-‘*"""-~<- " )5’. ~ l 1 ~ M... w, .such an emergency as has now £535,591”? ' TllE CRARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Mornlng Dally (Founded All IBII) President: Lieut. Col W Chester B. Mel-In Vic -President: .I. IL Burnett. IJJ. Blcrelary: Lleut. Col D. A. Maclilnnon- D.S.O. Ei"ur nun tluvraglng Director: J. R. Burnett" FJJ. A-suciule Editors: Frank Walker and lan A. Burnetl SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall in P. l. l., $4.00 per year; $2.50 for l mouth- 5125 fvr 3 months; 50c for one month Clty Delivery: $5.00 per year; $3.0» for 6 month: $1.75 for 3 month: u, Mail in (Ianuda and U.S.A_ $5.00 per you! Saturday “canny: $1.00 per year; $1.00 for 6 muntlu, 50c Iur 3 mom The (Jllurluttrlonn (ruanllun may b0 Qhlllnid ll Haunting‘: Ann: Agcllvy, ‘I'm-en squura, New Iurlu 01¢ South Se“: Agrnlgy. (‘Ilrnor llllk um] Wllllllllllnll, Bollfll] Alulrullrllllun huwi- Agency, 11H! Pocl 51., lllllllrill] J. Hun, 351 nay 51., ‘furuulu; News Slum], Chateau lmurar, Oltiuvn; \\u||\~'u .\ls\\| stand, rluilbury. (Inn llub Tuhlpog Shop, llonvlun, 1v. 11.. Ellen ltubvrtlun, Amherlt, n. n. Memory is Weaker than Ull Weakest Ink." FRIDAY. JUNE 20, I941. f‘ The Strongest Car Ferry Disaster ____< u n The ‘sinking of the S. S. C/ldfffl/ff/Oftllt while Onroute to lll'_\'\l<lk'l\ i-niphasizes the precarious nature of our vitally important transportation service wizh the mainland. \\'l1ile it is true we have the old car fcrr_v Prince Edward Island for the llovilcii-llu-iiiciiiiut- route, and also the 175m.‘ l\'.>:'u bciuccn ~\\‘ood Islands and Catri- bou, these steamers are but auxiliaries to the SS. C/llIl'll'Ilfl‘/l7.\‘)l, and suitable only for summer service. lt would be ziecessary, we understand. to recondftion the old Prince Eduvird Island be- fore l".‘-€llI]>li\_\'lll( lu-r on lbe winter run. It has been sluggish-d that the old Stu/fa, now laid up in Port Xlulgixive. could be used to relieve the Prince Filwztrd Island for an overhauling; but the froth: has no provision for carrying auto- moblo: exvcpt on flat can", and her operation would rc-iuirc zilicixilious to be made at the teriniuzils. What we have needed for a long time is a second ferry steamer of the capacity and power of the Cli.irlnllrlnrvii, to be available for just arisen. While millions have been lavished on many projects of lesser importance, this proposal to safeguard our transportation link with the mainland never got very far at Ottawa. Xornially, the (T/mrloflclnrcin would by now have rccsivcrl hcr zinnual overhauling, and be ready for the tourist season. Pressure of war work in the drydoclcs made it impossible to carry out this policy this year. Some holdup in tourist ll‘.lll~']‘)<7l'il\ll0ll would therefore have oc- curred in any case, owing to the limited capacity of the rci ring ste:uner_ The question now is whether the (jliar/otfrlotrui can be salvaged and repaired in time for the still more necessary and difficult job of serving our winter transporta- llull rctpiircuicnls. it is intimated that the railway and govern- ment authorities have the whole matter under consideration- A factor which might well be con- sidered is the provision of more extensive air service fwciliiix", by doubling or tripling the prc-xint air service if i1cccssa1'y, until our normal ferry service is restored. While the accident is a matter of major con- cern to all our pPOplP, there is general satisfac- firm ovc-i" the ncws that Captain Read and his crew are safe and sound. Stalin “On The Spot" British authorities, it is reported, are inclined to believe that lliilcr really ntcans business in his dealings with Russia and that reports of ten- sion between llcrlin and Moscow are not merely an artifice to cover up plans for a Nazi stroke at another point. If ibis be the case, there is at lea-t 71s much likelihood of Hitler making au- oiber lil<uiillLfl~i courlucst, as of Russia putting up any effective rcsistance to the Nazi war ma- chine, Zllll\‘(l by pressure from Rumania and 'l'urk<i_v. Slzllui is 11 rculi-t, and he knows better than anyout; (l-v Wlllli ll.'lfip<*ll('(l to Russian army morale sirvc bu lit-email, llZlCb in May, I937, kill- ing of hf- l-c-t :u"iu_v' commanders. These in- cludcd .\l"_l.~ll.'ll (inmai-iiik, vice-commissar of dvitva; .\.l.lr.~b:il lbkluiclievslcyq considered by lll.’ li\l'.‘l"ll!4 and by other foreign cxpcrts the lllll~l b mu military stmtcgist in the Red .-\rin_v; li.'l)\‘l'.'ll~‘ l'utn:i, (who had been Soviet iuibtzivv the in llcrlin, London and Tokyo) nn-l lxm‘ Yak-r, liiiciiizui, Uborevitch, Fold- nmu told l'l'llllitrvll\' all officers with combat \.\ l'll(‘.' :i.|:il ixccllvnf l'L'Clll'(l>. They wcrc Clillllldlltllrl on ll'llllI]>(‘|l-ll]) charges, and shot. 'l’b<'rc f-iil-iuvtl u uuvc of terror and (lcnuncia- tron ui. ll'l'l‘ll the iililllary forces of the Soviet [hind]. Arvin-fling lu (illll rnl lblrzitier of the French lllllfli'L'.ll'l'. the Sizilfni-l purge to March, I934), killed off llll'l i- of five Red .\rmy marshals, while six of ab» bin-inn Qcllcruls who passed sentence llpml llwm v. rv lillLT t-xrrculccl in their turn. .\l.-1)‘Wli-pulclizil" \\‘!'l'L‘ f} out of SQ mcmhgys of the Slllwlllll‘ \\':u- (I-uncil; executed or impris- 0nc<l wrrc l3 but of H) army commanders, l5 out of R5 crirp~ rommanrlcrs, H0 out of I05 division conuuzindcrs, and 202 out of 7;4 brig- adicrs. lpven lll the l\‘u_~<i.'u1 air force, long advertis- ed as riprc-culmg "llu- best there is in the U. S: 5- ll.’ .\l<'lllll\ ‘dinilb or imprisonment" lists piclced ruf two couuniseziN fur gin the chief of the mr force general staff. three chiefs of the aerial combat forces and the (nltlnlflflrlcf of {hf} lllllmlldlll lllluvfiw fllIYlfUllH“ The man known as "the (‘visitor of Soviet ziwriliiui", .\. .\'. Toup- olve. Ill~“l]\]ll'lll'f‘(l_ llls “principal collaborators" went uilb bun. While lbt- purge of the Soviet i1:iv_v "(xcrcilr-d in murderous thoroughness" tlial of fb~ lll‘lll_\' couumnirl. During I037 Fllmlf- Stalin or-l/rerl lbv arrest and execution of "a! lea-t I.) of flu‘ bivbcsf ranking unvnl officers," Tbme purrges uniloiilitedly accentuated the bungling and bwffieiicy of the on Finlnurl. commenced in November, I039. l! was llill~r who stopped large-scale assistance getting through to the hopelessly outnumbc-rcrl Finns, exerted the necessary pressure upon Nor- way and Sweden, and finally extricated Stalin from his icebound blitzkrieg. Hitler and his gen- erals saw thcn- they had little to fear from the savagely [mi-god Soviet forces. Stalin, through his own bloody acts, has thus put himself "on the spot" so far as effective re- sistance to Hitler’s demands is concerned. It is mere wishful tbinlcing to imagine that these two rapacious powers will clash on anything like even terms. or that there will be any respite for Britain and her allies until the rcal n1enace— Nazi Germnn_v-—is crushed for ever- Women In War As long ago as last March the Minister of De- fence told the House of Commons that plans were being considered for creating auxiliary wo- men's organizations and units in the war effort. Since then itolhing has bccu hoard of llicsc plans. \Vomen are playing an important role in auxiliary services in Great Britain. Some 1,500 Canadian girls have fried to join them, and some of them have received encouraging and official letters from the other side. They are stopped from doing so. however, by the existence of an order-in-council which was intended to prevent unnecessary travel across the Atlantic. A good case, says the Winnipeg Free Press, can be made out for this order, for as long as there is no shortage either of men or of women to fill war roles, it is good sense not to burden shipping or to increase the food problems of Britain. But there is another side to the picture. Recent reports stated that members of the Brit- ish women's corps are being sent to the United States. If this is so then it means that British women are being sent across the ocean to act as auxiliaries in the United States when cer- tainly somc thousands of Canadian women are aching for a chance to serve. There is some- thing out of killer here. The Government may say the problem is not an important one and that other more pressing things have to be settled. But there remains the fact that the present situation is one that in- creases frustration at a time when frustration is very bad, .— EDITORIAL NOTES -. It is our luck to have the Charlottetown car ferry gone the very time the tourists are due and coming. m m i: n: Unintentional disrespect for the Court, even by the Attorney General and his deputy, calls for the amende honorable. 4r =0- v 4- Don’t forget the boys overseas, especially with sox and cigarettes; some are beginning to weary of well-doing. x 4r 1v >l= The North Nova Scotia. Highlanders are t0 route march back to Debert, a distance of 95 miles, by easy stages, and expect to arrive at their destination tomorrow‘ or Sunday. They bad a great time Wctlncsrlziy marching from Tea Hill to Eldon where they bivotiaced for the night. yesterday they crossed by the Ferry and re- sumed their march in Pictou. >l< w: * k Queen Victoria SllCC('(‘ll(‘(l to the throne on thc death of \\'illian1 IV this date, 183;‘. Hers was the golden reign, superior even to that of Eliza- beth (in which the foundations of the Iimpire were laid and English literature “pure and un- dcfiled" held s\va_\'.) Victoria's reign coincided with the (lC\'Cl()[)lllL‘1ll of the l3ritish empire and the expansion of democracy- She was blessed with numerous men of vision as her advisers, chief of whom was Prime Minister D'sraeli whom she afterwards raised to the House of Lords as Earl 0f lleaconsficlil. ll‘ ll‘ 1K ll‘ “The Canadian Forestry Corps and Ne\v- foundland lumber jacks are engaged in cutting timber in the north of Scotland and from all ac- counts thcir speed of opcrzitious is astonishing and their work of great imporlzincc in the na- tional war efforts," states l\lr. G. B. Johnson, Canadian Trade Commissioner at Glasgow, in a brief review of conditions in the Scottish timber trade, in which Canadian timber had an import- ant place lzeforc the \v:ir. The trade in home- grown timber, Mr. johnsoii writes, is develop- ing rapidly and many uses never thought of be- fore are now being found for the domestic pro- duct. Saw-mills are working t0 full or almost full czipacity but are apparcuily finding it diffi- cult to give deliveries on home wood quiclcly en- ough. (Joe problem with which they are faced is that the wood is in green conditioir Experi- ments are being made with chemicals in an cf- fort to overcome ibis dcfccl, and merchants with drying kilns are using lhcni to the fullest exlcnt. .i\s illustrating further the changes wrought by the war, Mr. Johnson observes that the timber merchant is now only a vehicle for the passing of the government stocks to the actual con- sumers. a y n: * A year ago, France collapsed to leave Britain fighting alone against the .\xis. On that June 17, the French hero of the (ircat \\’ar, of Mar- shal Pclain, took control of Ifrcucb (lcstiny as chief of slate and sued for peace. A week later the Ifrauco-Germzm armistice was signed. Yet it is clear now beyond challenge that the prime expectation in the minds of Petain and the group which created the defcalist regime of the “Men of Vichy" has not been realized. France is not at peace. Britain has endured for a full year despite the added perils arising from the utter collapse 0f her ally. Britain still holds every foot of the vast empire she held a year ago. She has taken an empire from llaly in East Africa, restored llnili- Selassie to his throne in Ethiopia, lwaten off lbc German attacks on the lfniled Kingdom, lu-‘ketl llaliarl and Axis as- saulls on ligypt and begun. with Free French allies. the occupation of Frenchanandated Syria. llracket all that agan t Hritish reverses on the Cfihllllflll from Nl)l'\'.1\', lflznidr-rs and France t0 firm-cc and lhc Econ‘ with llu- Axis shows less one-sided than stunningly swift Nazi land vic- Russian attack l tories on many frout- would imply. The Men of Vichy miscalculati-i lritisb powers of resist- ance a year ago .'\~' I-iully as they misjudgcrl Am- erican will‘ to aid Britain. '1 hey surrendered too THE CEARQOTTETOWN GUARDIAN norrs av rmz in There Is realism to believe that the dope habit has a strong hold ln fiermarry even 1n high places. This 1s not lumrlslng. Germany was the first to use dope for her athletes at Olympic Games. Guer- ing is known to have been, after the last. war, a drug addict, and was for sccne time ln a Swedish sanltorium in consequence. Several German airmen, who have been made prl- soners here, have the marks of drug punctures on their amis. 1s prevalence of a pernicious habt explains many things But 1t. ob- viously has its dangers from the Nazi gangsters’ point of vlew. Sup- pose a leading member of the party, following Rudolf Hess‘ ex- WORDS OF CHALLENGE A THOUGHT A DA! FOR A PEOPLE AT WAIA “Give all vou can. and when you think you have done that. ab: down for more. Your dol- lurs won't. be any good lf we love. so vou mmht as well (l0 your best to help Britain zaln the vlctoryfi-Lieut. Co]. the - Rev. Sidney S. Lambert. i ample, were to land here by para- chute with a considerable supply; 0f. say heroin. and were made to resort to fourth-degree meas- ures - wfilch we certainly should never do—m order to get him to talk. or. as our American friends would say, "spill the beans". It would be enough to wlthhold his customary dope‘ doses. and, 1n order to obtain it. he would tell everything he tlon. - Ottawa Journal, imagined. scout ca: with speed up to 00 miles r hour. shock troops and French armies loose from ,- thelr moorings in earlier cam- army. we found. has its reconnaissance ca: and the Brit- Later the blitz buggy was dem- onstrated 1n a sand pit, and Hon. Kenzie, aboard as passengers. This have taken of the blitz b08811 at. Petawowa wlll not. show 1s how ls a. projectile. - By B. T. R., Wlnnlpeg Free Press. any day now Department of prior order establishing tankers. Tankers ln ordlnary use to America and the Dutch East- Indl95 Atlantic service. Therefore, lnution in supply wlll necessitate the spreading of the overhead over Times 1.1 Informed, have b0 used ln subst-ltution. print that deserves to be remem- arrlved m Germany after his Graz. 1n Austria. It. continued! and Queen." One had not. expected Hitler to arrive 1n Buckingham Palace so quietly. The mystery 1S explained by the next paragraph. headed “Crbrt sees King‘, which hands on his appointment. as Ccrn- mander-ln-Chlef of Gibraltar. Th“ the Kins: and Queen had‘ got trans- ferred to the paragraph above. - London New Statesman- ‘In the German Relchstag on. April 28, 1939—four brief mrmthsl before launching the war~Adolfl Hitler said this: “The Anglo-Saxon perple has without doubt. perform- ed for the world an lmmeasurabe work of colonizing. To this work I give genuine admiration, thoughts of destroying this work seemed to me and seem to me from the loftler standpoint of humanity only the offspring of human vandallfm." Which makes strange reading at this date. when Herr Hitler re- peateclly vows to destroy Britain and the Brltlsh Emplre. Or. rather, 1t would be incredible were not the lng llar and hypocrlte since the dawn of Tlme. — Stratford Beac- on-Herald. Sheffield one of the first. IIYIW- fnclal cltlcs to experience full- paigns of this war. The Canadian $1,“ and supply m 9d f to human freedom, must believe ' Bye-i 011 other; h 1,1119 v 11m; 1i mithat 1f the real volce of Ila-once l y two types, the American scout and upon w?“ huw lsngeban co d_ n s erod lsh palmler scout gal‘. A group of 5mm; to be Parllamelllflrlflni 54W bOllv WW5 weakness of the Dcmlnloxfs we: or- ls an amazing thing that the aged of combat car during a visit to gan1zagg°n_ There 1s no P9ll1“'l‘~“‘*l Cllmll Yecelllly- A l°W picture. no co-ordlnatlon, and with-lord, can appeal to the “honor” of J. L. Ralston and l". D. Mac- found himself 1n the unfortunate Neepawa. M. P. went position of be’ng llllable to meet“ 15 much of Major Cockeramhs critic-l wmelllinl; l0 watch for in the ism. The couldtruthlsthathefound hBWs feel-Q. but. what, the movieslhimself vulnerable at so many terrifying 1t would be coming at there was evidence throughout his full speed against ycu, 1f you hap- statement-as candid a. statement pened u» be a. German soldier on as he could be expected to make guard at some vital point. ‘Itie without shaking the Government blitz buggy is not an autmobile, 1t to lLs foundation-that he has been 1n doing his own best, and a 200d best under evezy sort of handicap. He ____ was, asked for the tools and they An order for curtailment In the have not. been given hm. He was consumption of asollne lsexpeeted tempted to take the extreme course G R Cottrelle dir2~riifo11g Alfietlgé zoiienob“iifizdelgalgt-mgfilftlifihndilhlcli mnuen“ l“ n“ slml“ Pawn‘ This i i l Munitions and Zpaismu? relyighfpr tequlp$epfi. l, to thls ls a t a ownr msorune e Suppl A precmsor t. fixed gglllntgrntléiztl; he find not. yield t3 price for the product. This has f 51 agillroil- lhle had 84931" tir.“.i:r.l"af s: illéiilh il'é...l;..£.°€ °s.“"s..zi or t» 15 not disclosed. The immediate B5 the Only tlflelms 0f Slimnglhefllflfi cause 1s a shortage of seagoing gfférfiglilllggipilrllllgnflfitlyfifllglhi2‘ _ supper ‘m sue ggggcgglifzieallflgc: would have applauded hlm. The °“““d§“{‘h1',’,°°";1° “Zffit” Indium?‘ now a lmpn salve obstacle 1n the l . _ sort o . 1 T! 3 are being tramiened w tragllfse “guano hfi effiiecrlgbrlthlf aching: an? be th ouxce of considerable de . . _ t _ ' i e a - filymiff bslfhllllirglhidttggltg: ‘gig/dd Hni/vfiifures iiiiie my henflnlflivlltoheg" lflylns Iwllfln tfiemlvflggsfi PYOELBF-lfi- - r _ _ t t th bl! l.t tFather south t Brit strong o f“ me Clmfldmn “mm This dim ffifgv o Du e pu caonitleneflfgsof Singapore stands as B. mlguty last. prisoner, There would be no need, Ralstolfs Hands Are Tied (Montreal Gazette) One conclusion, and one only.‘ knew. A curious can be reached from any careful but by no means impossible sltua- “my of me discuss“), which wok —- are...“ f". rsess>s°ma°a u: ay n: w n nghgfitahrzadlantareneiy “is ltudylng Alan cocmmm, D511 o i f mos n ymg ndap" Minister of National Defence Col- tat-ons o the internal combustion one, Ralswn. It 1s that [he Mmm. engine to uarfare that. can be er mcharge “Canada-S topmcsuwu l" l5 the “ght- “nllllred uepartmeut IS no‘. male to he. mug; done that. need to be done with- Tl"! "Y "W" out treodln on the feet of mu or certalny supersede the motorcycle ma,‘ wneaggue_ when 001cm; Rap d°v°l°1°°d bY the sbon told the House that it one . - 901111811 H1111)’ to cut the Pollsh stage he had bordered on “bugging literature, 1n art, 1n science, of the BIIdIO of Muni- nto" the Department iesslng for mm manufac urers and businessmen throughout the funduonental plan, n0 The Minister of National Defense lnts that his attempted defence roke down rapeatedlly. And yet “ invasion. and ministerial It ls probable that. Colonel Ral- flnedplaci. of any definite object- cbjectlve. these things have been bcffid R5 B» clllsslc- on ll" "ml" crmmon knowled for onth and page n, short news paragraph. l months past Thegzvldmg is “aw in‘ headed "Hitler back from the the possession c, the monk It L, front"_ stated that the Fuehrer had do“. e110,.“ now‘ if mere was I ever any doubt about 1t that. Can- of the Balkan front and had v1slted| m,“ w," effort 1s being slowuL and dangerously, perhaps fatallyq "Later he llmched with We Klllg‘ by a. stupid form of departmental independence. a svsfom whloh ls so rigidly observed that even the first ran-klnz War Minister hesitates obont "butting 1n" when b-uttlnq 1n ., T... . (g ,...._.,,c».v ,1 ..__....,. stated that Lord Gort had kissed be a War Oommlfts" o‘ the C net. but o such ccrrmlttee can functlcn eflclentlv and effectively sentence announcing 111s lunch with mfg,- a throwing system o; this 0on0 t Colonel Ralston has told enbllBh 1o warrant a. general and insistent Public demand for a thrn-ouzh over- hauling of the country's vfilfnls- tratlve ivar machinery. for u c311- verfloo c‘ th" ro-ehl-"v" lnto as nearly as possible single unit feedlnrz single fasl moving assembw line. Colonel Ralston l; Cimadafs formcst volunteer. He aaeeped the office of Mlnlzte‘ of Natlcnal De- fence lmowlnp what. his responsi- bllltles would be. He had returned tn publle llfe at meat personal suc-, rlflee. He has devoted all his ablll- tles and energies and all his time to the work of his department. but he cannot make bricks without straw. His offlclal needs must. be German dictator the most unblush- met and lf exlstlnst M88518 0f B1119- ‘plylna them are lnadeguate they wlll have to be change . "he Job that. m» hrs uncle taken mus‘ be done. but. neither he nor any other man can get anywhere with 1t 1f his hands are fled. scale enemy alr attack. 1s , lng a communal feeding system that has been cited by govern- ment. officials as an example for the country. Emphasis ls laid on the decentrallzlng of cookln de- pots. flve of which are dlst uted araund time city outskirts. The gystem ls now building up to supply 60.000 meals daily. and In the event. of a bfg rnld 1t ls estimated that probably 200.000 hot meals lcould be surfolled over a perlod of |24 hours. —- Yorkshire Post. The porcupine has. too. n very human quallty. One Summer carn- r tells of eneounterlrg one of hese animal: which had evidently been n target for a regular blitz- lkrleg frcm misqultcas and block- flles and which obviously quite m- rustomed to the human nper-les. held out a badly bitten paw with a plaintive appeal for sympathy. The porcunlnelq firstly famous qullls do not lqvlfe potting but respond- ing to a su~~w~lhetl~ t~ne of voice the nnlmrl hum; nrmind ln frlendlv 5°°lly ' " """“-~~vw'Tv-v- fashion untll 1t decided that then I were no tidbits AVfllltbblO to be handled cut. So It ambled of)! into the bush. —Sault Site. Marla Star. vicrorefToau |94| Idol! H , United Slam Secretary l g formance of the Vichy Government. iof the French, “the deepest dis- The French Situation (Ottawa Journal) "From the tmdpolnt of the French ple", declares Mr. Cor- of Stabs "and others who have a love for freedom, and have freedom, the attitude of the present G0‘!- ernment of Vichy 1s a matter of the deepest dlaappolntment and sorrow." Then must Indeed be much won- der outside of Germany and sub- ordinated countries, as to what is the real feelin, of a majority of the French people about the per- If there were. among the majority appointment and sorrow" which Mr. Cordell Hull believes to exlst. how Ia 1t that the Vichy Government remains 1n power? Nomlnally there Ls still some sort of representa- tlve government 1n unoccupied France. Why ls the Petaln admln- _ lstratlon supported? It seems obable that what is left nomlnaly free of Francs by‘ the Germans 1s simply too bewil- dered and dlsheartened to be equal to any vigorous political action of any kind. Also 1t Ls to be remem- bered that the greater part. of 57mm 1s occupied by the Germans, and It: p0 ulatlon has no means of actlng po tlcally: and than two mfllfon French voters belonglng to 5-1 let occupied or unoccupied Fmnce. were soldiers who are prls- 07ers 1n German minds. But all who bethlnk themselves T AFTER EVERY MEAL Join the millions wh " - - ' by chewing deliciduziiulvli-ligeistul“ “ uic Frult"Gumafterevep-yigyyfg [a You’ flnd It relieves that “stu a5 feeling. The healthful chewing h l keep your teeth clean, bright e p‘ attractive-lending charm to and smile! And the refreshing flii u: helps assure pleasant breath. yo: BUY SOME TODAY u a A ' . CV-l seriously of French history and a- chievement. of the great accom- plishments of fiance 1n war in tense patriotism of her sons ln the past. of her great contribution could speak now 1t would be something far different from what ls heard from soldier, with hls flne previous rec- lll/lle Unllid stalls 5W1" c" Welll out. these 1t. 1s impossible even 10r| fiance when his course has been lhmllEll l“ PM“ W" 9' lWEh- a. Minister of Colonel Ralswnb Polish range dotted with thickets. ubllltv and lndustw to g8’. tragps can only tmag e that the years Whlle l-he VlFllDT-‘l Wll-lflhed 11'0"! l 1n uniform. train them and eq P have impaired, 1f not the vigor of nearby hillside. It stole the show. them on the scae 2nd with the his Intellect, at least the vigor of and the members of Pafllflmem speed that are necessary for Oan- his wlll to flght, to struggle; and Came away lfllklng. llke the Ofllc- adals own safety 1m»: the safety of mat one can only hope that 1n dot. ers of Petawawa, 1n very affec- Q1956 whom we have pledged 011;. tlonate terms of the "blitz buggy". wives to support, I U . and 1| one of lain dishonor; one age the old marshal misrepresents the mass of his countrymen, who ' wlll yet tplgesent g fa: different mind to the e0. and speak and act 1n a far different way. Message To Tokyo (Halifax Chronicle) Tough, determlned ople ln the Netherlands East 1nd es are stand- lng up to the lntlruidatlons of Ja- an. The wlly Japanese are try- g to play a typical opportunist game. While the Western powers are engaged 1n a. violent struggle, the Japanese seek to extend t. eir 1s a program which ambitious Ja- panese have cherished for years. It- ls the more urgent. now since the campaign 1n China has proved un- wieldy. Jo ese leaders seek new 11c oplnlon from troubles 1n China. But Japanese efforts to expand southwards are meeting with doubt- ful success. The base of Hong Kong. which was regarded as virtually ob- solete, has grown 1n strength. It. ls Japanese path. At least. 1t would sentinel. Its defences are modern and mighty. The fortress 1s manned a 1°55" "mums whlch Wm‘ m‘ ston 1n his secret soul ls ' grateful to with a great concentration of troops c3‘??? ‘lélgfifrpiiaclg: fnrfkgifglgléf Major Ccckermnt he dmuld be and and stored with many aircraft. and lain nccecsary ma,’ is condo, of the mibllc are. It. ls abundantly ap- .t.b Mr cdsts and’ contra o; parent that the South Yo;k Ceci- ‘lg "1 ‘l ‘gt Us The Monetary servatlve a practical and gallant P "a e“ ' i» i" wlll...“ _ comma e r Reg en Wlllked {lllhml-‘lzwwgfhélflllfll ggdcgi of Canada. sald things that rieeded| ildllitibffilil Alli matter of heat- t" gegfltlighgf “B” “m? 52E . . 1 ‘ ' f mg‘ what supplies or coal can be Jrihicg age ‘ha’; otlarnghgwncnxlnfrsshei that an appeasement. Policy there all sorts of equipment. Despite these difficulties, the Ja- panese have been trying to ac- com llsh somethlng through black- mal. The have been blustverlng and threa enlng the people of the Netherlands East Indies. hoping might finally surrender me rlch 1s- serves. The lack of any clearlv do», lands to Japanese ham-m But the people of the Netherlands Several editions of the Dally 1 p 1 t t _l Herald on Mcntlay curried a mls- (xe-rajlmfimfxlf ellteovdfilgllrtavllgltdfll tggt m: Indies are ln n0 mood m: up. peasemen‘. A recent. Japanese ultl- matum met. with rebuff. And now the governor general of the islands announces that his government has notified Tokyo 1t wants no part of Japan’; "new order for East, Asia." L‘? “TIRED" . All. rur TIE Sln loll mluublo- wn non replaced by - clnr headed one!" ~ m up, I-lndacltc, blchchc, lnslhnlo and other dealt‘; Kidney Pill: Mai-um Petaln. n TllEY ARE SURE T0 PLEASE Yllll! SYDNEY- N! 8.. June u) --(OP) “'77” vlcwrl! Torch came to this easternmost Canadian city today dedication; before "Psslns the Atlantic m Britain W1") its message of Canadian sup. DON 1'n the Empires cause, In six Cape Breton communi- tles-Bydney. North Sydney, Syd- ney Mines, Glace Bay, New was". ford and Dominion-It was dedL sated. and then 1t w“ flown back ‘to Halifax to await the full sub- scrlptlon of Canada's Victory Loan before starting the overseas flight. The torch came here by plane from Halifax early 1n the day. Premier A. s. Mscfvffllan of Nova scotla. told the thousands at the Open alr ceremony here that a5 the Torch leaves the Dominion "the Prayers of Cflflfldifs n,oo0.oon peg. ple will accompany lt, and the prayers of Britain's mllllons wlll be the lmpelllxzg tome m- mggnet, drawing 1t forward until with out. stretched hands 1t wlll berecelved by_ that great leader of nations - Wlhiwn Churchill." Tl"? C1196 Breton programs lasted more than flve hours, the Torch moving from town to town 1n a Royal Canadian Alr Force motor unlt accompanied by its escort of firm)’. navy and a r force repre- sentatlves. MAY MODIFY MARINE LAWS WASHINGTON. June 19-—(AP)— To Dermlt tankers to carry larger loads of oll. and to snrcad the avail- able suonlv of exneflenced seamen over a lnrwer number of ships. Pries- ldient; Roosevelt todav asked the United States Cannes; to modify the Marine Inspection Laws. W h ~ lam: dfdélaliovdloltfhglfidfv, fir; llD to Mo Bathing m“ glriocéd at 25c, 35¢, 59,, Ind CAMERA SUPPLms ..:.*.~::i.r~"=- m5- o» We also car the 5m ‘British d " fl makes flfuballlflefflSl-n. “mm LET US D0 YOUR DEV. ELOPING AND PRINTING FISHING NEEDS Our lu- g g flsh sulfiilleaasfiglll “fir. if easy or you to get just what you want to make your outing a sure success. Steel Rods, Bamboo Linen. Reels. Cuts, mum Files, Mnsqulto Unions. m. CIIOCOLATES Molrs package, 60¢, '1 $1.00. $1.25 and $5.00. 5°‘ ‘lgoanonrs Mcklzes 60c and M01 XXX C‘ bulk Sign per lb. 0mm’ Molrs Fresh Made Choc- olates 39c per lb. ccuTy everythlng to We make your outing a real m- 005l- TllE TWO MAGS 0O-O-O-O-O-O-O-O-Q W000 lSlAllDS-BARIBOII GAR FERRY SERVICE The “Prince Nova” will Sundays, from Wood Islands at 7 a.m., ll a.m., andll p.m., and from Caribou at 9 a.m., 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. Atlantic Standard Time. Until adjustments are com- pleted, it will not be possible to load or unload high trucks at Wood Islands at low tide. NDRTHIIMBERLAIID FERRIES LTD. leave daily, including L-Zlll-B-l Say to Your Grocer I Want BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEA You will enjoy its superior quality A A A AAAQA ‘L4 AHIT! Our tobacco has scored I059 I of them all over the Islan - It has a range reaching 1'11)"; Tlgnlsh to Souris. It new! misses the mark and 30° right to the spot- Hickey?) Black Twist 10c Per F58’ Manufactured B)’ lllckoy & Nicholson TOBACCO e0. LT"- CHARLOTTETOWN