f1‘ 9 l iii ‘n ll l. -'n- _fg<‘F.'-1-1.~<r-:\-.f_'.:.m 5,5011. .85$"'-3§3RBE,-*v I .PA@'F--r0vR riiiz GIIABLUTTETUWII suiuiniiui Morning Ilally (Founded In I881) President: Lieut. (Jul W Chapter S. Mel-urn Vlc-Plfsldllll: J B. Burnett, FJJ. Secretary: Lieul. Col D. A. Mnclfilnnnn- 0.8.0. Ei"ur anfi “imaging Direelur- J It Burnett, FJI. A-aucmle Editors: Frank Walker and Inn A. Bruno“ SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall In P. l. l.. $4.00 per your; $2.50 for 6 mouths $1.25 fr: 8 montnl; 50c for one month City Delivery; $5.00 per year; $3.00 for 6 month: $1.75 for 3 mouths 15y Mail In Canada and U.S.A. $5.00 P" I'll’ yaturday IIei-kiy: $2.00 per year; $1.00 It: 6 month; 50c for 3 months. Th0 Charlottetown (iuurillrnn ml; ho ohmlnul Al llulallug‘! him: Again-y, ‘Hines Square. New \urlni 0W Buuth howl Agency. Corner Milk uml Wiuhlnltun. Banal; llnlHbDllllhIn News Agent-y, 1211i! Peel 51., Iluulruuli J. “m” 35.; "a, 51., Tunullu: new: bland, Chateau Iiuur or, Ottawa; mun"- Saul IIIIIIIII. suiitiury, Ont; lluh Tuhlrlrl limp. llonclon. 1i. IL; Ellen lIubi-rlluu. Amhanit, N. IL "The Strongest Memory IS Weaker than Inc Weakest Ink." nitriisnsr. Miiv 22, 1941. The Struggle For Crete The Citfllllllli are using every means in tltcir power against the llritish and Ljrcck forccsLin Crete. Thc hziule is reported to be growing ficrccr, and we have Prime .\linistcr Churchill's prediction that "we 111l1>t expect that the fight- ing \vill continue in incrczi-iug scvcrirv." The issues at ~tzikc arc vitally iinportzntt to the vvhol: .\lidille lfzi-‘tcru campaign, and it is part 0f Nazi strategy, in such cases, to throw troops into the struggle wiih reckless disregard of casualties. No doubt the ‘drive has bccn precipitated by the Ilriii-li succc-scs iu liiliiopia, involving the stir- rendci" oi the ltalL-iu Yict-rirv, the Duke of Aosta and his forccs. The northward movement of British troops rclezised from the Ethiopian campaign is already under way. The llritish Pruni- .\lll1l\'{(‘1', while stressing the gravity of tlic~siluaiiuii in Crctc. is also on record as having assurcd Parliament that the island “will be defended to the death and with no thought of retirement.” British authorities are confident they can deal with the invasion from the skies. If the enemy attempts landing troops on an extensive scale by water, the Royal Navy will have an opportunity it has long been seeking. Signifi- cant in this connection was the statement issued yesterday by Rt. Hon. A, V. Alexander, First Lord of the Admiralty, who sees the situation developing into “one of the greatest battles of the war," with the prospects of the British at last meeting the Germans “on even terms." The samc dcspatch which carried the First Lord's message added, “There was no evidence of doubt anywhere among London officials that Crete can be held." On this reassuring note we must be content to rest for the present. A Filling Tribute One day on which party politics will be for- gotten at Ottawa will be June 7 next, when the 50th anniversary of the death of Sir John A. Macdoitald will be commemorated on a national scale. The cominitbse on arrangements for the ceremony is headed by Prime Minister Mac- kenzie King. An announcement issued by the committee yesterday states: “liver since ihc death of Sir John A. Mac- donald the local Conservative Associaitoti has commemorated each anuivcrsrzty’ and this As- lociation is joining in the ceremony commemor- ating the 50th anniversary. In view of the sig- nificance of the occasion the commemorative ccrcnioirv this _\'Q.'ll' \vill bc on a national scale and the l‘rinii: Alinistcr, the Leader of the Op- position, aiiid other leading members of the Gov- ernment Illlil the OppOSlllfJH \vill be present." ITrc-scnt plans czill for thc ceremony being hclil at tlic tniiiiiimciit to Sir John in Kingston at 3 li.iu. liastcrn (layliglit tiinc. Immediately bciore or after the ceremony wreaths will be placed on Sir _]olui's grave in Cataraqtii Ceme- tcry. 'I‘lic PVTiYlllCCS should also join in paying tri- butc to ihc stair-innit who look the foremost part in ilii: movcmciii which made Canada a na- tion, vvlto guided that nation through its early stagcs oi f‘.\'l.<l(‘11i'f' and lcft it united, strong and vigorous. i It i. worth rccalling, in this time of crisis. “hill SIT llllllli" llhllllrnl ll‘£l(l‘.'1‘.~llll) iucziut lo the (izinada oi lii- flit)". and to the Canada of our il:|_\'. Lord Ito-clii-rvY- w orils come to mind. utter- cd on lllf‘ illTilslllll oi the iinvciling of a incmor- izil to his" l11(‘|llii1'_\' iu llic crypt of St. Paul's UllllrrltWilI "\\'c ixwngiiixc only this, that Sir _lohn .\li'i(‘lllill.'llll had grzr-pcd tlic ccntral idr-ii that thc iil'l1l~l1 liinpiri- is the grcaicst secular "ZWKIV flu‘ god/l now known to itizitikiiifl; that that was the sccrct of his succcss; and that he flctcriniucd it» die ll1lilI‘l' it, zmil strove that Cari- aila should livc uudct" it," Fighting The Gestapo A fl1l1'l_\'-f\\'O-17Zlg6 documentary pamphlet on the .\'zi'/.i (i. siapo has bccu rclcaseil for nation- wide flisiribiitiiiii lo the United States by lirietids of l)t‘11l()L‘l'21("\', lnc.. as its answer to the question. “\\'b.'it would a llitlcrizcd vvorld'bc' like?" The pziuiplilct is cutitlcd “Hitler's Secret I’oli'cc—'l‘hi= Nazi Scourgc in (icriuzuiyi, the coit- qucrctl couutrics and the United States." In a lcltcr ziccoinpairviiig caclf pamphlet, Na- tional llircctor 1.. .\l. llirkhczid states, “Friends of Democracy carucslly' hopes that this pamphlet \vill further slrcnglltcu your resolve to fight Nazism \\'ll(‘l‘('\'(‘l' it zippcsirs. so that the Gestapo \vill ncvcr take root in this land of frcc people." Pointing out that “Nazism and Gestapo arc interchangeable icrins“ and that neither could survive if the other fell, .\lr. llirklicatl declares that a llitlerized world would hi- one terrorized and opprcssc-il by the Gestapo. llc ailils that the punublct shows that “the barbaric practices in- siituicd in Nazi-controlled Europe by the Gcstapo" have included: “Government by assassination. nn free speech, no free press. no rights of assembly or petition. no trade unions, relentless persecution of races entire Bible in 3 1-2 years. ‘ and religions, concentration camps for anti-Nazis, pogroms and purges. family lifc disrupted by the fcur of spies." Mr. BlflillClld warns that these repressive prac- tices rcprcscnt the "organized terror that the Gestapo would impose on the United States. should the Swastika ever supplant the Stars and Stripes." Tlic third and most revealing section of the pamphlet deals with the activities of the Gestapo in the United States. By use of documentary and pictorial material, it shows how the Gestapo threatens German emigres in this country and pursues its work of espionage and sabotage. I1 states that the Gcrnian-i’\mcriczm Bund provides a large number of informers for Gestapo agents and that Nazi Consuls shield the Gestapo by “diplomatic immunity." Comparing “the freedom guaranteed to Ameri- cans by the Constitution with the oppression forced on Germans and conquered pcoplcs by the Gestapo." the pamphlet declares: "Under the Bill of Rights, Americans walk erect as free men. Under the Gestapo, in- lizibitants arc brolccn, hollow iucn —-chattels and slaves of the state. In the Ynitcd States the government is of, by and for the people. In Hit- ler's Reich the State is the Gestapo and the people must march where the Gestapo points. “Today's world crisis is a conflict bctwccni thc civilization of free tneu and the servitude im- posed by the Gestapo. Only one can survive." The pamphlet is excellently printed and il- lustrated, and provides anti-Nazi propaganda of a most effcctivc kind. — EDITORIAL NUIES - Asccnsion Day, Church festival commemorat- ing the ascent of Christ into heaven; forty days after liastcr and ten days before Whit Sunday‘. The festival is always observed on a Thursday, hence Holy Thursday. i I ‘I It is stated in the usual unofficial way that Rudolf Hess has made deposits in the United States equalling $3,200,000, Coupled with other reports regarding the large volume of questions he is said to have answered and delivered to Win- ston Churchill, there is one element left unan- swered. This is: “What is he trying to escape?” w w 1k >i= An art exhibition that includes such pictures as two suns shining. “because it is a very hot day," a cow milking itself “because there was no room for the farmer," an umbrella being held at right angles because the artist “likes to feel the rain" and a fifth Dionne quintuplct being thinner than the others because the artist “ran out of paint" was displayed in Montreal recently. a- 4- m 1k Hon. j. G_ Gardiner sure must be counted among the optimists when he declares that out of 3.717.776 men registered between the ages of I6 and 35, no fewer than 750,000 \vill be en- listed for October service. He says the 3,000,000 left together with the 4,000,000 over 35 could be organized to keep Catiadian industry moving at top speed. If it be all as easy as that, why does not the Government itsclf speed up the organiza- tion? v v s m Caitadzfs national income was tentatively corn- piiied at $413.3 niilions in March compared with $367.7 millions in the same month of last year. The increase of 12.4 per ccut was due mainly to the speeding up of the war effort. The national income in the first Quarter of 1941 was $1.248} millions compared with $1.133 millions in the same period of 1940. The national income is de- fined by the Dcpartmcnt of Tirade and Coinmcrce as the not value of goods produced ‘and services rendered. ii- a n: v The war is entering on its griiiunest phase. .~'\re we now organised for victory? ls it not a fair judgment to say (asks Spectator) that every move made by the Government on the home- front itiigbt have bccu made a tuonlh earlier? If thcre be any truth in this statement. some share of the blame must bc laid on individual members for their failure to press home con- structive criticisms, for their tcpid advocacy or possibly sheer ncglcict. . >l< s w -i= The function of Parliament is criticism. Fvcry member is a master of sonic aspect of |)lll)liC pol- icy: at any rate he is frce to witness bow policy directly affccls some corner of his country. If hi‘ secs waste of materials or mzui-povvcr, if he de- tccts injusiiccs or C1‘(‘Zll\'lllff< in local governmciits. if be observes IICFJICCI or failure to seize and fails to report thcsc (liscoverics in high quarters, hr is guilty of sleeping on his watch. This and itothiug lcss is the solcimt responsibility which rests on the chosen spoltcsmcn of the people. 111 1i‘ 1T1 1K Sir Douglas llziig, liarl of Ypri-s, (lied this date 19.25. lt was under his gcncralship that the Canadians in the Grcat War won undying fame in the (lclcat of tho llun at 1ll(‘ sccoufl battle of Yprcs. On Nov. 6, 1917 they, by a prodigious effort, captured the hamlets of hlossclmarht and (ioudbcrg t0 the north, and finally carried Passclieuilaclc. Four days llIl('1‘ they increased their gains. The vital [iart of the main ridge, after i long and bloody fighting, was in British hands, land the salient had been wiped out. On being lraised to an carldoiu, Sir Douglas chose Ypres iias his territorial ilisignzitiou; and it is at the ‘ hlcnin Gate lltcrc that a million dollar memorial has been crcctcfl in memory of over 100,000 Bri- fish soldiers who fell in di-feitcc of the salient. in u a n- A copy of the newly revised Catholic Bible, substituting modern English for obsolete ter- minology, has been prcscntcil i0 President Roose- vclt by the Rev. Ilarry C. Graham of New York, national director of the l-loly Name So- . cicty. It was the first revision in 191 years. The l President received a iluplicatc of a copy given to Pope Pius XIL-bound in India leather and gold- cmbosseil. Thirty-two biblical scholars, including one Irish, two linglisli. and the rcst American, have spent five yCflFs on the revision. Only th: l New 'l'est'.iment has been completed, and another l five to seven years will be rcqtiircil for revision nf the Old Testament. The last revision was made by Bishop Clialloner of RllPlfllS, who revised the i J rut: (IEZARYOTTETOWN c1 NOTES BY TIIE WAY Australia finds that. it has 100.- 000 I-'\\\‘I'L'I'Ill(.I1i;II under ‘fifteen than 1|. mu seven years ago. ‘Ibis discovery has alaiiiieu the Ubvsllh ment. and the people of Australia. and they are resolved to do some- thing about 1t. Under lc-gisiatani new panting. the Government. vivouid pay 1.ve siullings a week to any fuimly for each of its children in excess of one. - Vancouver Sun. We llke today’: youth and Ihlnk they're a big Improvement on a great many older people. who seem to get stuffier and stuffier as the years go by. ‘Iuey are frank and honest, look at. life pretty straight and aren't unduly impressed by the wisdom. dignity and gravity oft their elders, which ls a healthy, sign at this particular epoch 1n the. worlds history. Ttieyve got to! build a new world out. of the one we have made such-i; mess of, It, won't. be the cheaters wlw w111 do that. -- Regina Lander-Post, To few men Is it. given, to be- come iv legend while very much alive. An- Marshal Billy Bishsp, V.C., is one of the few. The first Canadian pilot to win the Vic- toria Cross in the Great War, and “the most brilliant aerial duelllgp the world has known", he per- haps more than any one man brought to the attention of the world the natural aptitude for fly- ing which seems to be the hert- tage of Canadian youth. His 311‘ battles-he took on tour of seven German planes at an alrdrome, behind the enemy lines when lie won the V.C. .- have become a proud part of Canada's story, — wlnnlpeg Tribune. Lady Violet Bonham - Car- ter's appointment, as 9, governm- of the BBC recalls to mind (a cor-I respondent writes) the devoted and often brilliant help she gave to her father when he was figm- ing the byelectlon at. Paisley 1n 1920. There was a Conservative candidate of the name of Mac- Kean opposing Asquith, and nlgtit. after night. he told Palsley aucti- ences that. the former Prime Mln- ister had gone to Dublin after the Eastern rebellion and visited the wounded rebels In hospital wear- ing a green tie. Asquith ignored him, but Lad Violet took tum on and made he most amusing speeches of the campaign on the theme of the green tie. Asqultlrs own silence, howeveiy was damag-l lug him. and Lady Violet and otl-i- 915 b88866 him. If he wanted to, win the election. to answer thei ‘ridiculous libel. Asquith agreed wlth a grunt to do so under this pres- sure, and this was what he said and all he said: "I believe there 1s a Conservative candidate 1n this election, a Mr. MacKean. I have never mentioned 111m before and 1 shall not mention him again for the sufficient reason that, in the words of Bollngbroke, I never wrestle with sweeps" The Conserv. alive candidate never mentioned the green tie again. - Manchester Guardian. i Imagine prisoners of war digging 1.11811‘ way out of a camp for nearly three months and none of the guards knovwing anything about. 1t. They say the tunnel was eight feet high. Think of the amount of earth I that must. have been removed in that. operation without any of the guards seeing anything wrong, 11m stories which have came to hand Indicating incompetence and lack 0f dlivipline are beyond belief. In constructing their tunnel one pris- oners used timbers f9;- shorJlg up the walls and ceiling. Where did the timbers come from and why did the guards not. miss 1t? .11.. 1s said t-liey were the studcling taken from beneath the flours" of tlic camp buildings. Nails were removed and wax inserted 1n the nail holes to camouflage them. -'Port Armur News-Clmnicle. The fourth bridge at the Niagara fronneni. now well in the course of ercctzon. Iluiidrcds 0f Lon; of steel are going into it, great. labor and enginezizng 5.101100. Tue ques- 1.1011 has bun advanced wlictner this jab could not have been de- terred until after zhe W31‘ and “nether it. would nzi have bcen “'15s w do s». with three other bridges taking care of the traffic? —St. Catltarlnes Standard. A taxi-driver was cruising along a London street. one evening Just before dusk vmen he was hailed by a police sergeant. “waml a job " asked the sergzant. “Bring it up", said the cabby. The Job turned out to be an unexplosed bcflib — which. Wll-ll t-wo members of the dlspcsai squad, had taken to same barracks. “I wasn't too delighted", writes the driver, "but. they sa.d they were very short of transport, so 1 agreed to help, "I was told to collect who fare from the town hall the next day. When I did. chnrgcd 3d for luggagvt" - London Dally M1i'ror. Let us get down In brass tacks.‘ as the Americans say. This is a war‘ inwhlch the dictators have every-l thing t.» win and the democracies’ have everything Lo lose. 11,15 a, tooth-iindi-nall battle 1n which the free peoples will receive no quarter, nor would quarter be worth hav-i 111K If 1t. were offered. for Its accep. tance would entail the loss of free-‘ dom alone with a lot of other things without which life would have neither purpose nor value. Tlils 1s no time for ululations about devastated churches and ancient landmarks. It Ls the time to save the countries and the people of the countries who may somg day, by God's grace and their own endea- vors comblned, return to thoughts of old sanctuaries and edLfIces. This 1s fight-lug time. Reccnstructloni time will come, but. only after the good fight. has been fought and won. We free peoples want peace. but now ll can only be won by the sword, Such was not. our desired But. 1t. shall be. ll. must. be, our» purpose. - Royal Gazette (Hamil- ton, Bermuda), In northwest Australia. 1| the town of Marble Bar, but It belles its niune, for 1t Is an excellent training ground (or the nether reg- Ions. m: 135 summer its temperature climbed over the 100. Then It. had a cool change. The thermometer fell b0 98. 11s revlous beat. was 106 con- aecu ve days from November 9. 1921 to llbbruary m. 1922. 1y responsible for the excesalve heat. Situated In a pocket. 1n the hills, the town Ia tml above the sea level, an 1'! desert region to the southeast. The Iron-stone formation o: the hllls Is Australian NW: Letter. ____ . w°1ld seen with as clear eye as this ‘Cabinet. although on the vergé o; .N°tl11118 0011111 do more to insure be “What differ more." vou cry. "than nsecutfve days this , The topography at Marble Bar Is large-l 596 100i.‘ the Inflow of heat from the d l lAllDlAN -'_;L. PUBLIC FORUM ‘lulu column In ulwn Ill! Ill! ngnuuiu- h; wwlflrlpflflllfllfll ll uuutlonn n! Intern! Th Charlottetown Guardian d nncnurlly undone Iho 09'5".‘ o! oarnlnnndentn. A PROPHEUY BEING FULFILLED Sir, I notice 1n n recent Issue of your paper that a Canadian who had recently returned from London and had marked tlie death and destruction there, remarked that the Germans seemed to dellglzr. 1n killing. This recalled to my mind a prohecy made by Heine, when he was a refugee 1n Paris, having been driven from Germany for speaking his mind on German atrocities of his day. Considering the practical abandonment of Christianity 1n Germany. and the fiendish delight 1n the destruction of churches 1n Britain, much In the Drohecy wlll seem strangely apropos today. Heine wrote as follows: “Chi-luf- limlty—and this is its highest merit. —has In some degree softened, but it could not destroy, that brutal German joy of battle. When on“ the tamlng talisman of the Crcu breaks 1n two. the savagery of the fighters-the senseless Bt-gfgeykgr fury of which the northern poets 5111s and sHY so much-will gush up anew. Thai talisman in Germany l! defiflyed. and the day will coma when 1t will plteously collapse. ‘rho 01d stone gods will then r159 from the silent ruins. and rub the dust, of a thousand years from their eYes- 711111111”. “filth his giant's ham- mer- W at 11-51 spring up and Shfliffr to bits the Gothic cams. drals. ' 1s there not here uenetuinc n-uni and uncanny foresight? Had real ponslble stntemen throughout the brilliant libertine refugee this German Jew, and acted accordingly m 31;: It not possibly have been all‘; itbeiger wfth the world today (R 15am Slr, pie, _ ev. r.) FRANK 13A Chlpman- N- B- May 16. 19411.1“) Union With Britain (Letter Ln New York flmes) Lash June through wsmsgm gihumhlll the British offered to Join e French In a union. The hem). despair-and paralysis, vo u; 11083.1 down by three Tgieseoflfi?’ Let 1L5 make a. similar offer of 11111011 to the Brltrsh now, before t; 1s too late. Nothing could en. vfurflse them more. Nothing could e snore disheartening to Lhg Nggjg. From the gold fields of the Yukon to the gypsum plants of Nova Scotln, the Bank of Montreal is co-opcnting with Canadian MINING, by provid- ingits various enterprises with the efficient, spe- dalizcd forms of banking service each requires. _@ "lull: aim; i. m m; Thousands of workers in Canadian mines, smelt. ing plants and allied industries, are among the owners of our million deposit accounts, Many of our branches are well located for their convenience. Slowing Caudhu: and tbelr industries In any urflu of ti: community, w: invite you to JIJrunYOUR banking requirement: wllb in. BANK 0!‘ Charlottetown Branch: MONTREAL "A IAN! II-Illl nun-r. ACCOIIIITI Ill IBLCOII" A. I. B. BELCHERQ Manage;- MODERN, EXPERIENCED BANKING SERVIC! Ill! . Ill dunno of n; YurflSnmu/ul 0pm,“; arterylcntth i;i.;.;.ii.g m operating little yous. War ~g—=—————-——=_ (By Klrko L. Simpson, Associated Prell Stuff Wrllier) the Ftasclsts and the Communist. Vibibrv for the democracies, neither mlgwimythlttz do more to gimme i, Deuce after vtown’. Without an American and Bltlsh union established as the foundation q! a world urilon of the democracies to be Joined latter by the sour. imd Ctizntral Amerrcan jfpu-bucs‘ mama f 1 110 mace could in reality be 111m lélkixasn an armistice. l A ' _ on ‘the TJresliIEIaTiTEIiInIiIeOCIdEr-igiliiigulzo invite the United Kingdom, Can- ada. Eire. tlie_Un1on or Boutht Ilxllflgoa. Austral: and New Zea- “ _"° 5°11" W-l-h 11s a provisional Federal union. modeled bvoadlv on the United States Constitution Th5; 1s the Federal Union plan devised by Clarence K. Strelt and expltfned by h"? l“ hls Mentlv Published book Unlcn Now With Britain" MP5 lrv ibis path to victory andl lasting peace before 1t 1s too late WORTH l Honorrpsréd shame from no condition, Act. wcii your part. there all the. onor lies. Fortune in men has some small dif- ference made, One flaunts 1n rags. one flutters 1n broc e; The colglailcrz aproned and the poison S It The Iriar hooded and the moxiarch crowned. crown and cowl?" I'll tell you. friend; a wise man and a o0. You‘ll find 1t once the monarch acts the monk, Or. cobbler-like, the parson will be un . Worth makes the man an a 1t the fellow; d w m; M all our leather and Drunella. ~Alexander Pope. WORDS OF CHALLENGE a THOUGHT A on rot: A PEOPLE u WAR "The world today needs a “@111. challenklnz. rtnglri faith In a few fundamenia things. We see darkness in. swad of IIKIIL but; during the Dust. twelve months more so than during the past two zen. 618110115. there L! becomln a clearer realization of the m- ple fundamental rules of llfe." —Dr. R. C. Wallace. principal gnoqueenk; University, Tor- |acy since 1t would give the Turks . nelp The battle of Crete ls attaining such proportions that, It appears to be a major Nazi move against Bri- tain on the confused checkerboard of the struggle In the east. There is a tacit. German admis- alon In the mounting fury o1 the alt-sea assault. that possession of the Greek Island L; vltal to Nazl grand strategy. Unless they cap- i ture It; or effectively neutralize It, the Nazl leaders may have great difficulty 1n converting the war In Iraq or the Franco-British clash in Syria Into a major threat to Bri- llsh Mediterranean and middle eastern llfe lines. It seems certain that reduction of Crete and Cyprus is essential to German hopes of crushing British , power in that sea or cutting Brl- ' Our e and ecocionuc life. Yet It has been garden vegetab e. Important Department The preparations of medl- clnes and the of prescriptions had our speclal attention. 4J0. Domlntorrs seclal ' Savoy cab is a m], h It. 1s not of ound in markets though its led leaves have a special flavor. mom than two NOTICE FARMERS We have just received l ship- ment of Most FORMJALIN FOR SMUT 0N GRAIN A cheap but thoroughly d- Iecllve remedy. Grain [rowan would be wise to act promptly In order to have seed properly treated before sowing. One plat to every 40 [llllllll of water. Full directions given with every order. compounding has alwayl taln officoapletbfly frlcpnd 011 re- Our experience and Iralnlng PRICE 4° CENTS m- sources n e 05111 e s. g Failure w knock out the 5th aloplg sclpntlllc lint‘; has been lmlglgélso carry the new Ill llSh-GYQHC defenders of Crete “c “s ° mm“ s 3 ma‘ WOIIId force a drastic revislon of t" it! siwclal lnisrssi In us- CERESAN Nazi war plans. 1t would also tend to stiffen Turkish resistance to Germany's high-pressure diplom- The result added confidence that they could hold their own Dardanellcs-Bos- porus waterfront. with British and methods Moreover, another Russian about- face might follow successful de- l fence of Crete. 1t. would certainly. be construed as bolsterlng British hopes of halting Nazi attack at the sea shore, east or west. Available reports on the fighting In Crete Indicate that the British- Greek defenders dealt. successfully with Nazi air Invasion. British re- ports of disproportionately heavy German losses are credible. Even if the air-sea Invasion 1s ultimately beaten off. a terrific and sustained alr bombardment of the Island 1s to be expected Ger- man prestige 1s at stake. extra. DRUG TRANS-CANADA AIR LINES Covering Canada from sea to sea. the planes of the Trans-Canada Ali- Lines fly more than 5.000.011 miles a. vein‘. ‘Ilhe lLIIB-TIS-Oflfllllifilll/Jl llne runs from Halifax. on the At- lantic, to Vancouver, on the Paci- flc, linking en route the unportiint cities of Moncton. Montreal OI awn. Toronto. North Bay, Wlnzilpcg- Rc- - gins. and Loltlrbrldpe. Cilflrlfllfi- , town and Summers de, Pr 11cc Firi- wiud Island, are Joined to Monnton by TCA service; there Is a TCA llne from Toronto to New Ycrk, an- vlde the people of this vlcln- IIy with every Item of equip- ment and with the system modern service requires. You cannot the value of when you require medlclnel 111111111111» =11"! "w new": Tm. Purifying the Blood ind afforded costs JAMIESUIPS A dust disinfectant fur when, oats, Barley. One pound Imil 32 bushels. Get your pound to-duy. 1 Lb. Tin $1.10. 5 Lb. Tlll 34-" is that we pro- thal. the most MACS CONDITION POWDER FOB HORSES AND OITTLI floneu up the system. cum Ill skln troubles and ll"! l losav coat. of hair. I-‘or swellifl over-estimate such service an an Eradicator of Witfllll ll In an unfailing remedy. P11" 50 cents nei- package. TIIE TWO MAGS DRU GSTORE 149 Great Gi-orze street Mall Orders Given Prompt Attention. ynu nnthln; w» STORE llfillfiflllffllilllilfifllfilfilIEIEIIEIEEJIEIEIIEIEEJIQIEIITIQIE fl MOW ’Elll DOWN! The battle cry of Charles McCarthy is ll 110ml slogan for this time of year. don't let any grass grow under your f1’ In other 011145 e1. lls Say to Your Grocer other from Toronto to Imdon and Windsor, and 'I‘CA planes fly be- tween Icltlvbrldge, Calgary and Edmonton. Connecting services op- mned by other com antes cross t e Strait of Geor 1a rom Vancouver to Victoria, y from Ilegina t0 Moose Jaw Saskatoon. Prince Al- bert and North Battleford. up Into the mining territories of the north and on Io the Arctic, and reach down Into the United states. Tra- lazrtic. by British Owrseaa Airways are carried across the continent b; i l I Want i... __. -. .~.h.-.~v-- . .74.. ‘Q .__.__._...__. BRAIIMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEA You will enjoy its superior quality H110 conducive t0 81111111116 1M1- -,ooo+wwwww+n+o+v+o_+www-o+n+oano+ooo+ow uuisiiaufatoisiiataiaii;iuisiiaiiiiiaiuiaiiaiaioiaiiaiaiaoouoouuiuu | l l good advice also to stick to old and tried friends in whom you have gained con- fidence through experience- Among many a man's friends can be counted the always steadfast. HICKE Y’$ BLACK TWIST CHEWING 10c Per Fig Manufactured By HIOKEY & lllf‘ H0150" Tobacco 0n. Ltil. Charlottetown f-Jfaiz-Jfiiuuioireiullai 12100000001010?“