TIIEHW“ ' cttlntorrrruwtt tiulnntln Morning Daily Wounded In Ill?) PAGE FOUR rrexioent: Lieut. Col. W. Cheater S. McLuro Vice President: J. R. Burnett. FJJ. Hecretary: Lleut Col. I). A Maclstnnon. 0.8.0. l Edna; mg Managing Director J. B. Burnett. FJA Assomath Editors: l-‘ranlt walker end fan A. Borne" SUBSCRIPTION RATES l By tnall In r.l-.'.l., $1.00 per w": 52-50 for 0 Ilwllllll $1.25 for 3 months; 50o for one month City Delivery $5.00 per year; $3.00 for If month: $1.75 for 3 month: By Mail in Cutlada and U.S.A. $5.00 per yen Saturday II ecltly: $1.00 per year; $1.00 for 0 lnonthA 50o for 3 month: obtained II The Lllurluilelonu uuurnllnn ruby he bulls; om llulllllllfll Aetin tut-my. f-“wr Manure. Nuw Mull unnl “lnlnnistoo peutn Aenu t-y, turner 1111-11.... Jlulrnptt 1.11 Ne“; Agent-y, 124a Peel u. Montreal; .1. _ sat lluy an, ‘Toronto; sew- Stand. chateau Lnurtvr, utinnn; lh-lie’: ha»: Stand. Butlbury. Out; llub [auburn-u bllup, stunt-tun N. 15.. The Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink." ‘ atotxbitiiixovlzatnrzn r1, 194i. Senator Meighetfs Leadership Senator Blrigltenls nomination as leader 0f lll? COll$.'l'\‘;lll\t‘ l';1rtv, sttvs the Ottawa corres- pondent of the liitiziittial Post (Illdependellt), has given the King Govcrntiient “its rudest ghttfh din-c the 171111 11f France. At that time, genuine nlztrtn 1'1>11l:1t"-~1l lil\~lllltl@. Since then there 1111s been tin tttt1ptv~ti11ttt~1l disposition on tl1e part ‘ of tiirtny tnctttlicrs of tltc Government t0 swing beltind Mr. King's unspectacular leadership rather tltttti force the pace. The prospect of it 111.1.’ st-ssiott llll1lt'l' the biting power of Arthur Rlviuitcir- 1111111110 changes :11] that." llv culling r 11 111111.‘ 111111 naming a leadcr who wiilibe ruitdv for ztrti-iti ztlniost itntnediatcly, says the 531110 t-t1111-1~<1111111l1'11t, the Conservatives have stored in tntblic opinion. Those who have ac- cepted his lcrtilrr-ltip bclicve they are doing so with one ptirp11-c 111111 on.- purpose otlly, namely thc immediate 111111 contpclling advantage of hav- ing someone in the House who could help gear the nation's wztr effort to desperate needs of the moment. Chances of the Conservatives giving effective war leadership in the House, says the Post writer, will depend partly on Mr. Meighems ability to organize his 39 or 40 followers into a liard-tvorking", disciplined group of diggers and experts. lt 1141s been widely commented upon that the lloit-e membership as now constituted lacks atlctpiate research and organization. If this lack c1111 be overcome, .\Ir. .\leiglicn's un- questioned dt-liztting powers will be greatly strengthened and stipportctl. No leader, how- ever able. can carry alone the burden of effect- ive opposition. Xotltitig tlttit 111s happened in Canada since the outbreak of \v.'1r, it is stated, is so poi"- tt-ntiotts, politicztllyq as this drafting of Canada’s elder state-titan back to the House of Commons in his 118th your. Already the active support of ]lo11_ Mitcltcll Ileplatirn for Mr. hlcighen is nwotcd. \\'ho else will follow his banner of an all-out war effort remains to be seen. Why Britain Needs Eggs \Vill farmers and poultry associations please note. Lord Dawson of Penn, the Kings Physician, atldressing the llotise of Lords on nutritive food for the nation had this to say for eggs: “If you give one hundred pottnds of protein food to the cow it produces thirty-five pounds of milk, the hen produces thirty-one pounds of eggs, the pig twenty-one potttitls of meat, and the bullock, which is l1_v far the lowest, only seven pounds of meat. This order of efficiency is accepted by all authorities, including the National Com- mittcee on Nutrition ivhich was founded by the League of Nations. My first point, therefore, is that the egg is not something you can treat light- ly, and secondlyg that it is a food of very great value from a nutritive point of view, Making e comparison with milk, it is rich in protein and vitamins and as far as vitamin B is concerned it is even better than milk. The egg is a very digestible z-tirl easily lundlcd food. In cookery light foods are of great importance, and they are especially important to worker: who are be- ginning to get weary in mind and weak in their digestions, as they are very apt to do under the conditions that prevail to-rlay. All authorities are agreed that without milk and without eggs you cannot make light food, and though it is right that there should be a priority of eggs for children and for some invalids from the point of view of preventive medicine, from the point of view of ltc-eltitig the active population wqll and fit we cannot neglect the fact that the availa- bility of e258 will play a big and important part." What Lincoln Said / Apropos of the King Government's attitude towards conscription for active service, and re- calling probably .\lr. King's oft-professed ad- miration for Abrztltam Lincoln, the Calgary Herald citcs the following incident as not un- worthy of considcratioti at Ottawa: In i863 the United States was in desperate straits. The Civil War, which had broken out in 186i, 11:11] so fttr resultctl in an almost unbroken , string of victories for the Cotifedcrate armies. Early i11 the war the southern armies had pushed to within 30 tnilcs of Washington. The Union army was in chaotic condition. Generals quar- rclcd. Armies fought like undisciplined mobs. There was every indication that the Union would fall. ljp [a that little the Union had depended on volunteer soldiers. some of them pledged to fight for as short a duration as six months. Some slates militia rcfttscd to move beyond the lsotttitlttries of their own states. l'1-t-<i1lt~11t Lincnltt tnrtde this statement in lll?" your; "Yulmitgtristtt ‘he tmprincipled dodge 0f cownrdlv pnlitiriztns. It has ground up ti?! cltoiost seed corn of the nation. It l1as con- sumed the young, 1h:- gvnrrous, the patriotic. the intelligent and the brave, 11nd it has wasted the best moral, social and political elements of the a Canadian company in I927. republic, and left the cowards, the shirkers and the money makers to stay at home and pro- create their kind." — EDITORIAL NOTES - “Far more money to spend and less to spend it on,” was Finance Minister Ilsley's terse explan- ation of what constitutes inflation "As W6 ldevote more and more of ottr goods to war pur- poses that condition develops," he added. “Those are the essentials of the situation in a war such as this. and at a time when we are making en- ormous quantities of goods." 111 111 =11 41 The former clizttclaitie of Ridcau Hall has doite a finished job of limiting Canada with col- orful interest yet satisfying accuracy, within the limits of the compact text which provides the bztckgrouittl for “Cana1la" the latest addition t0 the British Commomvcalth in Pictures series. Lady 'l“\vcedsmuir's condensed but comprehen- sive appraisal of the Don1inion's history, growth, people and present day development, is freshened by interpretative continent based on her first liztiid observation 0f things Canadian, while here as consort of the late Governor-General. writes Mr. Guy S. Cunliffc. Published in London and evidently designed primarily for readers in Eng- land and elsewhere in the Empire. this small. liberally illustrated volumme should prove of special interest also to Canadians. 141 111 n1 s It seems strange that a Canadian insurance coinpaity sliotild be paying at par an annunity to .\larshal Petain, the only explanation being that it is paid through the London office and that the British Government permits it. The annunity amounts to $2,670, and the Chancellor of the Exchequefs (Sir Kingsley Wood) ex- planation is that the Marshal had been permitted to transfer to France an annuity taken out with Speaking three days after Mr. S. S. Silverman, Labor, served notice he would ask the Chancellor of the Ex- cheqticr about reports that the head of the Vichy government had been allowed to transfer either capital or interest to France, Sir Kingsley went on: “An exception lias been made from the nor- mal practice on the grounds that Marshal Petain is the head of a state, and his contract is with a Caitadian company, and the Dominion of Can- ada is still in diplomatic relations with the Vichy Government." i i i justice Minister Ernest Lapointe’: health is not permitting him to attend to his official duties. and it is stated he will be obliged to spend some time in a ltospital for observation This unfor- tunate development and the protracted absence of Hon P. l. A. Cardin, who has not fully recov- ered froi11 the effects of his serious illness and operation, have revived demands for a strength- ening of Quebcds representation in the federal Cabinet. One of the names prominently men- tioned in connection with any ministerial shake- tip is that of Brigadier George P. Vanier, now in charge of the Quebec City Military District and former Canadian Minister to Paris. There is an insistence, too, front the younger Quebec members that one of their number be promoted to the post of a minister. =11 =11 l! 1U Would that Mackenzie King enjoytcd such a reputation and proved such a reliable character! Never has a mart commanded the love and re- spect ontside his own country that Winston Churchill does, said Richard Redler, head of the Etiropcan Section, Austrian Foreign Office press services, under Chancellor Schnschnigg. addressing members of the Montreal People's Forum. “Never has there been so much respect for Great Britain," the speaker, who was freed from Camp cl'lvernay in unoccupied France, later interned at Martinique and finally freed through United States intervention said_ “As an Austrian I can say we are ready to accept the leadership of Great Britain in the reconstruction of post- war Europe. What is more the peoples of Eur- ope expect it to bring order into this world. As the conqueror of Hitler. Britain cannot do less than take the lead in making a new order, 1n a u Prime Minister Mackenzie King had not said mtich about compulsory military service ttntil Mr. Karl Homuth, fiery Ontario Conservative, drew from the Prime Minister these words: "Any young man in this country who does not recog- nize the serionsness of the situation and does not play his part in helping to meet it, is going to suf- fer for it during the rest of his days." What kind of suffering the young man would be called on to endure was not specified, but it i: presumed his conscience would bother him. Probably he may have been speaking from personal exper- ience though his success as a politician since 1914-1918 seems to belie this. The emphasis, is still on voluntary enlistment for overseas ser- vice. The Government i: apparently relying on the young men seeing their duty and doing it through the promptings of their perception of the difference between right and might, and not through any use of force by a Mackenzie King Government of Canada. This is equivalent to saying "Don’t do a: Iiidid‘ but do as I tell you." n Mary, Queen of Scots, died this date r587; only daughter of James V and Mary of Guise, was born in Linlitltgow Palace and became Queen ‘when a week old ; all the more important years of her life were spent in France, where she was educated with the Royal children under the dir- Jcction of Margaret, sister of Henry II. In I558 ‘she was married to the Dauphin, afterwards ‘FrallClS II; she claimed the English throne be- [Cause ltcr cousin Queen Elizabeth was illegiti- ititate, atid on her return to Scotland on the death of licr ltusbattd she pursued her claim on the advice of her chief officers of state. Lord jatncs Stewart and Maitland of Lethington; this naturally roused opposition in England; in 1665 Mary married Darnley, eldest son of the Earl -of Lcnnox, a worthless character who was primarily responsible for all Mary's subsequent troubles; after the battle of Langside Mary es- caped imo England, where she was taken prig- 0"" l’)! Elilflltrllt. who found an excuse for her execution at Fotheringnv Castle in the Bab- ington Conspiracy in which Mary was alleged to be involved. '§ ‘ ~. _ Tl"! Cllflklil-QTIETMVN GUARDIAN NOTE!‘ BY TIIE WAY Now It ha; been told, whether or not 1t shzuld have been, Boskn ap- plLCIIlly is to become America's chief aZd-to-Rlusla port. Wx e.er that may mean to BOGIDTI’: presper- any, no American should deceive himself with the supposition that the minimum figure mentioned for Russian shipments can be very en- csuraglng to Russia's defenders, PUBLIC FORUM ‘Ible wlmnn In open h: the tlluuulnn by eorrenpondont: of qnutlun: ol‘ Internet. Th: Charlottetown Gunrdlnn due not noeuur-lly enderlo Ibo oplnlvlr of eorrolbonlentl. ISLAND AIR MAIL SERVICE Sin-There was an incorrect l "womb?- ; CHALLENGE- I [IT A DAY A EggUAGPEOPLE AT WAX! “T110 lesson to be derived from recent experience; la never to give In - never. never, never. Nol: 1n any event. great or small, large or paltry; never. never yield crept; to conviction and good dcoats. Queen Street Officers’ Ilnlforms That Fit We learned the measuring, cutting, In large cities and can take care of measure line. We also carry stock suits a“ J. P. MacPherson 81 Sun NOVEMBER 1,, 1 and My the mtidgng; Charlottetown Boston can handle several times 80.000 tons per month. The Slate Department. appears to have been surprised by the Maritime Com- mlsstorrs axmouncement of the Atlantic route for American Ship- ments to Rtusia. At a time vruett United States relations with Japan axe so delicately poised, the C m- missions statement was bcuticl to start unfortunate s ulallons both in the United Sta and 1n Axis countries, besides providing the Nazis with a blueprint of one sec- tion of American defense efforts, the shipping routes to fighters who are holding the front line age mt I-Iitlerlsm. Emphasis on Atlantic Ocean routes would seem neverthe- lass, to offer advantages to the Unted States- econcmlc. strategic. and also political. The mute fitm Bostzn to Archangel is a much shorter journey than that from Pacific ports to Vladivostok and thence across Siberia to the Rus- sian front. ‘The port of Archangel lrlay remain open as late as Jan- uary. and the darkened and cloudy nsrthern skies are an aid to ships which must elude rnldets..More- over. Russia, aware of that port's potential value ln wartime has establ shed many facilities for shipping through the White Sea. The lbillty exists that big Sa- viet ce-bieakers may be abie to keep a channel open even thrcugih the winter. -— Christian Science Monitor. There I: general belief In mill- tary circles that. when the Rus- sian front, has been "stabilized" and German units have dug in for the wnter, a new German offensive will be 0 ned in North Africa to include t e Suez and pcsslbly the Iran front. Germany has, ap- parently, sufficient men and equipment for such a task so that. it. becomes only a question of ability and strategy. The sexes of BLIQOKS by the RAJ‘. and the Royal Navy on Axis convoys from Italy and Balkan ports to North African harbors, indicates Britain understands the des re of Berlin to eliminate British and Free F.en.n forces in North AIHCB. prior to a spring offensive against. xtussa Latest news frcm Vichy has a bemmg on th.s. German aulior- ltles, it is said are amt ous to liave Petalzt remove Gen. Max.me Wey- gancr from his post as ccmmunuer of French troops in Tunsa etiu to have Gen. Henri Dentz, who op- posed the British and Free French figure in the typewritten copy in my letter that appeared In Satur- day's Guardian. In para raph four, line four. the wording s ould have read. "The plane leaving Char- lottetown at. 4:45 PM." and not. at. 5:45 PM. as in the text. I am Sir, etc“ H. K. S. IIEMMING The Ark Royal (By Klrke L. Slmpson) Mssoclated Press Staff Writer) The .s ctre ship of the war. the huge a craft carrier Ar.k Royal which has haunted Hitler and Mus- 50111113 victory dreams for two years like a nautical banquois ghost, has gone to the bottom finally, sunk by an Axis submarine. That the Ark Royal will be en- shrined tn British annals with such hero ships as Nelson's Vlcto goes without saying. Her log boo re- Dortlng many an action tn far seas since Berlin and Rome verbally bombed her out of the war tell a thrilling story. The essent al fact, however, la that she lived and fought on to an hour when her loss meant no vital Impairment of British sea. power. And sea power, in its triple modern sense of combat aloft, nlow, and on the sea‘: restless surface, still ls Brltatns ultimate guarantee against. her foes. Britannia still rules the waves that wash the shores of ner world-glrdllng empire. The presumption that. It was an Italian submarine which downed the Ark Royal arises from the scene of action. east of “The Rock" in the Mediterranean. The mere fact that the shlp was in those waters and based as dlcate at Gibraltar stresses Italy's failure to live ll to her full share ln the Axis war gar- gain. i I I Sinking of the Ark Roval will be hailed by Rome as an off-set for a steadily-growing llst of lrreplacable Fascist sea losses ln the Mediter- ranean Yet even an official Nazl or Ger- mmi assertion that it was an Ital- lan tinder-sea bent which scored against the Ark Royal would not. be fully convincing. There are 1m- pcratlve reasons to compel Hitler to go ttgaln to the rescue of his Axis mute 111 the Mediterranean at. the earliest possible moment. British militatflv forecasters expect that. 'I‘he_'»' foresee rettirti of swarms of in Syria, mtmed as his successor. Tne Nazs ate said to have l-ttte confluence in Weygancl as a SLmun-| pure aunii-er c-l the Axis, to sus- pect. that lie msy even be training1 and building his armies in Aftuca to be used under n;s own oom- mand as a. counter-balance to any Vichy attempts Lo conatbmatc Wlbtl Germany in the mlitary and colonial fields. So far Petain has been a. stumbling block. He refuses to sacrifice Weysand. Tlixs has lll- duced Berlin to exert pressure on Vichy for reinstatement. of Pierie Laval in the Government to litzittle negotiations with Germany. For his part Laval is beleved to have: laud down certain ccndiuons, It is. said he demands quality of rank with Admiral Darlan as a vice- pxmler under Petairt: g-uaranteei by Petiun that lle will not again; be ousted in some new surptxse coup such as est hm Lifs post as vice-premier last December: that, he shall have full (Lrectlcn of propaganda (control of the press): that. he shall have the “assurance of a minister of the interior who is friendly". This last point, ls import.- azit. Laval L; reported to be ex- tremely suspicious canceining his, personal or ltloal safety at Vichy since the a tempt on his life a Versailles, and the min ster of thei interior ls the man who would bel Nazi bombers to Crete and Siclly the moment they can be spared from the Russian front. British n11- lval and alr forces have made the supply rottte for Axis armies ln Libya a desperate gamble. ‘ Movies With “Depth” (Christian Science Monitor) When future movie goetrs buy their tickets, they will probably be handed n receipt in the form of an inexpensive ‘viewer,’ which xvlll en- able them to sce realistic, three- dlmetisionttl 11"eltltt‘t‘s. Such pictur- es, natural scientists report, are now possible with present theatre cqtilpment. It remains only for the engineer and artist to develop tnaeltincs and skill lll photography to ptit them into operation. Moving pictures which show depth as well as l1elgl1t and breadth have been introduced experimen- tally to the public before, notably two years ago at. the New York Worldks F1111‘. ilvhere delightful audiences WfllCllCCl full-color films through polaroid lenses which se- pn-rted the "images. These movies however, required the use of rather cumbersome double protection equipment. But the latest process ln which two images are produced ental Europe which has “touched ant-wide Dominion with the obser- vatlon: could be no British Empire." strategic position halfwe. the Bast and the West, two oceans these critical times. None of the visitors to the since the war started but. ha: come home with new respect forr the Brltlah people. Bishop Rmlson stud the change 1n England in the last two years has been one of the tnlr- acles of the modern world. ‘There ls a camaraderie of sacrifice, ItLBOpIE coming nearer end nearer 8e the little nation whim nu carried the banner of progressive clvllatton ed the Mother of Parliaments end given morale leadership. It ls ‘turd in: ls being evolved out of today's pended, each component part apply- sense. Never yield to force. Never yield to the growing and apparently overwhelm- ln-g might of the enemy." Winston Chureltlll. No Empire Without Canada Globe and Mall) Rltzht Rev. R. J. Renlson, address- ing the Etnplre Club on Thursday carried his audience to that. small I Kingdom on the fringe of Contin- Lhe hearts and minds of men fot 1,000 years," and beck to a contin- tl-ere I-le here to Canada's between twin: on "Without Canada was referring r1 a u. b01111. m ponder 11111-111; United Kingdom the ther as a great family. This la to all parts of the world, establish- to say what the general state of the world would be without her ex- ample. Now e. new spiritual understand- trlals, the most severe test of the British spirit tn s. long nlstorv. ‘thoughtful men In many countries visualize a happier lntematlonal comradeshlp when the nations have aseed throu h the crucible. Bil- aln la alre y showing the way. The British Empire ta Britain ex- lng the Mother Country's ideals to its own problems. Could this Em- pire be destroyed without slowlnc up the processes which have been working for generations to Im- prove t.he world? We think It would b» a calamity. ‘Then, lf there could be no British Empire wlthmtt Can- ada. the responsibility of this coun- try ls a grave one The Canadian Government makes much of the point that we have gone Into this war of our own fnee will. It ls rather an apologetic wav mm FOR SALE Well situated land on Malpeque Road: In plots from one to forty] acres. Also one team of heavy work! horses. Gurney Hot. Water lleater.| 12 tons of Hay and a quantity of] unthrelhed oats. Also tenement number: 10B and 110 Elm Avenue. Charlottetown. through the selfgovernlng world. We need more of the deep human understanding of men like Blsnop Renlson to realize that we are in this war to preserve the prawns of ages without which our own trcc wllllould be little to brag about. llalnlglerinrwroarrium How Are Your Eyes‘? At your service with year» of experience end n thorough retracting mules. Cell In and cllnouu your dlfflenltlel. Ii. F. llutchoson F. G. IIUTCHESON G. I. IIUTCHESON If lll to of llreln — hmelllgywun‘: eye: or dlzzlnes: — colunlt 1 meelallat '3 - 1.1 0IIlygW9LM1;-gp r _ save the clvllatlon which has its roots In Brltaln and its zrowtlt EXAMINAHUN "m" "ll slmlllyln; q Etc. ' 1|. .1. 1111111111 OPTOIIII-Yflllsr Mvnhrue. r. e, L Office Hiatus; 12 L Holiday: etc. by lpmh-"m Offloe Connected with DRUGSTORE 0r Trade ii silvers. Priced to sell, We Market Furs- It. is our business to market your furs. Cash ad- vances paid, soon as furs received. Fox farmer please give us the opportunity to help you and we will satisfy you that our marketing service ls the best. Refences - ask any shipper or Canadian Bank of Commerce. Bring or ship us your furs, either direct to headquart- ers, Moncton, N. B. or to 110 Kent St. Charlottetown office of W. Chester S. MeLure. TIIEKMARITIME Fllll POOL LIMITED ’ MONCTON NEW, BRUNSWICK We pay the expressage and supply blurs free. ' 4 e; iTs 1111121111011 We are buying daily Muskrat, Mink, Red Fox. Coon, etc., at full market prices. We have just receiv- Foxes For S11 A number of’ Standard B Males and Females a]; few good quality whitef M. W. W0 Southp SILVER FOX PELTS L WANTED - responsible for his safety lf he, L; ‘ m ) .. _ again entered the Vlchy Gcvertt-jggratégnsiaryethe $bltfggdtfiilgesflis mem- “" mmim’ om“ Free pre°si said to have facilitated production! ________ and lifted "depth" pictures from an experimental novelty lnto a com- Some section; of lron railings mercta] po551b1my_ and gates at. Buckingham Palace while popular fancy has been ed a large order for Muskrat and Mink, Silver, Cross, and Red Fox from a New York Fur House and will pay a premium to flll this order. Bring or ship your furs to us Immediately. Remittance mailed daily. have been torn down and removed 1.0 be converted into scrap and so‘ 111w tanks 11:11: suns. Tue Kdig‘ has set an example to landlords by , approving these removals, which wlti contribute about 40 tans of! metal. Artlatlcally the railings are of no special lnteest; most ofi them are f.om the Ambassldorsfl Courtyard. The tall, railings that enclose the front. are not. being touched. '1hey are part of the Queen Victoria Memorial e. bwlwrvund to Brook's marble fountain and monument. muqlit by tltls use of polarold others may prove more vital One ls In dimming glaring automobile headlights, which ls expected to remove the greatest cause of some 25,00) yearly fatalities said to occur on the highways at. night. It is also finding valuable use In educa- tional work where three-dimen- 1 slonal views are important and for military purposes where It cuts th1e~ glare seen through instrument‘ le helps aviators ascertain heights of objects from the Lil’, and aotwmflllshes other tasks which P. E. I. FUR TRADERS WE PAY SHIPPING CIIAAGES Write for New Prlce Llst 182 Queen Street ‘The Best Place to Sell Your Furs“ illszemsza:-:az-zmnxxnzcazcgagztgas. and e guard to the Palace. frontage designed by Slr Aston!" mllllf"? Secrets- webb M, may, “me, Ahead}, As this new cultural science un-| hundreds of tons 1n ialllngs have kls- "s developments are helm; been moved from Government POlHlI-‘d flhafllll’ Wwafd mllltfl-ryl bulldlnu, Including the Ministry 0f BPDUCBIJOn-l- WI l9 l! QTIWUTEBUW Works office and 1,200 tom have To learn from the researchers that been taken from the Royal parks. most. of ll-s defense uses can be Owners are asked to give thelflulapted to constructive purposes in railings, but those unable to do so peacetime. ’T‘::;i will be paid for them at. the etan- ‘_ ._ __, dam rate of 25s. a ton _' ' “TIRED” . The Min- lstry hope; to get half a mill on of scrap lron from undam- gone. but not those round Russell Square or 8t. June's square. only those ralls are taken whlcifnave no notable hls- torle or artistic Interest. -- Man- Sh. M. mhnufi cheater Guardian. dnmqofin i, m 1 fitlftlfiiffibii: I miféaiél"“l.tffé"tllltl°fll 21%;? 1111-1-1-111-11-1-1 man w”. I m5‘ made especial] m euuqtedfloddhlild- frzghten Intended victims of n1 N! Pllll- Alma-In frlqhbfulness so thoroughly 111111 51:: 13:11:" ',~, they will not, oppose force with force. The 5.1mm government was noon repllced by knows that the British people do clear heeded ma” Apply to Albert W. E. Douse or ___ Bell and Mnthleson. 11-654-11-15-17-19. .11 BAGKIIITE i111 TABLETS ii For The Kidneys ;_|l_| A remedy for Backaehe, Lnm- IIIIQ, Urinary Troubles, ete- ,__ Price 50 cent: : box. GASSY STOMACHS T: BET-Ev“ u-m-it-itt-i-t-ia-n iizi-Zdiiiiit‘iiiiiiiiiiiii i I "OTTO" I “Dr. L. B. Even: Stomach ‘ Mixture.” and see how qlllflil! It will relluve all dlstmnln eymptomr... A recommend. remedy for lndlgeltlon, 0!!- epsle. Sour Stomach. llenrt- | urn nntl all ntomaeh troublrs - MACI AMMONIA!!!) BIONCBIAL COMPOUND llelleve: Acute BHIIIEIIIII: S tll C . B hi $121’. ‘Enid’... 3515.,“ F A lelentlllo combination o. selected quelltle: of bran to form n eafe rant and letlatlve cough preparation. l The Two lilacs I III Great George Street Ioodl. not frighten easily. ‘nits to as II d; he, I1 elt I elhq true of Oonadfima as of the people u; ‘if [m]; m S tn the United Kingdom. Through D°dd3 be better able to reellae the Mall Orders Given Prompt Attention- reelng these films the people will m and nature of the enemy, tr T m‘ to ex- Tendlmgr ‘tlliwmltll-"Lfn lll be‘ rm no e 1n: w strengthened. The Ottaw: Cltlzecl. "“'““‘*”*“"”° noting that The Windsor Start urge; [tendon to send there films t? Canada for public showing, ex- paln: that tw of bhern- tlemll of Fire, recvrdlnlimacene: n the, maxim ln l>o d, and Victory In Welt. tenletlng episodes lnl the Battle of France, Including Dunlerque- are already in Oan- ndl ‘Thane In the vaults of the, National In Board at Ottawa.| ‘the boud would like to tnve them dlsple ed tn movie theatres. b Oltlren "It ls un- dgtibto-(Tdy-lhlt n11 offtclals In the lighting aerylces are against, ub- , ' _ 1 . , Echnon on our quahty own redflvr Say to Your Grocer I Want BllAlllllll DRAIIGE PEKllE TEA You will enjoy its superior Yes, how dld Hickey’: Twist. outlive S0 many of Its early competitors. It ha: Men on the market more than fifty years- 1'11"‘ l: only one answer-because it delivered the Hickey’s Black Twist Chewing 10c Per Fig MANUFACTURED BY titcttlzv a lIl0lIOLSOII TOBACCO 00., LTD, CBARLOTTETOWN '”""””"'§:1to111 BINJINS