|| ,._..-- ».:rv-4~»mnn-|» vase: O HI -_ -c-_-_ -. u-uva-r .-<.»_».-_a,.-....-.---_-T-_nl_f e . ..-.-..-.'..-:.'..'..'-'~'.'..-; .-;.;.-_=_s —,., ,_.j_.:.,!;_*;_c:_" P‘ t‘ r" >- '* u"-"-"»'»“-"-"‘ ' féfillllQUl TIIE . RIIIRLOTTETUWN GUARDIAN Morning Dill! (Founded In ll“) President: Lleut. Col. W. Cheater S. Mel-In Vice-President: J. l flux-null. IJ-L $gorelaryz Utlll. Clll D. A. Mltlflnllflll. lJ-S-ll- Idllor and Managing Dlrwuor: l B. Burnett. IJ-l. Associate Editors: ‘rank Walker and Lleut. Ian 4 Burnett. R.C.N.V.lL (On Active Set-nut "The Strongest Memory Ls Wtdkn T; the Weakest Ink.‘ TUESDAY. J_\I§E 13. 19M Honored Visitors An honoured and most welcome visitor t0 Charluttetoivii this evening will be the H011. Ray Athertoii, United States Ambassador to Cati- ada. .\lr. Atherton will be accompanied by .\Irs. Athcrioiw and by .\lr. Dana Dotcn, of the I15. ElTllLl>>_\' 11L tttiawa, and Mrs. Dotcn. .\lr. Atlieriiiu will lie guest spciiker at a combined servzce chili dinner here this evening, and will. meet 1'C])1't‘<C‘11l'dli\'8 citizens for the purpose of ‘learning 11s i .ich as possible about the Province. On \\'c1liic lav iiC \\ill pay an official call tipoil f (iitYUFllflf and Premier, and will tii» l.1E".1l _ lento \\.d .il.iy' attcrntion by plane tor >_vil- up _ _ I: Athertons career has been a most dis- lll"l_’lli5'l'l‘.’1l one. He spent several years in banking :i::.l nrcliiiccttire before joining the US. Ctiiisulnr >t"l'\'iCc‘ in i917. Since then he served in China, ziie Philippines and Greece be- fore coming to Ottawa. He was appointed Minister to Canada on Aug. 3, 1943. and rais- ctl to the ~z:itvis of ;\1'lll.J3>.~'€1(lO1" on Nov. 1S. Uur ClI1i§11> will extend a cordial welcome‘ to .\lr. 41nd .\lrs. .\tl1E1'lO11 and party on this UCC i , both on their own account and by rca- li position .\lr. Atherton occupies representative of our great neigh- to tli: South. l The Manpower Problem “.1\1‘l‘ the regional director of .\':it— iie Svrvice announced that new job i-rr 11nd loa pliins have been made iteces- _ _ nf reserves of artillery shells. the >l1FTlI1_‘_'3 it: 150,000 nien iii essential indus- t.‘ and the 1l(‘{"l by the arincd forces of 170.000 ln lltsnwa. .\ll111ill'l1l> .\Il11l.~l('\‘ lloivi- has derlrireii ih.i the tic-ed for 10.000 workers in the (llllllllllllilful industry is urgent. and Labor .\ll1'llrlr°1' Mitchell has announcrd a three-point plan t- " ‘Pnsify the search for manpower. 'l'l:<- rris:stli.'itl1:is now come upon us. says the .\lfi‘iti't".'tl tirizettc. l> one that has been looming inrlis. The tiivveriinicnt has been warn- ed tint.‘ and tzme :igain that it ivas imminent. The tiovcrnziie itself knew that it would ar- rIi-r- -=i , lt-rr. iidlillyll has come at the wneii the thousands of our countrymen . i I net-d t-very scrap of help the land can creientl :s a bitter commentary _ tical boondoggiitg on the home front R111 this is not the time for recrimination. \\'e nut-t ‘ook to the future, not to the past. The rn=ii l‘l1‘..~l. he found for fighting ai1d for produc- ing. The tioveriiiiient tnust use without further he illlllll the ivartinie powers it possesses to for '11 pace the citizens of this country, men and \\'i'\I1‘.E"‘., whcrc they arc most needed and in the job. tilt’ ruin il.i best. l§\ei'_vtl1iiig possible must be done to back up the (int “Illllflll to the hilt. The co-operation of tjn s and workers in the industrial mobili- 'urvrji‘ is imperative. lt is evident that t. . . bout to be called on to shoulder a grew share of tit." burden of the war than it ha» b trite until iioiv. ln one respect we have been luckier than our alli:-~. ‘lur fghting nien have only just entered “tttlc in large iiiassrs. lt is only from this in that our vaisziziltics Will call for heavy cements. \\'e could have been much worse oti. Plllt tie have no assurance that from todav our old makeshift manpower plans will serve. It §~ :ilrcarl_i' apparent that the expenditure of munitions is beyond the CXpTQIEIlTOH of the Allit-d lenders. 'l'he- expenditure of nien may also out- run our calculations. The policy of patching here and patching there. struggling along from year to year, has patently failed. The Govern- n1 ‘Ell must get to the routs of the problem on a nzizioiiivirle DElSln, and it must act now. For Inva. Maps n. r-‘or the last two ytears the Department of the Director of .\Iilitar_v_Survey' at the \\'ar 17f- fice has been working on the task of providing the necessary maps for the invasion of Europe. The vastness of the tindertaking is illustrated by the fact that. in tire final stages. every firm in the country capable of printing a map has been working on tile job. Security is. of course, of paramount import- ance. for the map is the only mass-produced military article which betrays of itself the very purpose of an opcratiriri. In this case, security has been maintained by the splitting up of the huge job into innumerable fragments. Each draughtsman, each printer, has a minute por- tion assigned to him, and has no knowledge of how his ntrirscl of the jigsaw puzzle fits into the complete plan. He is thus in no position to determine whether or not he is working on a vital zone. In the case of France, to mention only One theatre, the basis of the maps produced by the Directorate of Survey has been the pre-war survey work of the French Government, which itself was based on the original mapping done under Napoleon. It is unfortunate that France was one of the worst served countries in the world in this respect. During the last two years the Directorate of Military Survey has, in spite of being denied access to the ground. produced more original maps of France than that country itself made since the days of Julius Caesar. The largest-scale maps produced for the iii- vasion arc on the scale of i,-25,oo0. These are primarily made for the use of artillery but their value‘ is recognized by tnany other arms, all of which have demanded supplies. livery one of the t-25.oc0 maps has been fully revised with ‘spr- 4- The help given by air photographs is im- mense, but nothing is further from the truth than the layman's belief that an air photograph represents exactly what appears on the ground and can thus be interpreted without specialized training. To the inexpcrt, air photographs pro- vide misleading information. The effect of light and shade, for example, is greatly exaggerated in them; and the contrast between freshly ploughed and a stubble field is depicted as far greater than that between low gorse bushes and trees big enough to conceal a tank. Again, air photography tends to throw into relief differences of scale such as occur when in a domestic snapshot somebody is photograph- ed at full length with boots protruding towards the Cillfltfa, with the result that his feet appear to he larger than his head. The same distortion, the same difference of scale, is evident in air photography when, for boots and head, the hills and valleys photographed by reconnaissance aircraft are substituted. Nevertheless, it is from experienced and informed scrutiny of air photo- graphs that niany of the largest scale nlaps used for the invasion of Europe ltave been carefully constructed over a long period. The work of the Directorate of Military .Qtirvc_v does not include models. which are the 1'(’_5|70llSll)llll_\' of the Royal Air Force. It is. however. responsible for the production of ntaps for all United States forces based on or passing through Great Britain. and for all those used by the United States .-\ir Forces as well as by the Royal .-\ir Force. IIDIIURIAL NUIIIS _ The output of warships in Britain up to the end of _lanuar_y 1044 was only very sliglitly- lcss than that of the last war. and the ships are of niuch greater complexity today. There is a tremendous increase in detail of equipment. i 1i l? One of the German secret weapons that look- ed menacing a short time ago was the glider bomb. In fact it sank the brand-new Italian battleship "Roma" after the Italian capituln- tioii. lt has now been announced that P-ritish scientists found the answer to this threat. The tiziture of the new counter-device is, tiaturally enough. still secret. I i I A Nova Scotian in Toronto named Matthew lztiiegzi (aged 2n; zidopled a strange means, i1 is alleged, to be discharged from a llllllllllfill factory in order to return to the Maritimcs. He was arrested at the war plant and put unrler bail of $5.000. He is an experienced machin- ist. and the police allege he purposely dam- agedthe material in ordrr to be discharged. i! i i Ill William Butler Yeats, Irish poet, most dis- tinguished representative of modern Irish liter- ary revival, born this date 1865, his writing which includes poetry, drama, and llfOSf‘ ar“ marked by individuality" of thought and vision and subtlety and delicacy of expression; his poetry perhaps making the greatest appeal: "But I, being poor have only iny dreams. I have spread iiiy dreams tinder your feet: Tread softly, because you tread on my dreams." 3 II Ill i The index of Canadian farm producrprices moved lower in May, closing at 101.7 ‘for the week of the 26th. compared with 103.6 a month earlier, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics rc- ports. Annual product prices dropped 3.2 points to 120.1 as a result of decreases in producers‘ prices for fresh milk and eggs which out- weighed increases for live stock. Lower quota- tions lor fluid iiiilk reflected a reduction in producer subsidies. Field products. off 1.2 points at 90.7, resulted from declines for pota- toes and rye. ll‘ l‘ I 1i .~\ girl the cause of all the trouble in Mon- treal. Justice Minister St. Laurent said in the Commons that the R.C..\I.P., the Quebec Pro- vincial Police and the Montreal Municipal Police were investigating the cause of recent street fights in Blontreal ai1d district between “zoo:- stiitcrs" and service personnel. Ansiveriiig .\lr. Gordon Graydon, Progressive ' Conservative House Leader, Mr. St. Laurent said prelimin- ary investigations indicated that the fights were not due to any racial animosities, nor did they have “any political character." It had been found the first of the outbreaks was set off when a sailor took a girl from a civilian. F X 1C ‘I The news of the battling it took to get through one of the largest convoy-s yrt sent to Russia is a 1't"11‘ll11.'l€l' that, although the lf-boat menace has been beaten. it has not been removed. The con- voy had to fight its way through swarms of German aircraft and a series of U-boat attacks. beaten for one moment unless substantial niival and air forces are kept in constant viigilance, and convoys to Russia still need powerful escort. l II i ¥ In a speech calling for reorganization of D0- minion-Proviincial financial powers, Prcmilrr Stuart S. (iarson, K.C., of Manitoba, told dele- gates to the Canadian Life Insurance Officers Association in Toronto that “it is utterly bopé- less to expect to finance the Dominiorfs posi- war responsibilities out of indirect taxes.“ Hb . . . 1a a." lied operator, '- Two L-boats were sunk by the aircratt of the admin-l?“ ‘m Royal Navy's .\ir Arm, aided by a destroyer. _‘—* r __ ,, Cl tte k , There were also some probablcs. Bhlot {reg u, laignfmagmmhhmtgmd‘ ' ' e . three mon A2: a single merchant ship was dost, tit when ‘hey used u finance,“ the operation did cost one British des- tgjgflr-mgdg, Ram-d? “we; - t, ' D11 shed 1n brie Financial P st. troyer. It IS clear that L boats wont stay This does “m include cmucaes run CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN There will be no beauty pugelnt this season on Atlantic City's sands. It 1s bet-harps as well. tier motaer now remembers who was Mlss America for tltflt-Mllwaiultee Journal. In the Battle of Italy the Cun- adlans are covet-in: lsemnelvea with neat slorv. are flirhttniz as the; iatriers fouqht at Yures and Vunv. Ttiim that there cannot to higher commendation. - Ottawa Journal. Whlla working ln the mum; Albert- Edmr bs, or Winches- ter. gained oertaln information. He told his wife. who told he: mother, who told another person. After hearing 1n private a-t. wlmnesm Police Court. 600mb; was flnod £20 £3211 careless tulle-Landon Dally P We _notlee thlt 1h; Clty qr s“; Francisco 1s 120111: to use women as traffic officers. However, the [(1:13 won't pack pistols. Their only wea- vonuwlll be a miniature or “lady's size billy. Does that mean theydl only be able to "suuiz" ladies. cr that theyll only be axle to deal out a ladv-like 5lIU$'-’— Kingston Whig- Standard. lt may be U’!!! in a few year; we shall have absorbed all the tradi- tions of baseball mow befnsz nlavecl bv British tirocpci, win rise in a body to stretcrr ourselves at the S-eebv seventh. and write of the Fégle All {gtmriuazie as palgizéwlv fou- 1 s s ncom re. ns51.e.— London Times. D Price control rcgulstlonn extend to the Lraln vendor. and here are the prices he 1s permit charge for his mzxst mpular mares: Sandwiches. 15: each: gum. 6c per package: chocolate and candy bars. E.‘ c3211 peanuts. 5c and 10c a m c e1 sealed container; lee cream ccries. 5: cash: nipples 5c each: oranges, 10c each-Consumers‘ News. Few poets hziye shown so gentle and tender a SDlflt toward the low- lier farms of animal 111a as did Burns. The mouse ivhose nest 111s nlcwshare overturned, the ummd- ed hare that crossed his oath. the soziir-bird shivering from the Wln- terks blast, annealed to tiJs neat. ltumén heart r111 their world ivce brcame his nwn-“Our Dumb Animals." a n According tn line's viewpoint, the war has brought a teniibfe or a rl-cricus rhnrtaize of baizc-lpes 1n Scotland. Mayor Kenneth Doble of Dumfrlcs mmns: “How can ow" bcvs march into Berlin without 12317111155?“ How. lndieul? The “Lsdte; from Hell" exreatest fishi- irit‘ man 1n the world. need t" ~~ to bring out their fla-rninz spirit. And ink what. terror the skirl o’ m‘ "ca: _.r1k,e 1n the heart of Post 0am telephone d t. W! COIN-HM’! flutes By The Way lea" Emile" A10"? (W Prue Press) 501m In mop!» 1n Brit- nlnmralslnggfunidtnrepnlrth e crack 1n Bl; Ben. the bell Mitch stxlkes the hours from the tower o! Parliament. This 15 n movement which deserves to full. Big Ben cracked 8B years ago when 11a was recast and since then his sound according he been su 111m to be cast all over spin an that 1t mly "mm With a new tone. Th9 Rovernment bu set its face awmly ugnlnst this reform and r111- htly s0. The sound of 51g‘ Ben 1s music 1n the oil's of the undone: 1t. u been carried around the world by radio. A11 thmuih the blitz B1: Ben boomed out to the world 0n every rndlo to proclaim that lmidon "could take 1t.‘ Better an any other symbal 1t seemed to represent the unnonquerable spirit of lmzlancl. Now B15 Ben booms 1n more cheer hi1 time; and will continue to boom through the bother days of peace. Big Ben l8 a veteran of five reigns. two world wars and nothing has d1:- turbed or interrupted 111m. A suc- cessor, even made from the same metal. could never fill his place in the hearts of Ezrigllshmen and of free men everywhere. Let 1-11m bmm on. His cracked voice is better than music. It is the ringing note of freedom. Of Crete (British Information Bureau) The capture, by British offloers raiding Crete, of German General Kretue. commander of the 22nd Pan- zer Grenadier Dlveslon (the ‘sevas- lopcl Division’). 1.11 an even more amazing feat than might- ot first sight appear. because the Napls have made Crete a testing ground for anti-commando defense, - After the successful British Oom- mando attack on Herakllon ali-fleld 1n Crete on June 13 and 14, 1942, the German A11- Mlnfstry issued, on August. 2, 194.2 a. long order analys- ing the British methods of attack and revolutlonlslng the training of ground personnel. The reason, in the words of this instruction, was that ‘The Allies" specially trained sabot- age troops are too good for our def- ense ." The instruction specified the Commandos as s, new type of soldier. selected preferably frcm a profession like boxing, and then catalcgued the Commando methods used 1n attacking Crete and other European objsctlves, The new British attack methods. the document continued. demand nSW methods of defense: 11211:: the Germans must imitate Ccmmandf- methods. Troops and equipment. must. be specially adapted to nigh: iz-e. Every man must, have a Very pistol, rifle and pistol sights must be improved for night firing. sentry posts must. remove all shining equin- the Wfl.7f1€1‘1>.11-\\'~Efl-X16d Nazis! — Detroit Free Press. This story of a German lieu- tenant cant-med bv a British effic- er comes Answers. war as they to take the from Italy says Imndon Th v_ talked about the ‘ed for an escort onei- dawn the line "Your bombing d. Butt the German; bombr-d .cn first," nclnted out. his 02b- to.. "Yes? replied the "but" look how large your :5 are. The Canadian Churcliman tells this one: In an asseniblv of dlvines. the witty Archbishop Whatelev was once asked t define the difference between 12b: zltsh and the Irish c ~ e Archbishop: Wyn. Béfllled th “p h rfyou are lfsteriinz ta an Fr:- lisn preacher.‘ you want to stay avzake and he “isn't let vcu: tvhn vou hear en Irish preacher. vcn want to sleep, and he wont 1e~t you." The professional soldier has the most thankless calling 1n the tvorld. 1a 1:53."? 11': is looked r-coit as a ccnsiimei- of nubile taxes. In war he 1s art to be curled three deep by the inrush of amateur soldiers. each intent upon kriowledce that. takes a lifetime to acquire. You wt11 find him in the honors 11st unon oc- casion. but ten to one 1t will have been the condescenslon of scme amateur soldier placed htm thcrc. And vet were it not. for the stiffer‘- lnz cf professional soldiers each nation would 2'0 "s a tvro into war. —-V1ctorla Colonist. We hear a. lot of lament. about the Increase of tuvenlle dellnquencv and a lot of suztzestlons for its cure utliile n11 the tine we know. 1f we would admit it, that the real trou- ble ls parental delinquency an-d that the remedy 1114; 1n parents imvlriiz more attention to the framing cf their children and less to their own 1s falsely glorified as “war vrorklfl- Owen Sound Sun-Times. The commandant of an camp tried to telephone a-ti officer at 1'11; borne in a near-by commun- ltv. savs The Natlon. The offlecfs phone was on a three-party 111cc. and for half an hour the command am cot. nothing but busy signs =. Finally, he called the o eraitor and asked 1f somethinz cc-ul n't be done about. 1t. "Aft r he sald. "It Isn't suoh a lon distance. I walk there 1n 111:1; an hour." “O fore; there k more mane. to buy the rraspem; t from war tension _ and ovmwozk probably encourage chain smoklrq. 1n any bvent over llmree bllllicn cla- arettes 1n three mtmiths 1a quota I bonnria-Wtnnlvea Tribune. General Motors Ill having ill!- flculty “duh the final cleaning of tlnv lt-cles 1n the lnjeotors of D esel motors. says The Wall Street Jour- inquired of his large audience whether such an outcome would not mean that after the wal- the Dominion Government must maintain all something approaching their present level thd Federal taxes upon incomes, corporations an inheritances. “Hence," he said, “when the pre-l sent Dominion-Provincial taxation agrrementl expires, the provinces will be given back --l what? Their constitutional right to impose pro- vincial direct taxatfcai. But what good will this right be to the yiriivinces if they have to rc- impose their provincial rates of taxation in these fields on 10p of Federal taxes at approximately their present level." He said that each (Tan- adiaii province must have a strong and sound the help of air photographs. credit in order to discharge provincial post-war responsibility. m1. Piece! of piano wire were shov- ed into the holes. with nnsatufac- Kidneyi Acid: Rob Your Res Mmy [Qopll new um h n pol nl|hf'| Iul. TlIOIlIIIIIIIIIIOII-I-“ll! uwllo and mum chap. Ollcnt bhlo It ll ‘nuvef’ when if may In l ‘I llnllhy kidnap filter plum from lxod. Mthcymmrll amllnlpofnu yin! lllllll olplounuqhool- eel», bnchzlu olhn follow. ll In’! sleep will, fry Dolifi l-llf ll a mnury lln hvwlk nuuly. m Budd's Kldnoyjllls fareas must, be covered amazement-vac. less even to ivbat p1 ment. and improve camouflage, ex- posed areas must be methodically floodlit at irregular periods. blood- hounds must be uzed to pursue retreating Commandos land defense with trip wires. acoustic alarms and wires with electric charges attached. The document added that experiments on these lines wire being conducted by the German Chief Engineer in JUNE l3. i944 .k we m. h not. intently muanfil. Theyaiivant The General Snatchers i 1 l having to make u little They've proved by dcl' ' MH74 WHEN neighbours diacuu coffee thuY agree on this fact . . . it’: one they learned thxouih = To be sure of fidl enjoyment in every cup you must use really good ooflec- And to l very llrge number of them “null! good collars" simply melnl “Maxwell Home”. and full-bodied thin flmoul blend really is. If you haven't tried ‘Maxwell Home lately, l you should do so at once. You'll find it extra Ind extra utialying because: coffee go a long way: 1, It's blended from ran, urn-flavor coleu, carefully cbolen from 11a worldb 2, Round by l. opoclnl proud bow fragrunt ‘h. upturn all the goodness o! this RIIII blend. Maxwell Home h packed lu I Wartime Bu; ll In All Purpose Grind Ind at [on cool to you. Ahbdvdoffimuvllhofi British land forces again raided the very alrflelds of Greta to which the German instructions had most par- tlcularly applied, ‘may destroyed a number of enemy aircraft and with- drfut vilthcut casualties. Flor a fur- ther 10 months the Germans re- vised their defense methods. _ Then a few weeks 8Z0. BflllSh officers landed and carried cff the commanding general under their noses. Professional Barns --. ! =.-s--..— ___ . . l McLeod E! Bentley W E BENTLEY. K. c- l A. BENTLEY K (. Crete. The German orders went even J0 uud 98ml l? Suiddtuns‘ ifq aadaap the previous training. 1n the hope of making the individual German soldier equal to the British. Thus barrack squarg drill was from men on restricted to pre-mllltary training- of boys from 10 to 17, after which the new recruits were to have inten- sive fighting training and nigh‘. movement practice. On enterln: u combat formationn. the soldlcr was to be trained as an individual in addition to training as part of a unlt. The document devotes part- icular attention to guards. suiting they are no longer merely to report unusual events. but to train as fighting soldiers. They must b: trained to stand motionless berlrzcl a tree for hours. like hunter. if attacked to jump at the attackws throat and use Brltlsh methods of close combat. ‘ For 11 months. the German troops on Crete (as 1n the rest of Europel trained. practised and nrenared these metho Then oi-1 July 4.1943. tory results. Tom SorreIL, a super- visor 1n the plant, vms cleanlnlz his pipe om nlizht when he begun "to wonder be cleaners would do the bothersome lob. He tried them the next day. Thev worked well. and the ccmtoanv has been itslnz them 1n a standard manufzctu‘ .4: operation ever since. At first. Gen- eral Motors had trouble buvlnrr nine cleaners. Tom Sol-tell sent is children all over the West Side of Detroit, huntlniz for the cleaners. nally. the navy after rencllnrz offilcrrs to lnvestlizate. rmnroved a nrlorltv under vthtch the nhnf bell-vhf. as many cleaners as 1t- csd - __ __ - ARE YOU TROUBLE!) WITH OR SURE BACK 1.11 "stair °' Illmfly BAOK- RITE TABLETS fully effective for Liam o. Sciatica, Neurltll, Int muscular and other l offhe: Barristers and AtIornnyI-ll- LII lll Prlnca SIIOOI llorrelland Company; 1:0. F. AROIIIBALII Chartered Accountant: Eastern Trust Bnlldlnl Charlottetown =- lfhd-“JYI-Fn‘ ornu of Rheumatism which ordlnnrv lrutmentu fall to roach. Price 50c per box" We Have the Proper TRUSS For your particular one To than mu who are unlor lunllo anoulh la hove l0 wur n Truce we at the caution. Arc vou satisfied Ilth the one vou iir wnr- lnfl Does ll flt corn ortabl! or ll It an out of hm ulvle. We hove lust received u shiv- Ilant of new nlvle ‘Irrmeo. slur and at prices to lull avmbodv. TllE 2 MAGS llll Great Gear" 11mm Order] GIVE!‘ Pfillflhl Attention. Coal cars i __i._._. DEPARTMENI ll|ilt1\lll|ll\l' 1 ll throughout the summer if every customer on the Island is to be supplied with enough coal for the coming winter. Youiean llllp by uolng your dealer cl once. Order next winter's cool lodcy . r: wall In advance of your actual nude. H l) » “T HTLRTTERfSHORT 7m -A$1Bflfl¢ lnveatlntlorn re- ONE i veal?! the reason. The wife bad LONDON - (OP) — Mrs. M. Marks of Montreal. YMLLA. club h t .1te lowed dejected Cari- read: "Am on leave 1n London. aglsfliflwlll) bind recglved an un- Having wonderful time. Wish N! pleasant cable from 111s wife. were hfl- FREEDOM FROM FEAR Removal of fear is the privilege and the duty of insurance. It was the fearful conuqllflllllll of the Great Fire of London in 1666 that gave ' birth to insurance. It 1s fear of financial loss by fire, accident, and other unpredictable and costly events, that is the main spring of the In- surance business, initiated and nurtured by private enterprise, and which for rnore than 250 years has conferred untold benefits on the hu- man race. All lines of lnsurutu effected including War risks. Hyndman & Co., Limited Established 1872 Representing British, Canadian, and America? Underwriteru- IlSO Lloylll C°PII0IIU°R ° London. England. Offices-Charlottetown, Sumlneroldo. MQRQIIQ I ruuimt is rm ISSIIIIGE on Illll _ Inn: IEXI’ vmnn must roll without interruption SUPPIY tat 1 OF MllNlllUNfii ANli