TIIE BIIARLOTTETIIWII’ GUARDIAN Mnrnlnl Dally (Founded In 1887) fruldant: Lleut. Col. W. Chester S. McLlu-a Vlcc-hesldent: J. B. Burnett. F. J. l. Secretary: Llout. Col. D. A. MuoKlnnon, 0.5.0. Mltor and Mlnaglnl Director: J. B. Burnett. F.J.l, Associate Editors.- Frank Walker and Lleut. Iau A. Burnett, R.C.N.V.R. 10n Actlve Service] ‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker the Weakest Ink." 1110a YTEEHEERTKQZ? Soldiers And The C. C. F. cwffélillll! For some time 11o\v Socialist Orators and propagandists have been telling us that "the soldiers are going to vote C.C.F." - \\'cll, i11 tl1e recent Newt cial election 11.6.25 soldiers and this, according to is how they cast them: For ti1e Progressive Conservatives For the Lihett For tilt‘ i‘. i‘. 'l’i1us of the total swldicr vt-te the C. C. F, got less tltatt half of what the Progressive Con- servatives got. less than ltali 111' what the Lib- erals got, and less thin lute-fifth of the totzl. .\'o one knows, 111' can know", how members of the armed for-mes are sgoitur 111 1111c. lint judging by the above f1;1cs. the >l1cittlist clai111 about taeir t1ver1vhc jvtt-ftwezice for the C. C. F. is just xrtizitpci-tq» tiottsense. Brunswick provin- cast their votes, the official tabulation, Remote Control A recent sttrvcy reveals that only 32 per cent of Lizttizuhzt know what an older-in- council is. . ' a question posed in llfi 5l"\'<‘,\'1 of citizens gave "good or fair answers" 1111ly in 2g per cent oi the total. .\11o;l1e1~ 22 per cent were wrong in their guesses, 111' ittadcqtiatc 1:1 their (lCSCriP- tioits. The re111a‘11E11 51.1 p11‘ c1111 stated frankly that they did 11111 .111". It is part oi the ilritish and (‘atladiail par- liamentary system that the g11ver11or-i11-co1111cil, i.e.. tl1e _1g11vcr1:11 of ‘ie day. may meet e111- ergetit twcessitic» < 1h:- lang recess l1e- tween sessions t-f i: 111111011: with an order-in- council 1v ‘ch has the force :111d effect of law. The principle ittvoivt-tl v.;1s eventually ratified by statute and its ttecusstty is quite understand- able. lhtt dttrirt; 1l1c past live years a spate of owlers-itt-cottttcil ltas ssuctl front the office of the Privy (Youucil in Ottawa. They have i111- posed re=t1' 1s and prmnuigated principles which colic‘ e y have alicretl the pattern of our daily lite and changer] the course of our social and ecunontic reqitne. 'l'heir number, since the war l ..,a11. is cstitnatetl at 4.1.000. Cer- tainly tilt-reply s1» 111'1n_v of them that 11o one 1111111 cottld r '111l1c:' their exact nature. Few of them ham, for r1-;1~:.:111s of secrecy, found til-air way l!l'.11 the tanatla Gazette. ‘This i1'r1"_'11l:1r 111111111-1 11f c1111ducti11g the buszness o_f_i;11\'-11111l\i11g is 1111c of the unpleas- lnt necessities of 11:11"; lt could be argued that not even \v:1r's nvce itv justifies what prac- ttcaliv :1:111111111s' 111 ,;<1v1.11111c-11t hy secret order- in-coancil, at l<ll>l until nt-1re ti1a11 22 per cent of Canada's population have a clear idea of the meatlitlg of tins instrunlcnt of summary legis- lation. British Wgmen in Medicine llritain is gi cf the medical ]1l't1 men are iwinq wt-lt n1:111_v good all‘ been math- by the subject. ‘cotrsiticration ti) training ‘touptor future years. “'0. :11eti 111m the twofessinn .1111] 1111s‘ for their training have .1 counlltsston named to cougidqr llcl-"W lPJ-‘Iillllilll! lllvir trainiitg, students must liavc 1'cc.'i\'t'ti jjllltfi gelrcrzll cduc, imp Spiflctiol] should he based on cxa111i11atio11 results alone but ;1l---1 on ]1c‘l'.~;1;ll€li suitability for the citresr and tut-zliral schools shnttld carefully con- sider the use of special aptitude tests. The ex- lfiilllg élrrzttlgcltlctits fo “ants to students should be extcntled so that childiett with ability are not prevented from trnteriug the profession thy-pug}, lack of 111111 y. Studcttts should b: encouraged topcutne’ 1 2ll)l'l)£l(i, particularly from the British Co111111o:11vealtl1 atld Empire. diontcu should hc given full facilities for tramzng 111 all ntcdi l schools. Co-ctlucatiou is normal at ilritish med. al schools except i11 Lon-- d011 whcre teaching of wo111c11 is coitccntratcd ntaitlly at the London Stilton] of Medicine for “omen. it is recomtiiciuled that the 1.11191- silotild heroine co-etlttcatioral and that all other London schools like thr- provinciztl titles, shouli also bccozne co-ctlttczttiotial. Already (kl-arch, 1944) .l.011don Pniversity has accepted the rec- ommendation of o11e report to admit women on equal terms with 111011 in all schools. Note that ilritaitt ltas" a long pionccritig tra- dition i11 this respect. The first woman ever qualified as a doctor was a11 l§nglislnv0111an— Elizabeth lllzlcklvcll-ptu on the i'11'itisl1 .\ledi- cal llegistt r i11 1X50. The London School of Medicine for \\'11111e11 was founded i11 I874, and the report states. "its influduces comributcd i11 l large nleasttrc 111 tl1c position women doctors now hold." l<'1-<1111 11138 tn 1030, 14.0 per cent of all tnedicttl stud 111s i11 training i11 llritaiu were women, and from 111.13 1o 1043 admission quotas for women reached 20.1) per cent of the total. Women are already rcpresctited on the (len- eral Medical Council and on the Council of the British Medical Association and bold medical chairs i11 tmivcrs es. .\])])l't1XlI1l?llCiy one doc- tor in seven on the British Medical Register is I. woman and the report proposes to raise this proportion to about one in five. The report stresses giving women fuller opportunities for obtaining hospital appoint111e11ts after qualifica- tion, since this euahlt-s them tn qualify themsel- vcs better for gent-ml or specialist practice. Hence, “every possible step should be taken to secure that all lluspil-ll appni11tn1e11ts are fil- led by opt-n c11111p1it§1111 and that sex is 11o bar- rier to appoitittltetits." lt is important to stress Litat Britain is already in the forefront in giv- iltli ing opportunities to women to become doctorl and. in fact, the quota of women training al- ready approximately corresponds to the optimum proportion of women to men doctors. tDIlURIAL uuirs _ The Battle of Brandywiue this date I777; when Washington was defeated by Cornwallis; it is a creek at Chadds Ford, Penn. 1U U l I Saskatchewan C. C. F. Government has tightened the rationing of beer by reducing the quota from four brittle: aiday‘ to three per week. It would appear o11ly >ur present represen- tatives i11 Parliament are satisfied with the noti-progress i11 our transportation situation. It is time for a change. ' i‘ i I ‘ So many casualties are being reported wltll the otnvard victorious march of the Allies that scarcely a worthwhile family seems to escape. Heartfelt sympathy of the whole community goes out to those affected. 1r =11 I I Sir ilarry Lauder, \\'l1c is 74, recently re- ceivetl a 1c egram frotn Prime Minister Cl111r- chill saying: "Keep rigl1t 011 to the end of the toad." i l i i ' Sir John Higgins, the Governor of jam- aiclt. has anttouncetl that the Secretary of State for the COiOHICS has approved a grant of $2,- 500,000 for the i111prove1nent and rebuilding of schools i11 Jamaica. 1r t i K lletwcen 400 and 500 Catiadiatl officers and other ranks are being dispatched to India and Australia. 'i‘l1ey will be drawn fro111 units train- ing i11 Canada. The t111it going to India will consist 11'.a§11l_v of technical persomlel, and the <let.'1ci1111e11t going to Australia will be employ? ed i11 operating special equipment i11 the south- west Pacific area. 1o- »: w a .\[rs. U. \\'. Tdlorne of Red Deer, ;'\lta., has been elected ttttanitnously’ president of the lay advisory council of the Utiited Church of Canada. lt is the first time i11 the history of the Church that a woman has been named pre- sident of the council. Mrs. Tihorne is presi- dent of the Conference Lay Association of Al‘ berta. 1r 1r w x Council when it is necessary to call for police tclp to maintain order. .‘\t its last meeting was featured a sharp debate and numerous inter- ruptions from aldermen and citizens attending the meeting. The climax 1vas reached when Con- troller David .~\. Balfour described Alderman Sims and Norman Freed as “two aldermen who were hiding out when the war began and did c\'ery'tl1i11g they could to retard the war effort." Mayor C011bo_v, however, restored order, butl police arrived shortly after and one remained outside the door 0f the meeting until it ended. 1o- 1= 1a =1- The Ot/tlzca (filisrn rattggests the fact that Premier Drew, Ontario, went to London as the guest of Captain llarold ll. ialfour" assist- ant British Ministcr of .'\ir, may provide an election cry for Prime Aliuistcr King. It sa_v= it is understood a sharp llfOiCSf has been nladc by him touching the matter to Lord Beaver- hrook, Lord Puivy Seal, on the ground that Mr. Balfour's action constituted tttiwarranted par- ticipation in Canadian political affairs, “sure Premier Dréw presutnaiilyt went to Britain to secure more material to carry 011 his imperial- ist political campaign." lk i i \\'l1at will the Canadian army do when th: Buchc has been squashed? This is a question cilgztgitlg the attention of not a fcw soldiers and their relatives as well. It is not generally known that llritain has a large part 0f her soldiery 011 :lctivt' service i11 the liast. .\ recent news item, which nlust have escaped the attention of many" reads: .-\t the point of the bayonet, men of a Scottish rcginlettt —— of the 14th Army — clear- ed the Japanese from their strong defences on one of the seven hills astride the I‘aiel-'1‘a111u road, i11 the .\lau§pur hills of .\.ssan1." S0 there is stintething to think abou‘ by those who plead for a speedy’ end of this Global War. i 1i i‘ $1 More than 80 German reporters and editors suspected 11f opposition to the Nazi regime have been sent to c011ce11tratio11 catnps. 'l.'hcse ncws- paperttvstt include the staffs of the three big- gest (icrmau news agencies Tihese would be the official agency’ DNB, liuropa Press and Tirausoccan. .-\ ntnnher of newspapers were suspended, including the Berliner \'oll\'s Xvi- tttng, the financial paper loersen-Zeitung,‘the Lokalatizcigcr of Bcrliti, ilergwcrks Zcitung, Dgs Blatt and Her Hausfrau. .-\ dispatch from Berne said several thousand aristocrats from old families of Pr "ia, llraitdetibttrg, Silesia, Westphalia and Bavaria had been intdrtled with their fatnilies as hostages for Nazis. W ‘(l I! I Ontario and Saskatchelvatt are conceded to l1e the pritlcipal battlcgrotttids for the next Federal campaigtt, and i11 both those provi ces i1 is held by governtncitt supporters that he choice will lie largely between them and the Socialists. I11 Untario the Progressive Con- servative organization believes that the Liberals have shot their bolt, that their manpower pol- icy has been a washout and that the people are ready to get behind a party that has always and steadily stood for a more manful approach to this vital part of the nation's \var effort. One c1111sidera1io11 believed to he causing some con- cent is that of having the dissolution take place before the next Victory Loan drive is com- pleted, and that is bound to come next month. The conclusion of that drive would leave little time i11 which the govertuiurnt ca11 give the na- tion due itotice of its electoral intentions. This situation might l1e readily mct, for the ileces- sary 111:1cl1i11cr_y' to take the vote of the armed forces has already been set up by legislation passed this s11111111er, and 1hr machinery for tak- i11g the civilian vote can be completed in a short time, - There nlust be lively doings at Toronto City s THE‘ CHARIAYFFETOWN GUARDIAN llotlos l! Tlll Viay The uncut Fort Roosevelt n 1x11111015?» Tildmnbii: i-llllllll" "f"! lhalcatea tnut uewey an I pretty 1400a chance W0- 1! will stalemate e -, we m” "l" W Io ahead u usual ana hold the 9l0¢tl0n.—f1elv Yul-Ker. tetiflirigfdilicgmro ‘i? m Am“ 111 ll-llliltfflwfl by it“ m is w“ "W! l w“ that not a single plec 1 fgulpmeut the American. are 11:11:); N°fflwwv. except the 011mm rifle, Wu in production at the m?“ bssinulnr. —-Edmonton 10111- Why u :11 11.4.11‘. 1111111 who shoot; down a number of plane, any more "ml" i0 11 medal than a tank zlmner who knocks out n few guns 01' till". 0r even the overlooked foot 8108822‘ who during his service $2 ‘£62585’, 1:8 ponsldeialéle number ‘ - e 1 London Emu“ er to the -____ “leaf-wearers” h the llteral tran- slutlon for the nuns of a Jungle in India culled Juanita. According 1o Encyclopaecila Britannica the Ju. inks declare that the river goddess 9mm fillllflsed a pary o.’ naked 511M811 dancing. She ozderea them to wear leaves and threatened that "WY Should die 1f they give up this practice. One of the briefest wills ever Drobated tn Halifax 1,; the IO-word lust testimony of Charles Delloro, u n June. It, said simply: In case of mv death my wife Jenny Walton (Mistress Jenny Delloro) 1s the boss of Wot I leave." Delloro. 1m Italian. had been headwalter at t.1e ClWB Lord Nelson Hotel for nine years and left personal property valued at less than five thousand dollars. — The Maple Leaf, In London. on the eve of hls lg- nomlnlous arrest. many people Wife saying that Petaln should not be classed with he war crim- inals: that he should re allowed to slip into retirement; that Old Filth. er feat: has been punished en- ough. If he survives until the day "f Yeclwnlnfl. it is certain that 1115 Judie-s Will be tllsappasslonate, It would be futile to bear millse a1- illnit the DER!‘ shadow of all girl soldier who has lived too tong _ Vancouver Province. The Mormon Church, which frowm on bars. cocktail lounges and 559K389 stores, permlts [nose who attend church regularly to dance 1n the church baszmenls once weekly and bring tifelz‘ own bottles. Directly facing 1113 Mot-mm Temple atop the magnificent 50o- room Utah Hotel ls the renowned tarllte Gardens rooftop cafe, where there's nightly {llnlng and dancing wblle a Mormon Church choir practices on the other side of the street. —- tNew York Post). Gulliver found the scientists of Luputa distilling sunbeam; from cucumbers. A no less amazing new lndV-‘llfy ls being developed in swilflnd. t0 derive chemicals from seaweed. In recent years seaweed has been found to have extensive co- tentlalltles in relation to the maid ing of textiles. transparent paper, plastics, foodstuffs, sizing material, Surgical. medical and dental mat- erials. A Scottish Seaweed Re- search Assoclatlon is being fotmed to look lnto the possibilities of this new lndustrv ln Scotland, under the eyes of the Ministry of Supply 8nd the Scottish Council on I11- gg-istrvsct. Thomas Times-Jour- The Jllls hive u new 1va1- tlogan, selected in a national competition And from our very rudimentary knowledge of Japanese. 111w: should .553’ it‘; 8- Bood one- at least from the Allied standpoint. Th‘; slogan, 01' 0011689" vell is "Iki. Kaki. Konkl. Sookekkl. Icky as the Japs pfapug- Bnda line, wacky as their ideas of conquest, and conkcd out. us they rB-Dldly are becoming, 1t seems to sum up the situation pretty well, We aren't sure about, "Sokekkfl which l: probably among the 11,4351; in store for the little buck-toothed fflell- (Actually. the slogan means Spirit’. haztnuny, stamina, total action.’ in case anyone is inter- ested.) —St. Thccnas Times-Journal, Nobody, faced with a choice l1e- tween a few more bombs getting through now and ending 1,119 wal- by victory l1 few —perhr1p_; runny _ months earlier could hesitate for one moment. Let us, indeed. see in this new ordeal a. proof cf the wisdom of being strong enough to prevent an enemy ever again con- lmlllfln the channel’ coasts; but mean-while let us do nothing which will delay turning out-the enemy from those ccusts. It follows, of course, frcm this unanswearable Hrgumént that a cause of delay would be the diversion of air power from its tactical and strategic uses. e House of Commons showed round corporate sense recently tn its obvlmls dtlncllnation 111 believe that any other uses could be an effective form of reprlsal. To in- dulge ln a completltlun ‘m deliber- ate barbarlsm, apart frcm all other considerations, would show 115 1;, b5 the “military Idiots" which Hitler once proclaimed Us to be. The fly- lflB‘ bombs will not be fcrgottmt when the dtlv CCUIE; to settle 11cc- ounta with Germany, Meanwhile a deiitlillgogv and indiscriminate fire W rve flObOdv from his t.- Lnndon Morning Post. p“ One of the most remarkable features of the Soviet, offenslves is the success of field kitchen; in keeping up with armored spear- heads. Then- servlce ls at the peak of Elllfllfllcv while the offensive ls at its height. The commander of a Red A1mv tank battalion has been telling me about Pervunln, the battalion ccok. ‘There were days during the Spring offensive when none of u; ever imagined the field kitchen would be able 1o follow us. We gave up all idea of breakfast, lunch or dinner, Yet, every time we stopped at one or another line a. hot meal appeared as lf by magic." In this battalion Sergeant Ma-jor Krutavtsev ha; charge of the mesa. He repel-u for each m- ' butts as minutely u anv of men who take part In the fighting. After studying the mute to be taken by the tanks. he know; exactly where the flelu kitchen must be to deliver breakfast, lunch or supper. And he ‘always send; along lnsu at- ed containers in cue the kitchen cannot get; close enough to the tantra. It ls his bout that what- ever the circumstances, whatever the weather, hi; tankmen wlll get their meals hot and on time. And he has never failed-From the 1L5. 5.3. Infom-lntlon Bulletin. SMALL CONTINENT is the smallest of the with the exception of rope continents, Australia. Sumervells p0 the- Vimy Memorial ‘Safe (Globe and Mull.) Canadian . ‘ o war wlll rejoice to learn e Erl- tlsh have captured Vlmy Ridge, and that the magnificent memo- rial to this nation's glorious dead inspecting beautiful monument and fears were enter- tained that the Nazis would des- i1 it. But evidently the master race was more ‘utcmsted ln wrecking human lives, and spared the masterpiece designed b Mr. Walter S. Allward of Toronto. The capture of Vlmy Ridge was the most brilliant achievement of the old Canadian Corps up to the spring of 1917. when the famous escarpment was a cardinal potnt on the Western front. Hench troops previously had failed to drive the enemy from the longpp- land, about 475 feet in height, which affords a view of the coun- try around 1n all directions. The Germans prized Vlmy Ridge, which was the hinge on which they pivoted in their retirement to the celebrated Hindeuburg Line. The battle for the ridge opened on April 9 and the Canadian Corns —every Canadian combatant than 1n France pBfblClpflf€d-—llf\l;l 1w- netrated to fl_dBplll of six miles bv April 13. In modern-days of rapid movement, 1t must be reme "red that the enemy was strongl, n trenched, and mechanized equlo- ment then was not 11s fully de- veloped as now. Millions of men had been hustled dow11 ln trenches for ycars, butjthe great victory of the Catladtuus foreshadowed a return to a war of movement on the Western frontlt also proved the possibility of breaking through the most: ela- borate field fortifications. No Canadian wlll welcome the news about the capture of an un- damn ed Vlmy Memorial more heartiy thur. Col. Henry C. Os- borne, CMG. secretary of the Ca- nadian Battlefields Memorial Commission at Ottawa. tutds-r whose direction the masterpiece was erected. The liberation of Arras and release -of the memorial from the clutches of the hated Nazis will awaken happy memo- ries in the minds of thousands of Canadian pilgrim; who wert France i11 1936 to see the u. in, ceremony. at which King E ward VIII officiated. These peaceful pilgrims stood on the rlfllsv While Mussolini wa pursuing his cam- paign of slaughter in Ethiopia and Hltlerk legions WCTC B0059- stepping along the Rhine. Little they thought that Vlmy would soon again be in the hands 0f Ill? Germans. lhg British Expeditionary’ Force which made such c1 miraculous escape from Dunkerqtie crossed Vlmy Ridge twice on the way to Belgium and back, and one of its offlccrs caused anxiety ln Canada in March, 1941, when he wrote of civilian dead heaped around the memorial. Happily, the most beuu< tiful monument erected on any battlefield has escaped wat-‘s r11- vagss. Canada’s Radium (By CHI-I.) (In the Winnipeg l-‘rec Pressi OTTAWA: Catladn at war is today producing most of the world's supply of radium, a metal so yraluable that by comparison gold is cheap. Largest ticrcentage 11f 1m; supply is being used 1n Cau- nda by the luminous paint 111- clustrv to produce glowing dials. needles and panels ftnwtbe instru- ment boards of fighting aircraft and for other service needs. Much of the remainder goes to the medical profession to battle the scourge of cancer. v In the far north Great Bcnr lake country the famous Eldorado min:- produces the 0Y9 by Iiztzcl rock methods. At the mine i: is partially‘ refined and then shipped to Port Hope ,for purilicntlotl. Three million part5 of the origi- nal ore give approximately one part of radium 11nd that 1511-12 obvious reason for its high nricc. All the radium produced eventu- ally reaches the National Re- search council at Ottawa 11s m- nlum in the compound by the glans eapsttles, each containing about n hundred tnllllgrams. Enough of this salt. to cover the head of a pin would cost, bv rauqh count, between $25. and $50. In the radiology laboratory e1:- perts measure the amount of ra- dium 1n the compound by the increased conductivity of air when exposed to the rays. This con- ductivity is then compared with that, produced by 11 standard cap- sule and a certlfcate of content is issued. About a dozen capsules can be measured every two days. In the National Research build- imz the radium compound ls kFplZ l1. its lend container in a safe not so much tn talotect 1t against 111-11. but morn to keep the pouterfttl rays inside. No educated thief would steal radium: it would be 3111s "hottes" thine he could han- r~ The cxoerts explain its palm- tlal 11111111111111; from theft in this wav. While it is an infinitely valuabl- substance its uavs Pr: so powerful that 1t can be rsatllly detected and located from a dis- tance by Ql oal fnsicmll ' If a thief hid it ilow 1o 90111111115 Rheumatic Pains Rheumatic pain no when uuul by uric acid in the blood. Thin blood lllould be extracted by the kidneys. I i nay: hi, and nceu uric acid rellulnl, if lolntl uuling inihtu the muscles Ind owuciatiq palm. Trut rheumatic pain: b huh; you llidne a in condition. ah ngulul Dadd ' 0y Hill-fut lull I cenfwyl luwih kidney remedy. '99 Budd's Kidney Pills G, F, Ilutcheson 81 SUI OPTOMETIISTS “Specialists in the fil- ling of glasses for the correction of ocular de- fects." - 53 Grafton Street For as little as $2 a week at age 32 you can arrange a $50.00 monthly income for your family to last ten years, o1- you can secure a monthly income for yourself at age 65 guaranteed for ten years. Iu- quire today for details of this money - saving arrangement. of his house it despite walls and other obstruc- , tlons, on the tanee of 150 feet away. The rfldlfl- , mm 15 so pgwéffu] that even when placed ma, (luck lead sufeits presence can be detected- sillCg nothing will actually stop the rays, shipping radlunl ls a problem. In transit it ls ltelli. 1n a thick lead cylinder but any light- setlsitlve material such HS photographic paper MHST- i"? kept at least. teufeet away. Other- wise the rays will expose it. Per- sons travelling with radium, plo- vlcled they stay a few fret away from it. are l11.no 0:11:89!"- u Canadian radium is belnlz used for. treatment of some forms p1 cancer, other malignant. elm-Vii" and some non-mallqiiaiit growths- The doctors who banal; 1t know hoxv long a certain qurttittty‘ o1 ra- dlum must be left 0:1 o llwlvill Jl any size 1n order lo k_1l1 ti}? "115 o; the growth. ‘The time 1s men- sured in mllligranl hours -— so many milligrams of radium for so many hours cf treatment. Large hospitals sometimes have as 11111011 11s half a gram of rntltutn _on llllltl- The question ls often raised that if radium is so valuable 110W "'11" 1t be used economically in P1‘_°d‘l°_' m: jumlnous pnmt, The experts reply is that 0111.1’ 11 very 1111111119 quantity mixed with a 1111110 “Pl- 11me of paint nntltes the D111“?- fluoresccetit. _ _ l The popular belief 1-1 lhfll N" dlum paint is a dangerous thing to have around, but that is not so. Unless it is taken internally, _tl1c amount of l'f‘l(l.ll'l'll 1:1 Yflllllllllj paints would not be sufficient to harnt anybody. even lf it were ex- posed to the ram for YEAR?- In the early days of radium. re- search workers did die from swallowing minute quantities ‘of mdig conlpounds or from brindl- lnlz the gas given off. At Canndas research council laboratories 1.1- dim“ i5 treated \'.'ill1 respect jxndl 51:11pm but effective precautions taken. Radium 1s powerful stuff. i n SECRET EAPON MEL-HOUR E, Attstralin - m" beside his fnxhole when =11 Jarpullcse opened up with n mflfill-y lne-gun, He dived l11 and the bill-z 191,; tntssctl him. But D119 “f “lei bullets knocked his leg. Across the . 1 -k a pattern imce wild szeese Went- b-V- , , , . .. ..1 _ 1 11 from a. palm nbne h.m. It b.0k.. i ppsjegrnglllzilrzékaeyfgn could be 111.11}; l’? street frcm a dls- ‘i if 11. .1. llllBlllli OPTOMETIIST l-‘lttln: and Silalilfllll Glam l’ Montague, P. I. I. ' Office llnurs: l0 to ll A. M. 8 l0 l5 P ' " Holidays etc" by lllhfllllhlnllll 0f flee Connected with DRUG-STORE. Ii-TZW THE DIPPER AND THE PLANE AND THE PILOT e d ' s alonz the Si-flffv sky. Himself....a star set free‘ He flies the course the wild Reese v. And cuts unerrlnulv. Dlpper's 1111 1 luescent. ,Wlthin exacting point and lino Of ageless, astral law; iA suleitdld spark 1n charted fllllht 50111111.- 111111111 Across the starry “lhis 1111-1111111 Years Ago Bv The Canadian Press 1 seizfuérlbidrllnilizloifflaldhgfxidlizllildand Ell RAF tittttcked Berlin and other obleculvai "iedmflilialftlbllan aircraft (C?) 1 iiimihi-ecti riilbntns’ operation in lhe . The American soldier w!“ Siaud-‘Near East. T-HICKNESS COUNTS There l5 no practical difference dcv-‘n 11 coco11ut1 in the warmth of wggOfc/he0fsailxlg fixed denim. ‘SAINT JOHN., LV- CIIARLOTTETOWN 7.00 A. M. 11.30 A. M. @6100 P. M. 1 (‘Moneton Only) U0 NEW GLASGO l.OO P. M. Allied alr- T, 5 ' DEPARTMENT OF MUNi Hon. C. D. Howe 1 1t11(1!<ll..<’ HT YOUR r1111 v11 Use your fireplace to tulle the chill 0E the boun- bur, when not in use, be sure the " r‘ _ pl: is closed, to avoid heat escaping up the chutney. TIONS AND SUPPLY - Minister v ‘$00 One Way (Plus Tn) RESERVATIONS-INFORMATIO, I TICKETS PHONE 540-2061 illmnnt 11111 t .unuuuuua ‘v _. Macs Hair Restorer A delleately perfumed pre- mention which restore», "trengthem 111111 l1e-aunties he hall‘. Restores Grey n1- oded Hair to its original lhldu whether Black, llrnwn, Bed or Auburn. prevents dandruff and Slups falling Promotes a new and Ill rowth where the ha r h fal ing and ls umnlult- lbly useful In preventing dandruff. Get your lluttlc 111- lhy. Price 60 cents. ARE YOU TIROUBLED LUMBAGO ORE BACK T If l0 we have one of the best remedies to offer namely BACK - RITE TABLETS Recommended for Lum- bugo, Sciatica, Neurltis, Joint Muscllllll- 1111111 other forms 11f Rheumatism. Price 50 cents per box. MACS FILE OINTMENT A Ill! and efficient rem- Odly for internal and external lea. It. l; made only of the heat quality lnerelhentl. [misusing remarkable Iber- apeutlc value for this pur- xzle. It carries out its bene- hl effect In three w: l: 11 ll molhel. 2. It Lubrlen u. I. CGCJI Want. Ads!" l “For the life of m; l can't understand why he stays with nil-don't l1e ever read the Guardian It l; astringent. Get I full! Milly. Price 60 cents tube. TllE 2 MAGS Ill Great (learn 51"" Mull Orders Given PHI?! Attention. 1n? _l'rufessional @1118: ‘ McLeod £1? Bentler w. n. nan-run. K- C- r. 11. BENTLEY. 1r. c. Barristers and Atlorncyl-fl" Law l“ Prince 82ml ill. ll. lloana 8 00- Cllartered Accountant! {l8 Grafton Sh. Cl\'l°‘"" lPhone 2060 - Box 247 _- QM fi . lllamll 1111a 00min"! I. F. ARGIIIBALII clumml Accolllllln" . ‘nun 11m“ Bulldlnl - cnl-loiiewwn ae ALEX w. MATHCIEQQ, as’ to Loan c 54ml v 9° qr”: Geo! mun. lotion n. l '