AGINTS: Roll. y“; order to ed In luvs or micron iii-ix;- inyrALiN, Ceresan. $611185“! i w" "°“"““‘°" $3.53.??? .. Foley's Drug Store. oBGgT-ME-NOT cosmetics. i love the delightful perfume. ue; Rexall Drugs. 5-14-21. i‘ Pgying highest cash prices. puwson. Albany. 5-14-21. EPTONA! The tonic for yjgol‘ and vitality. 20 oz. $1.00. Gourlies Rexail Drugs. 5-14-21. .co:icli in good condition. S “m, Apply Ralph MacCaulL y Bedeque. 5-15-21 yonli BOOTS. — Sheen and to China .. GKING, May 14 —(AP‘l- in engaged yet still advanong gii China's buck door, Japan- talumns fought farther 11D the u; heights of the Burrou- today and, to the west, itened the historic Caravan - city of Tengylleh- r invading colmun had branch- Lron the main route to assault gylleil, ancient treaty port of » for this little-known corner casualties. pushing '- inside China, ong the Burma 1.500 feet through the Kaolikung talus. tlten plunges for 5.000 . lo the salwcen or Lu. River. lie Chinese said they had des- ed ihc salween bridges and . holding the east bank in gtli. Paoshan. east of the Sal- 0t the situation at Tengyu was raging. rice Belling n llseil Dars UPIIAWA, May 14—-(CP)—Un1- ii-i price ceilings on used cars ve been establ shed in each pro- n- it was announced in s. Wer- Prices and ‘Trade Board state- nt tonight. A systematic depreciation rate 1s l or i used cars according to eiind model year and in relation a the established ceiling prices of equivalent current year model. The order setting the used cu- iings was issued 3y J. H. Berry. tor vehicle administrator. ap- Irved by R. C. Berkinshew. chair- -- of the Wart me Industries ntroi Board and concurred in by mild Gordon, chairman of the iirtime Prices and Trade Board. “The ceiling prices as establish- li should riot be confused with the vice the owner may expect to re- ceive for his vised car if he is trad- Illl it in to a dealer on a new or lied CDT." Mr. Berry said. "The ceil- iuc prices established cover used his in first-class condition with Vllllliment complete and the car Ellgvtliughly reconditioned mechanic- “Tho public and the dealers alike rill welcome the system established ii this order since it places on u. iclentlfic basis a most important time of the automobile industry. Ihlcli heretofore has been subiect lo wide variation in different parts at the country. Under the new NI- ations the ceiling price of any model used car may readily be de-' gglllined in iill provinces in Can- War Deprives Children 0i Normal Lives _$ suospas. Msy i4 —(AP) "near is casting it; blight-in; in- n“ heevlly over the lives oi American children, ha,“ “b61111! war comes YkeRfiv- John L. Nixon, welfem 1,, agdggqilte: végbationtoffictl‘. what. ~ couny sren , “'13 31:11.: situation exists fussy:- bm “Vi-Tile delinquency among n m, he "Willy has incrensed m mocent durin the inst u. 1 ch11"? Bu]! ollht per can. n...“ “"11 ore being deprived m“ ei childhood because their t,“ ,0 3:: alzclrigifig: their home Rs ' M1102 613,110". Chief County Pro- ln Juvmnc¢f.__blamed the lngpgggg Ellie or re "elinuueuov on the M l, h rliystrstion Among youths ‘m!’ are‘ mo You to Mai’; mflllgniro in do once :0 12k" tit t _ zbllityu°arfgllikiegiIvnthtleoz pIrrt- m; ‘llllouonsy m; h “the mzuntms eight-cent I S I'm WESTERN GUARDIAN TODAY AND SATURDAY $'Side BIIdEGIS T" an John Pond. I1 Church nines-Ilene In: SUIMEIIHIDI nnd PBINUI COUNT! suhgqflpflbfll Adar-thing should bold‘: vvlthlln. Pond. Gurdhnmujgpqlljhlglu, stun‘; of the IOIIDIIJ. “my, Do M,“ w to: Street Gonrllns DIIIIWN. Wam- Btroot, Taryn. “Sig, water Buses lath Glndol. 0’! Granville an“; Qugrdllll vvlll be delivered w all! homo in slnmmernldo p; _30,;|gpperdl) ovlwlwtrvoek. Phonozllutorthlssenlsgu the w» rellluullbln f4: deliveries on your ronlo. -nouss son SALE '°“'“"' J's... adv-mull cl e par, 11o Herve-rd Street. oil/Icy i» DOUBLE BILL ‘TILLIE THE TOILER” w t s Id, M1110"! ayrigicu.“ I” “k ‘THE LONE WOLF KEEPS A DATE” ‘ ‘Nata influx" Hague‘; by firrangement with oc- lottewwn. —GE’I‘ READY for seeding. Tnest tatoes with For- SUMMERSIDE _.3gngqng ufljfEn CHUM oiiiisizairoi; unpaid $3,804.70. .____- —The services for Sunday, May 17g; 503ml‘ service on your films. as: asnfollowma P 1 _ h“ “exam Drugs’ 544-“ P. ihelegfiraménltfaofflkgnIoi-Igg .. wANTy-“y _ M; nnd,’ Supper will be obggrlved at all three ggui use any quantity, large or fimfgi Doral Sea Battle Heroes in Australia I I Set Ceiling I 0g, SALE at a bargain, 191g YDNEY. Australia. May ("ldflyl ——- (CP)— The men who fought the battle of tlie Coral Sea. qrrAwA, Mpy 14._-(QP)_Coln- for the Allies have landed m, shoe stow summemde, cldent with announcement of new Australian P0". unheralded- Hery large selection of heavy tire rationing policies by the Muni- boots and mllltarv boots. Best tiOns and Supply Department. The Whii-‘h may hove been the greatest ‘(y which gives lasting satisfac- Wartime Prices and Trade Bnard $11166 Jllflflfld. Wow $81K"! in 81ml’ |nd loot comfort. Price $2.25 today described briefly 5-14-21. ceiling prices ablished on all rctreaded and used tires, used tubes. and retreading and repair services. Tlic first casualties of the battle, the new ambulances to an Allied hospital many miles inland. No one was permitted to welcome the returning heroes except the hospital staff. Some walked The Prloe Order. issued by 5pm with assistance. Others were borne ps H. Williamson, Controllier or sup- on stretchers. Twowere carried in. plies in the Department, of Mung- swathed in bandages. Others WOIV‘ tions and Supply, and concurred in shielded only in blankets. Some by Donald Gordon, chairman of’ the shorted evidence o! severe burns. WartimePrices and Trade Board, t was a. slow sad procession. The seamen were all heroes. They had fed the guns in battle served below decks during One man waved his left arm, his Onlv uiibandazr-d limb. at '1 group of hospital nurses on a balcony. The first intimation that the sail- ors who had founht the battle were ashore leaked out in an 110391 nhere three sailors drank silently and then t broke their glasses deliberately. “What did you do that 211'." asked the hotel keeper. The reply was:- In n supplementary announce- deflnite steps had been taken to prevent hoarding and all indi- viduals, firms nnd organizations nrc required to report by May 31 the number of’ fires they possess. over and above those required for running wheels and’ one fixes a maximum price of $5.40 a which the popular 6.00 X 16 size of used tire may be sold, if the m China; the ggiser. despite g%h%‘%o%°§,;°§5fi: “m”; I“; e ea er may, owever, avg m“ {mm Lmgflmg‘ use" m“ Inf-deb}? ‘$8.12 for adsimiiar tire on W ie as ma e one built-in l“ m” He“ where n’ climbs and vulcanized sectional repair, or $9.70 for a tire which required two or more such repairs. The 8.00 X 16 used tube will sell for o. maximum of $1.45. Maximum s for retreading services have n‘! SIBIIIGEYIIIIZBCLIBIEG mos popu ar sze o 1mg t0 me Mekong’ up to $9 provided that the user is n “ ‘ eh it supplying the tire. o» hwy not tantra‘: tritium: “if” r speed at which the vehicle will operate before a sale can legally be concluded. The same 90681111! comrades who did not Nothing more was said. Ii. S. Takes Over Domestic Air Line Planes WASHINGTON. May 14 apply to the retreading of tires in —-'I11o WEI‘ DEPB-Ttmem announced today that the army, on instrnc- tions from President Roosevelt, 1s taking over actual control of all United States Dom- tic Air Lino planes. "All routes and services not re- garded as essential to the war pro- BOWMANVILLE. Ont, May 14 - gram will be terminated," the War (CP)—Lieut. Frederick Oeser, inem- Department said. ber of the German Air Force. was M!‘ on the loose tonight for the third mnining routes but "it may time since he was interned at Bow- come ecessaiy to curtail this ser- vice more at s. later date," it was if; possession or the vehicle owner. Nazi Escapes For Third Time mail will be carried over rc. mimville prlsoner-of-war Oescr was brought Iaerc in Dee- added. be Only last month an arrangement Absence of Oeser and another was worked out for the air lines to divert one-fourth of their planes hsrdt Wlldermutch. was discovered to the army as carriers or soldiers nnd it and military cargo. ‘The new program prov! Nazi Air Force Liicutenixnt. Ever- ot roll call this morning was thought tonight they may have been hidden in tap large crates ver. for war use of the carried from the camp yesterdag: entire commercial air fleet in these on a truck and loaded on a baggage ways:- car. Discovery of the two crates. broken open in the baggage cor on available flight equipment" will be a railway siding here, was made “Hnsfofiod outrlsfit to the army as police scoured the district {or Hr forces for operation by army 2. ‘The air lines themselves will being used to pack clothes of some Convert flDDfOXlmutely '10 ships into to be Bflfgo carriers. to be operated by air transferred to another camp- Both line personnel under contract for Oeser and wildermutch are small the air forces. 3. The remaining planes. aggre- The crates were said to have been Satin! about half filled at the camp by the prisoners wmmeroial themselves after which thev were further notice continue to be owned shipped out on trucks accompanied and flown b" the airlines. but will bv armed guards who were escorting be considered always available for the prisoners. The cases then were emerkenov military missions." placed sbosrd the baggage cor i? Otlter breaks made b on Dec. 30 and March 12. New Series 0f Postage Stamps OTTAWA, May 14-(0? signs depicting Canada's part in th war. which will appear on a. ne series of Canadian postage stamps. were described to Commounls ctkoday by Postmaster Gen- 1. A “substsnial proportion of the e trace of the two men. It was reported the crates were prisoners who were 11 InSTir-dvivors From Sinkings A 8T. LAWRENCE RIVER. PO . May lb-tCPi-Bix of s list of B6 crcwmen and passengers are missing )_De_ from the first freighter torpedoed e nnd sunk in the St. Lawrence Riv- Mondav night. an officer of the ship said here tonight. Early todav in Montreal 31 sur- vivors of a second torpedoing in the _ some area said ll men were miss- m. Mulock also announced lsiu- 1oz from their shin and one man m- ma". died from exposure. Th made s total of one dead. 17 missing and ill survivors in the 1g two sinkings, uIIIICIJIIOEG in Ottawa. by Navy Minister Angus . y Mm; donald.- be released "my. W111 b0 will reflect men lfl-oeht st once of a new lo-oent special delivery stamp for the con- venience of persons using the fas est post office service. Previously been necessary to p least two stamps to sent air mail. special de The new stamps will about July l nnd desi Canada's share in t e war with 60W special em hasis on the armed for- Purl) ons and war supplies adinn navy- productlon nnd agriculture. Mr. Mu- 3 ook s id. t a Portraits of King George will s. - or on four of the stamps. He w I shown in novel uniform on the show th eon one-cent stamp and the ive-cent stern . The brown cent stamp wil carry the King n military uniform te-m 1n shown on tho dark amp. a Canadian the ie 20-cent stmnp. p, Royal Cen- destroyer on the blun icture illustrating on the six-cent blue air mail stnm . The brown i0-cent e Parliament Buildings st iti l t W0’; ghuntheonlgrozrzn 50-cent stain . sir stamp will carry tlIe Canadian coo d The new ill-cent sir mail-special delivery stamp will sh in nCnnnds air lines will be of n. blue h-vlolet .._-_.______- force uniform. °° Agriculture will be unreserved in sin elevators which elwfll‘ four-cent stomp and ion form scene on the lolfil LT?‘ rewemtins the U" "“""““' ‘-“ W’ "“->- -~ ---. _.._.__ i._____s>_._.__.__..__ UMMERSIDE G RINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE For Deficit In Durrent Year Councillor Molllson, chsirmm “of the finance Committee of the Sum- merside ‘town Council brought down the budget for the year at the meet- Wllh Wlfroli Wlllllm. Frances llob- ins of the Town Council held last inso Bruce Bennett and Eric Blore. Show: at 7 nnd 9.15. tlnec Saturday nt s, 127.60. mpenditures were estimated at $120,881.60. with revenue at $119,- 754.00. The assessment on property and other times including poli tax remained the some es on previous “$331k. bills were assed as fol- lows: Town bills pai $1,359.85; 11!!‘ a 1684a d Electric light. Pu Police report: drunkenness l2. convictions l2; loafers arrested 4. convictions 3; dismissed 1. Vagrancy conviction one; speeding COIIVIOLIOII one; curiew law infractions twv; suspended two. Three Juveniles were to the juvenile court, Fines t $1121 costs collecledamounted to $91. The milk test was submitted and was very satisfactory b -iow was passed that all bi- A Y cycles operating in the Town should be licensed and registered, the ice for the license being 50 cents. All bicycles had to carry number plates and lights or reflectors alter dark. The matter of the curfew Woe brought up, Mayor Lidstone mak- ing L118 enquiry as to whether the curtew is being strictly enforced. Councillor weoge said H1111. one dif- ficulty that the police had was that when the evening train was late the boys selling papers were 00115611 l0 be out after i! ociock. It was there- fore decided to bring in a motion that boys selling J&DCI‘S"G._KEGI‘ 9 D- m. must have a permit from the police. Councillor Gorrill for file Street Committee stated that a_ numbeijof clay roads had been built. up with shore gravel, Councillor uorrill also referred to a bad break on the road at the western approach to the Town which needed rolldlfs- Councillor Morrison spoke of the splendid work accomplished by the d committee for salvage, C. B. Morris. chairman, L. G. Lewis, secretary and W. E. Darby treasurer 11c said that Sulnmerside was the first tnwn on the Island to ship imy cunntlty oi salvage and he understood that had shipped 18 I-2 tons ofpapel‘. The matter of extending the pres- ent civic building was brought up by Councillor MiicNeill and it was decided that the property committee meet the committee from the Board of Trade to find out, the cost of such a. project this to be without any cost to the Town. Mr. Nell Durant. Town Clerk. gave a report to the Council of the meeting in Charlottetown of repre- sentatives of the Town Council and School Board with the government regarding the continuation of the government grant for Grades 11 and 12 at the High School. Mr. Durant stated that the government were not in favour of continuing se t rant. Mr. Durant said ttdfitprlsredliietg Campbell said there was nothing to indicate in agreement made with the mill"- ment of Education st the time the extra. grades were inaugurated and no assurance that the sranii Would be carried out. Premier Can-pbell also said that due to other schools asking for three extra. grades BCCY did not see that they could continue the present Bram- Moetlfli; B5‘ journed-S D‘ co To Intern J aps Involved In Riot OTTAWA. May 14-(CP) ~21?- who participated 1n a ese u-fi-wu" at quarters where they were held in Vancouver last nisht will be interned immediately. 1411101’ Minister Mitchell told the House 0f Commons today. Guards at the building where the Japanese are held will be increased; Japlncsd were being Coast east of the Cascade Mountains ss (not, as possible, Mr. Mitchell 001d George Cruickdiank (Lib. Maser Valle ) who asked questions about i111 e isorders at Vancouver. Mr. Mitchell said the Hastings par); Qamp where Japanese are held prior to being moved east of the mountains is not s. permanent establishment, and will be used by the National Defence Department as soon as the Japanese are moved o ut. In the incident at Vancouver. several windows were smashed and an iron grating disap bred in the waterfront immigrat on building dining on outbreak of- Japanese violence which was quelled when military guards used fire hoses on the demonstrators. - ‘ms situation in the immigration as reported G111“ W“! build w sftorutxge disturbance late yesterday. The Japanese 1n the building apparently were protesting a ruling which prevented them from talk- to Japanese friends through 1kg building's iron-barred windows- Mr. Mitchell ave figures to show that out, of s. tel of 22.184 Jap- anese to be dealt with 1n the move- ment away from the Pacific coast, 4.300 had been removed from the so-called "vulnerable" points and a total of 9.313 had been handled .n the whole movement to date. GOLD FISI-Ig FREE ALL THIS WEEK Add Life and Color to your Home We give you absolutely free 2 Gold Fish and s Gold Fish Bowl with pearl chips and water plant with any with a Union Jack and I. Nyal purchase of 50c or will be illustrated over. Extra Gold Fish 2 for 15c GET YOURS NOW Enman Drug 0o. Ltd. Summer-side . , 5-13-31. TS MY BABY! Munitions And = a ' Supply Progress Reviewed By Howe OFITA May 14—(G'P)-—Ce.n- ndiezi explosives plants are produc- 75 per cent mcre es imated capacity plant is producing 2 1-2 times mncti as was expected of it, Mun- itions Minister Howe t House of Commons today, The Minister opened his review of Munitions and supply Depart- ment. activities as debate on the war appropriation bill continued. Product-ion costs in Canada com- red well with those of the Un- ted States and United Kingdcm, Mr. Howe said. Quality was all that "can be desired." The Department had placed contracts of more than counter-attack had failed. $4,000.000,000, greater pre-rviir national debt. PROUD of their work are men like Harry Good who build trim, powgfful Corvettes in Csnadifs roaring ship- yards. Vital work this! “Can't afford s morning let-down on this job," says Harry, "so I always start the day with I. sustaining breakfast of Kellogg's Com Flakes with milk and sugar." I_(ellogg's will help you stand w“. time pace, too. Order several packages from your grocer today! SaygiiStrong” Press Is Essential To Strength 0f Nation DETROIT‘. May 14 --(AP)— As- serting that if we "keep the news- paper's strong we'll keep the nation strong.'_'_Ed\\'m'd R. Grace, Detroit Advertising Executive, in an article in the annual newspaper of the Adcrafi-er. today urged Am- erican business to support the press so that “newspapers do not become anemic. clue to a. starvation diet, of sent to the United Kingdom laced iii a preferred Once his aminunizicn was marked "suitable for work in the air force,“ but obj-action was raised services other than the air force were unable to cbtain plies they wanted, and this maik- ing had been rcnic-ved. The House also completed in the Enemw" 595-510" m 51"‘? °f A“ fliers dominated the uir, destroying more than 30 German aircraft on the ground. in the first day and shooting down five lighters. Defence Department eszimatcs un- der the appropriation b'll. said that when Air Minister Foiver uitsnzied the Canada hid achieved.‘ Questioned by J.W. Nosevvortliy (C. C. F‘. York South) r making Martin Bombers at Lialton, Ont, Ma). Power said that changes in aircraft design for new types of ten mode it nec- essary to change programs. not be undertaken "Perhaps it would be a. g were being expanded. thing," Grace declared in the art- icle, “if business leaders turned into editors ii10l1L°9i\'P.<. 110\\'5Dfll)(‘l‘s is available and is not prohibitive in cost. “ A new type oi editorial advert,- IWEIIIQIIIZ is needed. k d f message that includes a dis is. the facts as they pertain to a bus1ne=s operation. “Manufacturers should figure out budgets which will permit at least a quarterly statement to the mibli- ledge who had to be trained. were in process of six-berth yard in Montreal had laid its first, kcels last ivcek. One 10,000- simple. factual statements in vertlsements can be very hearten- ‘he wnv to :vl_i""~d "IBWDOIIIIS and expectancies. They duction of Corvettes sweepers. anal. as output would be expanded further, objectives were vccrc producing tanks at a. uniform pace at the objective set. Com- boats had mltincnts had been made for the _of the supply of tanks to Russia and at fairiniles, the end of three monhs the Cana- dian shipments were even with Ask Servants T0 Curtail Travel OTTAWA, May 14 —- (C P) -_ 'l7he transport department an- nounced today the civil service has been asked to curtail week- end travel and not to conceiitrom all vocations in July and August. Purpose of the request is to re- duce congestion on railways so new heights of physical and mental activities to help win the war." 31 Survivors Reach iilionlreal being approached. been built since the start Mincsiveepers and smaller craft. i) ti.....u 11in: .o..iiy, flown “about this time.“ in six minim; in the st, 'I‘hree other plant...‘ Woikillg on Lawrence rcivci" iiiiei" a suoiiiuiiiie attack when they least expected it. They! were picked up by another ductton for some months. The survivors were from one of two ‘SHIPS known Lo have been sunk in the river earlier this week. iconic speculated on the pos- sibility that a third vessel had been the victim of the sudden-attack - speculation that prompted naval authorities at Ottawa they had received no signal to in- dicatfi gist more than two had been ivcre be mode. All previous figures for product- tion of Bren guns, Colt-Browning Aircraft guns and Boys Anti-Tan). in the production of motor vehicles. guns at the Inglis factory in Tor- _ _ now in excess of 250.000 units and onto had been greatly exceeded. llevms ‘reek-end Canadian machines had seen scr- but the minister said he could give vice in every area of active cinn- no detailed figures. Force. Canadian industry was “full out" serviceable no 8h Popular with cooks C (Women's iii i .5 ). ' he one-piece overall of IVn-‘Ilflllk dress of blue fabric, wtn tcctivc for duties gore skirt and bran buttons. Launch Drive tContinued fTom page 1) -____--_--_- troops which Hitler pouned inw the south, including those now attack- ing in the Crimea and those who are poised ior eastward assault along the upper shores o1 the Sea O1 AZOV. On the Kerch Isthmus. the Russ- fans were resisting stubbornly alter falLng back to new positions under the weight of superior German xiunibers. Today's communique. which did not specificalw mention the greater Kharkov battle, Sllld violent battles continued overnight. on L118 Crimean trout Admit Counter-Attacks (A spokesman for the German higircoininaiid admitted that the Itussiahs in the Crimea had launch- ed a counter-attack along the "tar- tar ditch," an old line o1 lortiilca- tioiis about l3 miles west of the town of Kerch, but claimed the _\The Berlin radio at the lune time announced there was no con- ammunitfqg; firmation ill "competent German had quarters" of reports that Kerch it- self had been occupied by the Ger- inons. This report nad originated in Bucharest.) British and United States tonic; were engaged in the great KIIDIAOV batfle- iiiiu $OVICL artillery and nu‘- crait ivere 1n violent action. Spread Panic Soviet dispatches said the Red The sucidcnness of the assault _ spread panic in the Cwrrmzin ranks. ited Nat-ions air ccuzicil in Ottawa and many of the defenders were re- ported to have fled, abandoning both artillery and "nortars. GCYHIIIII YCIIIIOYCGITIEIIIS WBYC b5- ing rushed up from the Ukraine manpower reservoir. to relllnce loss- es already described as tremendous. History Made In House Of Commons . ‘ OTTAWA, May l4 —-(GP) —H1s- Mr. Howe said his executves weic wry “as made m the House or competent to streamline munitions commons today “hen M S_ Com plants but this streamlining could Casseyman (Lib, Ednmmcn East) While Plan“ presided as chairman of the com- _ _ mittee of the whole. Airplane industries had expanded she took me Chan. as WA HEW their personnel by 400 times since B, the Will‘ began. and intake i'l\ll at speaking and a burst of applause the rote cl" 2.000 a month, YQDYC- inyorrupyed mvocaedings, settling men from fnrtns or (Lib. Northumberland) was _ Prime Minister MacKenzie King school without nielinnicai kiiow- anoiogized gm- mU-erupying ML Fraser to congratulate Mrs. Cnssel- Pefhflps 1W0 Shipbuilding’ Yami man on “mdupyihg the seat of now were fully manned and 1'l still chairman o; me commntee for A the first time in the history 0f this House." Mrs. Casselman rose and bowed. , Conservative House leader Han- launchcd every four days and this so“ adcd his congragulntlons and production rate would be IIICPCBSQCI Mrs Casaeiman bowed 38am to one every three days. deep-Wafer bat. The "most interesting- the yards were "lull out" on the pro- universal ¢ayi-ic1~_~ 1mg been step- Nilllc- pod up to very large production. 'Ile Angus shops at Montreal thrsc commitments. Zifnny Naval guns had been made and a Vancouver" factory making Mr. Howe said aircraft production this weapon was (‘Oming into pro- - was about 40f) machines a month. duction. Particularly good results MONTREAL, May 14 _ (C p) _ A large plant on the West coast lincl been obtained in the manu- Thirty-one SUI\A\~JQ oi a. tomcoseq was building 46 flying boats rind torture of gun mounts vrhicli pre- ivas being test sciited more of a mechanical pro- blem than the runs themselves. Field guns and small aims fact- new types would not be in pro- orieslwgre nlmost all intproduction. A Wn sor, 0nt., plan for the Output was assisted by st-and- making of automatic guns for tanks equipment may be available m’ ardizntion of nine types, and old W115 not in production as yet be- orders were cleaned up. The Cann- cause it had not been intended for titan production was providing for the production of this iv-eapon in all air training plan rvqilirosticnis the first place and changes had in nnd operational machines being provided for the Blue-clad cooks of the R.C..-\.F. Airwornen cl the R. C. A. I‘. twcmen‘; Division) ohcngr to white uniforms as they go on uniforms with dimgarcrs similar ilufy -- a crisp cap nnd the to those worn by airmen for "Hoover" smock for free-swinging ease. I_.._.________l UARDIAN . No. 29 MIRACLE BILL SAYS- When I was s kid, I used to hang around the county fair a lot. They had horse racing, and while I'm not a betting man, I did like to see them run. One of my neighbours had a horse he was always putting in the races. but that nag never won once. She would go licketty split- way out ahead of the whole kiboodie-until she hit the stretch. Then she'd just slow down and lose . . . Now, what made me remember that is that I was thinking that the last month before a hog is marketed is like the home stretch in a race. It ought to be the best spun. Ifyou let down feeding hogs the best feed in that stretch, you lose. When that time comes, there's nothing like Ogllvle “Miracle" Hog Fattencr to keep up the bug's speed in getting into prime condition. My hogs beat my neighbours‘ some- times as much as s month in getting to market, but that’: because I feed ‘em Ogilvle “Miracle" HcgFattenor in the home stretch. MAKE IT P Y riir mpflfflviir ‘IIQDBiLVK HOUR IIILLS Dlflibllil CARVELL BROS. LTD. Charlottetown Exclusive Distributors for RE. ‘l. essential passenger travel related to Canada's war program. The communication, signed by F‘. H. Coleman, undersecretary" of Stats, asked that the government set the country an example by staggering vacations throughout the year. It urged that holidays start where possible iii mid-mus. ic- COIIQCSLi II CH. railways and bus. routes during week-ends. (Women's Di\"s'oni llrotccf lheb sirvnlltus work. The ore-piece overall ls of khaki cotton drill. R.C.A.F. Photographs.