.n-=-_--_.- __ a-_k _.--__.. ._ i l i l .1 ._l‘L‘E‘f', Fflll‘? '1 iiE ClIARLOTTETOWN G ll A RO IAN \Iurn|n| Dally llollfldld ll! "37? livelier-in tit-lit nil. w Chester S. Mel-ll" vii-t» Prrsident. J R. Burnett. F-J-I- Seen-tan Lirut. (nl l) A Nllclilunon 11.5.0. Edmn- llld Managing Uirertor l R Barnett. Flt‘ Associate Iidiuns. trunk u alker and fan A Burnt siisstitivfits RATES By Maul H! i» a l. >400 n" vw’ 515" "f": "mm" 2 c E EDI! . (in siiiidtiii mliniii-i ii-lgvio-irtiitlti m h months. for 3 months” o0 p r y“! i a t s a - e - Nyfll’... mi. $1.00 w. a months Sue for 3 months. By Mail In L- iuluruui “with qh‘; 5;,},,,},).~,-! JIt-mnryiir TFCTGIKQT "VII (m. “lakes! Ink." ll 1 .i>\i;'!ti-? TD» Him That Hath i grr avers. out - .. fellow agra- . Yet tbev re- " "rt-iii "lC- r farming the .\lirt- arrange- Ie of 100.000.- goverrnient ce, which is e i". has. been 2 t:.\!@t‘1I of 15c a timers (if they i must absorb. and family ‘ . ivithout getting gc T’ Take our ~ and reduced freight we have our water . That nothing doing. filorable sum has al- se forsooth, we must iied. At what ex- ract“ ‘l? It surely which would pro- cxorbitant freight s‘ ‘Yo-vd-IsIand-Caribou Car F ~ . . ri completed, the Ferry <~ - - - ' _ ~' »- liwvernnieitt has taken 0-“. to be use“. as a mine i-urtl. The Car Ferry expected to under- and more than pro- mines intended to be offered for holding ( ir Ferry service, and Government is pay- fnr a service which the \\'ood Island- . as ousted. Truly to n hy this Federal Gov- ser us. 0 Sacrifice Here So :'ne Government, and CanadFans. . a._tirerl to make sacrifices in spa-Ed zlae war effort. Investors are t”: bends or war savings cer- r ..’1ti'ir1 is at the highest level in history. Put, says the Financial Post, Ottawa C011- tiniies to sell government annuities at bargain prices. nly does the Government pay the costs of stratiran of the annuity office; ivalent of 4% compound in- ies that it sells. of these annuities are sold who know a good thing This practice may encourage saving but it ls saving cost to the general public. And lt l! no’ "'1 lt is a gift from a Govern- ment llilf"? ;i.-r= to pay for the tvar. The Right Note Q said of the danger of "fifth from the foreign-born ele- lie other side of the picture is - to Canada and the Empire 'Hitl1(’SC people, who are ap- “egos and duties of Brit- xarnple comes to hand in ' nr-ivspaper “Der Nord- -l in Winnipeg. After stressing ~i ~~ti-.ii:il registration of all finely and necessary action, “Der Norm ~tt.. on to say: "\\'e an l\"1l]i_\‘ .'ll1]|l'f‘*'l71ll\'(! of the difficulties that tln- ' f-irrl-Il upon us. brings to loyal w.‘ _ (irrninn (limo E . .\l.-i:iy of them still have close tie. of lIn-l 1'11 w“li tln-ir Fatherland and the sentiiii n". n3 'il :iri~e iriin that fact are not rrn Iily t‘l';1'l.<.t -il. nor should they be under less rlailqiwviis <‘,l‘\l1?i1~!-lll‘e'\'\. 'l'liis. however, is the ml ~lt'lll It‘ lll. .\ll tli-i-r- who love Can- mist put ("in da first. and must act with all fort-n of uliiwh they are capable, remember- rl.’ ' tin! creation. lint was conccievetl and llii- 1‘li.'iiirt~lli-rie< of (icrmany and lt- if _» lllilnlllfllllf nlfevt of crushin all k J 1'"; \-,'.,i1lil mil l)Zt\V [l]? lfllfit‘. f!) Illt‘ . r-' '."i--. of viviliz:uirin. This is the , in and her llominions , Wlllff‘ power of self-govern- '. i5. is the war which, with ’ ‘i ‘» n 'l"ll-"."."‘I', stipplies and tin- " ' w-"v '."~ l‘!!! t b: win. and “"1111.- will! if w" ~ 1- \1.""ll lfviiic- for is not to vanish frrm ‘l! l'----l i» ‘fr’: w.“ r‘i~'-rf:'llv accept as our Home" As 1t noun-paper nuw serving its nationality that the \‘.';n- i. not of Canada's creation.‘ throughout the Dominion over half a centurv. we feel that there should be no misunderstand- ling among our reople. lf there are any news- papers printed fr‘. the German language in Can- ada that are riot dealing with the drastic realities m‘ {hi- \\'a,- and inat 11Il€’1lll\'-‘>C3ll_\', they are rendering a 45;, yvftf not only to the country, but to the vast majorfw of the German people ‘whose loyalty to Caiiafian i‘. 15005 55 n01 “ma, and never was. in. question. FDIIURIAL NUIES Safely garnered is the hay crop. U U l I Huge quantities of poison bait are being rush- ie‘. to Alberta to rey ' an invasion of grass- llyipfiéfi noiv on the \ .:._ from Oklahoma. . 1 . Charlottetowns summer festivities open. we tiirig frrends from away and the renewing of acquaintanceships from .\'-'~r:h Point zo lies: Cape. I I ¥ X l Alfred Lord Ten A week from tor“ on. Poet Laureate. whose pmtry is richly cc Eve and finely finished. born this date IP00: Live pure, speak true. ‘ wrong, fillow the King —else, wherefore 8 i I U i Arivorie not fully in sympathy with our na- tional war effort would from henceforth be wise to l-ceep their thoughts to ernseives, as the Treacltcry‘ Act. non" la , provi les the death pen- - i r certain acts against the public interest lor a ting the enemy by lowering the morale of the people or other“ i I U I The Brush Government has purchased from the Canadian Red Cro== in the United Kingdom ‘some 42.000 potinds of bacon which has been sent by the people of Canada as a gift. The Red Cross will get the benefit of the money and the United Kingdom will get the benefit of the bacon. i i i l The great business optimist and prophet. .\Ir. Roger \\'. Babson has been adopted U. S. .-\, Pro- hibition candidate. bu: evidently does not over- estimate his own prospects. lle told a Press Cort- i, fcrence that the United States is short ofonly two ;things—-parking space and character. “Char- jacter is the thing that will save Great Britain. The lack of it lost France." he declared “Blen and niachinc= win battles. but courage and char- acter win wars." It was on this principle .\Ir. Babson said that he will fight for his party's cause through I940. i U i I Argentina has prohibited the export of wheat ,arid wheat flour immediate-iv because poor crop prospects indicated there would be only a slight surplus. Thus, by decree, further sales abroad of the Argentina's biggest money crop were chopped off except by special permit. The decree em- powered the .\litiistr_v of Agriculture to issue per- mits for sales to neighboring countries in amounts which would not endanger the home supply or to fulfil commitments already made. Argentina's winter wheat crop has been bard bit by pro- longer] rains and lack of cold weather needed for hardening. l I I i Here is an illustration of the difference be- tween theory and practice in non-combatitiveness. A couple of hundred British conchies (con- scientious objectors) who were excused from joining the fighting services were sent to the Channel Islands early iri lune to help with the potato harvest. Many of them told the conchie tribunals that they would be quite unconcerned if the Nazis invaded Britain; others said that they would just as soon live tinder Hitler as tin- der a democracy. When German invasion first threatened the Channel Islands, most of the con- scientious objectors tried to get back to Britain. Some stowed away in cargo boats. Others were allowed to evacuate after the women and child- ren and the fighting men had got away. A num- ber were too late. A few preferred to stay and live under Nazi rule. These bad decided to take over empty farms and run them on the com- munal system, if thhe Nazis would let them. r a Some doubt still exists in many minds re- garding the conscription of Canada's man power. Col. Ralston told the House, in explaining the new training policy, that commencing about Oct- ober f and as a result of the national registration of the country's manpower, single men of the aged of 2f and 22 years would be called tip at the rate of 30,000 a month for a month's training, and that in a year a total of at least 300,000 young Canadians would receive initial military training. Col. Ralston also disclosed the fact that as a result of consultations with Major General H. D. Crerar, now chief of the gen- eral staff, who recently returned from Britain, Canada was now not only engaged in helping to win "the Battle of Britain" which was the sec- ond phase of the war, but was also planning for the ultimate offensive by which alone could the war be decisively- won. The Government now realizes, what it should have vears ago, that "Be Prepared" is the only safe policy to adopt. . m n in Nazi Germany has been canvassing for ord- ers in Central and South America on a money guarantee that the goods would be delivered in |October as the war would end in September. ilnvestigations show that the bluff was carried ‘Otlf by ordering the goods in U. S. A. on a ‘money guarantee, but very few orders had been .l'C(‘<‘l\'Pfl.' The Export Managers Club of New iYork got their secretaryi, .\lr. F). Q. Gallup to ‘report which he did as follows: “There is every lreasmt to believe that Germany hopes to use Am- erican merchandise to make good her promises ‘of delivery in October. American exporters re- sent the idea that their goods are to be used to service orders which the Reich booked to bolster her own prestige in the I.atiti-.‘.merican nations." He atlrled that as secretary of the exporters’ or- ganization he has had an opportunity to compare notes with many of the members who have be- come susoiciotis recently of the type of buying ‘that has been done by companies that are Ger- man-owned Virtually all the orders in questions came from contpanie: on the British Govern- ment's "blacklist" of companies the Empire has reason to believe are owned by enemy interests. I TI IF. CHA R_L_QiI‘_'I‘_ETQ\VN__(Z-_IJ'ARDIAN NOTES BY THE WAY, The Nazi muff The abroad CBC Interviewer "somewhere in Eng}. . tntenuevuag men 0n Zflffl f-d ozlaer dunes and ‘ask-Hi Dill-fill" 1a.‘: for trartsmmion to home 11s- teners was, 1n the WHEY bit/Pfi- cast recently. skating 0n pfflly thn ice Why zlve mfcrmazicn to the enemy about the road con- dzizors for motorcycles and lor- rzes? Why ask a guard what he wculd do if the enemy appeared.’ Is there no hm: to ny stunts by the rad1o? — Si. Cazharznes Stan- dard. » Nurses enlisting for service with the Australian amty oversea: are subleot to i-i-itlitary- tisctpiiue. The; are not allowed to use lip- stick or rouge when on dutv The order u Lnal, but the con- troversy rages Some of the muses consider that the order l! 3r, infringement of every wzmatfs rzghf to look her best. Tney pro- test that no nurse wants t0 appear or. duty “made up like a movie s: Tnat. they agree, might Iibllfb the patzents, but so. they argue, would a face without some l 1 1 l ‘Grated apples were prepared -ner, and. in spite of of the ordinary beauty afds. 1 Australia Press Bureau. Closing of overseas markets to Nova Scouan fresh apples last. year compelled a retort to pro- cessini 0n an unprecedsnted scale, and more than 7.000.000 gallons of canned apples and approxi- mately 8.000.000 pounds of dehy- and stored Of this enormous quaniity approxmalely one-half has been ‘ the resz. the prcperty of the Lon Gov rnmeni, rentaLns in warehouses Growers and gov- ernments, both ggovancial and fed- eral. for rnont have directed their aztenncn to disposing of this balance - Halifax Herald. We have a stake 1n this war and, more than that. a tret on the wzn- a good deal of hcpeful avoidance, that fact is bescmlng clear even tp oeople so acme-tamed to etxctzrzg dasagree- able facts from 1h zr minds that. tnev still talk as if the Unzted Siaes could face with equanirmty a Nazi-dominated chaos. Afzer all, 1f standards of living are slipping, ours sILp aiong Wlih the ozhers. Hitler's talk about Enllllg "plut- ocracy” 1,5 another wa of saying that he favors destrucpon of the system of free enterp. and polit- ical hberahstn under whzch we have attained a new high 1n hving standards, and the susstztuttcn of the drabness, inertia, and cruelty of bureaucratic absol 15m operated for the benefi " 1 Odd Items of news peering Lhese days are nu- 1n English newspapers — as for lnszance, re- ports of the fining of farmers for falling to plcw land under the direczlon of the officzaLs of the Emergency Powers (Defence) Cultivation of Land Order In one case, thus reported, a Lama- shlre farmer was fined £15 be- cause he had failed to turn 9.38 acres of h.s G1 1-2 acres of grass- land into plowed land. In a sec- ond prosecution a few days later a fine of £20 tin-is tmpcsed for the same offence, the offlcels informing the c:urt that they took "the gravest pcssible view of the case" when the defence identi- fled the prosecution with "dcia- torship", the prosecuting la.\v_yer said it was “to prevent dicmtcr- shzp comzng to thus czuntry that. 99 percent of the farmzrs and others had vcluntanly submitted to the regulations." — Winnipeg Free Press. The police of St. Louis have been armed with a bylaw which 1s much needed 1n St. Thomas and 1n probably every other city for the suppression of a nuisance which came ln-to belng with the automobile age The order i4 that people who go chasing utter newlytveds with their flutters steadfly pressed rlovvn on the horn button shall be escorted to the police station. The horn-blowing best 1s common to 5t. Thomas and should be definitely swatfed The blowers not only cause oonfusfon to other motorists, but are partlcuiar- ly annoyi to sick people or those who may taking an afternoon rest. They make a noise like "the German screech bombs, and 1f they Were stopped, our guess 1s that most of the newly-weds would be glad to be spared the embarrass- ment of having general attentzon called to their new status. - St. Home; Tlmes-Juornal, MlgIsIl-nlo Fitch made a gentle declslon recently when he ex- tended lenience to a young schsol teacher found guilty of making disloyal statements before hls pu- plLS. He found the accused “a deeply religious man and a pacf- fLst." He was given nlne months’ remand. The Herald does not feel that the deeply rellgzous v.ews of the accused man necessarily call for lenlence Such views cannot be tised as a loophole for dlsloyalty; the Dc-mfnfon Government has taken this stand 1n suppressing the organlzatlon called Jehovah's Witnesses. Regardless of the magm- trates declsion, 1t 1s certalnly not advisable for this young man to remain 1n a profession where he can 90W doubt and suspicion 1n the minds of young Canadians. The Detpanment of Education should take action 1n this and 1n other cases. to preserve law and loyalty 1n Alberta's schoolmoms. _- Ca1- gary Herald. Needed: Fellow-Feeling — Tho Greek word for fellowahfp 1a symp- athy; the Latin for 1t 1s humanity; but to freshen 1ts meaning, let us think of 1t as fellow-feeling. It. 1s the best and finest, trait of human nature-aha deep. inward conscious- ness that m do not. lfve unto our- selves alone, that self-Interest 1s not. as some once-fashionable philosophies would have us believe, ithe matnsprfrg cf human actfcn. It 1a the roct vfrtue of society; 1f all men had 1t. the Ten Ccmmand- meme would be unnecessary. It. makes obedfene to tre Golden Rule a matter of course - and makes duty a pleasure. It puts other people's happiness, other eo- ple's lnterets. other people's E1311 purposes, on a level with our own. -S1i- Rcbert Garran, dlstfngulshed Australian Rotartan, writing 1n the current Rotarfan Magazine. During 24 hour; of every war- trotilbled day an u eufva little vessel of drab grey, sister to craft spotted at all of Canada's ocean harborz, bobs and tosses 1n the waves of the Atlanta lust off the entrance to an east coast port. concealed amcng the meant The fnslgntflcance of the lfttle green folfnge of the shorelne. _ unset .1; lhllnhr ‘ In: Dublin *1; l "l". l have done, and continue to do, a ftne workmanllke enemy allens, they enemy alien ideas and rumours. counter-propaganda — no matter how distasteful the word sounds 1n our ears. that the 4,000 mlles of undefend- ed frontler can be a weakness as well as a strengtknatid that. south of 1t 1s n vast republtc which 1s tolerating the operatlmis of "Fifth Column"; knowing 1t, many of the influential cltlzens of that republic have act.- ually fallen vlctlm to 1t. other republics, wlthln whcm the Nazis are workmg day and night. Thelr machine never stops. combat 1t, are combating of the "Flftti Column“, OOIIIIIIOKISCDSQ. respect and lmmedlau amntton of wasnln of rhrleklng steel from the every- ready muzzle: of coastal batteries A Myth Explode! By "Runnymede" (Repx-Lnted from "The Lemon-arr.” Nattona] magazine 0t the Can- adian legion.) tCon tinned) THE OTHERS The pageant made the Germs-rm forget for the moment the anae- mlc-‘ooking and manlfestly under- nourished vouths who made up the bulk o! Hitler's new cannon-fod- der. There is riothlng of Nleta- che‘s superman about them. It 1s not they who qualify for she well stage-managed campalgn phOtO- graphs of Germany's troops in ac- tion which adorn the issues of the neutral weekly magazines on thl-s continent. Doktor Goebbels knows his business better than that. Weedy, pimpiy-faced. dull-eyed. cIock-vrork automatons. out of whom whatever individuality they might have had has 1M4!" booted. they form the vnstunass of timers land forces. Ann. after thef: exhlbltlon at Dunkerque. af- ter their ccmplete failure to do their job when every favourable factor postulated by ClausewiYl f0? the total destructicn of a retreaz- in; enemy was present. nelt. r M M hogs marketed bv Island pra- I-fitler nor his zenerais can feel ure ‘pustgdbvefegs (Si? t0 fiblrghnraz nartlcuiarljv- happy about this ex- (i? ' __ mar ete s" t s ves‘:r 0a "m, Smmuh posure o.’ n-rmam». Mnvtnetbblfigpnngpséoftgpntgidatbplgirte.c131: ,__E§_ <51 p after eating, heartburn. sud n a; aycg u’, to 5 3-3;; sideirations of modesty. When there“ ‘bfi’ ‘m! “m” ‘wmuh- even when everything a soldier can think of Ls thrown in to we. The scales cn his side. the Nazi still lacks szmetmng. He still lacks that particular something essential ‘.0 gain victories over an enemfv‘ T~ l! miter these enchanted woods. Nothing harms beneath the leaves To“ your heart up with the lark, Foot. at peace Wlill mouse and worm, 1- d d fdark atrial-e?! gndretllietioquit their form: Thousand eyeballs under hoods Have vcu bv the hair. Enter these enchanted woods. Here the snake across Your D831 Stretches in his goclen bath: soft as WlHXIOWIFIE plumes of sleep: Yaffles on a chuckle s 10w l0 . U3 the pine. where sits the star. Rattles deeb the moth-winged FBI- Each has business cf his own: 3m Should V011 distrust a tone. Shudder all the haunted foods. All the eyeballs under hoods Shroud you in their #13"- Enter these enchanted woods. You who care. re fold. Doktor Goebbels will tell them He doesn't need your help. Of course the operaticns of the "fifth Column“ l .14“ 5 ccflflot/ifln. A m0 i was: tvoons or a wssrsmtatr- You who dare. than waves a swimmer cleaves. ON Fair you fare. At Ma You who dare- by ggy-Ioofed squirrels leap kfm laugh from branches dim: the go? Then beware of —U eorge ltleredi th. bigger and better lies to be 3T6 I10! Q0116 S0 to recognize as most people H Sin-In your issue of July Nih- "Marketlng Scheme Ls Discussed". Mr. Glllles 1s reported as havlna stated. "that approximately‘ 43.000 hogs were shipped out of the Pm- vlnce 1n 1939. an increase of over 1,200 hogs over the I938 fleures‘. ported: "This year's volume of hols year-NICO over the ')I‘E\".OllS year." No doubt part of these hogs 521.’! backers and the balance out of the Prcvlrice. Is July 26th, otherwise where dld the difference-over 21.04%) (Mr. Gillies states that was the approximate total number, duce rs last _veri.. GRESEORD. Efgiand —- (C?) —, Mrs. Julia Scams-s has left income; to her ccncluslcri of rite war upcn which PUBLIC FORUM I'M: cola-I l0 opal h: Ibo dlnuulcn by ovnupollclh of l; LAOIE l1 oonnllly nnlnna the onlnlon o! i.-...-:*:.-. :.'.:::.~r....*~...°-.: l,‘ SWIM cAPs 1 Inspect om- at“; Caps before mgkin not". nxroars chm Bathing Caps Drlce from 25c See also our the I'l- annual msetfns of Gllltes the rketlng Beard Mr. shipped was the largest on the re- MACS ‘ciords of kthedotggantléatgn. d22é3§3 “MB BEST A CQS mar 67G l‘ .8 O81‘ . S paratlon whlch the Board went to our local there a mistake 1n figures quoted 1n vour lsstie of n “m '“‘°'° natural color 1 1 l . l (‘dd h0g5 hnlr. Price 60c. Order by Mall DB. EVA I am. Sir. er, INTERESTED PRODUCER ’ 43 000 ’ Tia“ other fir’ w: HIM, If l! ls (he usage} rot: nutarios i its Evans. Price grandchildren "until the! M King George VI 1s new en- We have a complete 1n s! Why not will! on; gm», of Bathing I I001’ the latest shades and ‘ ... rest"- *- _ lift! stuck ORER .4‘, stock m AUCUET n. 191g l _ m: ; f1 ir-r- ‘s. ' lllll l"!!- V! A delicately perfumed p". YESLOI B"! halt ti; m and produce s rich and abundant {rum}; q Today, NS STOMACH MIXTURE ‘ recommend this Bppppratlon for people wit". v finest Sta h ‘Mixture that mJney unmiay 85c per bottle. Int: rwo MACS Dlslress itaratlrthens and beautifles the 1S disposed to face up to him. ' ‘Yék- 151*??? avi-guzravglgluglfgifig grgezl with the government of .1 The German sodiers of e _ . . German)‘. .- m, Great War had {his same i Rearing false “hlshers ‘o’??? '" a _- conclusion that that weakness l5 l; age “mos-L pow“ arm's o! me ‘<1: l l - ' v > v t ~ * s ~ - ;’.l_‘2fi°j._"=.i.a§‘ --n:m comma- u- vzeldinz t. a- 2Q'IQIZ.Q1WI49Lf.£!I!I.ZI£IIII; ' l up. When Germany's enemvxm due course, provides himself win nmbers of free and freedom-pv- ing men, and the K113181181‘ iieces- z sary to place him cn anything like -5 an even footing with the German, the pmture will be vastly changed. The outlook for Gennany wfl in- deed be blacker than it has ever been 1n allbthe trgulent, stvag; gering, trou le-mak g hlim" ° The civilian population have a ‘he Tam“ most important dutv to perform nu: contrast-weaves: l“ A survey of the foregolng leads us to only one conclusion, and that is that this war 1s as different from any previous war u night 1s from day. Armed conflict plays a subordinate role. The real arm of aggression on the Nazi side is the nropaganda division of the "Flfm Column." is Our own services have been or- in ganized and are being operated 1n anticipation of a war that would follow a course along orthodox lines. The King's ships oppose the Nazi navy-What there 1s of 1t. The Royal Air Force successfully combats the Nazi airmen. The armies of the Empire are our wea- pon against the Nazl goose-step- pers. But. what of our weapon to ccm- bat this other new and most. start- ling effective Nazi arm-the "Fifth Column?" One must acknowledge t‘, frankly that this, which undoubt- edly is the “secret. weapon" where- of the Nazis have boasted. has found us totaily unprepared; and. clue to the nature of its operations e] as alread outlined 1n the early portion o this article, 1t has made tremendous headway. It has won for the Nazis victories which their armed forces dfd not have to ex- ert themselves to explolt. News from overseas clearly indicates that. it. is stlll winning them. With that. 1n mlnd, our own job slmplffles Itself. We have simply got. to view this thlng as another arm of warfare; and we have to organize an efflclent weapon of our own to ccsnbat 1t. No man can 1n justice be crltlcal of the Government or governmental au- thorities for hav1ng failed to grasp the enormous importance of 1t. be- fore now. It. Ls a waste of mental and physical energy to embark on a c1v1l war between the past and the present. The business of Can- ada 1s to concentrate on the situa- tion as 1t. presents ltself now 1n order to ensure the victory of the future. That being so, the suggestlon Ls advanced. 1n a splrlt. of good-will, that the organization of the ef- ficient weapon to counter the "Fifth Column" be placed on exact- ly the same footing u our Navy, Army and Air Force. It 1s thoroughly appxeclated that an excellent cutting edge of that weapon Ls the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. The Mounted m m SC Ls m SO Job. But a1- Lhough the Mounted can lntem can't Intern Propaganda has 0o be met with We must remember I110 and, wit-hour. South of that republlcithere are And nslblll 1f. Ll to 01m no 1n; at. all. YOUR. SURE SHIELD For the Canadhn cftlaen the we, whose no 1s a deftnhe duty. Your surest shield against. 1t 1s your own, sound Don't. attempt. to lee 1n the grandlloquent claims of the Nazis any more than that commonsense tells you Ls true. Don't. magnify them. Hitler and hls runn1ng- tnatea do that sort of nun; much better than you can. ‘Ilhey oper- ate a tremendously expensive or- tlme one of the lean, grim lhfps of, the Brftuh or Canadfan fleet. slfps‘ past her. But. with elf of her hum- ble appearance, she commands the every memhant shlp, be 1t. proud lfner or rusty trump. She l: the ex- nmfnatlon vessel of the Royal Oun- d to dfsobty her to stop would bring a hall presfon and giving voice to ap- prehenslon, repeating rumours and "m gossip. Nazi propaganda when he sees it" person who makes no such claims. but who _ come infected bv it. DON'T LET YOUR. “EN DOWN theft" couraze as high as tha: of the fighting troops. the few we were 1n our fighting thelr end of things. certainly be said that they didn't let their home folks down. and demorallze Knowlnz that. and that the job of our sallors. our soldlers and our airmen needs all their cunoentrntlon on the task at hand. the very least. they have a rlzht to expect from you 1s that. 1n your turn, you don't let ycur fighting men down. which lets itself be panicked by t e bluster and the bragflng and te bogey-man threats of cowardly the Nazi don't t0 rein“. i‘—a"d you w &—-—i———— NEWEST LINE ADDS less than two hours, One stcn is Detroit with Ciiltzo f- round trips are mn"e daili- the new route. and Ottawa directlv with W1 The new llne brings the total rcute mlleatze of the The derlslve person who “knows not so well armoured as the is resolverd not to be- thls war, and that 1s to keep had in not but We in Canada have uch experience of wars; en made a very excelient job of And it can We are now ln another war. I: one 1n which the enemy 1s leav- z nothing undone to debauch the home folk. remembering You don't bebne to the breed these utonlc tin-men. scarecrow: ard lions. b_v the h_vster:cal reeehes of beer-hall Natioleons. ; You have trot lots of stuff tltntl have. The main ement cf that 1s Liberty. Fight VIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIII 195 M" .5 TO T.(‘.A. The new Trans-Camera A‘? Lines , line bet-ween Toronto and Windsor, 195 miles 1on2 and 1s flown 1n ade, at Urrtrlcn. 89 m‘lrs frcml Toronto and 106 nrlss f"cm \V.nd-‘ r. Connectlcns are off-shied at . Tu'n' over ' linking M" trerl OT. ‘____. Perfumes QSc-SOc and $1.00 l A Naturalisfs Calendar FOR Prince Edward Island A carefully prepared series of notes of hfeteorological and Botanical observations made in the period 1910-1937; and includ- lng a short list of common insects.- By BLYTI-IE HURST (“Agrlcola") Brackley Beach On Sale at THE SCHOOL SUPPLY CARTER AND C0. MARITIME STATIONERS WOOLWORTHS TRAVEL BUREAU GUARDIAN PUB. CO. Price 10 cents per copy VIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIII You Too Can Serve By Saving! ff Buy War Savings Certificates and help win the War. HYNOMAN 8t CO. LIMITED The oldest insurance Agency in Prince Edward Island Offices: Charlottetown, Summerside, Montague. Creams, Skin Lotion! " Rouge; and Lipsticks l 50d- Face Powder 25c and 50c‘ Talc 25c i -_ Bath Powder 15¢, l Q1 I 7t» a aw sats/ @ E. A. FOSTER ' Central Drug Store Mytkvlr "that ‘I BUY WAR SAVING‘ STAMPS k, E. T. macs o c0. LTD. . s, r? of "fiiwb- Make Ends Meet! Buy “ llickefs Twist” 10c Per Fig Straight Everywhere 1n P. E. Island OONT CHASE AROUND IN CIRCLES SOME T0 B A C C O LOVERS SKIP AROUND FROM ONE BRAND T0 ANOTHER BUT CUSTOMERS ARE PERFECTLY SAT- ISFIED T0 G0 ON USING THE OLD RELIABLE HICKEYS B L A C K TWIST CHEWING MANUFACTURED BY \. \ IIICKEY & NICHOLSON Tobacco Co. Ltd., Cliarlottotown \ t t t t t t t t t t l t A t l t t t l A