>-<-4-4\4 rupsoav. , Ladies . . Here ’ The Mon MGDRE s r1 i The Store of Ten l ‘s A Tip, If He's A BEMUN HJRBUMHJRT! . HElI APPRECIATE THIS GIFTT Most men have an obsession . into a state of frenzy at the thought of tight and binding shorts. truly win his admiration . slip into a. pair of these shorts and he'll know that you're the most considerate i little woman in the whole wide world ‘s Store 4 i i i i i i . they go ‘I Here's how to . just let him ELEQD [imiled Thousand Gifts _,___ NUIMBER OF CAMPS. i By FRANK FLAHERTY Uanadian Press Staff Writer UPPAWA, Dec. 2 —-(CP) -Ex- eeipt for friends and relatives and officials immediately concerned in- terned prisoners are the forgotten men of the war. Canada may have as many as 10,030 of them. Most recent word on the number interned in Canada comes from an internment official but even it is vague. He placed the number be- tween 8,000 and 12,030 Th: public knows little about them. Unless they are of great prominence or win a, little tempor- nrv notoriety by an escape or an attempt at an escape the public never knows these by name. These perSons live under con- stant guard behind the high barb- ed wire fences of Canadian intern- ment oamps. They are there be- cause they were captured fighting in the forces of the enemv 0r be- cause they are civilians considered a menace to the sccurity oi Canada or Great ‘Britain. Some of them- - officials won't say how many- are women. They have seperote quart- ers from the male internees, In the camps planning nlears o; Qcape is the major pro-occupation I! thO bolder spirits. Otherwise thfly pass the time working, reading. talking. playing games, writing or studying. Transfer of several thousand prisoners from Britain to camps in Canada boosted ,iIl" scalp or the‘ Dominionfis internment oprrut-ltlns far beyond what. WilS allllcapccl at. the start or the Second Great. War. During the ‘First Great. War the ak of internment 31w only some .000 held in Canada. ‘The prisoners transferred to the Dominion from ih.» United King- dom were moved because of the danger of nunlbers oi them escap- ing and engaging in iijth column work o; the event of Germ-an invns_ ion 0f Britain. Canadian Intcrnees Canada's internment prolblelns m the present war started with the sound-up of Gcnnen nationals and Nazi synlpaihizers in September, 1939. First. prisoners, numbering several hundred. were confined in temporary guartcrs at th- Citadel at Quebec, Fort Ilenly iv Knizston, 0nt., and the Hlllfiix Citadel. Permanent rnnlps were vsfllblish- ed at Pf-tawaiva. Ont, ailrl Kanall- nskis. Alia.,boil1 poillt~ off the beaten track and aiizoy from cen- tres of pspillation. ‘These two Camps still 11H.‘- lhu only places or coufincmfllt. An un- allounccd nlunbzr o.’ camps have been set up in their pl u‘; to ccn- Population some Thousand With Prisoners — CANADA IS NEW HOME FOR ANTS AND INTERNEES FROM fin,- iho IIlTll’ll“Il=: of (‘irwurns -"lld ‘Italians brolwht i.'\ Ill" Dcminioni iron tlir- United Kinglloln. Thfl two camps for Canadian in-l . .,,, ., , ‘Waive-r.- =»-" " i hats ARMY OF COMBAT- OVERSEAS IN tlemees contain s. varied Broup of civilians but no combatant prison- ers of war. There are leaders of Nazi and Fasist- organizations which operated in Canada, communists, members of the National Unity paity and Germans and Italians of military age who were in Canada at the start. of the war and who might be expected either to trv t0 get ciut or make trouble. In the camps operated for the British government are people of the same type arrested in the Uni- ted Kingdom but these include a. number of persons who were really refugees from Nazi Germany but who must be confined on precaut- ionary grounds. In addition. how- ever, there are large numbers of combatants, soldiers, sailors and. airmen taken in actual operations of war: The various groups are segregated into different camps, the comba- tants because international treaty prescribes certain treatment for of-, fioers and mien who are prisoners of war, and the civilians for conven- fence. I(Written by Winifred Holmes for the British Ministry of information) Olle rough, wind-wlllppetl Sep- tember morning, Just over 100 years ago, the packet-boat "Fiorfarsiure, with 63 souls on board, struck an outlying rot. of the treacherous Fame Islands off the Northumber- land coast. A crash-a surge of waves over the ciecks —-and 43 lncll and WO- mell were washed overboard and drowned. Ou another island of tile KY0“?- a young woman cleaning the lenses of a. Imlgstone Light, hill?! up in a tall white lighthouse perch- ed preciously’ on a 100k)’ PW“ nlntory, looked out te sea and saw the wreck. She rushed do\\"n to tell her father, the lighthouse keeper, and together they launched their small boat and rowed out througrl the storm to the survivors‘ rescue. Olllv special strength and skill and great courage could have falcon through the heavy seas iufclv. but they managed. t0 reach the IOlllld- erillg ship and pick up four men and one woman who were elm:- illg dcsperaf" to the “TYBRYKEC. and bring them back in Sflfvli‘ i0 the ligllihousc- __ Another journey" brought >~ more survivors wlloln the girl nurs- ed back to strength And so Grace Darling won the gold medal of the Humane So- ciety alld became one oi illo lllcst popular heroines of our scilool- time history books. Today we who love the story of Grace and her father are being called upon to snow the same qualities of courage, skill and en-. durance every day and every night. Each morning hundreds o. girls and women in Britain put on their uniforms oi Red Cross nurses. Ambulzlce Drivers, Auxiliary File Service, Air Raid Wardens and auxiliaries attached lo tile fiullillr»: services the W. A A. FJs ai- e:l i0 l..e R .A. 1T, tile W. H h. N.‘s to tile Navy tllu A 'l‘ o‘ zo the Army -—zlntl sally . through bombs and gunfire to "ii . duties. They do it without thinking consciously of the dung * ' nor are they in the least cons oils of bc- illg heroic; it is Ei‘f‘l‘_\'fill_l‘ lifc for us llf)\V in England. Blu. .- stilncs "" it all stm iii wot-rial brave _. L ulrllllgs, which wllls sixwiai honor. -. » . . There is Peggy Prince, for lll~ stance, a girl l "" tile seal in Sus sllc (lrivcs all .l:l" lite sllc vou puddlczl canoes" by illc . August l4 a Blillnll bolllbel" ed into the Channel ulizi sol thrcc milllllil . ing round fill of the crew, - helplessly" ill the wtlt.l. ing the accident fl"oln the . off at once in her canoe, panicd by a soldier, but u: ‘ivlllg lit the spot. where the izonlbcr had sul they could i=2 no Sign of life mlzi returned to shore. Peggy. however, was uot. sofiis- fied and paddled out once ll__ft‘till— this time. alone -—t0 have u list look. She was rewardcd by fi one man. the sergeant win ..s operator, clingillz: to ll buoy. She nvinnaged to pull him, exhaust- ed as he was. illlo tllc tiny clllou thus saving his life. Fol" this she has been decorated with tile O B E. Then there is 21-year old Mary Cornish. a London music teacher, who volunteered lo escort CIllIjYJll going to Canada. When time ‘Ci‘y 0f Bellnres" ivas iorpedoed she children in her charge and got them placed in One of the life- boals. For eight days and nights she cared for tllcse children un- Ceflilllgiy in the lt'_V and cramped. conditions of the life-boat, muss- agiilg the boys’ feet when their circulation was stopping and keep- ing them interested in the fas- innting and exciting story of Bull- dog Drummond -“her own version" she described it afterwards. When they were taken on board the rcsctc ship, they were unable to stand up, but the boys were cheerful and un- harmed. The first girl to win the George Medal for civilians is only l9. She i5 $00111 straw. tibial in a. solici- tor‘s office in Croydoll. When volunteers for air raid wardens were asked for she offcled her sevices and took her training. Then one night the bombers came. A high explosive fell on a, public shelter and women and children in it were badly injured. 50MB- Oifefed i0 attend to tilt-m until their help arrived and although bombs were still falling all round she gave them what first It is the combatant group which has furnished most of the excite-i ment in connection with intern- ment. In this group thlm have been l6 attempts at escape. All but. 0ne' are back in custody and the one,! Ernest, Nueller is dead, shot when he resisted cabture in the North- western Ontario bush. Two attempk; at escape from the Canadian internment, cflmp at Kanahaskls endrd with capture of the men. Prisoner's Pay Officer prisoners of war cannot be required to work and are en- titled to their army pay from the Canadian government which in turn bills the British government. The British government balances of; the pay of German officer pris- oners in Germany by the German government. The officers do not get the cash but credit is given them on the books of the camp. Out of their credits they must buy clothing and any luxuries which are admitted aid she"""coulrl' and treated them for shock alone for a long time until she__‘ _reliei"ed.~ _1': ~ fatigue. Like combatant prisoners Jlhery get the same rfllions and quarters as Canadian soldiers on active service. . But where the fighting men held prisoner wear the uniform of their service, the civilian prisoners wear. a camp uniform, distinguished by a red circle inserted ln the jacket at the small 0y the back and a red strip down each trouser leg. .. . 51110113 One group of civilian pIls- oners brought from British a spec- ial works program useful to the Canadian government is being or- ganized. These are prisoners of the refugee typc. sympathetic to the British cause and if they wish may work 0n the making of sheepskin coats (or the Canadian army and on other articles for army use. In thn two purely Canadian camps at Kananaskis and Potawn- wa communists, fascists and Nazi mingle with Canadians, AmOTIg the more prominent inmate-i of those camps under regulations. Combatant prisoners without status can be required to vmrk but camps are Mayor Houde of Mon- trenl who was interned after he not on anything contributing to thei counselled Canadians against na- prcscclltion of the war. The‘, must, attend to their own needs. d) their own cooking. and keep their quart- ers clcnu. For that. thty 3st no pay for other work. site-ll as road-building, wcczl-ellltinz and farm work. thev get 2i ccnts o day. again In credit, not cash. (fiviizul pisrrrers are not pro- tri~‘::l bi" international agreement -1- M» treated i111‘. i-i ill" 3.» <: r w. nrn-"ff ccr crm- n~i~"=. Tllvv grl. 2n" cents .. I) . a day for work other than camp .¢ » r iwrewwvw “Mira-s- ~ w tional rcgistzation Adrien Aicaud, also of Montreal and lead-er of the outlawed National Unltv Party and James Franceschini oi Tsronto, millionaire Italian born contractor. internment authorities hive nev- er denied that among civilian pris- oners held in Caunzla for" Great I Britain an: Prince Frzderlck of Prussii and Eznest (PlllZI) Halif- etacrzlc. formerlv hi".h in um cl (“w as a press rltEou-i min and slfld in him» l: m "i 'l'lt’l'r"h"rnnr' rf hi", piano pllylnz ulltii he full into dislavour. KS.I";--VI‘ f." rushed down to the, cabins of the l fvurtinfi act of gallantry rho received tho medal. But even before this she had shown herself outstandingly’ brave and selfless, having one night walked through a. bombed street and into a. collapsing house to find a missing old lady who had taken refuge under her . " I I I I Such tales of women's bravery in this war are endless. There is the Auxiliary Inve Service girl ope:- ator in Whitechapcl who stuck to her teieprinter all through a. ter- ible night raid when tho fire sta- tion had been hit and several fire- men and girls killed. And there is Corporal Pearson of the Women's Auxiliary Alr Force, a. Cornish girl who. hearing a ‘plane hulking a forced landing on illi ainirome outside her quar- ters at night, dressed quickly, and rushed out in time to see the plane burst into flames on the ground. She helped two of the crew who were not injured to pull out the wounded pilot and, while they ran for an ambulance freed him from ills parachute straps. Then a bomb blew up. Corporal P. rsoll illrcw herself on top o. the ivoulltictl pilot to save llim_ from the blast and splinters and they ivele both allilost suffocated with the fumes of the bomb. But men were hacking clown til-e fence to let in the ambulance and before the second bomb and petrol tank blew up both pilot and his rescuer were taken clear oi tllo danger. And then tllore is the elderly Lanousllile woman, Mrs. Horton, trapped with lot) people for six tiOlLTS in an East London shelter, who calmed the frightened women and put the children lo sleep again ln their bunks, and allcr attending it) lilo peoples llljurics llull giving illclll “RILEY to drink from her own ‘ootzl-e drew tzlenl round ill a circle and lllude illem all talk of tllcil" CIlII(l1lOC(I days so LIlllL they would lolgot the terrible SllllilllOll they" were ill. All the time bombs were dvoixillllg with llcnvy cxillosions ollt- sitle, but demolition parties work- cd iluccasiilgly and eventually dug them out. Tacsi- stories have happy end- ings. 'IIit‘ lleroincs have lived. But others uu- evtrv day and night ill s manned by wo- ' tile EJSl ull;l coul- é-s‘. ex- u ‘I'll: oniv links found p. . , . were the two number-plates of tllc ca \ ilurlsd tilltlcl" a lluullillln of ' Anzi tlloro are three women ll‘. bile crllliezll \\‘.‘.l.) illlsivezeti SOS to go and fccd pcopfc ill .ll.~ o . cle kll‘(‘.l while ulorlllous flrcs w . blan 4 Tllcv ed fol .~iX llotvs itllvvaslnlill‘ ".\l H 1:2. blill.) it'll tlllti Lllrcc. ArxIUI These then are the conditions undcl" which the Grace Darlings of today arc living and working. Several illitzl of bravery stand out. hilt t"c wardens in s‘eel llcllnets zlrti .wn (Illll".f‘.i'('-TS who walk coolly round the st eis and visit illc shelters at. lliillt, the lillifilfi \\'il<> 4:0 olf to work each lllorlling through the daytime raids as n matter of course, and tine school tealchirlus and social workers who fecri and clothe the IlOll1Q16$5 2i hours on end lIll'0‘.l'lIi the Il€l‘(".‘El. bcnlbzlttlnlelit, anti lllou- sands of others v."l"o cannot pos- sibly be slnglzd out for special mention a cqunlly as brave. Southampton ‘Given worst Raking of War SOUTHAMPTON, Dec. 2 (CP) — Using tactics similar to those in the "total" raid oll Coventry the night of Nov. 14-15 waves of German bomixels gave illis port town its worst raking of tllc will" last night ilnd early tnis morning. The Gerlllans attacked the town for more than seven hours and it- was feared the casualty list would include a number of dead. Townslncll called it a “blitz filo mid" and one air raid official said “if ever there was indiscriminate bombing we have had it. here." The German bombers showered incendiarles and then high explo- sives, causing considerable damage to commercial property, private houses, churches, hotels and publi- institutions. The guns put. up a heavy barrage ‘as the raiders circled the town Many buildings in the centre of the city were wrecked and damage was caused in other areas. When the raid was at its height 70 patients at a hospital were mov- ed to a building in another part of town without a single casualty The hospital was gutted. Churches destroyed included An- glican and Roman Catholic, one Unitarian church and one Baptist. Among tile buildings smashed were a theatre, n. newspaper office. a lending library and a large number of shops. Four air raid precautions workers fwere killed by a. bomb near their post and one officer was killed when a police station was hit. ArTrnulvs FAREWELL And s‘.owlv answered Arthur from e barge: "Cromwell. I charge thee, fling away _ ambition; 'I‘he world is too much with us. Late and soon The flerv Cicero wit.h ferret eyel Looks towards Nnmancos Boyonas hold, As whenda Grvphon through the w and rue Cl-IARLQTPETOWN cufiliotilv WOMEN OF BRITAIN INSPIRED BY [l A HEROIC TRADITION W.~g.'%,i. Y . nurnnr Hoof-ins “Too bad Oldmlylélflifiléalglmy" ‘gut "wit: fir’ a... I ‘EIDont WXIISLG ‘time sympfll-hllin! with nle." Jebb broke m; "think of ti lild." , , . 191)? you, know. I believe we v3 heard of her from another source. “You have! You mean we! Ioglxig? we've just heard timi- Bhfl W35 lost. We got a circular note iwim the American cons in ienna. 1-16 had had word from the Allslrillll pouceyfrlend von Hollwald out tiwm on thqtrack. Have they heard 81W- m-ib 'l‘hey"'ve just begun to pretelgiang look. And here's the cir- cul r" I-Ietook from a lflKfionhole a sheet o r. ‘"386? see. it says. ‘Wanjgd. 111101‘- mation of Cecilia Baxter. u "It isn‘l Banter-its Thatcher. Jebb insisted. "And not Cecilia. but Cynthia." Rosell tossed the circular to Jebb. "Oh 10rd. Q Lord!" Jebb groilrl; ed, “they've llllsspelled the name. He looked furt her. “And got the description wrong! She doesnt. look a bit like that! The search has been useless, useless." Suddenly Resell was startled by a new idea: _ | "You say the clllld's real namc_ was not Baxter", but Thatcher?" “Yes, Thatcher." “Any relation to—-" he ut his hand out to another pigeo ole for 1 (gird, "to John Thatc el‘, of Ber- ll " "film's her father.” that so?" - "Yes. liow did vou get his name '2" “It ivus like this. A few weeks ago a Turk who keeps a little khan in the outskirts of town clune in here with a Gladstone bag-J’ "A Gladstone ba-g?" "Yes, same style as the one you carried, now that I come to think of it. The Tlll‘k——Ht1fIZ Mustafa was his nanle-he went to America. as a wrestler once. He can speak and read English a little. He came here with a Gladstone bag full of papers. l-ie told n long coek-and-buli yarn about some lllcrlcall gentleman who had left them with him and. never come back. Tile Turk came here to see about it. He woudrrt leave the bag. but he let us .oc.k\ through it. ‘There were a lot of blueprints and mechanical drawings with the name of John Thatcher on them. And n bundle of clippings and l letters. I made a note of the nanlc" and promised to kec it ill mind." “Where can I flu the fellow?” "I'll have him here tomorrow." "I can't wait to see him. Where is he to be found?" “His name 1S Hafiz Mustafa and llo keeps a little khan out near the Adrimlople Gate, close to the Mosque oi Mirima, Better go to the foot of the bridge and tnkc one of the Golden Horn steamers — they run every fifteen minutes — get off at Avian Serai. this side of Eyub, and then no west. through the Greek quarter. While you're up there you oucllt to see the wonderlul cemletery of Evub and the old lnndwal.’ "I don't want to see any cemeter- ies. I Wfllll; t0 see that Turkish wrestler with the Gacistoue bug. Good afternoon." CIIA PTER IX “Al. last the effcntli is on the job!" Tllls was Jcbbls greeting from a m east cont h: wmul two snugiusplt- i the Central Vermont Railway. An- r £ECEMBER 3, 19” _ ‘W? Mossrschmitt Reaches ceiling, ls shot down IONDON. Dec. fl —(CP) —A d fight seven‘ mile: above the sou - fire pilots shot down a mm Messersohmltt plane which couldn't climb higher to elude them was described tonight by the air min- istry news service. The pilot: who hsvl teamed to- gether in numerous engagements since the evacuation of Dunkemue, flew to battle together again. The German pilot bailed out, his machine crashed near Dilngeness and he was taken prisoner. A Royal Air Force soilroe said the pilots used no special fighting at terrific he except oxygen apparatus commonly used above 15,000 feet. Fights at high ‘altitudes are not rare in this war and this one was said to be no record. Tho Spitfire‘: ceiling is a military secret. The ministry new service said the plane was the 600th destroy- ed by squadrons operating from l single fighter command station. U.S. Has Bond 0i Sympathy Eor Canada MONCTON, N. B.. Dec. 1 -There has been a marked increase in traf- fic moving over railways in the United States due, in a great meas- ure to the quickened tempo of A- merica's defence programme and providing munitions for Britain and her Allies, declared H. A. Car- son, generai manager of the cen- tral Vermont railway at St. A1- barrs, Vermont, a subsidiary of the Canadian National Railways. when passing through Moncton this af- temoon on the Ocean Limited on his return to St. Albans, via Mon- treal. Mr. Carson, with Mrs. Carson has been on a visit to Halifax to sen their son who is a signailer in the Royal Canadian Navy. Mr. Car- son was formerly locaied in Mon- treal and later in Toronto, before being appointed general manager of other son is a cadet in training It the University of Toronto. While in Halifax Mr. Carson in- spected. the railway and dock facili- ties at that port and was greatly impressed by the efficiency of the combined water and railway ter- minals and the ease with which traffic can be moved through the port. He was also impressed with the natural advantages of the harbor and the splendid hotel facilities provid ed by the Nova Scotian Hotel whico is an integral part of the combined rail and wafer terminals. This was l r. Carson's first trip to the east. r. Carson, in referring to war sentiment in tire United States, stated it is decidedly pro-ally and the majority are impressed with the necessity for providing all aid to Britain and her Allies in the strug- gle with the totalitarian powers: short of sending troops. 50 MILES DAILY T0 HELP TROOPS LONDON. Dec. 2—(C P)- Every day, min or shine, Mrs. pclldcrous Turk rlt the door of a shabby khan. The mall had all the look of a retired athlete, whose sin- ews of steel llad degenerated into swacldles of fat. I He recognized Jebb on the in-_. stant. and lie was big enough to be remelnbernblc on IliS own account: butnfebb could not recall an ounce of m, Hafiz Mllsiafn hustled about mak- ing coffee and preparing a uarghile for his honored truest. He spoke what English he had with a stvongi flavor of the Bnvelgv, in whose en-l vlrclls he had picked up liis smat- tering. l "How vou like my little khan. eh? He is not so worse, I iheenk, huh?" "l is beautiful," said Jebb." illouch he could not inlaglne a more i tioleiul spot. ' ’ "It is not socll a dam racket out here as in New York ccety, ell‘? For loniz tam I had n hnw they sayl-a hash-house on Washecnton Street. Yes. I get lots oi‘ the long green in America and I buy that leetle hash- llouse fl"om an Osmanli who is home-sceck for Siamboul. Bine-by I get the holneseerk too. "So at inst I sell out for big pile of dough and come home. Eeet ees not such a much business here, but I can rest and theenk. Eeet is a small walk out to the beeg fields where the tombstones ls nice to seet on and smoke and dream the nice long‘ dream. And she is out there my little hanirn what I breeng from America." "You brought your wife from America?” Jebb inquired politely. “Evvet. efiendim — I mean sure, Mike. I breeng her. she is dancer in music hall on Bowery." "A Turkish dancer?" “Not on your life, Bo. She is pure American blood; comes from the great ceetv of Weesconseen. I see er dance one night. 1 theenk she is mos‘ beautiful theeng what ever ees~she wear the leetle trunks and the seelk tights and the — spen les, and she stand up on her toes o she enjoy it. Bine-by. she ees love me, too, and we get married. She says she ees sick of that tarrible life. and so when 1 buy pretty leetle hash-house she help me. One day she is make coffee in those beeg boiler they have in America and the water spl ls over. and she is tar- rible-how do you say? —- scalded. Her pretty face is tarrlble burned. ~ "But she is still beautiful to mo, and her body is still the body like a saralli from Clrcassia. But after that she hates to g0 out in the street, "I tell her. "You come home to Btamboul where honest wives is wear the ylldimuV-the veil, offen- It keeps all women the same. Eeet more equality than the hat. "Her name in Wcesconseen was Annie Meeichel, but I geevc her dim. The veil Ls very kind thing. 1 s Madge Nicholson sets out from her home in East Anglia in a. camouf- laged van on a tour of Britain's blen-kest marshlands to cheer thv ' troops station-ed along the North Sea. She olives the van, which serves as a. mmiature village shop com- plete with onfe, 5) miles a day, sometimes through dense fog and in the blackout. The soldiers call her the “Flozellce Nightingale of the mnrshlands." "I relt that srzmeihing must be, done for the boys stationed on this most desolate stretch of oul" coast- line, where they remain for week-s without seeing a. soul," she said.l "With the help of the Women's Voluntiarv Services. WllO Kflyfi us 100 pounds ($445), the county Council which gave 50 pounds ($2- 23) and local lesidents, we boughti our van. “Part of it is fitted up as a can- teen in which we sell tie-a and cakes specially made for us by tile local‘ confeotioner. The other t is equipped as a shop in 'we sell everything from hair oil to birthday cards for sweethearts.” Mrs. Nicholson, who is helped by Mrs. C. B. Marshall, a fellow member oI'“iJ1e‘ViT"VT'B-. “slit! she ; ' " ' travelled 4,100 miles in 14 weeks. sold 20,700 cups of tea and 37.102 cakes. "Our shOp is self-supportingfli she added, “and if we Ii§£p§n_t_0 Navlina. eet ees one nice name- ye gebb thought, yes indeed — not so , pretty as Mirurna, but s great im- proyement on Annie Mitchell. Egy tian Bazaar." "bu since my Na ima is grave there I like ese better. 1n evening I sit there and smoke and theenk, nobody is in hurry bod say. ‘Get a move on. Hafiz?" " e Gladstone —- they tell me you found it'll-when?" "The Gladstone, effendim '! What 1| tint?" “The bag — the valiso — the - I that thing of mine, you found." After another thimlileful of col-I u Jebb recognized it with intense de- 1 light. He wanted to caress it. 1t was the first material link to his un- substantial past. I He rummage‘ the contents with u sharpness of e a that might have offended a subter Turk than Hafiz. “All is there, I theenk?" Hafiz finding something more. With some embarrassment he asked: neew name — Osmanli name -- i. nmcss, “Utiflgea last wild carol ere her a . Pursues the Arlmaspian. who by, Creeps ind this petty pace from day’ av. I drenrlohim not. nor all his giant I smoggPthe sledded Polacks on the Wiiituri‘ vcur Vnlsclnns in Corloli. And left a name at. which the world _ grew pale, A our l Hid l‘ (‘ct llitvi to a nun- c lncll about me that are —Punci:. The Goughflhai the i321? ll.iiiiliiié’;..‘i.°li‘;.i.‘iil;'.l‘.§° $311.1’; you awake at night. Wh t . . ..Y..":..~tz:.::i:i.;'.?:.l'h‘;".£‘:."::3,*:; l, o t is coughing condition? it. acts prom tly and effectively going to til f d ' l‘ I soothing indium-ail an“ pH ,,.,'“',°'L,§’,§ fiififlfglf" loosening tlis h the bronchial grgglrslf’ The (tough Thai Slick: (To bejiontinued) ling: 0n . W 0d’ " h boo Price a Iiottr; itsPIilQiIIZiiIiIyIEILfOIIEiI¢Qiiggwflgci, w, g r r 5 ' all drug counters, The 'l‘. lililhurn 00.. United. Toronto. Ont. / \ Judge L. Stauffer Oliver refused on erty of publishing. -no-~.,,l \ 4 q ‘mu. savmes are the. exec-nit‘ "aiming? o“; expenditures. BY SAVING NOW you build present security and make provision for future needs when your earnings may be lower. THRIFT is n symbol o! responsibility. For our convenience there h, a SAVINGS DEPARTMENT at each of o'ur branches in Canada. y: Ifl$§filfl2r luv Wu 5s I s ~ n. tibial!" Budget for your Income Tax by making regular deposits in. a Savings Account. The of OVA SCQTIA EST.‘ IU32-—-OVER A CENTURY OI BANKING EXPERIENCE BRANCHES IN PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND Charlottetown 5mm, Montague 01¢“, Summerslda Kcnsingion \ Vioioril "M Saturday to order the l-l-nloval olJ news-stand from a street corner a WOULD NOT REMOVE STAND Inn landowner. He said “llbertv -—- circulating" newspapers is as esQli PHILADELPHIA. 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