340g rout: THE GHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Muiuiiq Dally (Founded tn I837) President: Lieut. Col W (Iheller S- Mel-JIM VICrPIC-bldtlll: .| R. Burnett, FJJ- Secretary: Lleut. Col I) A nlac-Klnnon. 0.5.0. E119; n“; flgisgxillg Director J. B. Burnett, FJJ. Associate Editors: Frank Walker and Ian A. Burnett SUBSCRIPTION BATES I7 sun In P. s. l.. ss-W no rim: $250 It" 6 II“!!- ll.25 lvr 3 months; 50c for one month , city Delivery: 55.00 per year; $3.0u for 6 months $1.75 for fl months u; Mail ll! Canada isntl U.S.A. $5.00 per your Baturday Weekly: $2.00 per year; $1.00 for 6 inunllll 50c for 3 mont. The Chulutleluvru Uuunllisn may he Obtllnfll ll flqusnug‘: heirs Agent-J, ‘Pinion bquure, New hsrlsi Old South howl Agent-y, Usiruur Mills uutl Washington, Bollolt llusroplllltnn as». Axons-y, inns Peel at. lluulrolls u. Flue, 3M lluy 51., Tomaso; hows sun-u. Chateau l-nsr at. Ottawa; \\ olfn‘: Noun stuns], suilbury, Ont; llub Tobacco pimp. llonrlon, ". u.‘ Ellen stun-run». Amherst. N. ll _”The Strongest Memory is Weaker than t!“ Weakest Ink." “nI-tvfi two’ ililflllilil. a.’ i Bundles For Britain llritliin with ships, tinder the Lease-Lend are doing a Apart from stipplvlllf-‘I lntlnents and SLIPlIllCa Bill, our American tieighltors magnificent voluntary‘ work thronghvait 0r- ganization known as Bundles for Britain, liic., 1n the fir“ {mu- ntonths of the fiscal year be- ginning Dcceinbci- M40, ii total of over $1.300,- 510 in CtftlillllllllCll and purchased articles and money was sent to England through this channel, for the relief of war-stricken civil populations and tlte armed forces. More than half of the amount went fl.)l'\\'(ll'll during the month of March. Otitstantlingly sticcessful was the organiza- tion's nation-wide Hospital Day campaign on May 6, which ran concurrently with a similar effort in London tinder the patronage 0f Queen Elizabeth. Tiivo \\‘\'t‘i\~‘ of preparation precede-l the one-day drive in ivhich 900.000 volunteer workers participated. Citizens were solicited on the streets of cities and towns, in the shops, the- atres and other gathering places. To assure the closest coordination between the two campaigns, Lord Luke, chairman of the Revenue Coin- mittee of King Edward's Hospital Fund, acted as special adviser of Bundles for Britain for the drive. Upon his suggestion the funds raised in America will he ll1.'l(lC available to all of the I65 hospitals covered by the London appeal. Fifty truckloads of clothing valued at $300,- 000 and comprising 350,000 garments were ship- ped last March to the civilian victims of Nazi bombings in England. The shipment is believed to be one of the largest of its ltind ever as- sembled by a single relief agency on its own ac- count, exccpt the .\itierican Red Cross. Contributions have poured in from all sources. More that“. one half the 3,000 persons in at- tendance Flt a special Bundles for Britain service licltl in St. Tilinmas Church, New York City, on April 2o. brought gifts to the altar rail. At the New York Military Academy, cadets con- trihuted I50 cots and more than 50 huge bundles of clothing. shoes and other apparel as “a voltin- tary expression of their good will and sympathy for the people of war-strickcii flritziitt.” The boys elected to give their cots for use in air- raid shelters and to sleep on the ground at their spring tnzuiocuvrcs. 'l‘hcv' wrote some 200 cheer- ing letters to mikuowii boys in England. In the State of \\'_vomin_q, more than 2,000 wool grow- ers contributed part of their fleeces to the ten Bundles for Britain branches in that State this year. _ The hcmliptartcrs of this splendid Organiza- tion are at 745 Fifth .\vcuuc. New York City and it compriws ovcr 900 branches tbrottgltout the United Flutes. Potato Marketing in his ictlcr to Prime Minister blackcuzie King, dined l)cc. i3, i940, dealing with the scri- ous agricultural Sllllilllltll in this Province, Pre- mier LI-tmpbcll Qx]il't's>'c<l the hope that steps would be lfllvCll this _vciii' to stabilize the potato riiztrkct. lle rcfcrrctl to the “diszistrously l0\v price of potiittics in October and November, and to the fzict ihztt the vvrv farmers who needed as- Sl>lilllCL‘, iizuuclv llltlhC who were not financially iiblc to ltct-p lllvil‘ itollttot-s. were forced to sell thcm zit ti l'l\li\‘lll4lll>l_\' low price, and far below the cost of production. hi prcpztratioti for the 104i stntsou. ht- tlYQWl that this tnattcr be given "early l‘lill~'ltlt‘l'.'lllllll, its it inigltt possibly in- vrilvc our giving of lll>ll'tlCll1Ill$ in the spting its rcgtirtls lllllllillllrll of zirrcugc." Prime .\lllll\l('l' King in his reply nrgited thitt “the ]‘ll‘(‘.\(‘lll sllfllllls‘ of potatoes, tnililte that of apples, cannot be attributed t0 the cffccts of the war. since Cilllfllllilll potatoes do not ordin- lrily go to European tnzirkcts. Potato marketing problems are lzirgcly rlontcstic. and it may he that some volimtury liuiiiatiott of production might help, though experience would indicate that a reduction tisuully follotvs naturally a scu- snn of low prices." llc stiggestcrl that the potato lllélfliPf iii the lliiitcd $tatcs was also poor, and that it was “difficult to see how low prices could have been avoided." In the circumstances. one would imagine that steps would zit lcrist be taken to instirc the home market for (‘ituurlitttt pntuto grmvt-rs. Apparently this has not been done. Lust weck in the Ilouse of Contmoits- .\lr. lliitficltl rcgistcrcrl a protest against the iiuporttttioti of small new potatoes from the [iitited States. "lluutlreds of cars of Alabama and Cztliforuizt new potatoes came in during May when our potato growers were sell- ing their minim-s at less than half the cost of production," hc said. "Tihcsc llnitctl States pota- toes arc of a grade and size which our growers‘ are not zillmvt-d to market in Canada. Foreign (‘Xthllitgc is being tiscil to bring in these potatoes. An order in council was put through on March 25 which was suppusetl to cure this condition. but it did uot- Tin-y cbrtugcil the grade front ll. S. grade i, silt.‘ ll, in I’. S. grade l. size A. but a provision ivasl included that until August 3i iuclttsive in each calendar year a tniniuuuu din- meter of I 7-8 inches was the size requirement for new potatoes. The United States have new l THE___QHARLOTTI<I_]‘_QWI§I ‘QIIARRIAN potatoes all the year round, and therefore small potatoes can be shipped in here any month of the year." The House went on to discuss other matters, without any further reference to this complaint. Our own representatives, as usual, were not heard from at all. Clemenceau‘ s Prophecy S. j. Woolf, the illustrator-author, in his lat- est book “Here I Am," reports a conversation in the mid-twenties with Clemenceau. “The Germans," said Clemenceau, "cannot be trusted. They are always the saute, and always will be. They will always have someone at their head who will lead them astray, for they mus: be led. That is their nature Ten years ago it was the Kaiser; ten years front now it will be some- body else. Even if as a. race they are all right. which I do not believe, then the rcst of the world must unite in saving them from the men they select as leaders. The Versailles Treaty is en- deavoring to do that. If it fails. it will do so for one of two reasons: either it was not severe enough, or else the rest of the wo rld will relax and not continue to impose its obliga- tions. I am too old to see the fulfillment of my prophecy. I do not know if you will, but I know what I am saying will come to pass.” - EDITORIAL NOTES .- \Velc0me our Highlanders who have teered for overseas. s w- s- 4- volun- Are you going to give a lift to the Victory Bond sales ?—who gives quickly gives twice. w 4- s- s- The war services financial report published in this issue makes a brave showing and reflects the highest credit on the campaign manager Mr- D. S. Bonriell. is u s: n A Victory Loan bond gives a double return —intcrest on money invested-and a chance to live again in a world free from hatred, fear and threat of death. s- : w s The first "black-out" baby to be born in Mont- real was appropriately enough the son of a sold- ier. He was brought into the “dark” world in hospital under the yellow rays of a battery lamp, and didn't seem to mind it in the least. n- a- n- Slowly the cigar is staging a come-back. Cigar releases in Canada during April rose to over I5.- 900,000, the highest total for the month in any year since i920, and almost 3,000,000 in excess of the March level. More than 616,000,000 cig- arettes were released in April, a decrease of 77,- 000,000 from the total for March. is s v s Magna Charla signed this date, i215 by which it was provided: all accused persons to be tried by those of the same rank in life; no taxes to be imposed without consent of the taxpay- ers; no imprisonment without lawful trial, and no delay, or sale of justice. This was the first great democratic concession granted the then average citizen, and it was wrung from King john at Runytmede. Hitler today would take it from us. a s s a Que would have expected Prime lVIinister King to ltave prontoted the Hon. Dr. Cyrus Mac- millan to the Ministry of National \Var Services, especially after the favourable impression he created as chairman of the Pensi0n's Committee. But once ntore we get the “go-by". Of course, Mr. Thorson made himself vocal in the llotise on behalf of the West, while Dr. Cyrus has been correspondingly silent regarding Prince Ed- ward Island There is more in Premier Lou's favourite poem than reaches the cur. it! \Vhen Vicount Bennett first arrived in Lon- don to become a British Citizen he was asked bv I-{avas News Agency; whether or not he would see members of the British Government once he settled down on his new $urrcy estate. llc replied laconically: “\Vcll, I walk about a lot." Looking back, we must conclude he \\’.'l.ll\‘C(l tn some pur- pose. It is more than liltcly the right of succes- sion will be granted to his sister's son, Jimmie lferritlge who is a great grundstnt of Rcv, Dr, Duncan, former tiiiiiistci‘ of St. Izuncs Church, Charlottetown. i n- v s- t- Rev. Do. F. Scottukfzickenzic. principal of Montreal Theological (wollcgc. told tlic nsscutblyi oftlie llrcslrvtcrizm (ll‘ll't‘lt in (imutla that thcrc is a serious shortage of voting men sock- ing training for the Ch "izui church and that the war is increasing (lifficultics. The principal said that blcGill Yitivcrsity hud proposed that the Anglican. Iiiiitcrl and IIil-slvvlcriztii theologic- al colleges in Montreal form a faculty of theo- logy and bccomc part of the university. llc sub- mitted a notice of ntntion that the assembly give sympathetic consideration to the proposal. O U I O Total production of farm eggs in I040 is esti- "ltltfll 236106.900 dozen as compared with ':°.2l.73/ dozen in i930- Thcre wcrc increases m production in all the proviuccs. The total value of the egg production was estimated at $46,i0o.- 00° I" "J40. nu increase of $5.ioo.0o0 over the i030 value In the eastern provinces Ontario had by far the largest production. The following were the figures nf these provinces. with I030 000) dozen; Quebec 35,854,000 ($3,224,000) (lozcu; New Bruitswick 5.374.000 (4,340,000) dozen; Nova Scotia 4.778.000 (3,932,000) dozen: Prince Edward Island 3.216000 (2,995,- 000) dozen. In the western provinces Saskatche- wan had a wide lead over the others in produc- tion; Saskatchewan 40,290,000 ($45,550,000) dozen; Alberta 26,117,000 (2i.2o2.ooo); Mani- toba 21.320000 (20.54o.orm): British Columbia 2o.35o.tx>o ( 18.405000). 'I‘he total production of pqultry meat in i040 ivas valued at $5.694,- ooo as against $4,446,000 in i030. The wtluc by provinces was: Ontario $5,r)o0.o0o ($5.614,- 000): Quebec $2,575,000 ($2,358,000): Sask- atchewan $.2.i3fi-t-xx> ($i,R$<l6.rxm): hfzmitobn l$i,637.o0o ($i,4r)i.txx)); Alberta $1508.00!) ($401,000): British Cflllllllllllt $859000 ($840.or>o); New Tlrtuiswirk $350000: ($356-- oml; Nova Scolia $316,000 ($286,000); Prince Edward Island $224,000 ($2o4,ooo),,, WORDS OF (‘n arriiiwflv NOTES BY THE WAY Cold weather with snow and risln has brought a lot m" May moisture to the wheat crop on the prairies. Tnat wetness will help tne growth. ‘lite grain needs rain at this time of year to give li a good start to meet the hot. days of July. The praliue farmers (ltfllgtlt in rain in late May and June, because ex- perience has taught them that. they ; cannot, expect g;od ylelds itdtthout this a.d from nature. - Clark in the Windsor Star. A THOUGHT A DAY FOR A PEOPLE AT WAR "I-lltlensm — the _ volwtl" reaction or thefiizhtflitl will" animal. determined to mHkBvB last, stand wit-h eveyrv known '—*_— _ ‘ instrument of force. -— D01- ln pro-wai- days Baltisb Columbia 01.1w ThompSOll. produced only about 30,000 cases of g , tinned herring per annum Lnstf year she tinned 415,466 cases tmdl for the season of 1940-41 to March l5 her output was actually 643,725 cases, the reason is, of course, that with disrupted fisheries nearer home. the British — who like their lserrings _ have turned to Britlsh Cfillllllflla. for supplies and the Pn- l n c ic Ccast. is ma lng bhem uvall- i t l‘ llks w.l1 have e able tn unprecedented quantity’. -- f,l,‘f,m‘,._,,',‘§‘u§‘l,tlo§ by the end June Brcckville Recorder and Times. ' L, ‘the so" o; Lhfng which the , '—,—~ _ l peOplg or Canada have 10m: FAVE-ll" We |lkg today; youth and think t ed) qq-m-e has been a demtmdfl theyue a big uttprovctneitt on a these many months, for actua. prO-l great many older pecple. who seem auction of tanks and guns and alr- , to get stuffier and stitffler as the. cram Announoemenbg 0f what. ls w| years go by. They are frank and be done are tnsulflclentflThe public honest, 100k at life pretty straight I have eagerly awaited sign; of defin- and aren't unduly mnwssed by the lte accomplishment. wisdom, dignity and gravity of their Tanks, are now being ccmplefed elders, tvlttch is a healthy sign atI 831d the people 0f Canada hope this particular" epoch in the world's ' ma; reduction will shortly exceed history. They've got to build a new even he rate of three s day whldl world out of the one we have made. Mr, Howe forecasts for July. such a. mess of. It wont be the Certainly figures of units actually cheaters who will do that. - Re- pyoducfid and completed are fa!‘ glna Leader-Post. ,1 more msssui-‘nz than figures of ex- ypendltu es Whlch gsvernmBHl-SPORQS- Five million four hundred dozen , men often present. Mr. Home has eggs seem like a tremendous lot. of been giving more of these 118111198- eggs to ask for from Canadian He mentions huge sums: more than hens. But. when the number is sift- , 54001200001 spent for construct» ed down it will be found that. ll; , lng Crown pronertles for munrufwfl- only means about five eggs per head i ure of war materials. total 0108B of the population of Canada and exceeding SLDODOQOOO- $1161’! n)!‘ only about half an egg apiece for‘ ues inevitably must. lack conv c- the people of the United States. So let. us not scare our Canadian hens, or discourage them by allowing them to think that they are being asked for any unreasonable war effort. Hens ni-ust. be patriotic as well as other non-feathered blpetls -Far William Times-Journal. (Halter-x Chronicle) Mr. Howe’,- anriouncement. that on. an; spending ls not. necessarllv I- mzn of accomplishment or elflcl- ency. Among prlvate citizens. the hi: spender is by no means the most efficient admmlstrator. So It i; with roverttmetits. l The tzctternnrent wlrch spends‘ Q “st may achieve least. spending l; a poor standard. The test ls ln accomplishment. What. counts at. the moment ‘sthe , mm produclon of implements 0f 1940 and lower than tn any year WBY- , l since 1932 when the same figural The“? “"9 the lh “g5 thntgwi1l de‘ was 1n effect In these tunes l. feat the enemy. kllerefpeti mtg Get!- wnen mxapign seems g0 be in gfiefTlOhP-S no stiemzth ivith which o, air and world conditions are such “T” ‘m the smllgm that governments are glancing in eveiy direction for sources of revenue. the fact that. relief l5 pre- sented tn the form of lower civic assessment comes to those affected with a refreshing rllfference. - Frederioton Gleaner. The city o! Fredericton had lls taxratn for 1941 made known today. i The rate 1s $2.56 on the hundred, twenty cents less than lt was 1n Polish Agony inst. Cat-herines Standard) It. ls said Ilh?it Gennanagugiatg in ins, - unconsciously, are playing Hltlerb ifitsuisiiiiftinm conquered‘ “me “ “l” seize ‘m even’ Fem" countries has been enslaved every- of a. British reverse or sebtack to l whey-e, but Polqnd ls the worst vic- dolefully shake their heads and ‘ um The Nazis hqve not secured Wonder how much longer the Em- an the 14mm- t-eqiilred, and The NCW plre can last. ‘Phat spirit of dG-_Y0rk Sunday Times reports that. fefltifim i5 111st will" P1485 in“! liw having faded to obtain cnoti h Nazi hands, Forget, 1t. Tnink of the I volunmrv w-mkers go;- transfer- pesple in Britain who. under far Gelmnm}, the Gestapo has now or- W°Y5° Suffering ma“ We have felt; ganized mrm hunts in Polish titles m‘ We 144911’ l-O feel. He"? sliilened l and villages on a constantly wden- their backs for the smuggle which l mg scald Army trucks are nstmbl. We)’ M9 69143113111941 W-ll 611d 111 ecl at. convenleitt points. The Ger- vlcwry. - owen Sound gun-Tunes. man police then rglitggoglted stieelzts. roundm ti all a. e- ie K111195- Germun labor, burdened with ‘No one“ lspexempt. from seizure. lengthening hours, shortening pay I Even men lawfully enmloyed in in- ana heavy taxes, sees no relief in dustry are gathered in. The‘); 1d- signi, ana is being asked to mukelentificnticn curd: ae torn up and still more sticritiecs. a. despatch, they are shlpred away. 0f the d6- from Berlin says. The soldiers at ported. these breuzht back are bro- least. get plenty to eat and a certain ken in heiirli by hard labor and amount. or glory, but for the Gcr- t scant. rations. man workers it appears t) be a life l Yet there has been one uncer- Qf umclievcd dyegyinagg, Tim sited TOWZllOIl Thor SILHGTH" has mayk prove to be the German welltled tilhc POTS 0 fgltfil-Y i0- cirac iiig point». 'I‘o substitute guns ueWer inn ever " ore. r for butter can be dens for a while, Hid each other. ashlar! I10 flu", fr‘ but it catmot be borne IIIXAQIIXIALCLV. knmrm: that all alike urc- vwtms 0t _1,°5 Angglgs Tin‘|(\s_ the siune ruthless nixprcwion. Sab- Thera are far too many who, all e iwitlnt the ofctipntcti 1:1- Shcffield, one of the first prn- ' 1‘- A secret Pblirh iadlri re- VlHCifll. ClkCS to CXpd-‘ICHUQ tull- I lv nave dirct-l cirl bearnu; to brmlrrs who cit-tacked Poznan ittvztrviug 40000‘ bushels o!‘ grain mad nunnlit es of ofhe‘ rtiprlies the Germans had stored there. scale etiemy air atctictts, is pL‘l'lL‘<1l- lug a c..siiititiiiiil feeling syaiClll tlial. has been cited by guieriintcnt officials as an example for the country. Emphasis is laid on t-he dvccntralizitig 1.1‘ coo-lung depots, [ive of whtoh are distributed around tue city outskirts. rue system is now building up lo supply 60.000 meals daily. and in the event of a big raid it is estimated that prob- ably 290.000 hot. meals could be sup- Great Canadians (Winnipeg I711"? Press) The 50th annivoswry’ of Sh‘ John .- _- , . Macdrrinlds death was the occas- gucd over; 991M181, '1“emv‘l°“r ion on ..turdriv for a notable oele- ours‘ _' 60d“ Y0‘ Sm” Pod" brtilicn at Kngs/on. when address- cs bv Mr. Klnfz. Mr. Nleighen, Mr. Inprilire and Mr l-lnnwt-n trims- Jormcd wlnl was nnce an annual l purlv clomotisration into a nation- nl wmtneinorallcn of great services to the male. The obsc nllon by Mr Hanson in his cxcsll/‘tit spec-h. that “now “Sir Jrhti helotvztt to tho stripes." _ __ _ ._ _ _ , llfllllf‘ 5O rears aft-r Laurier ad that.‘ lips govcuiinciit i..ls_L\\r_, llIUo-,rd,:ry:n.1 Ftfnhnps mnnus Saymg toes. Peace in the PllUll-l.‘ and nbnm Limp," u, 2.3,“ h-S Qhypqc fTtic COHJHUCLOII of a New Qraer, new.“ m p,,.nn,n(,n, Reference u: East. Asa‘. To prove bow svcll u. ,0‘ m’, “wit; .“ prim M high ls living up to than he cited ,.,._.,;,.,.'“.f,_; {H549 mfMr: Mdghen Japan's atuicretuc to il1€_vBL’l‘illl-_ “Hired p mm,‘ m, m,“ that Rome Axis. tlip Yflillglllllflll c-l g,h,,.d,“.is Sp,...._-'_i.~,<-, afilnlfgble as wallg cl““¥'“°‘° Pulmcl’ "ell-me lhev were. with till their evdencc Yusuke Mulsuokis is hack in Tokyo, alter a. lllpislllllllf.‘ Jlllllfflt. tnat Look him ts ivlosccw, Berlin, Rome and back to ivlosoovr, wlncre he signed a neutrality pllcl. wit-n atalm in "ten minutes‘ . Japan's Amerlcait-cductittu iorcigit lllillld-Cf. Laid reporters, in. the liuioiitg field, ln Naiiklng,anu the Sovlct-uup- n; ca‘et‘ll ryrcpnrljtlon were in azicse agtecmenl. - LCLFOII. IPrce f; A SS n; nhrflcfl =n elevation o; Ple-“S- tho zht. and in Illfil» apnreclatlon of Sir John's qtmTtles and achie- Roll Out The Tanks I I figures in brackets: Otitnrio 73708-000 (78,461- lt is apparent at. once that 1n- oome taxes this your civluot be left. to the last uitnute. Tncy will have to be budgeted for in time tn- dlvidual budget, dlSLYlhUWO over the whole yeaig or flllul payment oti the due date will have to be pre- pared ln advance by a system of t careful saving. Citizens wit] have to start planning the dlsbtirsement of. their incomes ‘immediately, will ‘ have to decide what. t-hlngs they‘ will forego and begin douig wlth-| out. sham at once, These wax taxes are going to promote the practice of having a family or personal! budget because hapliazzard expendi-i lure will not meet tLe sit-nation. And it is evident that. the personal fiscal year will have to colnclde with that. of the Dominion. - saskawon Star. A strlklng comment came recently t from Switzerland on Italy. This‘ continent was: "Italy wanted vlc- tory not war". Italy, beaten by our valor, wishes now that she could choose anew. By contrast, llhls country o! Great Britain, with its associated dominion: anti em- pires, dld not. want, war, lt wants and ts going to get. victory. At this lull, when the forces are gathering, take o. chance to remember that. u. was we who did not want, war. It was we whose prime minister went on journeys to Rome. to Munich, and Godecberg, averting. or st ieasl strponlng, the day of war. appear- ng at, tlmes even to be soft ln hll deep-rooted passion for preserving peace. Woe to time who wanted win- ln the hope of easy victory. ‘veymenls, loss striking than the unreht-aired tribute paid to h‘m by the man who had inst fought with h‘nt one of the most shifted elect- ognl battles ln the history or Can- n c. If ln pnrtlrnl strslezv and lend- e-shlp there was only om- Sli- John. there was cnlv one Laurler for t consummate m-tlstrv tn words and an unftvlterfniz mitunanl-mlty of If 1941 L: the 50th anniversary of Sir John M-icflorvilds death. It is also the hiindedlh anniversary of Laurlerfls birth. Why not an- other rmtlotml tribute to another irreal: Canadian? Woe to those who tlld not have peace in their hearts. - Lmidon Dally Eicpres. HOW TO COMBAT i Rheumatic Pains llhcsmstlcpsiumohsu csuntllrytlk scid-intlnbloosl. This slsoulllbentraeled ltylhehélaeys. II u and ueus mics slcs flss muscles and ivhh uaucistisg pains. Tnst k Hilts’: In sssnishgtitir Dosltlc K y Pill-ll lsnll a csntslyl favorite kidney ruled). l" Budd's Kidney Pills ' vmv on taunt. l 0o may no rr r ...Ill tis ilsl of Illlll s llrs vltlsnt s llst sl llsli hsliiigliigs Unless you're c memory export, you couldn't name every article in even one of your rooms, let i alone everything In the whole t house. An Inventory of u home l: us important as u business Inventory. flldml.‘ h! us luvnlsh you wllh n Inc household Inventory beoltmsliul . _ q- wlllglvsysstscnch- r1 I solusnhcelilngllss. ‘nu W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Prepared For The West (Sydney Post Record) A disillusioned Bertlto Mussolini made an oration to the Blucltshfl-s at Rome yesterday, on the first m- ntversarv of Italy Nazi compelled 611' trainee mbotho waznI-Iadlhlflslwf-‘Qh been a frank and real review of the fortunes of that wars as they have affected his own country- he would have told of s quarter of a ntllliflfl Fsacfst prisoners 1n British handl- of mother four-score thousand who halve passed beyond the b01111“; 0f the ignomtnlouq ieoulse of the 1t.- aliim lnvasim of Greece by a. mum-f erlcally weak but lncompambly b o! defenders; of the dleizvlrilageldnyeondltlovn of the Italian in home harbors, from the patroll- Ing squamous of the British fleet; or the 10s of Italy's Aefé-lcan Em- whlch Italv Itself has been reduced tn uenoe o! the war. But the Duce's anniversary ipeedh avoided this record o! weir fl-fluve and national disaster. and me coiwentrcvted on the two verv dif- ferent toples which. however. were ln their way as ignlfleant as its eloquent omissions. Ono of these topics was Presfitlent. Roosevelt against whcm Mussornl screamed crude epithets and lmprectlons 1n an ant-ti’! totem. The other was Itav’s “critical food sltuatlon." wh’ch has created an army of "pes- slmlsts” and doubters" on the home front. To the mesa of the Ilflllfln people the Dictator’: attack on Presldent Rocsevelt. and the "defl- aiioe" he Hmn-lated tcwaml Ameri- can lntervsnttcn. must have carr ed an empty. ironies] sound. To the outsde would these outbursts carry the clear iwoents of frustration and despair. Mustollril has obviously reached the stage whee he hopes for not-h- ‘ng anal ls all set. for the worst tlvt can happen. His speech was ‘c """"“ o’ " *\'~"‘=ld and beaten international bitaand. FREIGHT RATE§ IN CANADA LOWER THAN ANY OTHER COUNTRY EXCEPT JAPAN -.MON'l1R.EAL. Que. June l2—A1- though the Oandlan railways buy their rubles at an svemr of twenty-five per cent mater than the 00st to Unit/ed States llnes. Catmda’! average per ton mite frei- ght rate ts lower than tn any cotm. trv tn the worvl exoeet Japan, where employees are paid a few cents Der d-av. stated R. 0. Vaml-an. Vice-President Purchasing. Sfwea and Steamslflps. Canadian Nation- al Rtfilways. who was the guest. speaker at the recent (Tuner gathering of the Medical and Sur- pzlcal Section of the As-seclntlcn of American Railways in Montreal. Keep Minot-d’; In the home. NOTICE FARMERS We have just received n ship- ment of IORMALIN FOB SMUT 0N GRAIN A cheap but thorolsflsly sl~ feotlve remedy. Grain [rowers would be who to act. promptly ln order so have seed properly frosted before sowing. One pint lo every 40 gallant of water. Pull directions given with every order. PIJCI so cums Ln.‘ We also curry the new Ind Improved CERESAN , A shut disinfectant [or when. oats, Barley. One pound treats ll bushels. Gas your pound 80-day. 1 Lb. Th! $1.10. 5 Lb. Tln ".40 CONDITION POWDER FOB HORSES AND GATT]! IRAQ ARUHAEOIDGIST MANCHESTER-(OW- D1‘. RBI‘ lnald Campbell ‘mompaon, 64, 1n- telllgence officer in Mesopotamia. 1n of British Museum Nlnevah, near Mosel, Iraq, years ago, la dead. MAINYINONI 501116 m? During I940 the Prince Edowrd Island 6| jured cnd 6 persons killed. sum would be sufficient Spitfires Insurance. Offices: Charlottetown Little Money -' ‘Z0. _ Beautifully t; '| . Suits in the neivicrsfiiviitii sited stripes. All sizgg Special for Fridrti Saturday m) and $20! and $22, Come ln and see them they are dollars below their regular vslus. i“ our windows. l FATR’S DAY SUNDAY DON'T FORGET DADS GIFT. WE HAVE EVERYTHING HE NEEDS HENDERSON & CUDMORE SOARING HOLSTEINI t Holstein-Fromm , Dutch breed and with fresh m,‘ the First, Great war’ and in ghgrge . lgreed stock unavailable from 301.; excavations at. t 15nd‘ B- 5511 Francisco herd brought.‘ record prices, i moron vriiictr Arcturus l results of Motor Vehicle accidents show that 33,638 persons were injured and 1,650 killed in Canada. In persons were in- Thc Canadian Motorisfs Handbook for . 1941-42 just issued says that every year the Canadian public wastes seventy million dol- lars tn Automobile accidents, and that this to provide 3,500 Motto-"Drive Safely", and also see that you are protected by adequate Automobile JUNE 14. 1941 Smart Worsted SUIT. FOR ' ...T:_it cattle srs g and minerals sn ‘Dobsooo ‘m, oduct-a of Rhodesia, in Om . i- frlcs, and the output of this; Sane telephone cables contain as British territory 1s booming vltbi my); as__4_.24=2 wires. tbs l HYHDMAH 8i OO. LIVIITED Summerside Allison P. ltIcLetsn-Dlstrlct M Earle S. Jelh-y-Reprcscntatlvq s4 0'Lenry I. Martin Currie-Representative at Montague. Montague at Summerslde v-og-oT-wioooo-oooowovoofoofibown Say to Your Grocer I Want BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE Till You will enjoy its superior quality E W W P I Q C1 m Fl OQQQOQOQQQO-O -~--¢- A kkkwswv-wv" j -—_—;=-i" That's the way Hickeyis Twist sells all over the prov- lnce. And the reason? Just because it is so gol-dflf" good. We can't think of 8 better reason can you? HICKEY’S CHEWING Tones up the system. cures all skin troubles and [Ives u flouy coat of llllf. For swell: d en. the Blood and later of worms It rem , Price um lssn Mountains-pangs. THE TWO MAGS l 10¢ Per Fig Manufactured B)’ DRUGSTOBI I400 00cm- l. t Mall Orlilgs Glvlehsgzmpl Attention. yBLA CK TWIST HIOKEY & NICHOLSON . ‘N TOBACCO C0. LTD. CHARLOTTE-Til“