PAGE FOUR TllE C llllli LETETETO Wit G UARB IAN Aloriiing Daily il-‘uundcd in 18871 ,_ H .. . . » ~-.-- Pl'l‘*l1!t'l\li Lit-ill. ('0l. \\. (‘hcster S. DIOLIIIQ \ ii-c Fresiili-ut: J, It. Burnett, FJJ. ‘drcrcutijv; l.l\'|ll (‘oL It .\. Jhcliinnnn, 0.5.0. Cillfm unit _\|.in g llu.. Assiw-nti- l-Iililnrs: frank \\' >____ alkt-r and lan A. Burnett $l‘BSCI{ll"l'l0N RATES By .\l:,iI in P.lc.l., $1.00 per yciir: S1725 for ll nmnllh; 50c for one month City Di-livt-rj 57min pt-r ,\i-'.|r; $3.00 for 6 month: $1.1.‘- for 3 mouths B)‘ .\l;iil iii (Ziiutitu nntl LISA. $5.00 p0!‘ year Satuidoi “rt-kn: 531m |)(‘l‘ ye. r; $1.00 for 6 months, i Jllc tor 3 months »i_-— ~~~~ -— Ttn- \|l.|l‘ll)|l|‘|1\\\Il i. . him m.i,v he obtolneil ut lllllilllllfil\ .\i-u~ \Ll'\ll Itll'\ Square, New York; Ulll hmult _\r\\ \ iuvr .\|ll|\ itnil “Klslllllflltlll unsun- Au-‘Iu .\. Amherst. . The slTilllj/ZifilflfTITJ/‘l/ is- Weaker than the ll calm-st Iii/r." i_-l-\i'Ell.\'ESl).\Y, SEPT. 17. 1941. Overseas‘ Mail iiic yvzirnings issued on _ Ctiiutlzi iire still sending iurccs which have been for- .li.i‘>I<-_ flue Lizuiudian recent- thc ‘ things hidden or t l l, 3,13,, ._ n lw-pic: oi cut ilowcrs to 1i major ciYQlZ-‘clh, inn 2'» l»i-\ \\;t~ l-iulu-ii when it reach- ed Ouziiii 1 iiic ffuucrs wcrc riiincd. .~\n- 0,1,“- lm; - i ‘In in it. Still another plllTQl \\";i- . . i. u trout. l'runi January I t0 ivpqus, 3p _,_.,,_- 5.-,-,~,~,il.~ nrr wd at the base ~--siill four thousand miles pun tiffici: in k from thin" d!‘ i-nwioi; badly damaged t0 be shipped on. _§.,i\l\' of thcse parcels were sal- vaged by pus-nil n fi Bus, reparceled and deliv- t f 'ci l “mpg lwytitlfl repnir and the ercd: tlu: ml F3 fziinilii-s or s s iiml t-i be nntiticd. _ 3pm ill-it ltliilutlll still is the incorrect- or letter. In June, I941. "lore rllgiu lxg/(ttl lcttcrs arrived at the base post Office h, 1m. §,;l~.".l-rccily' addressed. Flvfi POStHl corps ‘ workcil full time tracing down [he QHllLTl rccipicuts. The niorzil, of course, is thzit more care ‘should be 9x0“: n, \\",..»n out: CflHSltlCfS the impor- tuicc our s forccs attrich to ncws and gifts from lwnic it is incxcii~=zililc thzit they should be dC,,,-;\~,.,1 m‘ up’; lvlvftsilft! “through czirclcss- “e55 on qllc part 0t the scndcis. H Incidentally, the postal fllillwllllei fC"‘t!l\' reminding Cnnarlinns that they should bf thinli-ijpr -,'~ on i‘i~<n Christmas PZlITClS for the’. ‘ <t~l< 'l“i‘.c- Yllllllllc of nizul is cxpcclfil 1y addfQ§§Ctl ,.I'c‘<'l ,_ are al- bovs Ovc!‘ toibe lll~ile than twice zis great as lust year be- came of the inciwii- d nuinhci- of troops 1Y1 ll"? 1.11m“, p~,,,,_,,im,,,_ X,,,,,.,,,l,€r i0 is the ilcatlhuc ii mic \\':\.n‘_< to h“ surc tlilit lllfi PHYCQlS 3Y9 g0" ing to zirrivc in lltlle- Defense Costs 5nd,, ca,“ g‘. Q- llllilll lii< pcnpic l0 forlt ovcr i5 lulliuzi i. in thcir ncxt ta_.\' lJIllS- Rethlcvd to a W,- Ulplyn hasis (population 130." 000.000) it is e-pixil to a lax of M00 0Y1 "QTY m,“ “wHlPH 'l‘ltl il1f"llf in the countrv. And ttlltf _\<‘ill'\' lIlXCS, XCXl there ,. ll" J4 this is ilbi _ will be do lllPI‘ and liiggci" l)!ll. _ gonu-nnc wlc-s, "lliuv ilucs this compare with Czinarlrtls P" (luinrliruis arc hit a little harder that‘! their Mnul-ionil cousins, hut not much. Canadian tnxpzivvrs ninst dig up 1.4 billion dollars from ‘ml! lllt‘t>lIl*.‘.< which on a conlllillinlwe P“ their cans for capita ltfl>lS ipiipiilzuiun 12,000,000) $117 from gverytiiie in the country. And, of course, neither Canada norlthe U. art- opcr:i"ii:;_[ on at ]i1i_\'-Il<'_\'°ll‘.‘~"_" lmllcY- Thclr (lcfgcih “jll lio pro;un-iiiviiritcly big -—I1O 0116 l5 sure jun lli>\\,' hit; they will bc—fo_r, sti-atige a5 it mziv §<'(‘tl], govt-rniuciits do find it ditfiCull f0 J/tcnrl billions. Tug l-Xplqiintioii, _ vs the Monetary Tintefi. l! that tlu- ll‘il'l\il'llll fziciulit-s of the countries are a; vol [lll'\liit‘ ltl turn out the \\':u" goods purchas- nblc bv lllcse’ zistrivnoinical stuns. To illuslfaltf the point considcr these sl-"ltiSlifi 0n the financial state of the _.\nic in dcfcusc zind Lease-Lend P,.,,g,-;,,,,_.<,_ lhc [nlfll .'iltl'i!'<)]ll'li'lllfr!lS and recom- mcudatioiis lIHlZlV amount to the stupendous sum of 5g billion il~illzirs~n figure several billions higher than the totzil nct dcbt of the United lut whereas the ap- Smtgg two yczirs ago._ ‘ _ proprizitious in-roiinil figurcs in the Amfrlfilfl fism] Ivcvu- July 1_ Iiyin, to Juno 30, I041, W0"? 3% billion d-illrirs thi- contrwcts nwardcd amount- ed to a much snizillzu" sum, 23 billion (lollars and 11w actual cash ('Xl)(‘ll!lt‘(l amounted to only 7 billion dollars. lt has liven estimated that a‘ Pm‘ "n, rate n; _.,,,.,,,15,.; four years will elapse be- fore thc <3 billion ilollirs will ll¢ llmd "m- m“ .5 prmlluf,i,,,, i5 ‘\_\’I):l‘l(lir|g rallidly, the plrogratn may bc Coniplctcd in a much shorter pcriod, wCilieese Price |fl€r90$e The ]),,m;,,1(,n (iil\‘(‘l‘ll!‘tlt'lll'. ziccording to Agriculturc hliuistci- (lzirdiiicr, will try to obtain . h1g1," prior- fni‘ cht-t-sc oxportcrl to Great Bri- tain undci" llic ncxt cuiilY-‘icl- The pypgzvlll Sllllilllflll is not rcgarrlcd as sat- isfactory lt is thus sunnucil up liy the Ottawa Journal: _ Eastern tinii-viiii-ii, who arc living culled upon to pyfl/hlfg |)|ui'i‘ mill; so thnt cheese and canncd milk nmv hc \'lll]lllt'tl in llritaiti in cwr-groiving (“mm ,._,_ _-,-.-,- tiulJIV working llllll(‘l' ili-iadvan- (flqtgs, The clirc-c prmliirt-r, for instance, sclls his pfmlm»; m ,1 fixml prici- in ll umrket restricted to m“. hHyLq- ,1“. l),'lil'l Products lhmrd for the llritisli lluiiktiv, llv rzziuint svll in the lucrative liiuilc ll!".!'ltll H4Il' l‘\ll‘\l‘l to tlic l'nit<'d States. “ll "T In‘ ~ urt- fivt- m‘ <ix cciits {Ilmvc the vcrv l1 _ in.’uil"'l. ' _ I work.- to the disadvantage of [on l'l'|\\' lllis u“; clim-st- produi-ci" mnv be realized by com- pirison with thu li u; tum-hot. When hog priccs zit (liicmgo row and (Eiindinu 11ml 5""'"‘(l '9 cross 1pc burnt»; in quantity the Canadian Gov- ldairy filflllfl‘ producing for .._. n, (.'Hl.'l4l'l wi:li {Ill biillllsbfi and |ll'f‘lllllllll$, ernment added large bonuses to the British price rather than put a total embargo on exports. If identical action haul been applied to ciiccse, the. chccsc fzicttirics would be getting scvcrul cents a pound more for his product today. The Wisconsin price is now better than 25 cents. while the best Can- adians can get is 20 cents and that only for tlic un- J. R. Burnett. F.J.l.t fcw highest grade cheese. The tiveragc is undcz" I9 cents. l Further, pork producers are not being de- 5250 “n, 6 monunlprivcd of their domestic market. lgnod authority in the trade the home demand for According to cheese zit prcsent is such that prices will ad- vnncc immediately the ban on donicsiic sales is lifted. _ Cheese producers want .1 fixcd price but they also irnnt one more in line with rising costs of production than that provided by the prcscnt zigrcciuciit and existing boniiscs. — EDITORIAL NOTES - A Soviet freighter of 6.000 tons which is be- licvcd to be the first to fly the U.S.S.R. flag in Austrlaian waters, has arrived at an tralian port to load a cargo. 4- : a u Prime Minister King's visit to Scotland was not unofficial after all. llc accompanied by the London High Commissioner journey-ed to pay his respects to the King who was grouse shooting on his Highland estate. The Queen and the two princesses were also there enjoying a welcome relief from bomb scarred London. ‘I I 8 I _ \Ve used to be told the reason why the vicin- ity of Charlottetown suffered so much from drought, when other areas had refreshing show- ers, was because the woodland had bccn dcplctctl. lhat theory must now go by the bnglnl Since 11m Clerk of the “lcatltcr has removed the plug from the skies. n- o a The honor of being the most bombed man in England belongs to H. A. Yapp, of the 5r, Heller brunch of the British Legion. He has been bombed out of his home five times. After the fifth occasion he took an apartment. That was bombed too. He decided to go and live at." Ifilfilllllgllilfll and on the way the train was bomb- c . ‘i!!! .\Valter Savage Landor, ‘prose-writer and poet, died this date, 1864. Friend of Southey and Browning, after much travelling scttlctl in Flor- cnce. His works are distinguished bv purity of styIeKand delicacy of diction. Best known works . - . . are Imaginary Conversations,” “Pericles and Aspasia," “Hellenics," Poems," and “Gebir." “Every sect is a moral check on its neighbour. Competition is as wholesome in rcligion as in commerce." ##1## Russia is a land of surprises: First, its zirniv which everyone, including military critics, were confident would go (ldwn like chaff bcfore the Nazi on-rush, is still kccping ihc cut-my zit buy; second, its air force, which lsindclicrgh chur- actcrised as being so much below par as to be negltble is taking its part in bombing llcrlin, Black Sea and Danube points, while its Navv, which most people considcrctl out of it, is suf- ficient to lcccp japzui ivory of butting in. U 1‘ i i! Principal Fyfe, late of Kingston, now of Aberdeen, knows his onions, or is it hi5 wormg? Atldressing the University‘ graduating class he atlinonisheil thcni: “When riilcs arc nizidc to sc- ciire for all an equal share of food, it niny bc, or of clothing or of petrol, you must set an ex- ample which puts to shame those stupid and treacherous persons —thc u-orms at the root of (lemocrcay ——who endeavour to profitccr by getting more than a fair shore for tllcnisclvcs "" o v a: n: Sir Norman Birlcett, (listinguished British jurist, told the Canadian Bzir Association that this is the time for the lcgzil iarofcssion to re- affirm tlic ancient British rlnctritic that all nit-u are equal before the law. "lt is a tcrrihlc thing to contemplate that men and women, ordinary citizens of a state, can be taken secretly into cou- centration camps upon the bare word of some secret agent and left without trizil or charge or investigation, in many cases to linger and to die. It is a terrible reflection upon any svstcni of s0- called law that a member of the bar dare not dc- fend a person the government has (lctcrniined to destroy.” it; n: n- x Is anything being done to prcvcnt the mis- spending of separation and other allowances be- ing paid to wives, children and other (lcpenzlcuts of our gallant soldiers? During the last War we had the patriotic Fund Coin in i t t c e, of which the late Jiulgc Fitzgerald \\':1s chair- man and ivhich met in on t h 1 y to su- pervise thc payment of cheques. That coni- mitce instituted savings bank accounts for the recipients and saw that a certnin percentage of the monthly allowance ivas Llcpositcrl against the day when the soldier rcturncil. llunrlrcd of men returned to find nice nest eggs lying at their credit and these gave the boys’ a good start off in civil life. Had these accounts not been opened, the total monthly allowances would in all pro- bability have been expended on non-essentials with nothing left to show for thcni. r a m The leather Sam llrownc bclt, traditional in- signia of British officers ivliicli was zlroppcrl from tlic Canadian army uniform at the outbreak of war, is coming back. Routine ordcrs signed by Victor Sifton, blaster-General of the. nrilnzuicc, said toilay the bclt will be worn with a brace over the right shoulder. Previously the shoulder brace was ivorn only when a revolver was carricd. \\'hcn army ilrcss regulations were changed at the bcgiunitig of hostilities and lmtilc dress hcczime standard cqiiipincnt of nfficcrs and ivarrnnt officers (class I) of the army, web t-quitmicnt replaced tlic Sun llrownc bclt. lt was replaced by n cloth bolt on “ivalkiiig-oiit" uniforms. lndcr the ncw regulations Ilic cloth bolt may still be worn. but \\'ll(‘Il :1 lczitlicr belt is used it will have the shoulder brat-c. 'l'h1_- wide leather belt was dcsignt-rl by blnj-Gt-n. Sam Browne, commandcr of zi cavalry force in lndiri, to provide sturdy cquipnn-in fnr In’.- offil-m-s m tIu-y could carry both rcvulrcr and sword Wlltl? on horseback. Aus- ' NOTES BY TllE WAY Th? Proprietor nf the Llver 0| cafe tells me that, one of the minor nuisances of the war pertcd ls the ceaseless thefts of soap from the wash-rooms of local cafes and restaurants. It seems impossible. he plied. The attendants have replaced 53ml) u often as four or flve times a diay. _but it has still gone on dis- Wpeflrlns: and ft ls exceedingly distasteful to accuse customers and “cause a scene". In peace-time there is no suoli. difficulty about the soap, and lie fitlributes the trouble to war-tune vi ltcrs who do not l belong to the city. - Liverpool P;st. Unlike lee cream, aluminum rivets, used in constructing alr- phuics, stny soft and in gocd driv- As sucn as tlicy are completed the rivets are ru lied to a rncm re- frigerated with "dry ice" (solid carbon dioxide). When the rivet-s are in place and warm they are hard. — New York sun. Memory ls short and most wu- mcn have forgotten that not: until 1914 did they begin to wear silk stockings generally when the slit. and hobbled skirt, ushered‘ 1n 1 new brevity for skirts. The Na- tional Geographic Society has painted out that at. the beginning of the 2011i century, only one wo- ninu in 2,000 worn silk stockings. - Bmekviile Recorder and Times. A watch carried in four wars ll in the possession of a woman 1n Wales. Ii began its career ln the pocket. of a soldier in the Crimean war: was hlt by a Boer bullet at, the turn c-f the century; was car- ried in France in 1914-18 - and suf- fered a casualty the other clay when its cryFtol was splintered in a bombing raid. A real service rec- ord! -- Buffalo Courier-Express. There is a good deal of loose talk about the necessity for tax- ing workers so that they won't. bring about inflation through too much luxury spending. In 1937 the average yearly earnings of wage- earncrs in manufacturing indus- tries ivere $9i55~ribout $18 a week. How much of that can a man with three or tour dependents spend on non essentials? - Fort. Erie Times- Review. Arrangements are being made for bonus pajvincnts to some 150,000 railway employees, one of the highest paid classes of labor, l! riot. the highest, tn the countrsn. Further, the Minister of Labor is on record as expressing the desire to have the bonus system made general. It cannot be made general because there are a great. many pea-pie who are not. being paid wages or salaries and to whcm the rlslng cost. of living constitutes an exceedingly serious problem. That problem, moreover, will become prcgrcsstvcly- more difficult as the bonus system bénins to operate. Bonuses are increased wages or salaries uucls-r anithei" name. They must incvitalaly increase produc- tion cost: and the inflation spiral gees upward with every bonus 1n- crcase. Someone tn the Depart- nic tof Labor must know that rising livinz c ts are never over- takcn by They are sent st and the cost-of-living bcnus policy seems dedgnecl to do just that. The bonus, in theory, moves auto- matically with (tiangcs ln the cost of llViIlg index but nciuzillj" it can only move higher because so long as these bonuses nrc living costs cannot c me down. ‘Ibo Government is endenvorlng to prevent inflation with one hand and with another ls making infla- tion certain. - ‘vfontreal Gazette. The program. lf it. i5 properly carried out, will have t-wo objec- tives. The first is to ensure that. the gigantic ivm" effort sslute first call on all the mater- lals it needs. The other-which has nct yet b"en proctselv defined but which 1s 45 vltal~ls f0 put 8. siop to c' ‘l s-pcndiug 0n RHY- thtng more ttnui minimum civilian needs. This is essential. We must. spend less and save more and the money we save must, one way or nnothcr, roach the Government's hands. olthci" in the form of war loan, \lt'.'ll‘ savings certificates, tax- es or czrnpul-ory savings, The pur- chaszng p wcr Cl‘I‘1\lE‘Cl by the war effort must no longer be spent as we see fit. It must be returned to its original source — ti!!! 6W9"!- nicnt. — Manitoba Frcc Press. Money chrngcrs at. harder points are huriiilg (c. 1:111‘; economic war effort. At cm .pot hi Eastern New England. there is a man established in an old American custcnns office. He assumes it sccnl-officlwl ntr and tourists leaving the United . for Canada think they have to mange their American money .into Cnnadtnu iit his agency. Can- adian customs men can look across and sec thc money changer handl- lnt; as much its $1.000 per day. ao- tcordlng to sine shrcsvd estimates. l He, gives Amrricans 12 per cent t0 I change ttic.r money into Canadian, but he .~onks thrm 1B percent when they ictnm and change their Clin- ndian cash bwek lnto American. ,Tlits Acnericrin money; ls badly needed in Canada. but 1t ls being lost right at the border. Even the lForelgn Exchange Control Board can do nothing nbont it, although scmc of the mcn wonder where the money changvi‘ gets hold of all his Canadian currency. Windsor Germany to not yet a Jericho, vttioso writs will crumble under a l/(‘Fbnl blast frcni even such cm!- lnout piacsts of democracy as Mr. Rozsevclt and Mr. Churchill. Those. statesmen know that. 'I‘helr pt-oplcs should remember it. Words- wfll not crack Gmnan morale. All ,cnnipctent observers agree that I Hitler will have to be licked before ; his ruined countrymen w!!! rise I against. h'm. Thu. will require more lthan ivortis. Action must follow. -- Detratt, Free Pre s. mg condition when kept vcry cold l being paid l sets ab- l THEWCHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN _____ PUBLIC FORUM this column lo opal for lhr alluunnlun h! correspondent: 0| qunntlnnn 0| Internal. Tho Charlottetown Gunrlllun than IIIII amount!’ ondurlo tho opinion of uornnnonoeull. l said. to keep the wash-bowls sup-I g PORTSMOUTH RELIEF FUND 5th, August, 1941. Sun-As you are probably aware the civil populatlon of the Clty of Portsmouth have suffered heavily ln enemy air attacks by the loss of their personal possessions and nousehold goods and the Lord Mayor (Sir Dents L_ Daley) has a Fund to assist those 1n rent need. He has many calls upon this and has been expending about £300 per week ln relief, i With his consent. I am appeal- ing on behalf of the Fund for . stamps of all kinds fused and un- ‘usedt, and if you would kindly co-operate by mentioning this in your newspaper tn the hope that readers would assist. by sending gifts of stamps to me at the above address, I should be most grateful. 1 am, Sir, etc J. TAY. Clerk of the Justices, Portsmouth, Eng, 5th, August, 1941. an Englishman is starting a move- ment that. may be more lnltating. and effective than the "V" cam-l palgn. The Idea is always to refer w Hitler by his real name, Adolphe Sohickelgruber! Much of the hor- rible success of the Nazis has been due to the terror inspired by the very name of Hitler. know. terror paralyzes, and" whole populations have been rendered helpless by the fearful connotations surrounding the name of Hitler. Perhaps in the beginning, substitut- lng his real name, Adolph Schlckel- gruber, might not have worked, but now that ttiie first. shock L! over and he is meetlni ma! resistance every- where, riow the time to act on the Suggestion cf always calllng this; power-besotted, hate-drunken spawn - of Evil, b the mirth provoking name. Ado ph Schlckelgruber! Adolph Schiekelgruber, you em- anatlonct all that is distorted, here- by we give you back your ma! name! May it be a festering sore on your monstrous vanity! May it loosen the bands of fear and give rise to the laughter that. brings action and courage! Adolph. Schlckelgruber, you pols- onous reptile, do not, pride yourself on the havoc you have wrought! You have been able to get so far, only because the vast majority of; people could not even imagine such depths of depravity as you and those you have infected with your venom, have shown! Your fangs shall be drawn! Time will heal the wounds, not you, Adolph schlckelgruber, have ln- fllcted, but the Powers of Darkness existing everywhere, of which you are but the mouth-Piece and instru- ment! Through you, it may well be, decent people everywhere, f9;- ages l0 COMO. will be on their guard, al- ways. against hate and nnbrldled vanity and lust for power! I am. Sir. etc. RUBAMMI S. FRANK. REPLY TO CAPT. READ Sin-Capt. Read In your issue of Septyember 5th asks the "rca! rea- son for !n_v letter of August 27. I was due to the various contradlctoxy ggckéiiirngzmtzitovenntor the loss of the wn. H The Guardian of June 20 stated: She bad run aground Tuesday imorntng tn a fog Wllll€ on rout." to ldrydock. but was reported yesterday lttrgepény _to mp0 pron igfloatccl {and ying a sa e mic orage. 1S ibelieved her bottom was injured by grinding pn the rocks when she was agroun .' Capt. Read stated that the ship struc an "uncharted shoal", and then, "an uncharted object.“ ancl if, 'Ca t. Read will‘ examine his own let r, he will find that the tc-rmi ‘he used ln the letter refzrred | tunmskhgiixticéiarltftttl obstacleflnnnd. not. ' c o s "uc zon". 1e Cap- tain's memory falls‘ htm again but’. rlxsleolthtttt a: 1t muly only ptitlds pine "e o 1e “co ec on" wlch e (‘ifllllgllig lstrupk. ‘T3995 he reiilly kn-iwl ' ie s rue . Surely, a great navigator llkel Capt. Read who ls so adept. at "discovery" oi’ new shoals. o jecis, rocks and obstructions and whit, have you, docs not need anyone to fell htm the difference between “iin uncharted shoal” and "an unchart- ed object." The latter might even ‘be a submerged derelict. s l It ts not ClfEWYhfingc 1n wording l lllifl$tkffff é‘ %i"‘i’£".d'“““‘"il“l§ at , e says l [there and "uncharted." Does Capt. iJohn L. Read mean to tell the pub- I lio, that. the shipping lanes between ttwo great national ports are n-t properly charted? That ls a very serious reflection on the British Admiralty, who according to Capt. React are responsible for this work.‘ iDoes Capt. Read wish to go on rec-I iord as charging that. the British ,Admlralty does not. know its job? l It. was ln the Guardian the very day I sent fii my letter, about inc placing of buo s over the spot where the Char oltietown lies wreck- _ed and sunk. What about the o1ac-. ing of buoys marking the "tinchart-l e11“ silica. glluleclhmtaitr obstruclllop" w c e taro own ran n o, folrhttne siagzguuliidltngthoft opiler slgilss w c mg so n a vcnity Every year there are literally ‘hundreds of shlps especially sime the war, which sail between St. John and Halifax, and whose Mast- ers have not 30 far as I have heard‘ .“dl.scovered" any uncharted shoaLl objects or obstructions. and who have not. lost their ships either. | Some time ago a youn man from the Island sailed a yrw tfrom 8t._Jolin _to__French_R.t_ver__and ‘ne 8 l t tary of State Hull though perfectly aware that Mr. Hull has no juris- diction over cartoonists. If the Vlchy government wishes to avcld being portrayed In n ridiculous guise ft. should stop appaarlng ous. When ft talks as t has been Ilollnnd ls taking a great. Inter- '€Sl lit bronscn<i= frjvm 1111141011,‘ land there are tznod stories o! how , tho Dutch srnrv of humor bothers the enemy. In his book, "Hollandl Flights the Ha s", Mr. L. De Jon I tells of n wcrrrin who was arrests. because ‘hi? had listened to the BBC. Unuortiirbed, she defended herself by saying: "After the fall of France Adolf Htler find announced -that in Ortnlvr he would speak over th= B"lt'=h vfreless. I < so nfrnk! of mlsslng ths historical speech“ "-~London Callng. , _._ Ambassador Henry-Raye. the Vichy z-vernment woresentattve at V/d"‘l“.‘2ffl!1. ccmvfirns (without p7"l~f‘="I1'!l tlwt Avmrlcan cartoon- ltsts lsmncon ttfwr=h~l Petaln In an -!n=ult'nq manner. H,» exhibited a collection of such cartoon; to peere- talklng recently, it mlikes ltalef u. fair target. — Les Angeles Times. "now to curtain Rheumatic Pains add J09 Dodd’: Kidney Pills ‘he on his course when this disaster loccurred?" ii-ii w SCHICKELGRUBEIVS THE NAME aniifiorltles? Sin-Several days ago, Edwin C. are sometimes odious". Hill, over the radio, reported that’ As we all bask i binding his sheaf. with no thought ustllanun- , _ l forms a part. There the shoemak- o 0 “00400004 oo+o+o+0+o4 v WURDS ()F CHALLENGF A THOUGHT A on run a rum-u: in WA!‘ - l1 Great. Britain lhllfliltilellitffl. ls with the em- plfe heart and soul for Wln- rung the war and will not spare any effort. that. ts ‘pec- ggsgry to ensure victory. — Prime MIIIISWI W. L. Mac- kenzie K1118- ,”“+Q»»»++Q+++HH . I f l nal mariner. Surely l iii: iigypcrtiiuiiisaii» this 1n safety. vhy could not a Master Mariner in 8. lslilp equipped with navlgell“! m‘ struments of the most mooern npe, i includhtgd powerftél c§$£s ~ er". édiiiiffei-lgrapilifidind radio telebnone? Capt. Reads long, unnecessn-‘Y and evasive harangue about. any course the master cnooses betntl, i119 I“El‘()pe1‘" course, providing the cnart l? “"2” '“..°'.°é‘fii‘;‘ttfllfifi‘sao°i“qi.vifi rue. e up a -,_ I i the obvious question which ls: Mis Will Ca t. Read tell the Pl-WWI what. cond tlon the ch19 W" in W" fore she left on be: fateful ulp. this reported to the FY0991‘ "Comparisons I can well imagine they would be to mm, ‘now or at. any other time. but. especially lu vlew of the loss of a. ship ecst- lng $2,112,000, to say nothing >f the potential loss to exporters. 1311101‘!- ers, fishermen. farmers who nave Capt. Read says: built. a prosperous trade over a Ion»! period of years, and who now find that they have "all their eggs .n one t’. Tlfe Captain 1n his letter to Mr. R. E. Munch, which by the way he has not answered, made a vanaut, if ungallant, effort to lav the blame for the loss 0t the Charlottetown on the man ln charge of the tug boat, whose apparent fault was. that. ne Every dollar you can spare is needed now to arm and equip an!‘ fighting forces-to win this 8f. was a bit. more cautious tn fol than Capt. Read Capt. Read disavow: any inten- tion on his part 0f "self-DIBJSB’ R- gardlng his trips to Russia and Hudson Bay. but. perhaps “X16011- sciously from force of habit. sorts to the same practice, the same sentence he quotes: "deeds speak louder than words.“ In other words, "his deeds s k louder than words." 111st soun incredible anyone who knows the Captain. CaptuRiead got command of the Car Ferry because of oontradlctory charges laid against the ships for- mer Master. The Department at 0t.- tawa was informed the reason he was dismissed was lncompetencml which by the way only a marine tribunal can determine. At the same‘ time the railway authorities at Moncton charged hlm with drum’- enness and while for only two davs 11th and 12th of October. they we-‘e allowed witnesses, he was denied! them, until thev were forced, utter] a long tight. of almost four years, to grant. an investigation. at. which C. N. R. was judge and ury which was obviously wrong m t. e first place. At tnls investigation, Ca tafn John Leturgey Read gave evl once supporting charge of drunkenness but when cross examined admitted he was mistaken and. dld so on the plea of short. memory. Yet: this as the man who has the effrontery to write “1 have never been forced to stoop to such tactics." H. J. Page, who conducted the in- vestigation, tn his report to D. B. Hanna, then President of C. N. 1%., specified the evidence of Capt. Road as justifying the dismissal of Capt. Murchison on charge of drunken- ness. Whlle Capt.» Murchison was on Borden route he was without his first and second officer, and yet the Guardian of that. date says: "Everything worked like ilock '. There Ls a. letter from the Minister of Railways saying abut the Captain was dismissed for iri- competience and that. he could. not. assiune the responsibility of endmg- erlng the roperty of the Depart- ment and Ives of assengers. Yet a. snort while therea W!‘ he was ask- ed by the some Department to go on S. S. Stanley until Ca taln of the Stanley got used to rou e. Capt. Murchison injured nelcherl property nor passengers, nor, did he use his ship; but went to his grave with this in! ultous charge and denial of pens on. and that. after long years of faithful and efficient service. H. J. Page, who conducwd the investigation, Mr. Hayes, gen- eral manager of C. N. R., at, Mom:- ton and Knowlton. inspector of Car Ferries were all dismissed from C. N. R., but. jnsttoe was never given to Ga taln Murchison. It time that; such should cease and this good fnl, and efficient former servant's name be cleared. There should be a fair, impardal investigation into the loss of the . S. Charlottetown and it should be publtshed and blame placed not where Captain Read says it should be placed-l. e. "on the Brltlsh Ad- mirailty" or “man on tug boat," but. where ft. rlzhtfullv belongs. Rm, Bu‘ etc, A. J. o. lVIURCIIISON injustice , faith- public "—TODAY—" Sin-As we look out on the world—war torn, and to some deso- late, we search for a power and means that; ls beyond our sphere of thought. and comprehension. But should not this comprehen- slve-understandlng begin within ourselves? Should not. we be ready and wllllng to accept the real for- giveness of this ourselves? Are we not. wllllng to accept the teachings of our own consciences? Are we not too hasty oftfmes tn our judg- ment of others? Are we not sel- flsh ln our personal wants? Are we not. lacking tn individual intu- ltlon? Here we have the mllkman sell- lng hls mllk, with no thought for its sale. There we Iiave the farmer that next year he shat! do the same. The business man goes to 11's office, transacting his petty bust- nesg, flrm tn his dealings with no thought to the “Great family of .Natlons" of whHi he lndtvlduisllv er mp5 out. hl-s llvfng. There the housewife bakes out her daily tasks. And so we might no on- So we have gone on-Unttl th‘: we-Our ave-The are of "H's- mry". The use of "Industry." The went: "Today." We look out aunt-There ls the ‘wart-broken mother, sorrowlng ii"- "w: of son or husband H-re is "<9 for-tom lover, ulnlnq the hours 1f her uweethearva return. There lLTlie ROYAL BAN Kof Canada for 1nl~ 0-OO-O-§§+ Say to Your Grocer I Want BRMIMIN URMIGE PEKUE TEll You will enjoy its superior quality tc er cams! How crea ve the)‘ llzlnldng! And why do we stand on such basis? A repetition of History. Each age has lbs prob- lems. each age its solutions, each age its wants. "Today" how great are those wants! Today, what are those wants? The answers are readily found In the world about us. The nitensfveness of those wants has become greater u the revelation of sclence to man has become more extensive. But rias man, and 1s man the world over using this revelation to its best advantage? science has come to us 1h leflns and bounds. too greatly, we are afraid, for all men to use 1r. to a Godly advantage. For with that. scientific knowledge we have not s. perfect revelation of its un- derstanding nor untll all men ev- erywhere have the harmony, reve- lation and understandlxlg shall the present world crlsls belcbanged. I am flmily convinced that out of this beastly and terrible con? fltct-clvlltzatlon on one side, bar- barlsm on the other-out of ft shall arise a complete revelation, a full understanding. Even now In kindling ln the hearts of the he- llever an understanding and pur- DOse of this vast trend of science. "Today." The ale of science and industry is not lost, to the "God- fearlng Nation". w!!! not, be lost- A glorious future stands. a glor- lous future for n peoples who shall use that progressive revelation to "I-Its" advantage. You and I, uhe youth of Christian Democracies are the people who shall enjoy; who shall understand. And how can we understand? That. depends on our individuality. That depends on our personal creative, Intuitive think- ing, collaborated with the idea that each new __d_li_scovery in the iteig "WHY ON ‘EARTH ‘DO THEY DO IT 7 whc" d°°5 l-ha mQMY wrne from to waga this Win-m build fie ships, the planes and tanks we need to Much of it. comes from the uvin f d‘ womem-tho thrifty people of Cnnadastllo 1.11:’ men and the people who buy Victory Bonds and WarSavings Gel-lip“. , who puy their War Taxes on the nail. n ‘is’ personal thrift. been so vitally necessary. “this 7 secession 11. o... ‘w “finish the job)" These arg Never before h“; wflwh Y9"! Bpending. ) Thll look will holp ynu nu. Thv Rom no.1. Family M , h‘ k nhogn you how u; budjm yx, mil-iii. °il'.i."ii..'.“i'.i.ll.’ “"““‘“' . , . llnlnll. Bunch. l i M w" vvw-v 0 sc enoe o '3 wonder u! rave-i latfon to mankind. We must m able to understand in this know- ledge; we must have faith to ba- lleve 1n tt: and we must be partial- ly reborn w realize lt. Out of l-llll vast, bloody conflict shall ai-Lso tlmt new birth; that new understandlng of I-Lts will and Hls purpose for mankind. How firm do 1 bellm For mfemnceexcuse me if! refer to a. personal Ixicldent, which though minor has become a major llvlnz problem 1n my life. When I wu unmistakably misunderstood Ln m! belle!’ and fdeals, when 1 was false- ly accused without foundation by “certain Individuals of this Pro- vince," as being undemocratic tn my Ideals and teachings, an n:- cusatlon. mark you with a ground- less and faulty basis made who"; to sheltor some other offender of the law, wherein as a conseqflfflfl I (youth) fn a sense have stiffer- ed; an accusation which has deep- ly affected my outlook on life, an accusation which I had found ow- ing to my profession almost im- able to bear-save for the tinder- atandlng of God's progressive reve- lation of scientific knowledge and personal creative lndiviiiiiril under- ltancung. That. understanding that men and women of the Brill"! 90mm” ales today, due to the oxrenslvfflf“ of scientific knowledge are thrown closer together. God's rorelnron Jl understanding. More friendly biases are being set up on evcryilfllld; __(Conttnuod on pglglgli Gassy Stomachs "iféiiieved ! Every person who ls "W" led with gas palns, sour sllllll‘ och and heartburn should fr! Mlmcuuru (utmost PING) . “hi: chum villi ll prlu Imam lvylng Inmcnn o! doubtful uwrtly In erdor to nave pnmlinn colt ll llllo flfl aviator buying a dohctlvn peruchvto bo- ccuu lfi dnup. If ha’! 00'" l° ""4 ll qt all, only tho um In good sown!» ll ho ha‘! going to need N. "WY “W” '° curry ll at all! Jfloml: lnllfl on ‘llllulltl that Y" llllltll‘ k I bottle of "Dr. Evans alillll’ lob Mixture" and w! 2"" quickly It will relieve all w‘ treulnl svmntoml- Dr. Ivan: Stomach Mlxtup taken It meal limes. not M! Y prevent; Ind effects from F’: ."' t. ‘i€"""l‘ff "':...i.:'.'i:"'.. I no v v o 6! ' . f; digestion and "II "m" the appetite. Prlcc 0" bottle. HOLLYWOOIPS TIZU - COLOR LIPSTICK I AMAZING FEATURES l. Llfellke red of vour llll s. van-arm: hi" ""'°'"’" t [do for. lcfllll-"f Elm.’ Prtco ‘Ila on; 8L3! a carrv l comllle" "W- W f M x Factor Belll" ""9" ztlon: Call and see them. ___-_ sons BACK 1’ If we have one of lhl mo. 2...“... w tum. was" melt ~ an": TABLE Ilneclnll effective for W: t» o. ‘ell In. flfllflllg-mm o, a ther "E E." Mum ortllnnlg W. K. ROGERS 1- the "dreamer." the "thinker" W9 "creator." Actors In the drawn "t "Tr-"av." And what ls our fu- ltiwi? It dvionds. solely. on how iron. are thou actors! How redh- Agencies Ltd. A l om m; hll to ruch- r“ l; cent! l!" 5"‘ TllE TWO M33 I40 Great morn 54"" ' mum? | Mall 0rde‘r:"n1‘3'|:;" ‘