mos roux . a HIE ' GZiARLC-TTETBNI GUARDIAN Iv ;_ Daily (Founded lls H81) President Ueui. Col. W. Chester B. MeLure Vice-President: J. B. Burnett, I‘.l.l. loose y. Lieut, Col. D. A. llhokinnou, 0.8.0. litter and Managing Director: J. B. Burnett, I-‘JJ. Asloeiste Editors: Frank Walker and Ueut. lass A. Burnett, LCJWJKB. (On Aetivo Service) “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." wsnnsspsv, sum: 21, 1m Time To Get Busy 11111? CHARLQTITETQWN QGUARQIAN - Notes By The Way use, several battleships of the Royal Navy have been berthed there. H. M. S. Malays was fit- ted at Gare Loch with new guns requiring a lift of ninety ions by s. giant floating crane. _From the same port Prime Minister Churchill Siilfld in the Queen Mary to one of his trans- . Atlantic conferences. it ded withwallw tieeibr iirlilz) m. n“ Looking Ahead ~In Ottawa (By the Ottawa Staff o! ' l» The Canadian Press) . 1B Seven of the gill deleg mlno Pllflc-mll" Omlfl- be headed by men who were not government leaders during the Ins:- Dominion-Provincial conference in 194i. ‘Premier J. B. McNair oi New Brunswick and Premier A. B. Mac- Mlllan are the only Premiers still in office. The new Premiers are Hon George Drew oi Ontario, Hon. Maurice Duplessis o! Quebec, Hon ' John Hart of British Columbia, Hon. W. J. Jones oi Prince Ed- ward Island, Hon. Thomas Doug- las oi Saskatchewan, Hon. E. C. Manning oi. Alberta and Hon. 5. B. Garson oi Manitoba. The line-up at the last confer- once was I-lon. Mitchell Hepburn oi Ontario, Hon. Adelard God- bout oi’ Quebec, Hon. T. D. Pat- tullo of British Columbia, Hon. Thane Campbell of Prince Ed- ward Island, Premier McNair oi New Brunswick, Premier Mac- Millon oi Nova Scotia, Hon. John Bracken of Manitoba. Hon. Wil- liam Aberhart oi Alberta, and Hon. W. J. Paterson of Saskatche- wan. The party affiliations of the Provincial Governments also have changed since the 194i conference, . called to study the Rowell-Sirois report on Dominion-Provincial fe- lutions. Alberta, where a Social Credit Government was in power, and Manitoba which had a coali- iooMimoN . . l I = Relieved . stfmmmhnrlrmcdy | ; . Illdlflflllfll, Dygpepsizuchs , “MENU. Bea n" ' ° Distress ‘m; _,_._ A story which reaches me from Ital wil appeal to those who, as smal boys or girls, have trembled in the tutorai presence. It con. cerns an lhiglish governess oi ma- jestic department resident in Flor- ence. was there when the Nazis took over and was in no way discolncerted bynthe institution oi the new order. Prom her‘ angle it was merel another foreign ec- centricity. e Nazis took them. selves more seriously. They do. cided that the overness should go to u concentrat on cam , and one oi them went to arres her. He found an erect and u te com used lady who addressed qhtm as were a. small boy caugmt a mis. demeanor. "My ,good man," she said coldly, "you can't arrest ma. I'm English." And he didn't. she was still there when the Allies ar- lgivtid. - From Leeds Yorkshire os . .-EDITORIAL —-__ Point people are not so indignant NOTES- ments seh. sow. Avaums AT ==:-;,.-;_,,,_-l...~.-.-.... voun LO0AL.0EALER’$ i Avoid Possible Disappointment In The Winter By Accepting Deliveries During The Summer Months. The Rocky after all. vs i t a There is not a new moon now till July 9, . hav then, perhaps, we Will have some summer. a re - a a s- s tlmun u "l llllrchase .1 le. Prise I80 ‘oer lwtt an! vov TROUBLE!) wrrn common . Oil KORE BACK 2 li so we hsvc one of the best edi t “ma, "In =8 o offer BACK-RITE TABLETS E! lllll- effective‘ Limb? , Sciatica. Net-ill: joint muscular and other forms of Rheumatism which ordinary treatment fail to reach. Price 50o per box. TllE 2 MAGS 1A9 Great George Street Mail orders Given Prompt - Attention The month of brides and religious con- ventions is fast drawing to its close—a month of “tcars" more than wnshine. U i I Both the police and City Council were pub- licly censured Monday. Whither are we drift- ing? Now that the Federal election campaign excitement has blown over, how about imple- menting some of the long neglected Liberal pledges? One of the most important is harbor improvement and the provision of a marine railway slip for the repair of our car ferry steamers and other craft, right here in Char- lottetown. The pledge to irndcrtakc this work was given by Conservative speakers here with the full approval‘ of Hon. John Bracken, and immediately thereafter it was announced in the sl plus: that the King Government was already planning to do the job. It will be re- called, too, that in the Provincial Liberal plat- form of September, 1943—rhe one 0n which the Jones Government was elcctcd——the follow- ing pledge appeared: "We will continue ta urge ir/ron the Fedora! Cozwrnmcnt flu: nrfessify of improving the Charlottetown harbour and loafer- froni, and that the drydock for which a site ha: bun surveyed be built d! once.” Now is the time for our City Council, Boards of Trade and other organizations, under the aggressive leadership of our Prov- incial and Federal representatives, to get after the new King Government for implementation of this long-neglected project. The Meat Situation DOMINION STEEL & COAL CORPORATION LJMITED HALIFAX-BYDNEY-SAINT JOHN—MONCTON s s s e ~ Mom rs of Britain's Young Farmers Club now number 60,000 enrolled in 1,300 clubs. ___.._ It Is reported that Berlin churches are being reopened to worshippers and with the approval of the So- viet Union authorities. There s s s s Free milk, issued under the national milk should be nothing too surprising about this. The laws of the U.S. scheme to expectant mothers and to children’ R rovlde m, the tree exercise under five years of age, cost Britain $69,878; of ‘reigious beliefs, in rinciple, .68». i. 1943- _ :.‘.‘.§i.“tl“ mortar Er or " ' “ ' under aussnmJunsdititidiiicniiibheé tlvn government. were the only For the past five-and-a-half years about We” m‘; Permlmd l° Wlerflle- -— p"°"l“°°5 “he”, m‘? Llberal Pam? 60o Londoners have gone to the National Gal- c Brantford Expositor. was not in off e. lcry each lunch hour to hear the series of con- .___ Ontario ha a Progressive Con- Hurry! flurry! The order-g are servatlve go ernmcnt, Quebec a certs initiated by the well-known British pianist, Dame Myra Hess. The public are urging coming in. The shortages are pil- Unlim Nalmnale Gmlemmefll. Brit- ing up. The evacuees in their ish Columbia and Manitoba coal- that these concerts should be continued after the war. Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside, D. O. Stewart 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown thousands are coming home. And ition governments and Saskatche- next month begins the trickle of wan a C. C. F. government. Al- men out oi the services. It will berts. still has a Social Credit gov- bt! B 300d by Christmas. Hurry up ernment and the Liberal parties with the jobs ‘and hurry 11D with still hold power in the Maritime the homes. Hurry up with extra. province; busses. Hurry up the walls oi houses. Hurry up with the distri- bution oi children's clothes and shoes. Hurry along the transport for the mounds of fish now being piled up in the ports. Hun-y up in the cotton industry and hurry up ln the wool industry. There is plenty of wool and plenty oi cot- ton. But there are few cotton goods in the shops, and few woollen goods. And precious little knit- illtfi The. County Council of Essex, a county ln Southern England, have inaugurated a scheme whereby each child in one of the Council's homes shall be unofficially adopted by an adult, who will visit his "adopted" child and arrange outings, holidays and gifts. This is known as the “Uncles and Aunts” scheme. I Q I I Generals’ reward: At a press ._.__ ._ _____ ,__ 4 wnfsrence 1m week Prime Mln- ities and defences and "pa'vé't1ie"6r1ts 10,000 nudes 1.500 were ut- lsler Mackenzie K111i; 500119 0f way ior invasion." terly destroyed ahd 7,000 were the "warm wlcomc" awaiting Gen. While American military estl- damaged. In addition, public ser- Crerar, lst Canadian Army com- mates “guy-e that Only 10 p" cent vices, schools, churches and public mandei", when he arrives home, 01 Jgpanesg army strength has buildings suffered heavily. posibly within the next twd weeks. yet been encountered, that 10 per On the basis of the estimate ior It was recalled that other Al- cent is extinct. nu either dead ‘wfisrwsanbosch here is lied leaders have been given some or doomed in by-passed traps. [t 115i °f miilterlals P90111161! 10 r6081! recognition by their countries on @150 probgbly mcmded a urge and restore the 10 million homes their arrival home and there is a scorched by Wflr in the Whole of Some startling figures 0n World food shortages were given recently by Mr. G. R. Pat- erson, Canada's commercial attache at the Washington Enrbassy. As .\Ir. Paterson is 8150 Canadian executive officer on the Combined Food Board, it can be taken for granted he was not making wild guesses. What he had to say throws light on the current meat and sugar shortages in Canada, and he held out little hope for any early improvement. The meat shortage, Mr. Paterson told the meeting, was more than two and a half million tons and the sugar shortage almost the same huge amount. There are also substantial shortages of all types of oils and fats. mobile team operating from the British Ministry of Hcaltlfs Blood Transfusion Cen- tre at Leeds recently set up a record by col- lecting from 82o d0n0rs in one single day, be- tween 8 a. m. and 4.30 p. m. This is the highest pumber of donors ever dealt with by one team s m one day. “D0 ers ease out B11 wcligtlvivoblaetrilclllfigtihllickoulielgiirt-g YE: suggestion that the Canada Medal n in knitting socks and ump- and jerseys for the iami y. — Dally Express (London). There is a ma“ in ti“ Ylwlwl tates who says that he has con- structed an welectric i. \ .. .1 . -' of six old razor ‘blades anrl old vacuum cleaner motor. A The Square and bandstand are being clean- ed and burnished up at a long last. the weather avmg been so unseasonable,’ but now we may look forward to fountain playing and band music for citizens and visitors alike. It makes rotor was attached to the shaft of three blades, which are clamped in place, tum with the rotor at high speed and cut the grass neatly and cleanly. The card for supplying power to the motor is no more troublesome than that oi an‘! the motor and arranged to support H —-created in wartime but never issued-Lmay be presented Gen Crerar on his return. There has been some specula- tlOll, too, on the Generals future. One rumor has been that he may become Canada's first Canadian- born Govemor-General while an- ot-her report is that he may go into the diplomatic service, possibly rep- resenting Canada in the Argen- ne. When Gen. Crerar's’ Job oi org- anizing the redeployment and de- mobilization of his force over- seas, is finished. it is generally accepted here that he will retire eriul Japanese cut oii in northern China. but idle. Due to the Russian able" it is against resurgent Chinese troops and the fast. in Central and turned. the duration, the struggle. percentage of Japanese first-line combat forces specially picked for suicide stands on insular outposts. Another hand-picked and pow- iorce is not only "imponder- not available even changing situation Eastern China well demonstrates that fact. The Okinawa comer has been It leaves in doubt only not the‘ outcome oi Europe: 30 billion brick 8.5 billion roof tiles 13.5 billion sq. ft. glass 108 million sq. it. rough lumbe b 2,340 million sq. it. dressed lum- l‘ f‘ 45.5 million doors 3.5 million tons of cement gag; milllfpn tons oils 111$ m1 on sq. y . paper 7'10 million pounds of lead 1.5 billion pounds zinc Not since the "thirtv years war" of the 17th century has there been anything approaching the present destruction in Europe. It took a long tune and a lot of materia‘! to restore the primitive houses 0? ISLAND S For Reservations ~ Tickets PHONE Rogers Agency 540 Airport 206i - 2062 MARITIME To Rebuild Europe - all the difference in the world having a pleasant; place in which to foregather. a s: a s According to Ross Munro, CP ivar corre- SPQYKIQM. the 1st and 3rd Divisions of the Canadian Army proved the most outstanding formations whcn the over-all picture of the Mediterranean and Western Front campaigns is viewed and consideration given to battles fought and won and opportunities seized. The North Nova Scotia and .P.E.I. Regiment was includ- ed 1n the 3rd DiVlSlOll. '1 Iii s is from military activity, even though he is a permanent force soldier. , (Financial Post) One of his most brilliant Lieu- A smallish Dutch city with the tcnants-Lt.-Gcn. Guy Simonds oi 111M059 llllpronounceable » name oi Kingston, Ont-is likely to return ‘s-Herwgenbosch has made an ex- to Canada as Chief of the General 86¢ Estimate 01' the materials heed- Staff, succeeding LL-Gen. John Ed 7°!‘ feblllldllls- It W85 One of‘ Murchge of Edmund5¢°n_ N_ B" thousands of such towns and cities understood to be slated for re- in the Will 0T W81‘ W?» not Mtlliilly ‘figment-h a battlegro was never a‘ Mr. Paterson made it definite that Cana- dians could expect less meat in the months to come. In order to supply as much meat as pos- sible to liberated Europe the people of Canada, Britain and the United States had been allot- ted a yearly quota. This quota was 71 pounds per person which meant, in the case of Canada, s cut of 14 p0unds per capita as compared to last year. The food situation in Europe was such that a "difficult Winter" was in prospect for most pcople there, declared Mr. Paterson. He also said something which most people close to the situation both here and in the United States Here are provincial records for ice cream mm have realized for some ti1nc—that actual sup- ‘sumption based on 1943 figures; British Colunk plies of meat on the hoof, both in this country bia 1.73 gallons per person, Alberta 1.20, Alani- snd in the U.S., were ample, if only ways and foba, 1.48, Ontario 1.61, New Brunswick 1.16, means could be worked out; to get those sup- Nova 5Com, L54‘, Saskatchewan 98’ Quebec 33, plies into regular trade. There is a record num- Princc Edward 151a,“; ‘g3 m, Cent The three ber of cattle and other live stock on [izisturc prinrary agricultural provinces consume least and on range, but for a variety of complicated .of their Own product reasons owners are reluctant to sell. l i a I There was a further warning in Mr. Patcr- The rc-education of Gcmrans has begun, son’s talk which should not go unhceded. It N0 school may reopen in (jg-many today ‘Qith. was that Canadians would have to accept lower out permission of the Mmtary Govemmem prices if they wished to kccp their war-created and before that i5 given me local authoritigg markets in l-lfllflln l0!‘ flair)’ Producb and that must make certain that no teacher will glorifv we must prepare to face, Danish competition for militarism, revive) spread or justify National Qur huge bacon exports. Il can be taken for Socialism, exalt the achievements of the Ger- grantcd that any suggestion of lower prices will man leaders, favor trcligious or racial discrim- not be readily accepted by farmers unless things inagiqn, Seek to disturb the relations between the they must purchase, and their labor costs, arc United Nations, or expound the principles of reduced and this raises the whole complicated war or preparation for war. issue of the future of wartime increases. 1* 1" * 1' 300 years ago. it is going to be a lmuch more complicated job this “me CENTRAL in; AmwAvs Am" ,”|»T...;.;.I;TT.T TABLETS McLeod 6r Bentley Sufferers from Asthma I. l. BENTLEY. K. I- Bronohitls, and chronic ' J. A. BlNTl-EY- l 5- coughs should take Barristers sud Attorneys-ll- ASTONE TABLETS "'- Ilt Prince Street Regularly — Dally ran o much semi- m» to ""'""‘"~‘-"'“"“"““"'“"'“m°'i wait for the symptoms oi sn- ' ‘ other attack, ' 8% taking ASTONE TAB. l. TS you can avoid the dlvkllll. breatlfleuness and heart strain caused by re- heated spasms. We ilnd that in some cases the adult so]. ierer gets better reliei with a. smaller dose. We suggest that you experiment a little and ilnd out just the right does to suit your own ease. Take ASTONE TABLETS It bedtime and get [Qflfu] nightly sleep. Many "n". ers are doing so, and enjoy- . lng?thls comfort-Why not YDT-l 10 Tablets 22 Tablets vacuum cleaner. The razor blades withstand anything except stones and heavy twigs. Ii the discovery docs not start industry off on a new post-war tack, a good guess -will have been missed. The fam- ily gardener would not wait a mm- ute were it not for the absence of an old vacuum cleaner motor. — Woodstock Sentinel-Review. und. fin-git iordwbiiiiiitltaildttieuflgiii‘ That weather, which has drawn n“ l‘ an a as a o y complaints from so many citizens, k531i Llfiliflglihlfllllflf has, after all, its favorable side. Up to last Saturday only 150 forest fires had occurred in British Col- umbia since the beginning oi the year, against 306 for the equival- ent period of 1944. The indica- tions of greater periods of sun- shine and a return to the climate which has made this area famous, however. will increase the hazard in the woods.--Victoria Times. It is a truism that urban life is abnormal. Life is, as it were, pit- ched at the city dweller in unman- ageable chunks. with which he is unable to build a wall to otect himself, or a house to live n. His emotions are stimulated into uncon- sclousness by continual sensation. His intellectual integrity is de- bauched by manipulated headlines. His entertainment is mass-produced and mass-distributed. The radio blats and blares at him all day long. The roar oi a thousand factories, the tinkle oi the adding machine and the cash register, beat remorse- lessly down on what little oi his creative soul may still survive. In sheer desperation he goes along with the crowd, hopelessly looking for a little peace in conformity, asking only not to have to think. It is a rare individual indeed who has the will or the means to sur- mount the soul -destroying pressure of urban life-Globe and Mail (Toronto). In The Pacific (By Klrke L. Simpson. Associated Press News Analyst) With the end of organized enemy resistance on Okinawa the war against Japan is entering this week on its final phase but witlL no estimate from any official quar- ter as to how long it may take to finish the job. Too many lmponderables are in- volved for that. They include such items as Russia's future role in the war in Asia and a Chinese military resurgence that has materially altered the situation adversely for the foe in the last iew weeks. , Gen. George C. Marshall, United States Chief of Staff, cited both circumstances to the House oiRep- resentatives Appropriations Coun- mittee recently in saying that “s. final victory as of any given date‘ over Japan cannot be assumed. Ho said the question as to whether Russia would enter the war against Japan was "the great imponder- able of the moment.” Imponclerablcs aside, however, with Okinawa-that pivotal Jap- anese Island in close air striking distance of both Japan and north- ern China — secure there seems warrant in regarding its fall as the conclusion oi’ preliminary phases of the battle oi Japan it- self. For possession of Okinawa means that encirclement of Jap- an's home island chain that sop- arates the Pacific from the East China Sea has been fatally Punc- mnwwvv~ ' "commas ' nvsunnvcr SERVICE” W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. ‘Plnsss 540-541 “.7 ii. n. llosno a 0o Charisma Aecosniallll SI Grafton Street- Charlottetown rum sow an I" Iondslsb I Manning. CA- flHfifiFJ-FP- lAorrell and Company ll. F. ARBIIIBALD Chartered Accountants lsstorn ‘Inst Bulldllll Charlottetown . |v EYES sxsmuru ANTI GLASSES FITTED J. S. TAYLOR OFFOMETRIST Corner lent all QM» s“ Ihous I | “A20 H.'.'.°."'fll':'“ ‘i1.i_.~;.=::::- BELL 0 MA HIESON toms 3it°"t'ii;."'i'§l> o» .________ ;.-.=-. 's1.a:x w. marumsos .*':'=:"".'s'.'i.-'='.2..‘i.?.'.'..=~.-"'§.- »-—‘-‘-"’ M. g ALBAN FARMER LLB- “ (humane lldl- -$l-00 E. A. FOSTER Central Drug Store Sole Distributor for PQEJ. l Oy ‘lain-‘Eeynolds London has said farewell to the “Bun Specials,” the. canteen trains which have been carrying refreshments to subway shelters cvcry_ night for five years. To many Londoners who have lived in the Tubes for four and five vcars the closing of these shelters was a sad occasion. Once the army of men. women and children who called these underground dormitories home numbered 170,000. It had dwindled to 800. Now the last remnant has reluctantly departed. taking with them memories of wild nights when the Luftwaffe battcrcd London, when the V- bombs and rockets rained down, while life went on far below the streets. I I l I Two Secret Ports One hundred and thirty-five dead on the field of battle, 55,000 killed before firing squads, 100,000 pa- triots who have died in enemy camps or prisoners, two million lured- prisoners and deportees. 1,200,000 Substantially. the foe has been houses destroyed, ports and trains 8011i. His armies at home and in demonshed, the suffgfjng by a China have been to ail intents and whole notion of occupation. op- purposes cut apart. Now the op- pression and famine-that is the portunity to apply the same old contribution in blood and distress military maxim that worked so well which France had made to this against Germany with a Russian- war in the cause of liberty. - ‘Allied junction on the Elbe-div- France-Canada. ide and conquer-is at hand. i Justhwitisiobed l\ committee of Allied scientists mains id) be disclosed ‘illltlioulgeli to control and, ii necessary, pro- Gen. Marshall told the House hlbit German! making use oi any committee that air strikes oi ever- scientlilc discovery dangerous increasing power would "devast- mankind was proposed in Britain's ate" Japanese wgf-maklng (up. After the fall of France and the L0\v Countries in June, I940, closed the British east and south coast ports to large ocean-going ships, the British War Office built two new. ports 011 the west coast of Scotland entirely from scratch. Each covers more than 1 1-2 miles of water front with deep locks. The ports are served by nearly fifty miles of new rail- way track and are fully equipped with cranes- twenty of them having been moved from South- ampton. Port Number One is in the Gare IJOch, a north arm of the Clyde, and Port Num- ber Two further south at Cairn Ryan, on Loch Ryan in \Vigtownshirc. ' (‘rare Loch has six and Cairn Ryan five goo-foot long deep water berths, with 35 feet of water at low tide. The ports were built by About 5,000 men of the Royal Engineers and the Pioneer Corps, who lived in hastily erected camps and worked for long hours under very bad weather conditions. Work began at the end of 1940 and the first ship berthcd at Gare Loch in July, I942. The experience gained in build- ing the ports was invaluable to the construction of the prefabricated “.\Iulberry" harbours which played so important a part in the invasion op- erstions. A large number of U. S. personnel have been disembarked at the ports, and they also handled great tonnage of United States sup- plies including airplanes, glider parts and veh- icles. Soon after D-day the complete“ facilr itics of one port were made available to the U. S. Services for the urgent shipment of motor QUIUKIES Charles Stewart Parnell, Ireland's greatest son, born this date I846; son of John Henry Parnell of Avondale, County Wicklow; elect- ed M. P. for Neath in 1875; at once commenc- ed a policy of o sition to En lish control in Ireland; in his fijrgf speech he adgocated home wail-i, lfilbfiufd llfilafilebelsiel-Artllllflgthljeretff; rule and Irish nationality; from then on he kept 0! clvmzltlmb" 1°" 0mm‘??- the House of Commons in constant turmoil filfijfl‘3,,‘°l‘§,‘;°"§;,,,§,‘¥§l,ll§§,,“up? until Gladstone at lcn th introduced and assed "I" W" idem!" the (“Ymflns a" a Home Rule am (n15 best ever devised) [which 9,S,§‘,'},‘,‘§“L,';°,‘,"’;§,,°','fi,$“,',$‘§ ',’,‘2,‘,"°§3; the House of Lords defeated; his later years but the 3611mm 1108M t0 fall b0- wcre rather checkered politically, due to a ‘g3: $515? ,F,‘,}§Y,,,°";’§‘,‘,§§,§“§fl5‘§,‘; matrimonial scandal, and Gladstone objecting to manybF-London- Daily Mail. recognize him as s supporter sfter his marriage on of ‘he chm “hunk. h with the divorced Mrs. O‘Shca; a minority or rnutusl understandings is the fact the Irish members by him; he was opposed gm zhlclremlgid "élzzzlaiefipealnég to crime to attam his obycctive, his most effect- new opportunity, the truth is that ive policy being “the boycott", by which speech, ‘rinks’ n§l;‘v“"§ggdlll3:' aghilgrlfggl: prayer, greeting, intercourse and food were denied any one whom the irationalists demand- ed should be excluded from any particular area; House oi Lords by Lord Vansittart. "Had Vi, V2 and V3 been brought r into action a year earlier," he said. "it would have meant the end oi Britain. Had they been brought I, who ha. kn gnaw! wwfglléeilgmown the Night ewe - gaylmlm heali-‘dltg Sufism”. Pb!’ 1101M. damn iurled. Or a day be; I. who have watched A wild bird flying Into fir“ blue oi fitactgim ese ar nan That havee l-BTIZM; rife glory: NONI! 1'0 LOAN These are the things , . . _ salutes-mt. sotrcrroa. 8T0- That have set mo free . _ v. " ' . OIAIUOTIITOWN , all the trammels of Jsls BIA‘ From The Earth's dark sod To walk, Unshadowed. in BAIQIIIQ. IOIJCTIOB NOTAII. ITC- OUIIIII BUILDING This is a fundamental difference? which can settled only by transport.‘ The rate of handling and assembling show him he is not wanted by leaving him scv- been fng-mjng 1o,- youl- ygg" win these vclucics for dispatch to the U. S. forces erely alone"; he remained leader of what were LII"?- ll l5 the "V111" ll ll°m° '1" n r , ' he “mo God “But, when I got him with A Guardian Want Ad all ‘minim’ _'g,n|4°“°"'¢'h,,l:¢i»1m I intended to teach him was to bring the paper in!” change and regress here at home. It is hardly o be expected that the - - . . wh illh t d t re n - on the continent hit a world record. known as ‘the Parnclhtes 1n the House of Com- ,,..?,.‘,',.-,.“.’,$,t1§’.ol¢l§n§ mghllcWrllll Although the ports were built for nulitsrymons Ullliil death m 189i. ‘ most part living the world of i939 I ' ' ll Parnells advice to his followers was you must returned men who” ‘views have ke timc-Inndon Press. .._,~.._~;~ "v6 Wu, and," c q . I i“‘l\-i-M4',-l.ca‘s£¥~ "is ‘ "w "