Invest in today . . ,~ Enjoy SECURITY tomorrow ! e When you buy s. Victory Bond you do two things st oncel country and her allies. l l l 2. You buy a share in the glorious i future of Canada. l I There is no more urgent need today than for fighting money to back up our fighting men. There is no safer investment today than Dominion of Canada Victory Bonds. Back of these crisp certificates are all the resources - ‘ of the Dominion. They yield a fair l rate of interest. you can borrow , against them; and they are readily, saleable when you need the cash. Do without today-and share in the rewards of victory tomorrow! i Y NOTHING MATTERS NOW BUT . IIUIURY _ l Buy the New VICTORY BONDS ProWse Br0s., Ltd. i Fwomen of the Maritimes l No, Sir}: < ' “Those . D. Airwomen‘ Isn't profanity, ' Far from it. ' It's at once s title, : And s blessing. For G. D. means, GENERAL DUTIES AIRWOMEN. And they're topsl What do they do? What don't they do, rather. See that neat little trick, Trim in her airforce blue, . Timing the Harvards u ' In and out of the hangars, i SHE'S A G. D. And that Wench with s wrench, ,' . The aircraft helper, i SHIPS A G. D. And the comely lass who keeps The Station as clean a home, (The walls, floors, desks ‘Are so polished ‘Airmen have forsworn mirrors, F i For tho durationz) I SHE'S A G. D. ‘And those sprightly, ; Quick-footed: runners, Those nonchalant M. T. Dispatchers, ' Those smiling counter girls, , In the dry Canteen, , ,5 Those deft-fingered dynamic " f Spark-plug testers, . Those smart clerks { In the log-control room, ' ' iAt Maintenance, V 'And in the Link Trainer Sectionrj Theyfe all G.D.’s‘l , What would the Air Force do, i TVithout the G.D.'s'l_ ‘ Bless them. ' Many more are needed. Every Airwoman, Releases an Airman, l For Aircrew duties. Enlist nowi Write the R.C.A.F. Recruiting Centre, Moncton, l. You help to speed Victory for our- Finc Record 0f lllaritimcrs up, Relieved Prices Needed THE CHAR GUARDIAN 50,,’ mapped Why Control of ‘W g g a u a ‘_ ‘Tfihnun Pelnlul Roughness Prevented When the slum“! hill"! what the Royal 9mm! nas done in this war is flnali written, many 01 the milllvfl-‘i M 0e devoted to thee et lllefl. Ilmd In m nhhll! we gn A1;- For“ and nightly-the crooked surfseee easily infected by dsngorous germs. Gel relief the quick, sure way with Lypsyll e 0f the ndmir- Its wonderful emollient action instantly “n; young men who left Maritime soothes the wounded membranes end iiomes to do their duty 111 ill IBI- seals them against germs end impurities- lt softens the painful. crooked snrieees, keeps them pliable, hastens natural hesi- ing. The first application gives wonderful vice. In the cross-section of the 3.0. Ar‘. which was shown to the visit- 111g (janadinn newspa rmen in the recent tour. I ioun many boys (rom New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia. whether they were in groups or with all-Canadian squad- runs. I found them praise-worthy; every one, from the LAC Squadron Leader held the Canada. Because of the nstgay gowhbui: war, the Army could picparatlons—apart trim the Di- eppe veterans. But when we visit- ed the Air Force we met men who had Ieit their scars on Hitler's vast war machine. Like our Army lads, Canadians in the Air Force are well-trained and physlcull fit. They have con- fidence in emselves and their ability to do their Job, a faith built up by successful o rations. Thcyde not in t; e least urinlnd- l ul o’: ‘hi; dyarhgoelga sixth? mafia syiililskgdféggliirlly owhat the 1W- cen t": an s I too - y planes have ‘failed to re- m“ 01 m” farmer's o‘ this m0- ii 23°" '3tt"i’§d°3§iféi“c?§ roruwmue View 1m"- ém ""- en». "Jen wien the odds are Chilmhln?‘ “PM” w “mm” m’ ugi ihem. They live up to the more Q! ""3, “W15 °f WM- l" M “llilliluoirdeiiltzli iiheiidi'A'p' Eamircd ‘diprlum iguowsgood m” t l - z: w sav- Q1110 I m; . 1l:[‘l_1 c "Yes, Mr. Churchill. you can Ai .1: first fl htdn squadron we count on the farmers of Prince Esilcu, 1 found gciue IOU leader K. Edward Island to buck up the B. licdson, Ds housle University Tnim victory 1cm to s Ereater graduate 0f '37 in char’; wouldn't talk about. himsel ; more interested in what was on a; home. But the "Old Man," I found out from PO. G. B. Murray of Halifax, was the pride 01' the squadron with aircrew and ground men alike. "Everything5 got be one but, we like hm for that." DUE FOB. PROMOTION Murray, incidentally. is the our- ren "llOi shot" of the squadron. The guns of his Spitfire have a half destroyed (shared with another pilot), two probables and damages to their credit in the three weeks proceeding our visit. s due for promotion. To get a ‘destroyed’ the enemy glam: must be seen to crash or real: up—and that's seldom mllw up and over d’ and even a iacto. “But we don't worry much about ‘he credit. we get." Murray wld me. "When we get cur sights on Jerry ind let him have it, we know what .ie got and that gives us all the satisfaction we want." only a. llill; it's one Nazi less." At the bomber the same kcenness. the same mod- .he air the bomber crews fly ~ ifi varies according \ orders and the pilot obeys. ‘pert. Chase, Fredericton 1111GT, explained that to me. The feeling of equality in the air reeds a comradshlp which .0lIlf3S all nationalities. Maritim- ‘rs hang together on m5, British, Czech well. And like the Army lads, they're of the boys have gone on leave wth R. A. F. friends Scme of them have fallen in love and married British girls to start JOHTES of their own. At a night fighter and Army Co-operation PO A1 Dunn of Lyon's Brook told me of his recent bride, a Portsmouth girl who had gone through the worst bings southern Eingland and had once been trapped for hours in n. blast- ed builduig. The fozmer ‘Henton, N. 5.. school teacher said he had been lucky en- ough to have an old classmate, Trooper Andy Gui-in of Plctou, act. as bcst man and that. the latter had been very impressed with his bride. "MARITIMES FOR US" m answer to my question about what he would do after the war, he told me; "I'm coming back to Today. Which Shall It Be. . The oostotvlcwryisblood. ...bem1...endtnensuml But the ocetof deIestiIIVIIRH-IING ...frcun!.'VmYONEl Shall it be 110th?! or defeat! Every Canadian must give his newer- in igrlnl d putting every dollar be can possibly more tnw the new Victory Bonds. The money you invest in Vic- wry Bonds will come beck to you with interest. But defeat would cost you everything you own . . . your savings, your home, perhaps Nin- very life. , ‘ I Nothing Mnflen Now BIO Victory . sweat rIUY THE NEW V|0TORY or DEFEAT? K Vl0TORY B0ll0S The Rogers Hardware 0o. Ltd. G000 LIGHT EEPS EYES FIT FOR WAFi WORK 7am EDISON Nlllllll LAMPS MAD! IN CANADA iiliiW-ili “Htilifil till W" Vi) to the esteem oi his fellows from other parts oi i5 all 5tatlons there is for us. noes: if o Jerry night-fighter is for a their tall, the fear gunner gives icsuit. tIO British tn homes where they are made welcome patient. Thflugll the and enjoy that indefinable pleas- abmit it, they know w n; n51 “m1. iitness of household atmosphere flce is. They are doing everything ' r-‘liich they have had to leave be- they can; they only ask that g hind. - our share in Canada to the utmost. " OUT OUR WAY relief-lips quickly regain Mnnnl smooth- ness. Get Lypeyl sf your etore todey. Use it regularly to soothe and protect your RAJ. lipmioldeverywhsreinbsndystichform. LYPSYL IIIIII Ill Q lnslllble While MI Ill Ill WOIOI Farmers Give. Assurance To Mr. Churchill m, yJ. drainer, pxmldent of the "r .,........"'i'...°°"'.‘§.’" w. Barbour ll ' laws: "In W14. basing m0 0°“ 0! living st I00 per com. lhW that there was 11f! l" "Wei" for the first two yea-rs. Haweva‘. by 1917, tihedizgdexJhnd ma? to 1111B. . w“ a“ y dmble whit u per cub-chest was at the outbreak oi war." m. Bsrboir wmt on to exillnin. "Phi; increase was not caused so much by the shortage of suppllefi 8.s by the manufacturers, whole- ACTWUWIB- salers and retailers continuing to increase their prices. WIGQs nev- er caught up with the wl-Wvard Vince as a gmvup was toward i310 trend of prices. with the c than °- H9 extent than we have ever backed W" up such a campaign before. You 8°11‘! say you need more ships, and guins and tanks to finish the Job. Well, proportionately the farmers of P. El. will vlnco in the not lag behind any Pro- Domini OIL u, d "We will pail-chase more We.’ right aha he‘; tough when it isn't Bonds to owe you uhe W15 of wer- Already hundreds oifourboysare orvcr there. and we mean to bark them up with Nothing matte everything we have. r5 now but victory. "Some of our more DTOSBEIVJB farmers will i nvest largely in the new War Bonds. Others can only invest; smaller amounts, but they will illVEBi. You can inks it from me we are al will back you do iairs. l Canadians, and as such, if we can't go to the front we up with fighting “When I think of the farmers of fiancc, D05 sible in these days of fighting five DemW-Tk» NOIWQY. Hvllflfld» Bel- Germnn held 8111111. territory; n ‘probable’ culls for al- Oolfllirifls that have hen Overrun most, as much proof s5 a ‘destroy- by filters hordes. I ask myself ‘damaged’ comes what are we bickering about? If nly after rigid exznnlnation of the you nzed 1g m guarantee victory, take it, and use it. and all the other “Yes, ND‘. Church l'l, you can count on the farmers o1 Prince 13d- ward Island. settle somewhere in the Maritlmes "Even when the official credit is and I'm taking her with me. I've ‘damaged’ we know the old her all about it and she'll be liances are two to one at least happy there. The res; of Canada ‘right but. it's the Marltimes With the same squadron were usty and nlwnvs the same interest F, sgc, Bill in what is going on at home. In who flew a I-Iu We did find. ate. Howe, Campbellton, rricane as did Dunn, as and F‘. Sgt. Ted Ingram, si. equnis-wrmmand pf the big air- an air gunner. Ingram John, had been to circum- grounded for a rest and was hoping trip home for a while as a P0 Through the Air Force we found Bil‘ aspect for those who had tailed to return but no sadness-to .lie job is their idea of a happy en- over- ding, die on however, a deter- , the gwund minution to seek revenge for lost Jllflllg geographical joshing; but cmrades, for the damage inflicted hey mix Well with omer ccnqldi- On British cities and civilians and ' 0r Ausirailm a will to win. While local news in- dmgbflil fliefs- '1'11BY are P0130011‘ ierested them, all wanted to know with all because they do their duty what Canada. was winning the war; home progressed popular with civilians too. Many st doing towards how far we at to the "all-out" The boys over there who go out face death a; e inclined to be im- do not talk we do the hardships of the greatly increased and s. post-war depression later hit the country." In comparison with the claiming conditions o! the last war. when mere was no control on prices, there is the picture o! the present war. wherein prices and wages are m . centroid . the cost oi.’ living at 100 per cent in 1909," Mr. Barbour said, “tihe hidex. after three year; of was‘ is only 116 per cent. When the spiral of inflation thneatenrd to begin, the Wartime Prices and ‘Prado Board instituted If WBTB its price ceiling policy, and the dangerous t 1m; 1111111341. ately curbid." TIMELY NOTES ON TOPICS CONNECTED WITH Silver Fox Farming aw W New llll: Hitler and Hirolliio Great: Plans For Canada Yes, all Canada's great resources her forests, her factories . . . could be less bully-boys from Germany, And Canada's boundless room . . . for the Germans and the Japs. But what of the Canadians’! think what happened and is still happening to the Poles, the Greeks, the Yugo-Slavs-and all the others . labor, mass executions. Every time a hard-working Canadian man or woman buys a Victory Bond, the plans of Hitler and Hirohito receives a setback. The more you save and lend . . . the more certain you help make it that our enemies shall never put their greedy claws on Canada. NGRDRE 8» PFLEODME! ‘. i i mi,’- ocroasn ‘;.~&Q\_ NOTHING MATTIRI NQW s u r Vl C TO R Y! tun nouns ‘a have . her minerals, her wheat fields, put to wonderful use by the ruth- by the polite little savages from Japan. acres would provide plenty of living The answer is simple when you . . in terms of slow starvation, slave $1 (Continued) Elmer Olen, A\.. .. .,..:s..re. has a nice bunch o! pups this your in. eluding some very beautiful patch- es, or what iic-uici ce pl‘(J',.\'...y signnted as cross foxes some of uhern are of the Alaskan strain and others are pure Isiand breeding. Mi". Glow every yeu- bre-ccs and raises scme very nice pelts and this year will be no exception. Arthur Smith Nortih Wiltstilre, has specialized in silvers and has some very bright beautiful speci- msns in lzls raw‘? f"; w“ * ~~ uho have called to see much, and so dces Arlh Lampoon, Fraser s; Huth, 131e,, New York, will hold a sale of =llver fox and ranthed mink pelts Dec. cmbsr 16th, also on January 18th, 1043, and March 1st, 19'". This "m ‘s corvtmlled by the Hudson's Bay Company, London, Emglnnd. ‘Time weeks tmm next Mutiny ""1 be receiving day for foxes to '“ ‘Pr! u‘ "l" Pwcvlnclnl live 11px Show, Oharlottetoiwn, P EI. we nq will commence on Tues- dav morning, November 100g n1; ‘l a like very ur. nine o'clock, m- rmsihlx’ n w» later now that we are under a different time schedule Intending exhibitors are reminded of the dates and the tact. that the Prise list is in pre- paration and will be issued very shortly. The Fox shew has ai- uays been a means of keeping up interest in our industry even in our Limes of greaiest stress so we nm=t ndeavor to do our best to ketp it gilingthis year when things are not as b/rigiht as they might be. ‘Hie October number of The Fur Trade Journal of Canada is v-sry attractively golden up frcm czver .0 cover. It has a ClfCillllriOll oi over 9,000 copies Ontario l< icps with 2.312, Alberta crmcs next Wllh 1,318, United Staics 1,126, Salt. atohewan 1,1714, Prince Ed\v""d Island 1'75. Robert G. Hodgscn .he editor ls a prolific writer on all subjfcts connected with fox faun- ing and hi5 Journal has be n "he means of helping the fur iarillers 0d Canada to grentu‘ picspelxiy xhrcugh the years. The following is an extract from an editorial in the October issue: "The position of the fur trade has shown improvement through the month just past and furs have been actually selling in considerable quantities which is something new in the present arket. And as will be seen by look g in the ncccunt of safes elsewhere in itris issue prices have also shown unprove- merit . . . This season what with ice controls and war scares we ave experienced a period of cle- presscd markets Who would dare prophesy that the marketwould duplicate its action o! a year ago in ggistenng a quick change and By J. R. WILLIAMS M1118 Us moo a prosperous Such things have happened before, certainly the fur market is capable oi’ overnight changes because it is sensitive to world remarkable degree. A W€aI Dally that the German government has Purchased 39,000 silver iox_pe_lts, vicinity of 100,000 season? being one-hall o: the Norwemm crop of pelts for 1942. This mm" how gmatly curtailed the produgg, ion o! foxes in Nod-way has b,“ since the German Qccllptltlilll, Prior to the War Norway had reach‘ ed a maximum ucuon of lumen 400,000 pelts. is has been great. 3711mm writes 1y induced until last season u; production was stated to be in H] "conditions to a correspondent oi Women’; frown OUR BOARDING HOUSE S TRANGER IN SHADY GULCH Romance Rides The Range In This Whirlwind Serial Story Of The West The guns of Duke Hassefs rustlers told Bill Radkin to get out and stay out of town if he wanted to stay above ground. But the eyes of Arlene Waller bade him not to go-and he obey- ed them. He was soon to find he had taken too lightly the dangers he chanced and too seriously the hope of Arlene’s love . . . You’ll find Bill’s story-in the new serial by Denver BardwelL-packs a kick like a mustang. Fol- low it, beginning ' TODAY _;n_ The Charlottetown Guardian i J WITH MAJOR l-IOOPLli i.‘ uo-ouu/ JIST my . V THE Qilwe“ W‘ 60”“ PmVEm You REQEQEER 1§%Pii%e-\r' you AGAIN AT we . ANDIDOtJTW HER THAT use l<lDS I M“ F l , » , UQTER '-. “RECALL WHEN , TABLE WM 80L! STARTlNG ANY- ‘IQ-jg EEQ; j {QNmTED qou wage Lhgr g. BE ‘PT/kt J Me FLUG, { ME oven Hes-as ? 1 was Towel-ll‘. 60/93, ’ wuo PLAYED FORDlNING INTERRUFTED wéTi-ipTl-EWKT FULLBAQI, QQOM Wl-“LE RELPTlNé Rl L “q FOR 0L0 SCRlMMAGEl HON‘! eroepso _ ‘THREQATEK gngngp, L3,, 3M THORPEOR w READV HERE'S ‘IOUR SlSTER pear .' cusp i” A FUhAEJsE FALL ON '2 NAG lT WlLLlE BERN nesToic? -~HMl ' L MlDéET =1 ;R\\\\\ _ \\\\\\\\\\ g Q \ \\\\ \ RV George McMnnlll PH. 1W5 h?" “Tlmhowm pour Know WHEN n, |'Ll. EHOME a W} .. Ill "s a .°§ h