_political colleagues. and especially by PAGE FOUR I ll l: UIIAIILT"T‘ETIIWII GUARDIAN Mommy Dally (Founded Ill 158'!) Prouldeni Lieut. Col. W. Cheltcr b. Mclmn V Trelldeut: .I. R. Burnett, l"..l.l. Secrets y: Lleut, CoL D. A. Maclilnnon, 0.8.0. Editor and Managlng Director: .I. R. Burnett, FJL Alloctato Editors: Frank II/alker and Llelll. Ill A. Burnett, RAJ. HVJL (On Active Service) “The Strongest Memory is Weaker: Than the Weakest Ink." ' SATURDAY. AUGUEIB, 1945 II Didn't Just Happen While congratulations are the order of day 0n another outstalxllirg silcccssfill l1.- hibmon and Qld 11......» \\'.-.~l' visitors are ask- ing "how coilic" Prince lillllvzlrtl Islam-l, Willi its many transportation drawbacks, should be the ceiltre of holiday diirlCllfill and harness racing in the Rial-it’. l: is an 01d story- a young mall lizid a v.si~li and never rested till it had become a reulitv. Son after \\'orld War I, in which he play- ‘d |, congpiciiflllS pzirt, Co]. l). A. MacKin- non, D.S.O., felt a great dcul tiiore could be made of QI annual lixhibilitiit and race meet- ing than was bciilg done. He zlclltiirctl stock in the company, and €!l'.l'?£\\’0‘_l!‘L‘cl to urge his ideas on the directors without niurli success. He could not even get \‘l('Cl(‘1l to the directorate, so he did the no“ best thing. lzc sci out acuuiritig control 0f the nlzljurity Lil the stock Then did he not only attain the directorate but the presi- dency as well, surrounding himself with fellow director: witll similar progressive ideas. Their first objective was sufirlbic 1lZll€S that would not interfere with tile _ schedule in the Maritimes generally, and flltf)’ were fortunate in securing the third weel: of August Then they realized the iteccssity for plcntv n-cwspaper advertising, makin i lions that. in mo“ days, 35:0 ._ .ul:ural exhibitors and sport promoters not only in the Nfaritinles but elsewhere. In the spirit of "making a mouse trap better than anywhere else in the world, and finding patrons crowdirg to the rlOor", the Exhibition directors soon demonstrated their policy to be safe, sound and profitable, attract- ing patrons not only fronl ail over Canada, but the United States also. The directors as- sure themselves well in aclvrltlce each vear that nothing shall be laclcitlg to tunke the Fxliibitiorl and Old Home \\'ccl~: mt all-round success, every detail being provided for, leaving nothing uncertain except the weather, and that, for- tunately, for a number of ‘rears. has been all that could he desired. It is the foresight. and the faculty of taking pains. to he plzparetl for all sorts of emergencies. that has resulted in the Charlottetown Fxliibition and Old Home Week proving annually one of tlie great events in the Klaritimes, and it is only right that credit be given to whom credit is 'lllE, Col. llacKit.‘ non and his enterpris g z-ssociatcs. Churchill As Golfer Mr. Churchill's political friends rublbed their eyes with amazement the other day, says a London correspondent, “ten they read that the former Prime Minister as one of his re- laxations at Hendaye had sought the (livcrsioil of a round of golf. “It is an ideal sport for he politician and many have been tlle efforts to get him interested in the game." this corre- spondent adds. "Lukevrarm, however, hardly indicates his attitude towards it ls indicated by his observation that it would serlrl to offer all lgreeable opportunity for desultorv conversa- tiorll The only vigOroils sport to which he was addicted in his younger days was polo which he played with a viglitir tixccc-dillg his assaults on political opponents during the general elec- tion. He could uevcr quite understand the cn- thusiasm for golf displayed b_v many of his Arthur James Balfour \\'lin \\‘1illl(l spend a coilple of hours on cud in the saute lilllllvTl‘ in order to accustom himself to playing out of sand." i}. The Baltic Recovery titr- Bulletin tells of tlic rclvll; .-. Baltic republics-—l£>tl>ilia, lzltvia, Soviet Inforlllatioii alioil of the three Plllfl Lithu- ania. Formerly within the limits uf Czaris: Russia. the three llPPIHillj llTil('l\(‘l1rl\'i"ll countries; after “Vii-bl \\':ir l. .it ""u.iti-d i(>-.lllL‘ l\'\l.i- siall fulll lll Iflili. \‘-'li'~l| i\'ctl zlrltifcs illovc-tl westward after lliiIi-rs .'lii::-;1v on l‘<il..ull. Late: Itey were the -ccltc ~f bloody battles between the German drinks llioviiny on Lcningrad and the Soviet tlcfcilllcr». i.\'ow I'lll(‘ll l.v fllissars Illlfl (‘Ttfll wit“. the llaliit‘ rc-piililft" wrr ed towns Jtllfl rc and forest iilllil-l pattern. It \\'.'l~ b_v L‘it'L‘il'lZl t'l'l' lll(‘>f‘ snllll ltatiolis came tinder Sovim milbuf For centuries ruled by (lot-nu... “ll? llzlruis" ililtlct a harsh form of the iciilllll i. 'll(’\' \\"-‘l‘-' countries 0f riclt l:lllll-liv.'licl. bilrirl-r- and ilras- CHIS. CYCII <'ll'll'l‘ llllUllcP V115 i'l‘c0_g~ nizetl zl l|l:ri tvr of .. " v ago nflllllflCfl l0_v bil- :f‘ exist, liolzilitl Elllil Fast l’rus.~i.'l on the -' :11‘ :l..<l wcst, their pre- war position was out >f Lflllwlllllf Ill>CL‘llI‘ll_V. Ilaviltg llit-filzitly lll-lV-ll iu their lot \V’llll the Soviet tiatiou their |lIIl-l.('t‘l\' for piwlce and progress appear bitttii- ‘lllill at nnv nlller time A l\>lll_' of TCCfJlli of l'l~u;.lc's ("tull- Y-iiliciivc emblem. .<l 11g flit‘ r shatter- llleir zlgricultilrc wliorlnitv lo Soviet c~1l|i1l~ I In their lung zlllrl lurbilllll! instill‘). Russia points with gl:ltii"":tti..il in the fact that iii I.illiil.'ilii:l today uvlre (‘lhltlffll are attending F€llfllil than before ilre w; r. despite widespread war dzutizrgl- to bcr hllflllrlCd cities; that the port of l\‘i_g.'l it. I.1li\'i.‘l-—-lOl'll‘CI‘ly one 0f the grealcsl timlxil‘ ports of the world-is rapidly being rcn-ttircl tr. prc-lvar inlportatlce and that agriculture ill li-‘iizun has lurlllc vasl *-=4*~ wince its recapture from the German .plc and with people moved ilito their areas in 1944. One of the greatest factols in re-establish- ing food-production facilities in the Baltic re- publics, the Soviet Bulletin says, was the estab- lishment of horse and tractor-renting stations at strategic points. This compensated for much of the loss of farm horse and tractor power THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Plates By T713 Way Though I-1a8th of looted during the war years, and ensured a m d i945 crop that exceeded estimates. Possessed of excellent ports, resources of timber, coal and oil in addition to the potential of the soil, the Baltic Stfites should make a rapid l Moreover, their political position -— prln recovery. hitherto a danger-spot to the peace of Northern Europe — appears to be solid for many years ' to come. -EDITOR IAL NOTES- Vl'c'll call it a. week. i: n: a u Never in our history have there been such crowds, such rejoicing, siicb good behaviour. U A A I In the current issue of Fortune lllagasille, Bruce Hutchison, associate editor of the Win- nipeg Frn Press, says Prime Minister Macken- zie King has selected Hon. Douglas- Abbott. Canada's Minister for Naval Affairs, to suc- ceed him u leader of‘ tbs Liberal party. 1 m Good news for the sick and ailing. A large number of medical .d0ctors and surgeons now on active service intend returning to the Is- land at all early date. Several ale booked to relieve the pressure in the City, but it is ex- pected not a few will resort to country prac- tices. l l i The Earl of Kilmarllock and Baron Bal- ineritto were decapitated as rebels at the Tower of London this date 1746 for the part they played in the insurrection of the Forty-five; altogether between eighty and ninety l(’Zl(lCI'\' were thus put to death; their heads were fixeil at the top of poles, and stuck over 'I‘elnple Bat, as a warning of the fate waiting traitors to their King and country; thus ended the Stuart regime and began the Prince Charlie tradition. I U l I Tomorrow, sober and in our right minds, after a week of excitement and rejoicing, we ought to be in a condition to assemble ourselves together to render thanks and reverence to the Gi_ver of all good gifts. The churches should be as crowded as the Exhibition grandstand il we live up to our heritage. One does not re- quire to be "good” to go to church for we are "all miserable sinners." n- n- m Beginning next September the Utiivcrsitv of Ottawa will include a medical faculty. ac- cording to an announcement by the rector, Very Rev. Philippe Corrlellier. A site, or. which a building housing all the departments of the fac- ulty is to be erected, will be selected in the nc.l~. future, but for the first year the faculty of medicine will be housed in the SClElICc building of the university, A part of the new building. costing some $400,000, will be built by Septem- ber, 1946, according to present plans. i I i I To train leaders of nurses’ placement bur- caux for handling the needs of nursitlg service across Canada, and to provide vocational guicl- rlnce for nurses, an lnstitiilc for DIICCIUYS tit Placement Bureaux is to be held in \_\’inllipc'_i September 5-15, with a view to setting tip these bureaux in each of the nine provinces, .\liss Gertrude Hall, general secretary of the Cau- adian Nurses Association, Montreal, states. I i U Establishment 0f social research as a regu- lzlr college activity is recommended in the i944- 45 report of the retiring president of Dallloilsie University, Halifax, Dr. Carleton \\'. Stanley. Only a beginning, the report slates. has been made in the Maritimes to collect data on the social conditions under which the people live. Hardly any of the problems which the llfari- time region will mcet in p-tst-lvar years can be tackled with any success before their social and economic implications have been clirified b_v methods of scientific research. The effects of the Dominiotfs social security program on the Maritinies, continues the report. can only be Judged on the basis of more accurate iufnr» iliatiou on existing social needs thmtigb the regiuti. a a U O Now that war is over, it is good to recall that most British boys and girls belong to .1 Youth Organization of some kind. accurdiltq to the publication Britain. All these organiza- tions are entirely voluntary and there are a large number from which to choose. Dllrigg the war the pre-servicc organizations have perhaps been the most popular and a lot of boys’ and girls clubs have units of their own. liut as~ sociations like the Boy Scouts and Girl Guides and those connected with the churches have still continued to increase their numbers. They have all done war service of some kind and the war has brought them a variety of new friends and experience. Boy Scouts and Girl (iuitles and members of the Boys’ Brigade for in- stance, have undertaken Civil Defence tliltics such as operating A. R. l’, telephones aurl ines- szltgc rulnling; they have fought fifths, guided aulbillrlllces, helped deal with bmnlictl-out tyco- to escllttc bottlbilig; they have taken part in salv- age drives, collected tolls of waste trlpcr, carried strcicliers, painted sidewalk edges white l0 zlvoicl falls ill the blackout. They have ltclpcd ill lins- pitals. they have entertained woundctl soldiers. they have acted as police runners and they have done canteen work. Camps, which itl peacetime were always the climax of the year's activities. have continued, though they have centered rotintl such jolts as fruit-picking, harvesting, or pre-service training. In the sulnnler of 1944. an international Boy Scouts camp was. how- ever. held in Scotland. It tras attended by boys of all the Allied Nations finding themselves in Britain. nlzlny of whom had escaped from the enemy in Europe. Mr- "H"? J. Kaiser, the man who Imi- shipbuilding on a mass pro- dlmmn 58515. has no lack of self- conffdence. With the same aplomb Showed when he wrota a new rules lunged uslness. n Francisco, as well as a medlum.prlced ca: In De. graft. 1n. an age of centralization e ls defying convention. Time nlone will tell whether In Mr. Kaiser the world has another Henry Ford, an R. E. Olds_ a Walter P. Chrys- l" or merely ls in process of ad- dlns another name b0 me 1m or those auto-makers who 1191.3 m, Slmllltfht for a few years, then passed from sight and today are "11 but forgotten. But lf he fails, lt will not: be for lack of selLas. surance-Wtndsor Star. Wm‘ "l? flflenlng up of the west. em prairies in the last century white pioneers came tn contact with Indians wearing elaborate head- dress“ ‘if dyed eagle feathers. The ldeahof all Indian riding over the t-n tvlcss prairie with a spectacular crusade of feathers streaming be- hind his head appealed to the 1m. iiglnatlon of the period. Fiction writers mentioned headxiresses and artists used them; on calen. dais. in illustrations and the cigar stoic Indians of the last century they are shown as if they were characteristic of all Indians. Need- 1955 l0 5R)‘. this was an error; they belonged to the Plains Indians 11ml to them alone. No one could wear such a lIPRCl-(IPEFS lll the deitsr furcsts either of the W55; coast or cl O;1'.:lrio.--Ontario Mu»; cum News. When Major F. V. Tilston of the Essex $COlflFh told reporters lnex. pcrience won him the Victoria Cross he can be given credit for "b19113, "it t0 rl point. It cannot be imagined that any 591.11.91- 305.; about the business of winning the rare honor as he might, under other circumstances, direct his am- bltlon to a golf championship. spe- cialized practice doesn't make may; feet in that field. But, rim-é g5 the sort of experience that lifts a. mail t0 unprecedented heights in w) emersenclu and MSICI‘ F. v. Tilston was not lacking there. It. ls the experience that drives to the utmost effort, refusing to con- Sldfl‘ "allure, no matter what the odds. Cull lt ambitiotL-a habit of life, ircn in the soul, or what. you like-there are men who be- have that_ having undertaken a _ ls their duty to go through h it. motive power ls there l to the necessity. _ Anllivrst vs. 0f course, nigh}... ivrifcrs and Prof? “firs wl t l1 psychoneurottc leanin have oversold the war ve. teran as a problem. Onl as many veterans as ‘civilians will be prob. 1PM ll-lc-i tilt)‘ are home again. The Ciliindlan forces overseas WPYK‘ 0111i’ rl cross section of our- "MP Thfir H01 more attention and therefore criticism because their were tnore conspicuous 1n uril. form. _The disdlarged servjggmrln l5 09f111I1f-I I"'1lC unaware he is a oi'_pm't. of any na- Fnc returned men citizens substantially _ As we want things done so will they. The only dif- ference is that they will have the ritzht to tinngs we cannot expect and are not crcn entitled to. The government t cruised preference to cx-scrvlceiticil d women in many places and sitilzltions and we have to see that the ilndcrlings carry out the policy so often repeated in government boosts and publicity.- Brtlndon Sun. who real-lyflknow something 4 affairs are hopeful cf a _. u . democratic IEIIHIFS- anre ill that country unclcr its “General” Barri. so titled by his devoted disciples in the Norm bg_ cause of his brave and skllful lead- "shlfi 0f the Italian Partisan movcnlctit and indomitable opposi- tion to Fascism from the first, ‘s actually a profg yours old_ and. A JOI‘ in the last war, won three 511. vcr medals and the Croix d9 Guerra Hf‘ Illfltvfl :0 Journalism after 1913 and edited n paper which was pcatedl_i' SIIIIpYCFSPG by the Frlscl He was SEIIIPIIFEWI to prison, and confinement iii the notorious Li. part Irlnnd. but SUPHVCd to or- tzatlzze the Itrlllnil resistance move. merit lri the North, and actually, UIIflCl‘ the liom tle gurrre of Gou- eiffll ' d 15 fighting fli- Those about I f‘, QIS. lllflzll), rrlis played a considerable inn llbrratotl. IIc'1s , itlcdest. reticent, and sombre man_ invlnclbly hos- tile to nil pretence and theatrical. fsm, anIi tn every way the very an- tithesis of Fascist and Latin brag- HMIOCIO. He may be the Instru- mpnt of Italian regeneration. Much will dcprurl on how fttr we support him against deeply established Itu. llan traditions, not excluding the ecclesiastical-Front London Letter Neither among the more accom- plished crniisiirntcrs ill our armed forces nor 1n thus: chanceful sec. tlons of Hlirlcm where a pair of dice can often alter financial rut- lnES ‘would the experiments In ‘psy-"IICIKIIICIICS" which have been condlvtod at. Duke University be taken very seriously, we believe, or considered entirely necessary. ‘the ilnlverslty experntienters. who for some years have been interest. ed lll proving the power of mind over matter. have been throwing around as many as ninety-six dice ln one mechanical fling. in an en. dcavor to cstnbllsil the lnterestlnrz possibility that more than Lady uck is involved ill throwing a cer- tnln number. Intense mental tie. sire, the scientists declare, can be ll ruling force_ nnd they claim to have obtained rc-lterrlnt scores show- ing psychic influence over the "rolling bones." Too often, how. ever. the strong flesh-e to wln np- pttrently conflicts with an o pun- ent. whose cerebral powerhouse sends forth wlsltful waves of high. Er lllleflsllr- We would respect. fully suggest to Duke University psychologists that they engage in a real crap game, equipped with g month's salary and not ninety-six but, two North Carolina dice. Their resulting reports. we fcrl. would be v.’ interests-New York Iiertlld Trl- bune. China's Contribution By Jame: n. White (Associated Pres: Staff Writer) Of all tho United Nations, China worked and waited longest. for victory. Among Chinese It. fa a mutter of argument whether the Second Great War began for China 1n 1931. when Japan grabbed Mlmchurln; or In 1987, when the Japanese army rolled into North China. The Chinese dld not actually .le- claro war on Japan until Dec. B. 1941, after they had been fighting for more than four years. By that; time millions of Chinese had died In action, under Japan's virtually-unopposed bomb: , or from famine or disease induced by war. ’ . ' Future historians may point. to Chinese refusal to sink Into Jap- anese slavery as China's great con- tribution to victory. By the end of I941 the Japanese held most of the coast, nearly all the railways, the great Yangtze valley rice-bowl and waterway up to the western mountains, and nearly all of North China. From 1969 on, they made annual rafds trim unoccupied China to capture and destroy food supplies, but. they made no decisive effort to do either of two things: I. Capture Chungking and des- twy Gen. Chlang Kai-Shell's mill- tary power. 2. Capture Yenan ln the north and destroy the military potential of the Chinese communists. who held aloof from the Chtang nation- al government. Envy of the United States Into the war buoyed Chinese hopes. But these hopes faded as the ap- anese overrun southern Asia nd cut the Burma road, over wtflch China had been getting Al led supplies. The American 14th alrfoltce was sent to China and gradually built. up its bases. Slowly the Allied military pottin- tfal 1n Asla revived. By the summer of 1944 so much shipping had been sunk and so many Japanese loco- motives blown up by American planes that the Japanese decided to end the five-year stalemate. They struck southwestiward from Han- kow to hew a corridor to the bor- der of French Indo-Chtna. O O I This drive accomplished two puf- poses. It gave the Japanese an over- land rout-e to their holdings in Southeast Asia, and it enabled them to capture several Important American a r bases. But by the time they had conl solidated their con-ldor, American planes from Philippine bases had a- gain closed the South China Sea to Japanese shipping. The Burma. road was reopened tn February, I9- 45. and China was no longer isol- ated. With the road came an of! pipeline. It fed gasoline and oil to a growing fleet of planes operat- ing from Chinese bases. Then the Chinese took the of- fensive and cut the Japanese lor- rldor to Indo-Chfna. Hundreds of thousands of Japanese troops in Thailand, Malaya and Indo-Clifna were doomed to wither on the vine, or face death at the hands of a Bri- tish offensive out of Burma. The Chinese cut; the corridor at: its weakest snot. Nanning then turned toward Kwetlln and Ltit- chow. They fought now with air support. I-Iope pervaded more than fighting men In China. Charged by the communists with being a dictator- ship more interested in its own preservation than 1n fighting the Japanese. the Chungkfng Govern- ment called for a national assem- bly in the fall of 1945 to adopt a cle- moeratlc constitution. President Chlang Kai-Shck re- vamped his cabinet, giving male control to his Liberal-minded bro- ther-ln-law. T.V. Soong, and China took her place at the United Nat- ions conference at San Francisco as one of the five big world powers. U nrepetl rant .1 apanl By JAMES D. WHITE Associated Press Staff Writer | As usual, the Japanese are blam- ing everything but themselves for vlihat happened to them. Practically all Tokyo statements since the surrender, Including the Emperor's rescrlpt, take the line that Japan has been defeated by such western tricks as the atomic bomb and that; the only thing to do now is to rebuild the country by n11 pulling together. Typical is the quaverlng voice of a To yo propagandfst telling troops to surrender: “We do not think the way we have thought has been wrong .. we have lost, but this ls tempor- ary." Ho added that Japan's big mistake was her failure to build up enough resources, and that, this must be amended. No hint here that it might have been wrong to conquer the world if Japan could have got away with it. The Asahi Shlmbun comes near- est to facing the issue: "What die JIIpGIIGSB nation ls confronted with fs not. a negotiated peace but a cite-sided defeat. The Japanese should fully realize this stark real- Ity and unite themselves under the guidance of I-Iis Majesty in order that they may survive the great trials." ' O O Premier Kantaro Suzuki. ln re- Ilfe will begin for the peoples, he- glnnfng today. This day has be- come the day that will never, nev- er be forgotten by the Japanese eople." He offers the Japanese, n other words, something to re- mernber-whfch to them ls much bigger than u Pearl Harbor. is ls ominous because Suzuki can see ahead-and look back. He knows the Japanese people have not been adequately prepared for the occupation that 1s coming, that they have not been led to expect or visualize the shock and humiliation which any occupation brings. There may be a wide difference between what the Japanese people think the peace will mean to them and what we know ft will mean. C nsequently. when occupation comes, many Ja anese may regard its more humilatln aspects as breaches of Allied alth and ex- ceeding what they have been all- lowed to understand are the terms of surrender. _ 'I‘he are likely to regard what the mperor has to do to carry out surrender terms as violations of their stipulation that Ila sov- ereignty not be impaired. The fact that the Allies replied that he would have to take orders from the Allied commander in chief. lmd that. Japan subsequently assented, g §‘ Under the harvest mcon. When the soft silver Drlps shfmmerlnfl Over the garden lush"- , the may mocker _ Ccmes and whispers to YO-I Ac a beautiful friend Who remembers. Under the summer rote: When the final-wt crlfm" Lurks In the dusk 01 the wild red leaves, Love. with little hands. come; and touches Y0" with I. thousand memories. filadutlful IIIZEIIBWGYHUIE questions. I --Car1 Sandburl- Canada's Uranium Bearing Deposits (Nort-himner) When Gilbert IABlne mad; 5 dLg. covery of radlumJaeaz-ing urananlte at Great Bear Lek, 15 years ago probably nobody knew what. a con- tribution was being made to a war which was stlll tn the making. Research by Canadians, Amencarl and British ult’ ‘ ' disclosed that uranium had special qualities In the manufacture of bombs of a peculiarly destructive type. The ol-lzlnal discovery of uran_ tum-bearing radium ore was made by Gilbert LaBln¢ and with his brother Charles. tlhe necessary funds were raised to develop l. deposit which Was very remote, being on the east end of a anal] bay on Great Bear Lake, 1n the Northwest Territories. The uranium content of the ore did not appear at first to be of Particular importance and the rs. dlum content was for several years the more important. However, scientific exploration of the ore 1n the war period suggested that ur. lmfum which Ls a relatively rnre element. would be aflnfflcnnt. What has been done by scientists who worked for years on the pro. jcct of producing an explosive ma- terial which ls terrifying in its effects ls one of the remarkable developments of World War II. The possession of such a rare de- posit Ls not only on asset to Can- ada. but a potential liability. It could be that the knowledge which has been developed by a group of scientists working on a rare min. era]. Which has through their ef- forts disclosed murderous lbtll. ties. 1s a responsibility wh ch must taken seriously. O O It could be that the discovery on a remote shore of Great. Bear Lake might will have the answer to peo- ple who are Inclined to be watch. ful. If uranium in combination with other elements can be devel- oped Into such a lethal wapon that a mere nut shell sized bomb could demolish an area which formerly could onLv have been destroyed by 20.000 tons of TNT. and If the sources of this material are well guarded and remain 1n the posses- sfon of peaceful nations such u Canada, there may be an answer to potential war-makers. The two greatest. sources of uran- fum are the Belgian Congo and the Eldorado M1113 at. Great Bear lake. The latter property was taken over by the Canacran Government In Jan 1944, at the open market price at the time. $1 35 a share. In view .of the day's news the action was well Justified. The sec- ret. would have been no longer a secret if speculators had been able to play with the SIDCk. So far as ls heard, no other deposits of mag- nitude have been turned up In Carl. rtda, although Ihp search has been diligently pursucd. There are some prospect prop. ertles in the N.W.T. and there are some ptltchblende deposits tn Ontario. It can be expected that. some of these may be rigged up to entice speculators, and also that uranium will pop up in many places. People who. hive. been reading the exciting feature stories In the pa-pers had bettcr not Expect. hydro- and other sources of energy and heat to stop runnlnll next week. 1L. Murals; filnlssflme F!!!‘ ls unlikely to impress them very much because the Imperial rescrltlt mentioned only the Potsdam terms and these did not say anything a- bout the Emperor. To the Japanese the Emperor ts still tnvlolable. Whether you like It or not, if we didn't have hlm the military fn Japan might be completely out of hand by now and the whole place ln chaos, which ft still can become signing, says "bloody and tearful - if the military decide to use the guns which they still have. Occupation and disarmament may teach the Japanese the false- ness of their beliefs. ‘They will re- gard it as unjust, certainly at. first. After the first Great; War the Germans didn't, learn. They didn't want to. The Japanese don't want to eith- er. SIIPHIICO. OHIO”! power plants. coal mines. 0'1 wells.‘ I GL5 MAGDALEN ISLANDS For Reservation; - Tlcketl PHONE i“’l....."" “fill - #5 4 . MARITIME CENTRAL AIRWAYS a Rot of uranium to move the world through lfllQ release of IIGIDIO energy. There's um; mozemtion. some propaganda In some of the Mrlel But. the value of uranium as a war wgupon ls terrible to behold. It mly not end war. lmt. It vim; M1111“ policing wer In the hands of those nat on.s possessing it. Before the war a. ENE-t Pile of uranium oxides rested In an 0P8" shed on the wharf at. Port; Hope, alongside the Eldorado radium re. lnery. There was then only a tiny commercial deznand at. 10w prices, but, Gilbert LaBlng refused to sell when foretlgnlbuyers offered to take it all. The same instinct which had led him, as a youth, to‘ look for radium ore. and had devel- oped hfm in adult years from a prospector into an extremely learned lay scientist told hlm to keep the stuff, that It would be useful some day. If the plle had fallen into the filalfld! of th. Gefctlzlam the fig; hJpemktng war today m hnve been In rubble. with 1Y4 "l!" almost empty of Life. Tho biz P116 was available for a two billion dollar experiment. Canada's radluunuranium mine has been taken over by a. new com.- pany, details of which are just. an- nounced. with 60,000 no Par sham of capital. lllldorado Mlnlrlg, and Refining (1944) Limited ls a. Crown company replacing the old. Dit- ectlors and officers are: President, Gllbq-t LaBLne: vioe-presldnt, Chas. LoBIne; directors. Fraser D- Rcld, RT. Bfffu. John A. Mc- Auilly. wlnmpes. PM. Ctm- G- Wllltams. Dr. Wm. James; sec‘?- breas , J W. Gflflmell- Aunt: “What a. beautiful com- plexion you have, my dear - it's a. gift of heaven." N on: "Don't you believe ft. aunties-it's nothing but a steady expense." pal Millard‘: _ kl1h_ l l l I I “COMPLETE INSURANCE ‘SERVICE " iw. If. RDGERS y Agencies Ltd. Ptlollo 540-441 M. ALBAN FARMER 1.1.5. B.A.. Cnnullnn Bulk .of Commerce Bldg MONEY T!) LOAN BARRISTEII. SOLICITOIIL ETC. CIIAILOTTITOWN ALEX W. MATHIESON Office: 90 Great George Street FOOD AND SHELTER Next to food. clothing and shelter for today, what a man and his family need most. is a guarantee of food, clothing and shelter In days tn come. A Life or Endowment policy is an Insured Sav- ings Plan, with guaranteed values for retirement. Conserve the Home and Stabilize the Nation. Consult your nearest Great-West Life Agent for ti suitable plan Including Accident and Health In- IIYNIIMM a. no. Lllllrlsll Provincial Managers CIIQIIQQIQQQIQ . Gnmmenlllo - Montana ALLISON P. McLIAN, Dlmlct Iluturl of lummenlda CYRUS A. ll. SHAW, Dhtrlot Manger at Montoya THOMAS MQAVINN, l. I. IIYNDMAN, lpochl hpnuoamtveu at Clurlottotown. Money to lam ‘lleetlnm IABRISTER. SOIJCITOB. ETC. .:-- I. “Illa! qugilfg‘ “lily q_ Wholly; "mm Itmahtlfufw thiih .. L ca"! Stomat Relieved lhmagirurink'fl In u» We llone algtuduon lhl, a 0C Ill' fill nutritive“: . 83 f‘. " Pr!“ I51: uirwgntlisiiumi‘ TIIE 2 MABS 149 Great 6,30,.“ sum. Mil-I Orders Given Attention __\ Professional c, i publlfisiélfig Mi-m'°ll'flllhlnz cards IIIIII .1 wmllwndence, twin, | boflkkceplllg. MISS HELEN GIDDl-Ifl i Telephon 1399, P 0 Bill. 452.‘ ' Cnnnaiigtit Ants, M 4‘ l MCLeOd é? Bentl w. ll. BENTLEY. lt o,‘ s. A. BENTLEY. lt o Banister: and Attornm- Law 15f Prince Strut .___. Clarion-l Accounillntl . 53 Grflton Street. I Charlottetown Phone 208" l»; . Randolph W lllltnnlllt. GI TTffim='i's'.'ij§lliil'li Attornev At Law Commlnfoner for Deeds. m. Prince Edward Island ISIIccessor tn Lite Richard E .Inllnstonl Office Sulfa 420. ‘ll Mill! Bo I Morrell and llompa Chartered Accountant: ll. F. AIIBIllBlllll Eolliarn ‘Trust Bnlldltq Charlottetown A~Il.v'-'Jl.v.‘.n-.-.'.w' w»: .____.__. .__._.._____. Charles P. MLUUGIII a A. " Barrister. Sollcltar. Notary Etc lllley Building. Clturlotlclfll ' Phone 331 BELL o MATHIESO uAnRlsTl-ll: l-xlt Phllfpu Building, Ill Grafton Phone ma l’ v "t" CHARLUT L @9311: Frellerlc ll. Larf PROPERTI __ COLLECTIONS Oll-rlotteown. l’- 5- '- Attorneys-ilt-Lflf I LUANS ON CITY AM) ' W W"“J ‘ i . . . , FALIYIILK (s! HAblJl A. .I. flASLAM. M» “- BARRISTER. ETC- m Bu! of Non Scott: Cl" . Charlottetown. l'~ 5;, MONEY T0 LO/I. w Phone 85 _ n o‘ l5"- _' J.A. Mclill NOTARY. ETC: 0| B/nuusrl-m soul IT CUBE"; BUII-DWG H.F. McPhee B.A- K~ sonny ov- aAntusran F.0I"‘"'"“I lllloy Bulldlnl ___ =,»-——-—.—- "- EYiE; EXlliIlllEll. tum» GLASFANDFITTEI; f. S.‘ TA YLORI olrroivllrrklbnfl, Phone I955 . n iv nlnll b! ‘lmlnmfl or”... Bflmgncv-ll I l l 91mm Krill ""3 on" I l W,