.-.....-_.__..a.-»a|n_ PAGE FOUR TIIE DIIARLDTTETDWII G IIARD lllll Morning Dally (Founded In I887) ., .. _ __________;. Prcsiil t ut. Col. W. Chester S. McLuro Ville-l esidcut, J. R. .1 l. Secretary, Editor and .\I.in Associate Editors. SFIISCIIIPTION RATES By Mull In l‘. ti. l.. 51.00 per year, $2.50 for 6 monllll $l.'.'.'. lur " numtis, 50o for one month. 0 per year, $3.00 lor 6 monthl- City Ut-liviry s1. for 3 months. By Mail ln (‘u a and U. S. A. $5.00 per year. 0 per year, $1.00 for 6 lllflllfllh for 3 months. .______ ___ ~ .----__--—-——- “The Strung/est Memory is Weaker than [he Weakest Ink." _ I Trnsixn’, MAY 2a, i940. Saturday \\ lTkI). ” ~ --—-—“i-'~ hT-Tw‘ St. Piiiisloii’; Closing zzcetiient exercises at St. Dun- i-r.l;i_v marked another . _ of an institution of 2'1 t. "ll l-Xinilcrs at home and ' l. llziscil on the litiman- zviiluin has been expanded ct practical requirements on chiefly as a centre The tcrm is 5_\'tlOll‘l_\'lI"lOllS s at stake in the present :.- is the fate of all our . hztsed on Christian cul- ~-i :Iie=e institutions is de- uce of i-leals which it is time to destroy. One has on of Poland and r to rrxinze what a Nazi vic- i iiire would mean from The German latt- n all cr-iiqtiercil districts, I"llZS there or not, Even c and learned congresses German. School-books \‘.l' l -~~. au-l tciisoretl. The two He other eight Czech rank have been closed laboratories mid lib- vcrsity’ is left in the .‘ i lnvcrsity at Prague, but r : ~! ti» zutcittl this or any other t- _» ~ 1- - ~ 1.1 ab, lu Poland it is estimated i- to of the intellectual, reli- have been executed. The (‘.‘fli‘il\\' Ynivcrsityr are ifl ln licrmany itself, edu- <"l'\l(‘lll to the rule of the "ll for anyone who is not ic lllllll>ll'UllS heresy of ._v. ;\s expressed in one for 6l('l‘llCl'llZll"_V teachers, is to train the children inaiiitetiance and in- .,- :'","...ll national consciousness." t -. taught that other races are ' '0 is no transcendent God iii riYllIPOIISIICSS is binding THE CHARLOTTETOWN Prime Minister has been telling us about this on every convenient occasion for some years. We are on oiir own. We are not beholden to Bri- tain for anything. We entered the war of our own free will by Act of Parliament. Neverthe- less we fail to get on with the preservation of our independence and life because of some cir- cumstance in Britain. “Complete independence of Britain in peacetime and wartime impotence in the production of elc- mentary essentials without British leadership do not harmonize. The Canadian Government can- not hide behind Britain's skirts in this emer- gency and satisfy the people. “The Government is to be judged by the initia- tive and energy it puts into the war. It is ans- werable to the people for what it does, not what it declares Britain fails to do." A .- EDITORIAL NOTES — Pravda, Communist newspaper, says "the United States is going to war even faster than in the Great War.” The article bore the cap- . the highest manifes- 3 is Arlolf llillcr, “to . l.t-_v_ one of the chief In mi (vificial letter of in- ' . l tcrichcrs, Storm Troops. 3- ' us, “we are bound and to custodian of Na- to make our -".I‘ vow, ZN the sole faith tis itli-al is everything for which .- mill education stands. Even an era, the civilized world had oncd the totalitarian idea in .o \\'."ll‘l16(‘l against its danger, and ' "HWFIZHICC of teaching “Justice, statccrait. l‘l. empha-iz il the f@;|§()1\;!liii'l!'f~€ ..ll‘l wisdom" as well as the war- lgkc virppg, of ¢i>1il'3_tj£ and nationalism, Eight h,,,,.1.-¢._i ycrlrs later 5t. Augustine declared: "Ba "i justice, and ivhat are empires but brig ndng-z on a re scale?" How truly is that a dCilllllliin 11f _\':izi imperialism! All enlightened phposapiht-S nit-.- taught that above the State are hgaher l;i‘.\'5 bv \\‘lllCl‘l both States and in- dividuiils are judged. lt is that PrlndPle m! which our fillllCflliiillfll institutions are founded, and from which thcv derive their life-blood. 1,, this C »:1li(‘Clitvil it is siguificent to note thal Bighnp Xelirgzin, who addressed the gradual" yesterday in inspiring terms, is one of the Sen- im- (“haul-tins in Cianarlas Active SCH/ICC F011?"- ini 1a‘. -,»-,..-.ri M Rector of St. Dunstan‘: Uni- ,.,.,..,-.,fn..i, m, Altirphv stated that about flmfpl‘ m. who were planning either to re- mmqg ,_,l trip! m- y; enroll for the first time had loiuml ti“. (yhiurw and are now on active ser- vice, T is a FFCrq-d to he proud of. The grad- mpn, ,< ‘ ‘ ., to he congratulated on work acc,.,_,,,,g, n. i h, m: a period of high nervous tcnuwi ‘lat v as are the advantages lhfiy will have de-rivi-ili their University training. in .. ‘V, Pr“, of mo_re practical value fllilll ~i".-i-~~~ ~ ,; IlI-Plllllllfi acquired by the habit of ow r." u. A Poor Excuse nfrflixti‘: mini dw- refusal of the King GOV- erl1ln‘]ly , - i,- llrilziiii to train hcr own pil0t5 in lliilldiii mgr) because it might in- terfcrc v. "i .tll% status as an indepen- dent , .: ,, .. t. dlilllqi‘ to finrlthe Government "Ira-qr; :1. iwt." in the British author- l-nm. ,,,,. .‘_ 1,, and procrastination. A5‘ cording i.» llm. .\lr. lloive, war contracts of m“; m; .,,~._._.,,.i hnpoi-i:iiicc have been held, up ')(‘kv'll1 ,. |'-.,,.,i, ,,,-,....f:ictiircrs wcre reluctant t0 . |~ '- l ‘ _ , , . rckfllq, ,1 hill‘ {My “<0 m lauadian IHCIUTIH- Th,- ,.\,..,_,. ,.i.,.,',_ ,1... {nllriwitlg comment fr0m , . H", U; ,;,. _-,,,.] _\I.|ll llllIll‘]>('ll(l(‘lli)I H ~\\'_.,,- ,4 n... p....ihh- in tcll the Britishers to ‘(ul-‘(l ,i,,.r,- m“, mun ovi-r to handle the secrets L,» H’, ;,. ,,,,,.,,,,;.,,.._ to do anything necessary to M m , , ,,,, , l]... work? llon. Mr. ‘ltogcrs f llllll i‘. "lVl < wl-o iii llriiziin. So did Mt‘. .. ., , . .. p3,,” I h, d. Hiilcuct: (Eimida would be illflll" all-Ix?! ,.,,.,; {or what ivas deemed at Ottawa ,,,i,-,i,.-,'-, ,1 ,». Cd...» nil something in the Old Coun- trv "'\\'.~ ti» chm-wilful to ask what has become of m" H, i ,..,,t. ziilt-occ, nllt‘ cqtialily of stfllufi lion: "a unit-fighting ally for Britain and France." w w w a It is announced that the Royal Canadian Navy has grown to a fleet of 220 vessels, with a per- sonnel of nearly 7,ooo. Rear Aklmiral Nelles, who started in the service as a cadet at l6, com- mands a force of which every Catiadian should be proud. w w w w Dr. Alexander London, Netherlands Minister, reports that Nazi snipcrs in surrounding houses had fired upon Queen \\'ilhelinina and her fam- ily in their palace gardens and that Nazi author- ities had issued orders to “cxtingtiisb the House of Orange at any cost." The Minister said that "fifth column" agents had spotted every move of the royal family and that it became impossible to protect them in their own country. w w a w Thomas Moore, poet, born this date, i779. He was Admiralty Registrar at Bermuda but tinfortunately left it to a deputy who made away with $30,000, darkening the remainder of the talented poet's life. Yet he was able to write: When Time, who steals ottr years away, Shall steal our pleasures too, The memory of the past will stay And half our joys reitew. w w w w Birds of a feather! Lindbergh assures the USA. that it is incredible the Nazis would in- vade that Republic, and von Rintelcn assures British newspapermen that it was “iinpossible" for the Nazics to invade Britain. The former found a refuge in Etiglzitid from the United States after the kidnapping and murder of his son, and the latter also sought similar shelter when released from prison for sabotaging IJ>SIAV\I iutinition ships during the last war. Both are “Fifth Columnists" who act alike. w w w w In Brooklyn Federal Court the trial is pro- ceeding of fourteen members of the “Christian Front" for consipracy to overthrow the United States (iovcrnmctit and steal Government mun- ioiis. The ringleader is one Bishop, and the other accused are mostly 0f foreign origin. One, a school boy of eighteen, testified that he kept his rifle hid in a closet among his mother's Slllll- NOTES BY TIIE WAY a Even at. the cost. of lacing josulea by a London aroivd, it. is worth ulhlle watching outscle Buckingibasn Palace to see the re- cipxims of gallantry awards enlarge after having that: decor- ations panned on by King George. Their alert, stalwart figures and clean-cut features show up the meagre pale-faced Cockney civll- tans, atmcl how proudly their rela- Llves - wpeciallly their womenfolk and small kiddies -- stop by their side! Amongst. the last baton of award recipients was Oa-ptaln W. H. Harland, of the merchant. EQIVICG O.B.E. He is the veiy plenum of the hardbititen seamen — spare, vigorous and tough, with the crow- footed eyes o1 the bridgedeck watcher, and a real Nortih Coun- try set. of the chm. He was tor- pedced 1n the lflzb war, and in mls one has fought off a U-boat, sub- sequently sunk by the RN, in a 75-minute duel with his 4-inch gun. He took to the sca aft-er serving in the laivt. war as an tnlantiryiman in the front trencha, and bezng severely wcuncled by shrapnel. While he was recovering on the front. at Raclcar s. yaiong wonran presented htim Wihh a “htt- foaither. Captain Harland now carries that souvenir lo Sea as a mascot. - The JcurnaiYs London Letter. A woman who for years has been a leader ln movements to pro- mote roadside beauty reports that she has received the following s3- niIican-t. bit of Amsizcaira Ill the fo-tm of a letter from a fllC-ZOIISL who apparently does not see eye to eye “nth her: "This woild ls made up of all kinds of people. In the car sheep of you the people may want trot-clogs. so they l:ok for a hot-dog stand. The people 1n the ear behind you may want to buy a quilt, so they lock for a quilt store. And you yourself may \\‘3.D¢ to stop over nghtt ln the next. town. and you find just the géitce through a stgn. So why not a. person who live; and lets live? We all like to ride out tn the country. and lf there were nothtig but trees. g-rass and roads tn look at. 1t would scon get so monoton- ous that we ivcultl lock for another road that had things on 1t." Fen- stfc as it may secm, the inc thought. oeeiirs that. per- haps til-us fellow mtwresen-tv- a, larrrer mrecrttnze of Americans than the beauty lovers had susprctcd. Have we actually spawned a. gentirrtlcn iidth Ooncv I=lantl souLs who h":- estily won't! pass up a nrble tree for the sight o1’ a red iv‘"lte arid Wile Bar-P-O sign? - Nriu’ York Herald ‘Irihtme. Booker T. “Washington's lace upon a new Utinteu Slates sianlp is symbolic of the fiutage 0!. true dclnoctatzv. ‘Ilie negro eduwtci", thus ltcnorcd on the aDtih flIIZLVEf-‘v- ary of Tuskegee Itistuute, wh.oh he founded, lilkfs razik in the tits- tory of the ivorld among these who loved, sacituficed, nrici strove m glit- lly for the gocci of them tellov. men. Up from Sla\‘,X‘Y himself, Dr. Wa‘ lhIDgllOh wen his education under the most severe ditfciiiZtLes; bhen turned to labor u asmgly and with remarkable vi _ to in- sure mcans of lLgllet‘ education for his people. Eventually he receiv- ed acatlcmlc honors tor his labors and‘ became the friend of Pres:- denits. One sentence by Bocker Washington mlgiltt be quoted t0- diay as a challenge to much of the world's wrcni-g-tliinking: "No man mer dresses, while another, chairman of thc membership committee, testified that applica- tions for membership were scrutinized by him and admitted tinder assumed names. It has transpired that the organization was one of the leaders of the Fifth Column movement and had affiliations all over the States. I I i I They have no use for Fifth Columnists in England. Lieiit. Ernest Gates, Conservative, was elected in a by-eleclion today for the l\lid- dleton and Prestwich seat in the House of Com- mot1s. He polled 32,036 votes. Mr. Frederick Haslam, the British Union candidate, represent- ing Sir Oswald .\Iosley's Fascist anti-ivar party, polled 417 votes. A near riot occurred last week when Sir Oswald attempted to speak at a meeting on behalf of his candidate, and he bad to be given police protection. Labor, observing the by-election war truce, did not rim a candidate. The vacancy was caused by the death of Sir Nairne Stewart-Sandeman, Conservative, who polled 27.359 votes against the Labor candidate's 17,398 in the I935 general election. This is the eighth election in which the opposition candidates have lost their deposits, U i i i Hon. Charles j. Burchell, the former law part- ner of the Hon. Mr. Ralston, now Canada's High Commissioner in Australia, was the first recipient of the honorary degree of Doctor of saws recently instituted at the University of Melbourne. Conferrcd by the Rt. Hon. Sir john Latham, G.C.1\I.S., Chief justice and Chancel- lor, Prof. Barley recalled that Mr. Burchell was a graduate and teacher in the law school at Dal- hoitsie University, one of llis .\I.'ijesty's Colin- sel in Nova Scotia, chosen as one of the fore- most Admiralty lawyers in the British Com- monwealth to preside over the merchant ship- ping committee of the Dominion Legislation Con- ference in London in i920, and is actively litter- ested in problems both of the British Common- wealth and of the nations that fringe the Pacific Ocean. w w w w Italian Air Marshal Balbo, who a few years ago flew a squadron of planes with only one mishap across the Atlantic to Shcdiac and was then made Governor of Libya, was observed crossing Egypt the other day on his way to hunting big game in the southern jungles of Ethiopia. This, according to a Cairo corre- spnndent, is the third time he has performed this stunt and the Egyptians liked it no more than they did the others, particularly when an "ac- cident" took him, on one occasion, directly over an Egyptian military airdronie ivhcre he “might have bccn obliged to make a forced landing." lint thought better of it, according to the corres- pondent, who adds: _ “In addition, at the end of his last visit, Marshal Ballm gave m1 interview to a leading Arabic daily in which he strongly criticized Egypt for increasing her army and fortifying her western frontiers. In consequ- ence, his untimely ‘predilection for limiting did I 11w with (area: link-nu wider a comtnofl Q“!!!- netwo unnoticed ..._._~._.__.-.__...__. r I ,...sha.ll drag me down so low as to make me hate 111m." - Oltzistimi Sclence MOIIIIDI‘. Following an Alberta decision. Judge O‘Connell has dlstnssed a charge of “having can or control of a. motor car while lntloxicatzd" on the ground that th e accused was too drunk to be capable of fomtlng the nectssitry intent. to commit. a criminal otfrnce . . Until this case has been wit-led by some higher authority, it ap- pears that. the rlrunk is stile at botih ends of tihe seaie of lnobriety. He may ztg-mug all over the road and run through red lights. but. if he can stand nip he is 11ft. drunk enough to be charged with drunk- en drlvtnlz, and ll he Ls ccmplctelv dead to the world he 1s too drunk to have the charge laid against hlm. It lffhe ln-betwcen drunk. 1f tihere 1s such a thing. who runs the danger of a ]a'l term lf he ls found 1n tihe neiizhtbcrhood of a motor car. -— Toroiz-to Telegram. When the history o! our times 1a written. a grim note of pro- phecy will be found in the warn- ing given by Adolf PIJLEI‘ last De- cember by his former backer, Fritz ‘Ihyssein, lndimtrlalzst: "Turn back as long as it. is stall possible. Listen to me and you will hear the vodce of a tormented Geiman nation that. ls crying out. to you: “Turn back, let freedom, right and lvurminlty rise again 1n the Geimtan Reich." Hitler didn't. turn back. It ls too late for hlm to turn back now. whether or not. "free- dom, rlgiht and humanity" will rise again In Germany depends on the outcome 0t the war. Through the tragic irony of fate, Germany must. lose the war, if there is to be any hope of Germans regaining thrfi liberties at. hc.r4. It a Hztler-dtg- ln-ated Germany wins the vrar, Geimans will continue tn a slavery almost as abject as that. of the people: whose countries they have ovenun. - Buffalo CJUHCI-EX- press. An Ontario farmer has had his new car-damaged considerably by a ram that became pugnaczous when he saw his reflect-ion cri its gleaming side-s. It jrst goes to show what. can happen tiheae days. In case this story has caused some alami among tine motoring public. however, 1t, miiztht be well to set down some simple strategy to follow vimen a chance meeting wttih a ram comes about. First of all. note that. a ram telographs nfs punt-hrs. Se-"ontllgv. b:- mobile and press this advantage. No farm ant- ma] can cnntoimd a flghtng ram more quickly than a. 171R. and mrkyl: tactics tire recommended. when the rnm backs up for his haymakcr, the pie follows tum. Confused. the ram retreats attain to get set, but once more the pig closes tiho trap. 'I‘h‘s aces on until the ram calls it a (IBIY. He might get ln a few short. sideways bunts, but. lnfliztitlnlz font his speciality. To he effective he must. lnnd that headon punch. and once thntis ne- GUARDIAN PUBLIC FORUM film column In up“ In 15g anon-in b1 sump-jg" ,3 caution of Inland- Tll Glu- lothlun llunrdlu In: In counrlly undone ll; IQI-IQI‘ unrnunnlhnln lo- II Mr. Dunning As Chancellor (Winnipeg m» Press) Hon. Charles Dunning, former Mlntster of Finance, has been honored by Queen's Unlverslty COURT HOUSE CLOCK Sin-The _ clock on tine Law Courts building 1n Charlottetown now registers daylight saving time. to the confusion of our farmers and other visitors who my stall be mI standard time. By whose autihctuty was the change made? The law Courts building ls tihe property o1’ the Provincial Government, not. of tihe City-and tihere ts no provincial legislation authortmng the Gov- ment to change the time o1’ day. Was 1t don-e by Order-in-Oouncll, or is this Just another example of dictatorial administration? I am, Sir, etc, ‘ TAXPAYER _i___i_.___ WAKE UP. CANADA! Sin-The war situation ls very desperate. We know now this ls the death struggle that. ls to decide the fate of the British Empire, France and Democracy.- The Empire ls 1n deadly peril. What is Canada doing about it? What is the present. government doing about it? In the last war it was the Can- adian troops who so heroically did their duty, and held back the Ger- man hordes at YPXIES. In the pre- sent. struggle there are no Canad- lans fighting side by side with the Motlirr Land and France. After nine months of war the few Can- adian troops in England are not. equipped to go lnto battle. We have roughly twenty thousand troops in England not. equipped. In the last war Canada sent thirty-three thou- sand troops to England in two and t1 half mouths. fully equipped and partially trat-ned. Facts speak for themselves. In 1914 Canada had strong, aggressive, governmentlead- ership. This time we sadly lack I. strong ‘leader. Mr. King made promises long {wears ago that l1’ he were elected lie would end poverty, and bring in monetary reform. He dld not keop his promise. Our people have starved ln this rtcli country, and cur youth have drifted ldly about. losinz their morale. t-helr spirit. and ,thelr physical fitness for mill- tnrv service. When England de- clared war Mr King had to call Parliament and debate for three days if Canada should declare war. i clared Canada's stand ln the war 1n about. three minutes. If the Ger- mans had been landing on Canad- lan soil would Mr. Klng have called Parliament to see it we should fight? This 1s no time for political partlzanslilp. This ls a time to for- get politics, and unite to win the war. All parties should unite, and throw all their energies lnto winn- ing the war. Mr. Kin? promised that he and his government would put; every ef- fort into helping to wrn the war Now when the Empire ls faclnst her darkest hour. we have practically no help to offer her. Australia 1n the same t"mo has recruited seven divisions. Canada hasn't. mt got two full divis‘ons. Our citizens are not. trained or equipped for home defence. We are practically at the ntercy of any foe who wished to ln- vtido us. Mr. King knew the dan- trot‘, yet he did not act. In our darkest. hour of need Mr. King has foiwl us. The time has come when Can- ada must waken up and face facts. Canada must have a change o1’ leadership. In this time of deadly ncril through which we are mas- lnz. we reoulrc a strong. vlrile, rourrvwous l“f\"l’l‘ a mim of 311L101 Mr. Kin: must go. I" “more and England durlniz a crisis. 1f a government lender ls found incapable. he must tv-slen. Canadian citizens must demand Mr. King to resign 1f the" do mg was}, disaster to overtake them It. i; the dutv of cverv Canadian to chal- ‘ctirc thi- slncerltv or purpose of Mr. Kings war effort». and tn ques- tion his efflelcncv of leadership. Siirelv we are not zolniz to tilt, snincksslv hv nnrl allow ourselves to drift to destruction? It's our lives w»; m1- flghting f0;- riow. our homer. our loved ones. P“' our verv even-neg, we cannot afford to be weak and soft now. The Empire has her back to the We mus‘ have no mercv on anyone now This 1s the survival "f i119 fittest now. Weak nations will be crushed we have been taking about throwing everything before 1t 1s ‘too late. We are ftvhtlng for our lives. We must: to sacrifice everything willing WE‘LL GO N0 MORE A-BOVING So. we'll go no more a-rovlng So late lnto the night, Thou h the heart D6 still as lovlnl And t. c moon be still as bright. For the sword outwears its sheath, And the soul wears out the breast, And the heart must. pause to breathe, And love itself have rest. Though the night- was made for loving In 1914 Sir. Robert Borden de- , which has chosen hlm u Chan- cellor, 1n succession to the late James Richardson of Winnipeg. And Mr. Dunning, in accepting the post. has shown his appreciation of the importance of higher edu- cation to the national welfare. Mr. Dunning never had the ad- vantage ol n University courseAt the age when students go up to our universities, he was coming to Ca- nada as an immigrant from Eng- land and “digging 1n" to become established 1n Western Canada. Native ability and an aggressive splrlt brought hlm rapid advance- ment. Soon he was a member ol the Legislature of Saskatchewan and later premier of the province. Then he had the call to Ottawa and filled the responsible post. of Fin- ance Minister until his health suf- fered under the strain. He resign- ed just. before the war. It may seem strange that, st time when ii university education ls regarded more and more as a izoocl foundation for trmcst any ~ltne of work. ti man who has edit- cated himself should be chosen Chancellor nf a tinlversitv, The greater the honor to Mr. Dunning, and no doubt be would say that he missed something 1n not attending a university. Slr Robert. Borden was a chan- eelloi- of Queen's. It 1s a univcr- sttv with a distinct character and a place 1n our national life. It has sent many men to responsible pub- llc positions. and 1t keeps in touch with the progress of the country. FoulqTactics (Exchange) Nothing seems to be too low for the slyly ingenious Nazi mlnd to think up, Nothing seems to be too vile. The record of their damn- able strategies would have brought a. blush to the cheeks of Mach- lavelll, In a despatch from London th other day, Gerard Jouve described the horror _ot Nazi penetration to a Dutch city. He recounted the combined activities of the para- chute-soldiers, the troops landed by plane, and the "filth column" vermin. A Dflfflgfflph from that despatch revealed a particularly foul situation. Jouve noted: Snipers concealed In bulld- Ifllls and on rooftops-many of the "good" Germans who had sought refuge In the hospitable Netherlands as enemies ol’ the hazl regime methodically picked of! the Dutch In the streets below, Tactics like that. are worse than anything done by the wlld savages durum the Indian ivars on this continent a century or so it . They disclose a, mcntnllt-v uf 1T1‘; most. despicable kind: but a, kind that, the Nazis prize above rill. Fercettv, brutality, inhumanity such are the lndlces of Hitler and his minions. d5 l0 be 1109M. ll among the Nazi refugees which England gave llltarborage to there are many slimy fifth coliunnlsts.‘ that, 51,- Jghn Anderson's measures to emascu. late their planned assault upon Britflirfs nation-a] integrity are sufficiently stringent. When l)e_ MAY 2s, 1940 l T‘ only v17 SAVING! Nowlggz Can D0 Your Biz Through the purchase of WAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATE; every patriotic man, woman and child in Canada, regardless Qlf :::.:':':~a::.il:l:l.:?aii;¢:f"""* °' '"“*'"* = When you buy WAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES you ggvg mm“, for the future and supply “dollar ammunition" to bank up H: men who are fighting our battles overseas. WAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES are sold through all I)I"|'II|\I||'\ of this Bank. Iinekcd by the Dominion of Canada, they url- Ills safest kind of in vestmcnt. you can make. Held to malurilv tin-B are ivorlh 25% more than you pay for them. For every’ y . , smo you invest now, you receive $5.00 sevenandone-halfycarshi-iil-e. Buy your first certificates to-day — then add to your investment Qhrly by purchasing at. least one certificate every month. WAR SAVINGS STAMPS l_l you cannot ulurd Inpny cash for I 05.00 tificate ou - can purchase WA It STAMPS’. These oncl. only 23c each. Sixlann stamps $.00) can be exchnn ed for one $5.00 cult. tickle. mu SAVINGS or: MP8 are IOIQI h‘ all branches ofThe Royal Bank ofCunadmYnur ni |1|,| dime: IIJII qulrlurl, u well n your dolllrn, In iml wait. ‘" Edbllifii. $2121.": "fil."‘“'°'- aimwriiiln SAVINGS STAMPS?“ ' W" THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA OVER soo. BRANCHES 11v ALL mars cit/vim of those foods which are o1’ tt‘ 0 be safely limited to th f high st v l r h lt ~ e “hm. wr- ._.,,.s.§. $§...'l..“‘.‘l.£“2.5f 3f int?"- that i» sitze aoi.d 11 . lower value‘ I10?‘ Ilglflcliélbl ‘bridchnéldd g H8112’! H%IITSIIIIT:D “the TiaMiFiIdIPT he be‘ be imported and paid for with for- iwmelg-rqwn food Dmguléitm °1 any H?" Clea!“- lobtalned. Guaranteed Tlfgan b. Putting a crown on the potato he markets for two or thiifw l?‘ m‘ says that it is of special value for head ls his plan ‘mm " liealtih and that. the consumption of This mav be ail potatoes 1st onlvAlialf Wlllll. lt ls m Sir John Orr ls a higl some counri , ‘ gives twice afsismlighafcdicfdoiis ihotiaiigi: but we have not heard of ivheiit. and it Ls the best insur- ance crob agatnsthtood shortage, ac- n. cordlnii to Slr Jo 'I'here has been a drop of 4.000.000 Wvefnmenl. and that mav not. be acres in farm cultivation since 191B. fills; vKl-‘fluhdlfivmvfiafi Fl” mfg‘ mid hr‘ holds that tr this were re- nature cf the food sllbulvgandlln m: coveted and the right things grown diam he Damp. 50mg and is. e dletaiy ha its of the people thing. however might be dim m adjusted, then food imports could the direction 1hd1cawd_ ° —-—-———1 For Vitality alwas use "IOCTBCV 1S fllrhting for its verv life. it has every reason to be frlmly efficient in handling back- stabbers. (Exchange) A vlew of Britain's food supplv different from what. we had heard DYBVIOUSIV. find One which suggests that Canada's role as a source oi‘ fwd supplv to Britain will be st-rlct- ‘ly limited. ls contained in a boo); Feeding the People in War-Time," by Siruohn Orr, famous autliorit LL11, bciéllllélboratlon w. sir John Orr first lays 1t. down that the morale and endurance of _ on the whole pop- ulation l avinz a healthv and suf t- clent. diet. But he says that such n, food supply can be produced nt home to a far greater extent, and that. food Imports would be reduced to about '15 per cent. The healthy diet, he says, should include milk, potatoes and margarine) He wou‘d subsidize as far as neces- sary to secure sufficient production to maintain our existence. Life would not be worth living lf we are defeated. WAKE UP CANADA! In the ’1‘>2%3..°J.."”i°§fltm “Sgt €§‘r"‘“““ Ls u» not m n l am, Slrhetc" Ottawa. May 2i. ' GORMAN’ ,4. ' ~ l SEMESAN BEL rm: NE ll. Qmckwnfilnggif” w TREATMENT m“ l a SEED PDTATDES “if; gllgoliflugllllizlswlll treat Iflm: uu Q ‘(fine pound lln _ _ t t. -— — Li! "I flllnd IIII (300 to 100s 0 bu: els) -- __ _ ._. _ 533m fii‘_§7<-P CEBESAN m: on! nfiidhbhklifi” r03 WHEAT - oars - nanny And tlze day returns too soon, Yet we'll o no more a-roving By the ltg t of the moon. . -!..ord tgyron. wooamo 00444» 0 0 “+040 How Are Your Eyes? , ll you are tn l u; of alraln-headliielvigafmg e7“: alhdinlnesn — consult I spee- S Al your service with yearn of experience and a thorough rrfrnellng service, - Call 1n and dllclm your d1!- flcultlel. 0. F. Ilutcheson G. I‘. IIUTCIIESON riled hlm he's licked. - Windsor Ill» 1 r. u. IIUTCHEBON. l IQIQI_I_1Y.VVU.U_i _,_ _ Ono a ._ ._ _ Flve Iliillllllid Tl: - - ._. PIG WORM A TONIC POWDIglI.) M l’ Powder lgvlllwgmou-{Tily The-bl? tah all traces of worm; um glgiovo tho health or you: 3m wand mug; - - 35c HOB-SE CONDITIO POWDER N I l v0: the animals coll. a line [ossy nnpe . It lone: up the s stem. rom- edlel ll ukln lrouh ca and In l l len il eradlcllor of worms. loo per pound - - — 50c é MAIL ORDERS RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION ‘ Offices: Charlottetown.Sunimerslde, Montague | T ~ .. _ _. AHMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEA W WHERE ADDIDEIITS HAPPEN Six out of ten traffic killings happen In rural traffic. Six out ol’ ten traffic accidents happen In cltles, towns and villages. Most urban accidents happen at street inter- sections and hills. '16. of accidents and 8% of killings happen at cut-yes. But 217?» of accidents and 36% of all ..."_'""1trs hflPPen ON THE STRAIGHT ROAD. Three out of every four drivers who get. into accidents, either kill or hurt, gqmgong. IIYNDMAN & DD. LIMITED The Oldest Insurance Agency in Fringe _ Edward Island ISLAND FARMERS Yes Thousands of Island Farmers do know that our Tobacco has given them complete sat- isfaction year after year. Those who work the land have a genuine appreciation of that 300d Maud HICKEYS BLACK TWIST 10c PER FIG STRAIGHT Everywhere In Prince Edward Island Manufactured By IIIDKEY & IIIDIIDLSDII it i i i 1m: l two mics Tobacco Co. Ltd., Charlottetown