PAGE roux TIIE BIIAIILIITTETIIWII GUARDIAN Morning Qllly (Founded In I881) President: Lleut. CoL W. Chester S. Mclmn Vice-Premium: J. It. Bur-null. IJ-l. Secretary: LIeuI. Col. D. A- MMKIIMII: 9-3-9- Idttor and g Director: J. I. Burnett. IJJ. Associate Editors: Punk Walker and Hut. In A Burnett, KILNNJL (On Anllvo Sol-vial) "The Strongest Memory i: Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." WEDNESDAY, NOV. l7, 1M3 Air Force Changes 'l'here will be little cause for surprise at the changes in the Air Force igh Command an- nounced recently by Air Niinister Power, says the Ottawa journal. Air Marshal Breadnefs desire to get \l\‘('l'.~(‘tt$ has long been known and Air \'ice-.\litr.~hzil Leckie's training and experi- rnce make him eminently suited to succeed Breadner as Chief of .~\ir Staff. Key to the changes is iii the announcement .\lajor Power made at the same time: that a good number" of Cauaibrs home tic-fence squad- rons 211"‘ going overseas. 'I‘his is in line \\'itli tlie cliaizging treinl of war. The threat of air at- tack is no longer sufficient to ivarraiit main- tenance of the full aerial defence of the Western lleiiiispiierc ll,; .\ir .\lar.~'li:il Urcaihier had to build up. t li;‘t‘-llllt‘>' now not much more than a great an inin ii. and as tlie most experienced trziiiiiiig- of in the eotiiiiry is .-\ir Yirc-Xlitrshal Li-ckie it is lnit a logical stcp to l ‘r- liiiii iii change. . .\lltl'.‘villll llrezi will Ialcc considerable :nithoi'it-.' tl\'t‘l'>l‘ll\. iii than was eiijovcil bv his ]\l‘Cllt‘CL'>~¢tl' .\ir .\llll‘.\llt‘.l lfdivurds, tic wii‘ Iiaie uiiat the .\ii- Alllllsltd‘ called a great int-as- ure ti!‘ ;lZl‘<llll'lll_\' <‘\t‘l' (l".:izid.'i's fighting air. . . . . ._ _ H hp, only ,0 U“, Milhisociatien in succession to retiring pcrswl-"iit .\lr. I‘. huh, rcsmmal-ble iCharIes 5t. Pierre at the animal meeting of tlie f-irces .‘lll'l v.ill b; l‘ istcr. l-lliiiirds liil‘ to the Chill‘ of lilL‘ . ' l'o\\ei‘ tool. p-ri». . line, this iiiove is iit no wa_v a d iiiiii f~r llrcadnci" but transfers’ liini ti» iln: iii-lii of The tiiinrs ilriiw ll!‘ _ v.11 l.) thc (lmllgq ml the foriiiiizs of uzii: .\ Lluiailiiiii squadron“ hi tie: Aleutian. will now pacl; its bags and head IUY lint-ope. (illlliltllllll squitdrons posttd in \'£tl'i-itl\ pl nriiiinil Canada will follow suit. 'l'ln~ L'll's‘ill_\ is being pinned down and the Allied firccs uri- pursuing lllll! with ever- iiicrezisiiig" strciiiyth. .\l:iio.' Power, Brtadner. Lcckie and lidivard. — among OflICYSilTIHy well feel proud of their record. The IITIIIS" Com‘ nioii\vc.'il.li .\ir 'l'i- hing l‘lan outplaceil even its greatest promise and the iiieii behind it -— froiii its chiefs to its pilots—li:ive won b01107 for Canada iii a way that has not escaped itlleil- lion in any corner of the world. f: Titus, as .\l:ijoi' itrtiiiii. - \ Britain's Contribution Tle British Commonwealth. “P l0 last Tum’ 1- c; 1- 900000 toward the dclerwe contributed ~ ./-l- i _ - _ f the LViitcd Sales through lcllddczhe m re 0 '1~1‘,c rrrcillcl‘ |)'it‘t of that suni came INTI‘- '* ' . < ‘ . \ iliemcUnitcd Ifingdom. illllOtttltlllf-I l0 ¢87"°°°" ooo and was expended in providing barracks, '. ~ It for Ani- hospitals, airtields and other I€1CllIIlF5d V. as erican forces in Britain; for goods .i_n S€_r\1<‘ .-: ~ '.~ iiiiirc- and for shipping. lliislllll’ “a” l-Zws , . turn for approximately tire and a half bill10l1 (palate rcpresen "d by lend-lease Sllflpllcs “m” Y ' ' — J ICI Olillfb- thcprtciiiicin, ltniisuvelt has been l>l°fl5°‘l_ l0 c?” vcv this information to (itlllflfcis- “Ml l" 1mm“ ing out’ the‘ mutual advantages of lend-lease. h" ‘aill- "It is an iiidiczition 0f the C-Ytfillt l0 , . . . . .- ~. . . ~ c- wliich the‘ Biitish liaie beeili Pogllgfd ‘gee: gm sources with otirs. so that lie iicc . I all rnav be in the hands oi that soldicr—-\v.ia.evcr ha’...,it,,,..],-.=._\\-li<> Ctll ‘ll the proper nioniciii s .1 1.4) _- - _ ' < - .t dfetively to dclcat our come use Itfllitlnilltlbi)" L k nioih Itoiisevelt also draws attention to the fact tlhat Britain has made man)’ Sllpplics and sgryiccg available to .\lll£‘l'tC£‘.ll forces. iii North Africa ggcgly ‘lnll c-lscivhcrc for which no ac- ‘I *' ' . 4 - .. s ' -- .Iii counting ivas picseiilttl to the buried btfzites l‘ addition Britain and the l)oiuiiiiotis_ are urnisi ill-r lllc United “ta with considerable raw mj‘m.,.;..i_. m, d, of reverse lend-lease, iii- cludinfl rubber. sisal. cliifllni‘. Wlcil- lcai C0603" nut oil llflllillll and tar acids, all from sources within the EIIIPlYC- ,_ j Sir lolni Antlcrsoii. Cllilllflillol‘ °I ‘he EX‘ ciieqncr, has CXlllillllfitl to the House o3 COT; irons that. iivci“ and above the iiiuitial at to Ill. LX111...‘ flflllgy, tirezii llrituiii has sent goods and w apoits to Russia valued at I79 lllilli0ll P0111145- LIIIIUII" which material were 4-690 aircraft and >- , . £93m l,“ llritish aid to other .‘\lll€S, among thcni th .-d forces of Greece. Czechoslov- akia. l"rz~.nr< and Tut" XV.‘ tinimtiits to 106 lllll‘ lion |ii1iiiils. .\lor.-iiv.~i. liritain has sliaicd he‘: knowledge. strategy ZHMIMFCSCJTCII progress wit the United States-Jienetits of the first import- Nor can the hazatgds of getting supplies to Rus- sia along the Arctic sea route be computed in dollar: and cents, the Chancellor stresses. In this world emergency money becomes second- ary; weapons and other supplies are the prime essentials. Iii that spirit of conzradcship Bri- tain is sharing what she has with those ivhose need is as great as her own, and so she hopes to continue until victory is won for humanity. — EDITORIAL NOTES - A: was anticipated, the powers-that-be at Ot- tawa are in no hurry to fill the vacant Supreme Court judgeship. a u n u General Ross of the A.R.P. announces his new .Lezi|i, I).F.C., of Lew i title is Director of Civil Defence-there now be- ing little necessity for Air Raid Precautions. a i: v u giving the Province a lot of free publicity, piib- licity which money cotild not buy, by his visit to Toronto and elsewhere. e n i I Either the Prime Minister has taken the Pre- mier of Quebec, for some ulterior motive in be- hind tlie scenes, iiiid proved to him the war will be over in two months, or Preitiier Godbout has l been indiscrectly talking through his hat. U Ill Ii llr The convention for the nomination of two Progressive Constiwative ciuiditlzites for Queens takes place on llll‘ 25th inst. Several prospects are mentioned, including Mr. \\'. Chester S. Mc- Liire, Mr. john O. Iiyntlniaii, Mr. john H. hlyers. Mr. M. \\/'. Wood, l\li‘. l’. \\'. Tanner, .\lr. \\'alfcr S. lifillll, .\'i|dn. Leader _|. :\. Mc- nid Col. f}. l5. Full. 1F .\lr. S.‘ M. lYcdd of TOFOIIIO. general manager of tlic Laiiadian Haul." of Commerce, has been ancc on which ll-l accurate value can be placed. elected president uf the Canadian llaiilters’ .'\s- Association. Named vice-presidents were Ro- bert Rae, general manager. Dominion liaiik; S. G. Dobsnii, general manager, R0 al liziiil." of Canada: Ii. P». t‘. (iardiicr. grit I manager Ifanlt of Xloiitreal. and ll. I). l-iniis, general manager. Bank of Nova ‘ itiii v v i: Sir Auguste Rodcn, French iinpressiniiist sculptor". died this date i9t7; president of lntcr- national Society of Painters, Sculptors and En- gravers; ilistiiiguished for his busts and statues of ovciwvhelming power. realism and psychic perception; also executed Biblical and symbolic groups; his masterpiece is claimed to be “Victor Hugo listening t0 the Inner Yo" s": Others iii- It cannot be denied Premier Jones has been j clude "The Burgliers of Calais", "The (late of Hell", “\\'ai"', “The Man \\'ho .>\\vzil<es", "Si. john the Baptist." I turn. A grand total of 869,000 letters of all kiiids— surface, "blue letters" and airgrajiii letters —— were moved from this country IOIIIIC troops in the week ended October 3t, the peak week in the Christmas niail movement, according in the lat- est computation of postal officials. “Because inf tlie value 0f these letters to the. morale of tlie troops we are using every conceivable form of Illillkthlehflb ever; Mr. Shawi say r ldrmkmg e are ewer people transportation to get theni to seaboard and across the ocean," said an official. A few days ago a special train of 16 cars crammed with Christ- mas mziil was moved to an eastern port in 28 hours and. fortunately, it got there just in time to be loaded on a ship ‘soon to sail. I l I I When workers are deprived of tlie right to strike, the wife of President Roosevelt told hei- press conference, then the public must assume the responsibility of seeing that injustices to ivorkcrs are corrected. Commenting on this year's series of coal strikes, Hrs. Roosevelt said the public has failed in its responsibility to find out about working conilitioiis and act to rcriiuvc injustices. “The public has been pretty neg- ligent," Mrs. Roosevelt said, “not just iii one spot but all over the country." We stippose pol- iticians and statesmen are not included in the term “public" otherwise this advice would be given at home. t 1k Q The change in commissions of Air Cadet 0f- ficcrs has been put into effect and the Officers Selection Board at Ottawa is examining tlie qualifications and granting the officers the King's Commission as quickly as applications can be passed. Previously such officers held only commissions granted by their Cadet. League of Canada but under the new regulations they niust meet the same requirements as offzcers of the R.C.A.F. Since the Air Cadet Corps has become a junior partner of the flying service its officers Will hold the Kings commission on a similar basis to tliat used in the Reserve Army. The flood of applications at Ottawa has slowed the granting of the commissions, btit they are being examined by the Selection Board as rapid- ly as possible. It is understood that all such new officers will have ‘equal seniority as of the date of the new regulations. i nunctatton- but, there are other 800d ii. vlstb made to a dictionary Wm‘ reasons. So often it happens that- rm: rtnaiuxirrirroww _ GUARDIAN; n u‘ of Soviet. citllelil PUBLIC FORUM I1nl=nhopq—fi.e ‘in. cl Inland. ‘lb minute ha: Iltolbelli. “WOIIIIID FATHER‘ AGAIN hf: letter brtnbcd in the ember ll. Mr. R. E. miss ntfnl the m. ‘Ilemwr- I n1 %>:;n:u$mkér&w% as drunkar as refill‘ , b t 1 the film-e: eahoiildmba climb: two In ten for PJII oer duo to Low we have here. 100d lluuor from the Prohibition Law or Federation (the name: an ayriony‘ drinker ' think 9d Province the Te mous) ha drt th to m drtrikliix alllexkllndse of“ few — first there Is Some call or "screcch." names are "moon- It. "Jungle-Juice" I ttitnk both these very appropriate Indir- he li-nillflkfi and antics who drink It. Next, we have beer-It matters not what brand or whose make In drun 0s It Is sold. more to drain the Dockets bf the poor dupes who drink if. than to set; them drunk. Now we come to the extracts. Le- mon and OTBIIRB extracts were very bobular substitutes for liquor uii. gtl their enforced tgappgayance rom the shelves of the grocery stores this spring. (I am told that tlitse can still be obtained fronil the iietittiborhood bootleizger), Be. sides these tlie drinkers also have 511°" thinks as rubbing alcohol at. fer-shave lotion. refrtizicraiit; lliiutdd embalminiz fluId. beef Iron and‘ wine. vtm and several other mix-l tures_t.o choose from. The results of this have been qutte evident to anyone who enquired into m; deaths these last. few years. This is vihy I say the flizures for P.E.I. stiould be cut. to two In ten, n; our; 01' every tin drlnklnz this stuff.| only etzht. survive to drink aiziitn. , The Temperance Federiitfon of- , fers us It} cure for these "nrobtim drinkers by enforcing u law pm- hlbtttrnz the sale of liquor. thus eliminating these three es well as tho other seven. T00 bad some of our Asiatic and Iiicltain countries couldn i. hear of this method! They could banish polizamy by not, a1. ltllljyllnf! any women tn their uoun-i, The Prohibition Law has liad BI fzood long ITIfII on this little 1s-' land. backed im by enforccmenti officers. SDIBS. from Montreal tthe‘ Eovérnrnent. called them detectives: l and In more recent times by that last notice force tn IIIB WOPId -i the R.c.ivi.i=. yet in spite of this 1' today than therri fifteen years ago. Theaesults of this law are detly becommv more evident. The num. ber of deaths directly {Itlflbtlbablg m dflllklni.’ this stuff. such as murders. drunken brawls. people found dead In bed after Imbtrliim. cw. has increase at an alarming m‘? Ihfise Dflst fev/ yioars. While lii all tlie deaths mtllrcctlv caused by drlnklmz. such as manslaughter car "accidents" etc., I liiive only heard of ONE case ivher; II]: car driver was drinking vendor's l1- lluor. In nearly all the other cases the driver was found to have been drmltln: "shtrii." or “after-shave IOIIIEII‘. etc. " a mu b f try l}; kgep Iiquésenwljary 81.33112“ hi‘; sons as It. ls to try and keep them from smoking. (Some of the strontzest supporters of tlie Tern berano: Federation can testify to this). The Province ls liberally SWIIIIIIIIIIIZ In bootleg drink, What we need Is more and bet- ter temperance education and a law that will allow the sale of izcod liquor and beer to those who tvarit a drink. at a price with whiz-h the bootlezizers could m", compete. 1f such a law were In force here and strict punishment handed out to all offenders I am sure we would have far fewer deaths and accidents directly or indirectly at- tributable to drinking. In answer to Mr Shaw's last Question. I am 100 per mm rm- Temperaiice but. would never aun- nort; a law which has caused so much evil as our present Hnbtbt. tton Law. W1 TI‘- I am. Str. etc. “WORRIED FATHER" Sourls. P.E.I. Crime And Punishment (By Ilva Etirenburiz) The Soviet State Publishing House for Political Literature has published the first volume of a collection of documents enbttled‘ Documents Accuse. This volume Includes Molotov}: two Notes. as well as some 200 documents evtu. "RR 01' the unparalleled committed by tlie German Army ‘on the territory of the Soviet Uri. on ..T""i.:"'".'r'..t= "t" .,..... rel a I d t - 110i: of 1943. wheign: go most horrifying proofs of German nth-u. cttles fell Into our hands after the liberation of Don. the North exhnmttvc. _ h Wm" il-Ittler and endtniz with the loldlers unodu itarians. b. time d til: 2th.???“ i: flietrrw: um; lvlryom know: inn mm dnrkuti Inrtlncts come to the :7 - tttt. "M"; "".-..."%..‘J.‘.'. ‘ff-ti’ a are sentfmmpof mercy. The chronicle tin In d cm ‘yin? laur- ' n "mur er vuis.’ |In¢ of children's mouths with not:- ‘on, the destruction of whole vII- lakes wlethcr with their popula- tions. the brandlnlz of war Drfsori- ers, cannot be oln n! the my- cholcilfbll excesses of a of kllled Inf Vlpebll. who of German newspaper let the cat out of the bu: when It stated: "It In necessary to reduce the population of gatlnnd by tlitrty or forty per cm ." Amateur: lllfl Prufcutoml: Of course. there are amonk the Germans vrry many sadlsts for whom murder Is an amusement. These monsbcrs try to vary the rooess of manslaughter. They “lnvented" the two storied IIJIOWI various systems of torture. bury- ing people alive. I recall a ticy If. gallows In one village In the Killin- In Region: n kitten was swlriizlniz m from It. There were no more Rus- sians left In the vtllaize. and the German officers. missing their amusements. banged cabs. But the "murder van." t.e.. a truck In whteh the vtcttms are kllled by uas. ts not. an amat/aur device. It is i: state method. Such “murder vans’ are manufactured by B 13911111 15¢" wry. and form part of the equin- uierit of the German army. The brutal abduction of the population ls similarly not the Im- provisation of some officer. but the fulfillment of a plan drawn un by tlie Berlin government. The Ger- miin Dress refers frankly to the slave labor of nitllioiis of Soytet. citizens forcibly brouitlit to ucr- Tlie slave trade ts Dlled openly In Germany. Ktzv students are compelled to be housemnlds to German women. rind the German newspapers wrivr: “Russian and Ukralnp girls have eased the exist:- eiice of miiriy German house- wives." And tho destruction of cultural treasures ls not the vandalism of Individual Frttzes. but. the-fulfill- ment of von Retchenairs order. The German wishes to destroy tn». culture of the Soviet peoples In order to “make better us: of Ost- land." Now that the mass expulsion of the enemy from our country has beizun. now that we see the dawn of victory. the Droblem of’ res- ponstbtltty becomes more acute. Our people and "nttre mankind cannot be reconczled to the Idea of the lmnunltv of the insttmitors of these horrible crimes. The conscience of tlie people will not be lulled. Hitler and lils associ- ates will not b" able to "resltzn." This time not; only tlie diplo- mats but; the peoples. raise the question of punishment. People who would speak of forg-ztttniz would be classified not as hummi- bu; as hypocrites and covert adherents of the liangman. The Zcalots I do not think that mere dozens. or huiidizds. of lilglier chiefs are responsible for what has been committed. Tlic SS troopers have displayed not only obedience. but a veritable zeal in murdering and torturing. Can the problem of the responsibility of the SS men be restricted to Hitler iirid n dozen of his IlLhCIImEIi? Cari we forget the tens of thousands of command- arils and Gestapo mcii. burglars from Roscnbertrs battalions, the “agricultural soiiderfuehrers", the Dugtttve detachments The list of identified criminals is lonst. No doubt In their extrem- ity they will attempt to plead or- ders IIS nn excus: to shift. the blame on to other heads. to play the downtrodden subordinate. Bur. they wlll hardly fool anyone: events are too frcsh In the mem- ory of mankind. Cruelty has demoriiltzed not. dozens. but hundreds of thousands of Germans. A German corporal describes tn his diary the mass- acre of the Inhabitants of a Bye- lorusstan village. Two hundred men kllled one thousand villagers. For economy. the children were to be kllled without smndtniz cart- ridges. The chief asked for volun- tcers. pointing nut that this re- quired beanie With strong nerves. There were found among the two hundred soldiers elevn " ‘ who volunteered to kIlI the child- dren by smashfniz their hauls against tree f-mnks. Thus an ordinary German Int- talton contained one hundred bei- cent rank and file executors of murder. and flve per cent: of sad- tsts for whom tlie murder of chII- dren ls a pleasure. Our Concern l: For Our Chllilnn to make the d safe demands the Isolation of such nudists. punishment. Th; question will nrfue: are than 95 nei- cent of the aoldlera who shot women and old people without. protest: responsible? In my mtnd there Is no doubt re- rdtnz f‘ yS responsibility for the deatruc ton and the Convention. J. A. MacDonald, Secretary. WTITGIII m Iluuh ma the other mu. u we have to retested so much In I15 In the safety of our children For u hundred and fifty W"! Ge!‘ many ha: done tier fllhttnlf 0n 101’- etgn terrteory. Th1: has fostered not only l. Itklnit for war. but also cruelty. The Germlua were train- ed u» the Idea of coneum Ind of forelizn nroblrty. ll form of economic manalzemcnt. During the first World War In France. I saw .-Germans u to the Htndenhuriz Line. They were not: only but-rum: factories. they were also cutttnfr down the orchards. It. was a. kind of melt; mlnary sketch of the "desert zone which they left; behind them In the Smolensk and Ore] Regions. The world must. be protected anlnst. the recurrence of such things. The German appetite for bandit raids. for Inflows and "mur- der vans". must be eradicated. Ger- man housewives must be made w regret that Kiev student IZIIIB were their housemalds. I consider that the explatton of tlon of conditions under which the nguflty mav exptate their crimes by labor. and return to the standards of human society. The respon- stbtllty of those who executed death sentences. who participated In mass requisitions or ‘cited slave labor Is indisputable. Res- nonstbtlttv means exntatton. op- portunity to make up for crimes. Responstbtllty is associated with the problem of safety for our coun- trv and the whole world. _ It is not. my business to discuss the organization of post-war Ger- many. But In speaking of the crimes of the Httlertte army I wish to stress the need for protect- lnu the world from the recurrence of such "campaigns." The re- rducatlun of men and peoples Is a loin: affair. The time WIIl come when the German people will real- ly devote themselvrs to peaceful labor. and the sbtrtt of Internat- Ipinal obllgattoris will penetrate m e . But. before us we now have not only brute rulers. but morally crin- Dled subordinates. The blood of their victims demands that. we pro- tect the world from n-s-w Goerlnits and from new anonymous lovers of other people's wheat or oIl. That Is the morrJ of Documents Accuse. ______.i__ Kindergarten N0. 48 Writes To The Front (By Irina Grekova) One autumn night In 1941 Nazi raiders dropped a load of bombs on "a. very Important military tar- getfl-Ktnclergarten No. 48 In the Rostoklno district In Moscow. Ibr- tunately the children were safe In .'.Il9 shelter. Work was Immediate- ly begun on the rebuilding and rc- furntshlng of the kindergarten. AI- though the builders were at the same time fulfilling an urgent State order at their factory, they still found time to make sauce- pans and pots for the kitchen of the kindergarten. Many workers contributed their ration of yard floods for the needs of the school, which was :oon able to accom- modate 150 children, many of whose fathers were now serving at. the front. Mothers and wives of men at the front made up the staff of the school. The children write and send gifts to the men at the fronts. Svetlima wrote the following not: to ac- company a packet of tobacco: — “Dear aoldter. my name I: Svet- lmn. I attend kindergarten. Moth- 144 Richmond St. 11-10~13-l7-20-U-24. these crimts demands the crca- Itv ,about my boy- NOW I IWIW 11° l‘ Progressive Conservative Convention " " ' ' r0.- iQueen’s COIIIIIY toinomlnate two candidates to contest the next Dominion Election wlll be held In the Empire Theatre, %arIOII¢l0Wll on Thursday, November 25th, I943, at 1:30 P. . All Poll Chairmen are to no that five regularly accredited firllnlyuglildrd from the an... rlqlqggm no QMIOIIIIQII from each poll. Mr. Gordon‘ u‘ don,,M.P., Progressive Conservative House Leader n o . House of Commons and Dominion President wlll, address Gray- T. B. Rogers, President. o k: t the factory. My dud guwaklilled‘ at. the front. Nearly n1 m; father-p of the children In the kindergarten are at. the front but I have no one to write W- 11 I had been older I should haw korie to fight. The Germans myflll- 101‘ they kllled my daddy- Igenr ml- dm; “on” my father. A r this Bvetlann Inqulred for a let- ter every dlll- “u? ‘l’ “mlaf It wu from a Red Navy mm,’ 9h; g: vnstlyev. "Dear Bvetlanl. more, "I am on n. warshlp which gives the G<rmaiis peace rtelther day nor night. I am avenllllt! your father's death. I wish you t? gfQW up b0 hate tho Null: ll n and our whole country h!" m9"- Bvetlima hos received many M“ tern from her frlend. 1'74. "u! m1‘; his slster and shows Interest In a her“ iictivitnirtism “mi; grader-y” u Ihléhfiaxtw used w g m en. buylwtylwslllgrhffitall In your kind"- garten," reads one letter from the front. "My wlf¢ "m" m“ m’ chug has grown strong and healthy- The state Is taking good core of my child while I am defendlnk 1:1‘! corrntry to the best. of my all ' G " f Boris Poletnyev onghiifiatttilgacfilldren In the iiinl dgfgarten, wrote: "Your letter came lust as we were about to R0 action and I read It. to my 0 m rades In the duizout. We foul: ghlnkjng of you. The Ietber lay In my pocket. and while Ilfllll 917' ‘he Germans I realized that I was do- fendiniz Boris and all tho jabber children of the ktnderkflfwll- m Alexander Korvvachkovs mo er and father are both at. the RON? and the boy has seen neither of them for over a yW-P- Th9 1"‘ time niii mother visited him lbw wrote In the visitors book bBION leavlnkiil‘ tell you how Rrateful I am for your care of the children. When I return to the front: I shall de- vote all my efforts to the care 0f the wounded. and shall riot. worry tn good hands." nocron NEGLIGIZNT FUNERAL DELAYED LATFON-OUM-EYBEY. Enulnnd _iCPi- A clergyman in this Wilt-t shire village who refused to 00nd" a, funeral service for a. woman m!!!’ ber of his conzreiwtlon maul’ ' dcam. $13,,“ the death certificate yvntthoilirt. seetnfiotxttizeflbxtildi. described mce as " v of the movrment for DWI/elm"! °7 premature burial or cremation and of their alternative premature death For almost Inslunl nlM from NIIIIIAIGIA and "III PAIN on solo, fort-u nl ASP/RI “W” Full directions lll PJCll outlast‘ MINING: ' lnni. l... ii». liAily < Nil E. R. Brow & Son s Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent, at Summerside, D. O. Stewart Charlottetown l !wiui 0 Prong and prong, vinyl-m, n, miiz-uuieéa-nnneii. mum, k1 A I'll! ANSWERS M“ AIIIIIIIIII néovnaterl that tor r with the inéi sl ht. make our age o! m" " For ever stare! 0 ttat and ili , that do?“ l-ITYQILBG hi; ID . ' t u: DECO? m mo“ H rllht. umvet. atowl brofiier ti-fuunbreatliable, up . How canst exlst? How self. thou u: m’ . And dreary sloth What t canst share Of the only blessed m.’ we ry’! I Mmetimes see of’ ye M a P! o by! odi Inked fin by uni ., ously. “Lelkli H ____________ Evans’ Stomach Mixture Every person who Is trout. led with Ila In the stomm gnrl bowels should zet a hot. Ila of Dr. Evan's stoma-i Mlxture and lee hllw qlllclily It wIIl relieve III distrrsslin nymntoml. A recnrrlmeiillcl remedy for Indigestion. nyi. uepsll. Sour Stnmai-h. Ilean- purn and all stflmaeh iriiuh- Don't delay, o d - bottle tlldly. Price rlfiuienliin MACS BLOOD FOOD TABLETS For Plle and Thln People. A combination especially valuable In the treatment of those diseases Whrre ma; nrlgln l: Irleeablc to an lin- Mvcrlshed condition 0i (h, blond Price 60c per 1m. mos AMMONIATEn srtoucnmr. COMPOUND Believes Coughs, (m; Brrmelittls If taken at the slirluf "Ilkh or cold It wlll often cheek any spread of the III‘ Price 50 cents pg} TIIE TWO MAGS l“ Guilt George Strut lhll Orders Given Prompt » I Attention. “COMPLET INSURANC SERVICE ” W. K. IIOGE Agencies Ltd. Phone 540441 Professional Gard, McLeod 64 Bentley w. a nun-nay. K. e. J. n. BENTLEY. K. c. — Notes Bylhe Way - fly gully, the days are getting so short. ihey hardly lust till dark!— Wliidscr Star. What they iii-‘ii-ifwis-hv i134 helpful to our eiicmtss as what they over- hear. —Kl‘clii:nsi" Record The man wlin used In humlllate tlie neighbors with his new car now owaggerg up tlie front stops with u whole basket cf mncliss. -Toront,o Telegram. Finance Mlnlster Ilsley ls not only one of. the most outstanding members of the fedsrnl cabinet, but one of the ivsrst lriiilrrs In his [Md atnoiiiz III" f-'.'llf‘.‘lll‘."ll of the United Nations Aliiinrlou Free Press. Somebody In Washington Is the author ot a naziblc nun, terrible m. all nun-r urn but rather witty as r'ali. He was asked why he supposed the Ilnttz-d States Treasury Depart- Irent luil b:=n leLI to ball: tlie new on: can‘ [zlcuv winch luJkS almost exiit-tlv like n (time. “t iloirt. know. I'm ".|l't*" lr- and. “but. they pro- bubly: Illilll, \\'¢ll " “Vancouver Province. t I There I: something to the III!!- ment. that. Canadians should W8- sess the vote at. the 18c 0f l9 Ye!"- ff they can fight and dte for Can- ada BI. that use. it N181" l" l” fairly sale to entrust them with the ballot. at. the same 18o —Bf00l¢- ville Recorder and Times. There m sn Iillldl in armh- tloris about the grief that swat wealth usually brings. ‘PM!’ B" laughed off by many people who never have been and never ex- pect, m be well to do. But fre- quent: re. Inder: are given 0f VIM! a substantial huts of tnith there In to these sayings. The victims of two murder cases which have been fol- lowed most. closely of liile were t ccedlmzly rich and In both In- stances the accused are members of their family circles. Their stories must help to make one content with modest means. -Edmonton Journal. It nhould not nur rlu u: to learn that the moat. pupll iir book tn army libraries, as reported by the New York public library, IS the un- abridged dlcttonar". This L: attrib- uted w the fact tliat it settles ar- gument: on use, spelling and pro- g, purpose winds up with a. browse 0 ucn u . the Do b C5853’!!! Ilkntne. 0g fiiiruifidwwthl 0 mm other fields. n11 DIM-ll!" None ts so wtse that he cannot learn something new from any m. imd the sublect. changes so requently that. monotony is impossible. Not many can take It. for long u steady diet, but It would come htgih on any nu mi- the man cut of! on a desert Island. Not dlsplaetnz Chestiertonk choice of l book on how to build a boat, perhaps, but. well up jaoward the top neverthe- less —New York Times. Before the prelent war. produc- tlori of flour n Canada was ruri- iilng at less than 5,000,000 barrels n year. In the 1942-43 crop year ending July 31 flour production totalled 23.017530 barrels. an tn- cmae over 1941-42 of 3.000.099 bar- rels or about 20 percent. In i014 when World War 1 broke out 0m- itdtan flour production was about 12,000 barrel! Per 24 hours. Durtniz the wni- tlie heavy demand step- pad up production and the expan- sion continued until 1920 wlsrn capacity reached 141,000 barrels per i714 hour" This declined steadily In {the 'an'.-= unlit It was down to 90.- l 000 barrels In 1939 -Alberta Wheat P001 Blldlct. .. . ltreaaiu-ea of our tortured and hlnied ' not yams. Rahev. Kink nnd Ore]. But even thl: first volun-io lufftces for the busing of l. ver- dfct. It relates now the Gemiiin: robbed the peaceful no lgttqn, haw they drove our ctt ns m Germany. flow they destroyed the c . how thev dofenneles: townsfolk. noun-its nnd wnr urb- onera. Tho most striking thing Qbouv, tlie crimes of tie German: I: their premeditated character vast: scale on w ch the committed. The Inltlbttva be to individual stars or sadtsts. who might found In any society. but to the ‘high command of tho Ge army. "...Io Rod Ieafltllligmnlopulotlon of If the mutter concerned one Fritz or even one thousand Httae: tempted by easy nln. one mllht explain It tn term: of the want- : But tbn ,wv , Gael-Inc's “Gmn irlle." by the natorlnu: order of Field-Marshal von Betclienm and other order: of the Geri-non hlnh I command which show that the de- vastation of our country and thl cropl. om "s t: TWIUT" CHIWING IIOOIIIIO It: stimulating, op In; goodiiu: help to lmooth the fur- row: of can. RAINBOW The rain bow ha: alwoy: been of good ohm to farmer: bocauu when there I: o rainbow,‘ there ha: been rain for Another good friend of I. 0 It’: “BLACK frlondly flavor and lut- M. ALBAN FARME Inn-bur: and Attorneys-ll- LII Ill Prince ltrefl 1 IAorrolhmi 60ml!" 0. F.’ AIIBIIIBALII Chartered Aceonnllnll Intern Trill Bllllllllll Charlottetown A cw. MAI nnaso ll [an “u” , ‘mans. uoblcrrvll- * ~ ' ‘any to 03f l. A. u“; IAIIISTII. souoITOR- I Clllllllll Bonk in cum-rum " IONII ‘I0 LOAN