‘k.Ii'lIl~ 4.. ennsfla-rifivvf""¥“‘~ uwririrvsr-‘sr ..'*.='. .. wrzxa-svsrzw r: ma: 5* =~ *1 -"""-""-1'6'9\‘&"2J* ‘t-“mw-mturvx“ ‘-ss'c;vs:1i'¢L-<.:"' ". l r i i 1. r\-_~__, w! ~4£iia T"4-i-&-2L"“ - ' =~= PAGE r0111; Tlli GIIAIILOTTETOVIII GUARDIAN lornlng Dnlly (Ionndod ll Ill?) Prufdunsi Linn, Col, W. Chum: I, lnl-nrn Flu Prulnlonti J. l Burnett I'd-I. loontnryi Llnnl. Onl, D. A. Invdlnnon, DJJI, ldllor nnd Inuit g Director, ‘l. B. Burnett, I-JJ- Allocate Hclltorlii Funk Wnllu, uni Unul, Ill A. Burnett. ILALNNJL, (On Auflvc lorvleo) SUBSCRIPTION BATK I; lull ln P. B. l. $4.10 par your IIM for I Iontll 11,25 for 8 monthl: i011 for on month Olly Delivery 86.00 per yuan 85.00 for C lnunlla . [or l munlhni 00o lor one month By lliul to ollzu Provinces lllll ILLA. lfl-W pol Ylll Illllldil] Woolly: $2.00 1m run 01.00 for I noun. 60a tol- S month: The (ftmilotlotown Guardian ma; be ohlnlnnl ll Alum-ling‘: New: Agency. Ilmu Square, New York; 01d South New: Anni-y, Cor-nor Milli and Washington Bontoli llelrupnlllun howl Annex. 12m Peel at. llnntrelll J- Fine I54 Bu; Si, Toronto; News Stand Chnunn Lnnrlcn Utluvvu; Walla‘: News Slnnd Sudlmry. 0nL| llnb Tobnm-o b11001 lllunnlnn, N. B. "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." TUESDAY, JUNE 22, 1943 i Used Farm Machinery (lptiiisiiiou members are continually giving helpful stiggcstioiis to the Dominion Goverii- iiicnt, tine of ilit-itt emanated the other (lav from .\l1'. _l. (1 Dicfenbzilccr, Conservative ruem- her for lake Centre, who called the attention of the .\illll~l('l‘ of Xziiitiiizil \\'ar Services lo Il lllllllCl‘ having It» (l0 with the present shortage of farm m:icliiiit~ij\'. .\ campaign is under way iii the Viiitcil States to collect usable farm nia- Ci1i1lCl'_\' nut in use ziiid to assemble it under gov- ei-iiiiieiii super-v‘; m. 1t is theii distributed among the farmers in need of it. Has any con- 5l(l(‘l'.'llli11 been given to fl Silllllill” Campaign l“ Czinsitlzi? he asked. \\'hile the quota On farm inachiiictjv has ltreu increased, there will still be a shoring-u and it could be iiiet in this way if the Lrtpfpffllllflnt tuolt- the initiative. The Minister, ticiierzil l4il7leche, said he had "ht-mil nothing ztliritit the subject mentioned by the hon. tueiiihci” and ivris not quite certain that it ‘vtuild Privptfll‘ \‘l\l1l(‘ tinder National \Var Service» flowcvcr, he promised to look info it imiitetlizitclv. Our farmers are not concerned with what de- partment it comes llllllCf. There is no ques- flgn about the stiggesfioit being a nfost valu- able one. Maritime Rights Ignored How the Rtlaritiiiic Provinces have been de- prived 0i their rights tinder the British North mitt-rig“ Act for the benefit of the Central Pro- vinces is told trenchanflyi by 1\lr. H. Conlon, New Brunswick tobacco commissioner, in an article published in the Saint john Telegraph- jouriial. The article was prepared at the rc- quesi of representatives of a Montreal P111161‘ (who saw fit not. to use it) and is based on iri- formzitioii prepared by that indefatigable spokes- man for Xlaritimc rights, Dr. A. P. Paterson, formerly New llriiiisvvick minister of edttia- 1.1011 and federal and municipal relations. Among other things, the article emphasizes that as part of the agreements of Confederation the lntcrcolouial l\‘ailwziy' was built t0 enable the hlaritimes t0 trade on a parity with the other provinces, and the Circa: Northwest as compen- sation for the loss of foreign markets. With Union the control over foreign trade was sur- rendered to federal authority. \Vhat actually happened? The all-British lines of communication to the Atlantic seaboard were never used to carry’ all Canada's overseas traf- fic or even the majo; part. Montreal, in sum- mer, and United States ports all the year con- tinued and still continue to handle the bulk of our peacetime .-\1laiitic export and import traf- fice. Maritime ports remain little more than a threat, receiving btit a dribble of traffic in win- ter months only. ZFrIadd insult to injury Canadian govern- ment capital to the tune of more than six hun- dred million dollars is invested in railways, port facilities and atixifiry enterprises in the United States along the eastern seaboard, and these very facilities carry the traffic that we in the Naritimcs were stipposcd to handle. Among the duties and responsibilities assigned to federal au- thority by agreement of the provinces is "t0 regu- late trade and commerce." For a good many years the liitcrcolouial Railway with its man- agement at hloncton did operate on the prin- ciple that traffic originating in the Maritime lhwivincts should Ulljtl)‘ rates that would enable producers and merchants to lziy down their goods in tiiher parts of Canada to sell on a c0iii- petitivt- basis, 'l'h:it policy terminated in I918 or lllf'l't‘ilijllllls when the management 0f the liiterctiltitiizil ivas removed from M91160“ 3W1 tnergctl with other Qt1\'(‘l’1ll11Cl1[-O\\'1‘l€(l and gov- efflnjffll-Cttllll'llll('fl raihvays. Thereafter the situation ll('tf;llll(' so bad that the Duncan Royal (civlllillisflllll was zippoiiitetl to study the qu€5- tion. The Xliiriiiiiic Freight Rates Act result- ed, giving :1 measure of relief. By constant nibbling, hiuvi-vcr, the effects of the remedial measui-‘s have been largely" vitiatcd. In addition, livczil initiative and enterprise at- tempting in build secondary industries are quickly srpr-lclit-il its $11011 as they show signs 0f vigor". llnw? To some extent by buying-out but tn a large ilegree by rlttmping competitive products m1 the market to ilestrny the local coni- petition m‘ by teiiipor:irily' inflating the price of the raw uiziterizil until the local menace is re- moved. Ottawa has l'(’t‘<>Ql1iZl‘(l these inequalities from time to time by tiayiiig subsidies to the Mari- time Provinces. lliit money grants, attractive as the immediate .'ippeal may appear, will no longer be acceptable as compensation for a paralyzed economy. They may be accepted because money is hard to resist. llut iii the minds and hearts of the pCriple the siuise of grievance will persist. Nothing short of liriclttrziclting to the letter and spirit of tilll‘ cun-iitiitimi will dispel the deep- r1r0l(‘(l conviction that our Blaritimes have been cheated. What about post-ivar prospects? "We have no newly constructed war plants tn be converted to peacetime production," says Mr. Conloii. “Our folk must return to essentially the same factors that constituted the back-ground of our pro-war economy. Without reform meas- ures national in character the outlook is not pro- pitious. Given appropriate redress, native in- genuity, initiative and enterprise will seek and find opportunity at home. The removal of handicaps will open the door for an enlarged fishing industry built on modern principles, the expansion and improvement of agriculture and secondary units established to process crops that do not reach the markets in the fresh state, a wider use of our forest potentials and diversity of auxiliary units for the manufacture of wood products. Industries in general would no longer flow to the centre of the country to the exclusion of other sections. Decentralization would grad- ually distribute benefits to all parts and the in- evitable tendency would be to equalize the econo- mic status of the provinces. Trade would flow through Czgadiau ports and the wages sustain- ing others would accrue to the benefit of Can- adian workers." ’Tis a. consummation devoutly to be wished. But first and foremost it will be necessary to have Maritime federal and provincial representa- tives with backbone. S0 long as governments at Ottawa are able to wield the big stick O\'€1' supine party supporters, we shall always be hewers of wood and drawers 0f water for the hiore power- ful and influential provinces. This has been notably the case under lllC present federal ad- ministration, which with tiiiliiiiited funds and patronage at its disposal insists on retziiiiiiig the old pre-ivar premium on party politics. — EDITORIAL NOTES — Evidently no let up of wetness iii this other- wise supposedly dry province. =1: * x s A cordial welcome is being extended to the members of the (iziiiatlizui Seed (irowers Associa- tion iiow holding sessions at Si. [Juiistziirs [Titi- versiti‘. a: io- * x . Mussolini is quoted as siivi : ".\ll fu1'Ci_£_'11€1‘~; who cannot justify their prcsciive in llzily slioulil be sent baclt to their owii Cfllllllfivs." This re- ference might be to the abnormal number of Licrniziiis in ltzily, of whom the Italians are sick. v w v at Hundreds of thotisziiitls of dollars have been lost by farmers in the \'iCll1il.)' of .\Ini'itrcal due to destruction 0f their growing crops by rziiii At least fifty farins on the lsliuiil of Muinrcai and iii other viciiiitics were still ilootlerl-snirii‘ of them entirely and others only partially-last week a checlttit) of farm communities disclosed. l‘ ‘P U i! According t0 Caiiiaflixui Press hluiiititiiis Klin- ister llowc—aiid all other iiicitibeiss-jtiiiictl in laughter in the llotts“: of Commons when Rev. Dan Mclvor (Lily. Fort \\'illium) said he thought the minister was “pretty well loaded." \\'heu the laughter ceased. .\lr, .\lCl\'ti1' said he appreciated the oppositioirs 531151: of liuiiioi- b-it he had meant the iiiiiiislci" was loaded with work. “I'm surprised he can take as iiiucli as hc rlid." continued Mr, hlclvor-zitiiid zuiother gale of latighter. “\\'herc were you lzist night?" otter member asked. l l l! I George V, fathecof 0111' ])1‘t‘s'(’1'l[ stwtrrcigu, crowned King in succession to his father, lid- ward \‘lI, this date, 11111, as Duke of York, he entered the House of Lords in 180$ and on lulv 6 the same year married Princess Victoria Mary 0f Teck (iiow the (‘Queen Mother); hail six children. the. Duke of Windsor, King George Vl, Princess Mary, (fouiitess 0f llarewood, Prince Henry bvllliillll, Duke of Gloucester. Prince George Edward, late Duke of Kent, Prince lohn Charles, died iii i911). U I I I Major James Clark, Speaker of the Ontario Legislature, says the Montreal Gazette, has not onlv got himself in wrong with his province, he has got his province in the same unhappy posi- tion with its neighbors. Ontario has prided it- self upon its strong and deeply rooted pro-Bri- tish sentiment, planted there by the U. E. Loy- alists, ivhose numerous descendants like tn re- gard themselves as citizens 0f Canada's banner province. As a matter of fact, judging bv its actions, its heavy vote against the 1911 reciproc- ity agreement—suspected of being an annexa- tion instrumenb-and by its splendid contri- butions of men and money anti material in this war and in the last, it has had some reason to pride itself upon its patriotism. Hence, when the Speaker of its Legislature takes part in a United States round table radio discussion (Detroit. hliCll.) and proclaims that 40 t0 45 per cent of Canadian citizens including himself would favor a political union with the United States if asked to vote on the question now, the provincial roof manifests a tendency t0 blow off. i ll‘ i F By design health is made the first phase 0t education which the Survey Committee of the Canadian and Newfoundland Education Asso- ciation deals with in its review of education in Canada, and which review forms part of the data confided to Principal F. Cyril James of McGill University, chairman of the Advisory Committee on Reconstruction. "Healthy chil- dren are public assets; sickly ones are liabilities," and the committee does not think that physical education is a matter of turning out athletes. An adequate health program for the nation will require an estimated $20,200,000 a year, made up of $200,000 for an immediate investigation of conditions; special grants to stimulate health in- struction, $1,000,000; medical examinations and dental examinations and care, immunization and nursing services $17,000,000 and $2,000,000 for school lunches. The survey finds that already. many admirable public health agencies, staffed by capable and trained officials, have been set up throughout the Dominion, and municipal boards of health, provincial departments 0f health and the Dominion Department of Peri- sions and Health are all engaged at the present time in enterprises and schemes of far-reaching 0.1L- CHARLQTTETQWN _qt1_Aizni/iiv_ Notes By The Way When Hitler nnd Mnasollnl nnbd to meet at the Brenner Pass, the world used to bold its breath and wonder what was being planned next. when Chumhlll and Roose- velt meet now, 1t Ls Hitler imd Mussolini’: turn w do the breath- holdfng. --From the Ottawa Citizen. A lot Ls helnl heard of’ “lmphlhl- ous" operations, but actually the word 1s only two-thirds correct to describe the coming activities. "Amphibious" fa the adfectlve from the noun “$mph1b1a," which means animals capable of lfvlng both un- der water and on land. The amphibious operations soon to come will be water, land and afr opera- tions. —Qttawa. Citizen. I hate Spring. Spring lurcl mn out wtb a sunbeam, and then turns on the shower. Sprfng blows my umbrella inside out. Spring melts the crease out of my lawfully cuff- ed trousers. Spring puts mud on the shliie I hoped would last a week. Spring lets the furnace dfa dOWH and brings the éifvers. Spring gives me rheumatism end makes me creek. I hate Spring.- Toronto Star. After the war has been won there will, tmdoubtedly, be a. new era of international inter - dependence. Otherwise the war will have been fought in vain Canada will be 1n a ncsition to trade with manv coun. fries iii a. mutually beneficial wav We produce things they cannot pro- duce and they produce things we cannot produce. There 1s a vast field for trade with Mexico and the countries to the south of that anci- ent land But trade 1s not all that counls. There 1s also a vast field hi which to cement good relations tin-i mufun] trust and respect. that iviill he}! bulwark against threat" of "TZTCSSIOH 1n the future —Fcr'_ ‘D 1- 1 am TimesJournal. Life raft survivors will now be able to send an SOS over 100,093 square iiiilcs of ocean. even though llznor- niit of the Morse code says Path- finder. A iiewlv developed portable i-nrbn transmitter. known as the "Gibson Girl" to plane crews be- eaivse of its hour tzlass slime, has n hand crank which this 0119mm;- "I111 turn tn send a continuous dis- tress signal as a guide for sear-w mg 17111105. ‘The aerial 1s held 91bit ‘JV lWdro vii-filled balloons m- box" lfll"? Arivf‘ sifluril “'\l‘l‘<‘ Hicrafl lfiifiifY laboratory at “Field F'r"1 and Bendix Aviation collaborated in the development of hls transmission equipment The llfanitoba Department of H211 £1 has issued figures which shew it cciisi 1's the rat an ex- pensive luxury. According to their figures a rat costs two dollars a year to k€0p 1n food, It ls sup- pessd that the rat population equals the human. Thai seems m imply that. Winn neg spends in the neigh- bozliooil of half a million dollars a year diiiiig i-of-erits. Rather l1 hrgel cl eqiic to pay 101' guests who are, liable t0 start an epidemic at the} drop of a hat. -Winriipeg Tribune! Juan Trippe. przsidcnl, of Pan- Aiu 113111 zfirwagg has predzcted tliizi the fleet of I53passenger clip- pers planned by his company will te able to take us to London in 10 hours for S100 That is t0 sav little as perhaps $250 1t will be pes- sible to sneiid an entire wsel; in Great Britzrn. or even, for a few dollars more. to toss lri a vlsff to postwar Paris! And 1f plane trips will cost. that much, sea trips should be sull less. The good old days are gone forever-thank heaven, -New Clasgcw News. A London item says that a Brlt- ish Army officer of high rank who acted as escort to the Axis generals captured 1n Tunisia and came with 111cm to this country. was not greatly impressed by the German members of the natty. With one exception ~ an artfllerist -he found them rather of the ordinary type of personaltv officer apparently wishes to indicate is that» he found no suggestions or symptoms of the Moltke touch a.- mong the Africa KOtps brass ham, On the other hand, the Italians were far more impressive intellectually, and had besides much pleasanter manners. Yet one German major captured 1n tvhe final Tunfslan bat- tle. when requested to get lntn n lorry with some Italian officers. ex- claimed: ‘Donnerwertterl S011 lch mit dlesem dreck fahren!" which belng interpreted means: “Hades! Hove I not to travel with that muck!" Pleasant fellows, these Ger- man paludfnsi-Amherst News. A mug of cocoa. made from water distilled from the ofly Thames was handed up to me from B. lifeboat yesterday. It. was hot and tasty. But 1t was much more than a comforting drink - 1t was s afgn that two of the shipwrecked sea- mnn's worst enemies, thirst and cold, had been conquered. For the cocoa. was made from water first. distilled and then boiled on a small my stove won to be port of stand- ard lifeboat equipment. The stove looks like a small bathroom geyser. It: bums amost any type of fuel- brfquet-tes stuffed into odd corners of the boat, damp wood. parafffn_, and dlslfls half a gallon of fresh water an hour. Painted on the stfll are instructions on how to make hot drinks. to dry clothes, heat blnnkefs- and an ofly rag wfll glve off i1 dense smoke signal 1f burned 1n the stove. Two men are chiefly resnrvisfble for the new device. The are Mr. James A Mulhem. n years-old Liverpool engineer. and Mr. George Keenan, n 36 veers-old Board of Trade surveyor who fives at Great Crosby, near Liverpool. Their lnlflnls "K. M." have been combined in give the devltze its name. They worked for months. fbelr efforts sustained and energiz- ed by the iwhfevement of a chlef engineer who rftzized up a atlfl from H Petrol can and n blscult tln and. bumlmz driftwood, kept his crew iillve for 19 days untll they were rescued. I was given other good news of the nrotrress made 1n the strurnzle to save llfe at sen. Llfe iiavlniz wafslcoiits are fitted with rone Rear w ease the wm-k of rescue. Portable ladders will help men to 011mb lnfn the boats. The fat c011- tent of thi- biscuits provided ms been tmbled -fmm 4 per cent. to 1:1 oer cent - to make them more palatable and increase resletanec to exposure. Preparations for remov- friv fuel 011 are fiimlahed. and elde- seat extensions will enable mm to —wiih a weeks vacation and as 1?‘- . .What the British 20o AGONY 0F ISRAEL Bow gout heads ,n.11 yo nut-foul. And ipnble yourselves, all ye p00- P e5. In the [JIEBSAZXICG of sorrow un- EPBB . At the 51131;: of axisuisn beyond H1685 ; For the sons of Israel are ale/ugh- tered all the day 10118. And the daughters of Jerusalem are violated and slain, And the synagogue 1.5 burned l-n th fire The phage of the congregation 1.: utterly destroyed. These are the people of Jeho The folk of t-he Ancient Covenant, Who were spread throughout the 6B And were scattered among the m.- tfon s- many peopIE Sojourners amo And dzviellera 1n dam fu- on. Yet they rendered good b0 the Allen And comfort w men of many races, Seekfn our cures for the 111a of the es And healing for the bodies of man- kind. . . But the hangmen of Human have rfse up, Arid a greater than Human has come, A man whose heart. is filled with darkness, Whose veins run evil, And he has urposed to destroy them a , To capgle them utterly to per- Therefore let the nations gathered against Hamtm, The peoples who war aealnst the Agngite, Swear mightily to avenge the blood of the guilfless, To SEXIWE I-llaman as he has served s e ra . And let. its offer refuge to a rem- mint, Even sate refuge to the fugitive from murder, That the guilt of his death be not upon 1.15 also, The inst-k of his death upon our (loci-sill; For we are all bound up together 1n the bundle of life, And the Lord God will require the blood of the tzuilfless Both from him that Slfly5 and from 111m that. stays not the slayer In the iLiv 0f blood , In the day of the desolation of Israel. —Watsoi1 Kirkconnell. The France (Sydney Post Record) . The spirit of [reason seems to mount steadily l1\ uie soul or l-ierre Lflvfll. even in inverse pro- portion to int- tailing fortunes of 111s Axis mas recent Axis re s mare active in his truitorous ‘ -. fabrication" with his country's deadliest enemy 1112111 at any time prior to his appointment. as stooge- in-chisf for Adolf Hitler at Vichy. Lavnls energies are now devot- ed in 1m intensive drive for the rounding up of young Frenchmen to wcrk in German munitions plants. But a dispatch from Berne, Switzerland, says that: France's traitor N0, 1 i; finding the going hard, that. he admitted 1n a public ‘.('L1.1i1 m Vichy a couple of da s_ ago that. French youths were offering resistance on i111 sides to compulscri‘ labor in Germany. Laval‘ mfsrmed the Vichy cabfnet council that u law would come Into effect mu week empowering the Government to seek out and pun- ish "all whophuve provoked or fac- ilitated evasion of labor regula- tions." L:1va1's programme for the re- fnftirccment. of Hitlers war factory workers is said lo be the providing by June 30 of 223.000 addftlonai workers. 1.111s being the number his Berlin masters have requfsftloned. But: Laval finds, according to his own statement to the Vichy coun- cll, that active resistance 1s 0n the fncrease and he reported to his colleague that 1n one village nearly amrpogsflddischprgied“ ilrom ycvut c s i rece ve our; rug to vfsft 1.11 g ceedlniz v- Only 49 tum- ed up when the traln left Lyon. There 1s 0f course nothing sur- 11118111: 1n all this. Levin's crooked- ness and incurable bent for tree.- son have been known all 12.10113. That. he would abandon his traitor- Ovs activities once he dfsoovered that; the AxLs was doomed t0 dw- tructlon W115 the belief of many persons. who. however, failed to reckon with the fact. that any- thing this arch-eneim of 111s own country can do 0r leave -‘ would not have the slightest at. feet, 1n wardlxia ofl’ the fate that awaits h m when his German slave masters have been finally defeated. Levels cespfcable record 1.5 nearly Cflnlfileted. And he W111 have the satisfaction of knowing, when me time comes for hfm m face m; m. trig squad, that 1t 1s the most. fri- famousc-wfth possibly one Qxpep- tlon.~—fn history's chronicle of bribed cowards and traitors, Will The Balkans Crack ? (Hamilton spectator) One of the signs of increasfn strain, and perhaps a symptom 0% fatal weakness, 1s the European Axis 1s seen fn the reports of peace oven/tires which are being heard on the Continent. Some of these r-um- Ours are no doubt. inspired by the Nazis, such as me "Gemini-Rus- mm talks. WOrd o1 which comes from a source 1n Sweden that fa suspected of befng more than neu. trill. and the Duff-Jose of whfch ls obvfouslyhfntended to sow dfaunlty amo e Allies and make them suspfc ous of each other. Bei-lfn 1s notJfkely) to deceive the United Nations y such clumsy tactlcs; and lonclonls a urance that. the Swedish report sheer rubbish should carry weight. The report from Turkey that Ruxnanla. 1s seeking outright peace and ls ready to surrender unoon. dltlomllv to the Allies, ma n» rove to have no foimdnt. on ln act. But. what. up ars to glve 1t some colour of a tanoe are the terms which Ion Antnncscu, mm. nnian Chief of State, 1; credited with being wllllng to have imposed on his country Ruimanla 1s mu w have asked or an annfstfce that would spare her from befng bomb- ed or attacked by Allied land forces. She faces s. plossfhle offensive on the east, from us-sfn, and the respect. of invasion by British oroeii from bases 1n the easfem Mediterranean. Not. without significance, either, la the circumstance that just at a. time when Antoneacu 1s re rted 1l~ full length. - Inndon Dgfly MB , ° ._ t__,.i.a.. tn have taken this step, Berl be- trays fta concern over Axle “‘ JUNE 22. 1943 i‘ awe-traumas afl lolcil number of loans OUlSldnCling in Canada's Chartered Bqnks average less than $500 per lqqm Through bank loam, Canada's Chartered Bank; help Canadians to benefit themselves, their fellows and their country. Many of these loans are small- but all contribute their share to the day-by-day aqivitics of Canadian enterprise. Some further facts about Canada's Banks: Chartered Banks’ loans related to agriculture as shown on the Every general manager today heading a. Chartered Bank en. tered the bank as n junior in some small branch; last oflicial return to Parliament, ‘Qlfllléd $ 540,11 3.475. This sum included loans to farmers, Up to and including February ranchers, fruit raisers and to 1945, no fewer than 6805 m en grain dealers and grain ex- and 154women bankemployees lmnem- had enlisted in the armed forces. Canadian: in ovary walk of life and In ovorypcl of Canada we urvod by more than flu-u thousand branchu and llIb-dg¢||:iQ| mqlnhhnd b the Chartered Bank: to facilitate the nation's Business. y THE CHARTERED BANKS OF CANADA __ snuff‘ ——_ ‘_ '- lty 1n the Balkans by bragging um me v,°g_‘i;‘,"*,_fii,"g.*;g-,eg,lj,prggg 35g ,§’,‘,‘éw,fel,‘,‘,,r°s‘trf,‘§,‘fg‘el}‘f?jf,=§f“Bf; mere: the first officers killed 1n usual meihou 0y the Wilhelm- scrasse to wnlstie away 11.5 tears. ~ Aripmer (ileveigplrhentlthahlcouid be 1' G ——'*" —— a acwr i1 11.1 n Rum- aniap feradetr BTISCeSAEIDIifI m: move- l men 0 s rong fed forces 1n Syria, lnciudfn th .5 ltfsn N 1 ' and ‘Tenth Arfilfeseas rweli 1151211: American. Polisn and Mench ll yon m hnvln symptom troops. The clcsmg of me Turkisn- Eve person who ll lroub- °l "I'll" — hturlwhfl. we zyegilgnlsbordgr while the deptloy- had Y‘: h {an fryottltile bowels zgefiigllhtdllllllfll — will!“ I, 1111C)‘ W8, 511 ts ht lflll D. pllfed litratggy vuulllfsqettntls Evaiiip b11151. Mlxlnrgfanlil A‘ "m, "n". "m, "l" 0 t k1 r rm at. theatre, iialy may : see ow qnc y 1t will relleve o, experience “n. . ‘human’ IDIY, fill-Y l not be the only area of the nurth- all dfsti-esslng symptoms, rafmcun‘ “m” Q- Anted umtes 1n gym, 1s taken to nctlvtsi‘ of the stomach, u- lllllfllntmentl. anfa to get. out of the conflict. at Don't delay. Get a bottle lhll. if Antonescu‘ ove t. ls ‘ r ‘m’ r. nurcnesov ii______. WIABB V. C35 UNIFORM lomnecl-Iry it lflflllflfl Cooling, ‘yum-n- _-» vp> loaned ' their owners will not go to wuu, qnvpmqgggqq J. A. BENTLEY. K. C. ern sho f th M d - to be alfuied, i‘; thee gfiféfgeig It remotes the functional C." h, Ind mun“ you“ f ash d d: ‘M! "sum a a l p ' difficulties. Write or uhoiui for 1K2 nfifilm?“it.i“'ll..i.é"%t°f.“h‘f w» wwiiw- " "‘ m" th lf . I d . “f” e" ‘e "m" _ " "Jew "M; l1. F. llutchesoii e es. , 11 <1 owev" w l m“ _, l‘. o. IIUTCIIESON Iglgnufne. Mennwhflg bthgl war of - ‘ G. rves 00s 0n, an y lappear- - '» _ anoes ff fa finding some 1 u; E "~31 weak spots 1n the Axla nrmoiir. a ‘gaff ' P _ s’ ,,,__,,__,,,,,,,__, rofossional Bards mnnon - (or) _ so um off- "fir... ma...“ and oonlhlnl- ' leer’: uniforms 1 but,‘ m no onqer needed by uulcklycununltehlunad of McLeod & Bentley W 0-70 M1118 distributed in new W. I. BENTLEY. K. C. owners the Officers K11; Replacement. Service, free of charge. One uni-form handled recently by Barrister. and Allflrflcyl-ll- the service was that of Lleut, E, 3, [my MONEY T0 LOAN Prince Street llorrelland Company, IIQJLI-PILOI- ll. F. ARGIIIBALII Chartered Accountant! Illtarn Trust Bnllillnl Charlottetown TllE TWO MACS 149 Grant. Georn Street RD‘ NINA S Mall Orders Glven Prompt Atteutlon r ilNirvitNl __,‘ EYES EXlllIIllEll Life Insurance-rim rim to Security GLASSES FITTED sllllllolts on the Road to Security Read: Inde- pendence, Happlness, Comfort. , J. s. TAYLOR OPTOMETRIST New Location Corner Kent and Queen 51l- Wl" l" Blessed to point out the way. r o enco 1013 A Great-West Llfe Savings contract will get you to your objective A Great-West Life man E 011ml MI’- Glrvfsfvnu m '"":':.."1..ti'"" ' llYlllllMll & 00. LIMITED Provincial Managers Charlottetown Summq-gldg NOTARY 8w. BABRISTEB SOLICITOR llloy Bnlldlng Chlrlotlcll‘: v M Offlggg; Montague 6 MONEY. r0’ 1.01m Phone l5 P. 0. B" u eisiffsiliffiiiizgsoil l MONEY TO lflfllluflo" Cnnluon Big-i.‘ hhniallll" Support the Greek llollof Campaign. There l: no more worthy cause - a H, F. McPhee BA” K-l-i