtio ctr for ttucm they are killed instantly Saturday in a col- wserved. lislon of two truck; nem- here. He Everywhere he was asked, “Vtihal tvttg in a truck driven by William l5 the opinion abroad about the stinks-r, Newcastle, when it col- Fdcid hencLon with one divert by “I noticed" he said. "cirilv slight I-"cnarrl Smith, Penobsqtttls. A ver- or ioy ZlhiClll Ifg vic- o'er. of accidental death, with no get The feeling thal blame- attached to anyone, was rcachedpt an inquest. CZPPCSS forks. I DISTCHARGING NOW B E S T ll ll A L I T Y WELSH HARD 00M.‘ Furnace Size HAVE Si... SUPPLY DELIVERE TODAY ll. PIDKARD & DD. PHONE 240 11> SEPTEMBER 15,194, cw. . _ , w/oaos or cnattencr "Let us ll be a 0U!‘ deter-mutation Ismail? m "ltd wtlllv destroy the neg?‘ u menace ‘ K111301010 of the rlitzlit olgiéill if: (lm togvvpxil-k gltgtvlvts deSl-léllly Humph Mt ' ' T" ‘m o‘ Labolfily‘ tchell. ~ _ a-aq llllflistgf SCYTHE SONG MOWGIEE weary and bi-otm, and 6- Wlmt. ls the word miiilllllks ye know the Scrtlti 1 {ht gym Kristi and as they w Scvthes that swing in the clove Something. still. they sav What “has lh our. e word that, over and Sinks gtgasgcythe to the flower; ma Hllshkmnhllsh, the scythes are Husluand heed t, d . . Hush. they sasiwtiiln ’.';‘“?:.i‘,‘;;g, Hush siltaymlh t . ev s 1r til 1 Hush-‘tls the lllllbbyelTntfgch ing- Hush. and heed not, for all llllltzs pa . Hudl. an hush! and the Scythe; are swinging ' Over the clover, over the g-ritssi —Andrew Lin; Professional Cards tuflrmt Mason a. BENTLEY l W. l. ‘HENLEY, K. C. I. A. BENTLEY K, (l, Barrister: and Attorneys-gt- Law MONEY T0 LOAN I54 Prince Street pamltimn-avav-v-mawmg' Morrellandllompanyi D. F. ARGIIIBALIJ‘ Chanel-ed Accountant: Intern Trust Bulldlnl Charlottetown '-h'fi-fi'tw'a'v\fl'lt'i_ PALMER 81 HASLAM A. J l . HASLAM 8.1L. LLB. \ mimisrrsn. crc. 1 l Bank of Nova Scoua Chamber! Charlottetown P E. L MONEY T0 LOAN Phone 85 P. H. F. McPHEE B.A.. K.C. . NOTARY a '1 BARRISTER SOLICITOR Riley Building Chitrlotlclttfil BELL s. mArTiitso . MONEY T0 LOAN ' CIIIQIOII Block. Ch-tloflelnfll P. B. Island. MacGUIGAN 8t TRAINOR MARK ll ManC-UIUAN KG C. ST. CLAIR TRAINUR. K. U» Barristers. Sollrllnn M0 l \ l may ‘r0 tom: 1 cc: Over Provincial Bank (‘tharlnl 0m Richmond Street "W" EYES EXAMINEIJ GLLSSES FITTED J. s. TAYLOR OPTOMETRIST ti ~ Corner liglli bill!“ 133"" 5"‘ t Germany From . . Within (London Dally Telegtmxph) Oonclltlcns inside Germany as the war draws neair to the end of its third year are described ln the Ziitvch newtsoevper. Volkroeltt. The wrftter who describes his first-band experiences. records these "tire salient. impressions: l-Tlie focd sltuatlcn ln Ger- m'=n_v 1; serious. 2—'I‘here L; no present chance of a revolt. 3-1111! German neon‘: are lsss lnlepesttrl in victories than tn tlhe war ending‘. "I met, a-cou.iilnt.ance= h“ known for years", vthrm I he says. “Their stilts hung loose on their les. Thev had lost. about. four store ln weight, "Iirtev feared the worst for the 00min: Wlnifer. People expect that man" will collarpse. "The wcrsvt. off seem to be poop. over 45. Tn t-ho lndtttstxial west undetxrtmtrlshment- its becoming evvr more set-loin." ‘The writeu- wm astonished to see ovorvwhere well-few and "tell- r~lo'ltn>d SB. troops-Hitler's Black rzvmv-fls_whn dud m”, nmd w so m the front. They do police duty on ti." inner front, ‘Thev were there. the writer was told, “as [tualranttorg that. there tv-‘" not he ‘another 1918'." Th» writer inquired of l manu- facture" friend wtby he lmked so w“, ‘TWI- frlerd replied, "I am a. self-provider. I bcnclw q "w, fur-w m-rlv, as dlrl munv of my mlhnvtve-s. Thvt fut-m feeds me. It u ¢ll leqal." ‘There ls nuirh rumbling even nmomz the party msmlw-s abort. flu: ‘vthveflpe "q [wpfltv-qtu" "1 the (ll"“’l7llLlCll of frorl and goods. (‘mo vvtrmbev- r-f tip. p-rfv whom "w wr't~r nut was narfcvlarly ccricorncd at "m number! of mon. ewrl wool- lfilliw in t-b- mtcrlrtq win-Mn. "Ms 1= credit-i: M4 n10“! Awh- nw‘ again ‘be writ." Mp1! H -~' "(the worker Ls always the fccl". M" thew ‘s nrvhlnv l» btiv, the wvt-ker cannot do anything wltth PERI On the sea, on land peril of fire, lightning, falling aircraft, of automobiles, of accident, of sickness. In our modern life we are surrounded by per- lls, and that is why we employ the system of in- surance to protect us financially. We are in a position to provide a complete ln- surance service, and welcome your inquiries for advice and information. No obligation. IIYNDMAN 8t DD. LIMITED Insurance Service since 1872 Offices: Charlottetown, Summerslde, Montague I llml~k~ PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND-NOVA SCOTIA f,- FERRY SERVICE I VIA WOOD ISLANDS, P. E. I. —CARIBOU, N. S. M. V. "PRINCE NOVA" “The Connecting Link Between These Provinces.’ Daylight Saving Time-Sundays included Leave Wood Islands Leave Caribou i 1.00 n-m. 11.00 mm. 3-00 pan. 9.00 min. 1.00 pan. 5.30 p.11!- LUNCHES SERVED IIDRTIIIIMII LAND FERRIES LTD. i CIIARLOTTETOWN. r. n. l. Opposite Bin Grocer! l tmenll “tiara. k...:.t::1... I i‘ I YOU TROUBLE!) n wrrn LIIMBAGD SDRE BACK . g m, but 2.1%; lldbeflgileflg-“lely BACK-RITE TABLETS treatment: hll M cent! l!" 5°!- A sv sroitntclls G s RELIEVE-D h. 5"" pawn who is lion led with "l" pill relieve lymptoml. t o l: n!‘ Dr. Evan‘! Bwmuh M til! taken at ma‘: 1111:3612‘ fi-om invent: dingo“, e n1:- but It ma] loll t M; til u! on l" i T]: nppeflte- "l" 55 per bottle. h“ pm" sales. l’ and 596- 93;: value Powder ‘m, Ton“ l llttllnrl cpmpnna‘: imam" Bllm 350- 111: TWD W9 pl n; n given l"°'“ Mall 0 ¢mmenmn rice 95° Face Dernl‘ am 6%