30.14" ,¢...,.-;.»=-.¢, , .. 1'1 PAGE FOURL THE DNARLDTTETDWN GIIARD IAN Morning Dally tlblnlel tn Ilfll Pruldunl: Ulnk OIL W. UIIIIHI K MCI-Ill‘ 1 Wee President: l. It. nurnen. I44. ‘ Scom‘ ,1 Maul. Col. u. s. nlnclklnuon. 0.14.0. am»: and Managing Uueolor. J- it Illlfllf-‘l-L lJ-l- Asswmse Iidlwrs: h-enn Welter and Inn A. lfllrlllll SUBSCRIPTION ILATII By mu 1n r414. $4.00 w 1w: 81-50 M 0 111111111" 5.1.25 for 8 months; 50o to: one monsn um Denver; $5.00 per run-z $8.00 m: o ustllllll 31,15 u; s months; I00 ler one luau; Bylnil toothes-Provlneesnnd ILS-Lfi-WP" I." Saturday WBEUF “~90 l" 7°“? um w‘ . muui." 60o to: I months ‘I he Chnrlusleto» n hull-ulna nu] be ubtlluml ll. ss-auuur- Noun Alenvi. ’ ' mes Dunn"- he: lurks 01a South News Annoy, l. s llllk and Washington. l-loetunp Metropolitan lune bulw- llll Peel In “mung; J. n», l]! Bu) n, Toronto; hens Ilnnl. Chateau lander. 001s": Wnllfe News Ilnlfl. llndhnrl. Onh n61. Tubman Shen- llnmn l- l: ' “The Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink.‘ MON-DAY, AUGUST 3. 1943- Fa rm Production A11 encouraging review of Ca11Zu1flj$il11111 P10‘ duction was given by Agriculture Minister Gard- iner in 1l1c closing hours of the 1101158 0f C0111" 1110115 session. 111 1938, for exzunplk‘. (“11-“13 ,,,;.,-1;1~1111l 5,700,001) lmgs, 111111 1111s _\-1*:1r \\'c are 1~xp1c1i11g 1o market 741210.000. 1111110“ 11911510 111“ 11111111121. We marketed 1,183,000 cattle 111 1939- and 1,400,000 in 1942, or an increase of 220,000 the cheese fuarkctings in I930 were 125,009,000 11111111115 and the 111:1rkc1i11gs this __\'(‘f1r W111 11¢ 1.1.1111; 160.000.0110 pounds. I11 grams, there W111 be an increase in production i11 0115. 1111110)’ 11111 flax. The marketing; of eggs f01 1939 “"110 8-‘ 460,000 dozen, and for 1942, 17.540000 (101011- There have also bccn large increases in poultry and in all milk products during the 5111111: per- iod. With regard 1o farm labour, Mr. Gardiner said, there were 429,000 single men on farms. farm labourers and sons of farmers, on March 31 last, about the time an attempt was mudc to “freeze” labour 011 the farms. The pro- bability is that this number will decrease rather than mcmse, 11nd an attempt will have to be made "at reorganizing the labor available and move it from place to place, in ordcr 1o assist i11 the harvesting of crops in one area at one sca- son, and i11 another place at a different season. 11nd moving [rum one place to another as the season requires." A Good Political Speech judged u s, political effort, says the Vancouv- er Province, Prime Minister Mackenzie King's final speech on the conscription issue was a very good one. It is doubtful if Mr. King ever 111:1dc a better_ It had lift snd verve. It was full of hard and telling blows. It scored points 10 no end, It challenged the opposition and hinted at- perlmps even forecast —an early appeal to 1111i cvmulryn It roused the enthusiasm of the 111cm- hers of the right of Mr. Speaker- most of thern at least —end set them cheering and pounding their desklids, It was a political speech in the good old style. Obviously Mr. King enjoyed making that Spcctlb lrlc lct himself go in it, as he seldom lcts himself go. He had a topic which really ap- pealed 1o him and on which he could wax e11- thusiastic and eloquent. That topic was himself, hi< pledges, hi5 ambitions, his desire for 1l1c C011‘ fidcuce of 1l1c llousc and country i11 his lcud- crsliip and 1l1c nefarious conduct 0f 1l1c (‘q-Ptol- tlon in seeking to reduce that confidence. The spcech, says our Vancouver contempor- ary, 1111s reminiscent of the one .\lr. King dc- llvcrwl five 11111111l1s zigo on 1l1c p10 Eciic- l1 “'11s a spcvcrh of the same typc, pointing i11wurd to himself and his party and 01111111111 1o the opposition, but going l1ar<lly any further, scarce- l_v touching 1l1c great issue of the war, which is 1l1c only issue that rcnlly intcrcsts 1l1c pcoplt; of Czmndrf 111 1l1c 111111111111. Like 1l1c spccch 0f five months ago, it 1111s a good political speech, but, like that other, it 511011111 never have been made. It wns out of plucc. l: \\:1s i11 11nd taste. It \\'7lS a shockivf: \\':1s'.1~ of $11111: and 0111111)’. \'i1;\\1.1l (‘v01 from 1l1c low plane 111 polllics it wus culiirulv lllllltjCcSsllfy, for it did not cluiugu a snrglc 1111c. 'l'he members of the opposition \'.‘ll11lll .\l1'. King bclaborcd so 110111111); wcrc ll!*':‘l\' 1'1~:11l_\- 11, vote for his 11111111111111.1111, 1111/1 '11 vr-lc for i1. 'l'l1<* 111111110 \'.l111 \\1--.~1* . 1 his :\1111-11d111c11t wcrc 1110511)‘ on his 1_1\\‘11 shic 1,1 1l1c lloizsc. The Nazi Menace If Russia 1lcfca1s 1111: Nazis, shc cannot sprcud 11110111311 liuropc, for shc must at least protect hcr 1"1-:1r against japan. l1 i5 seriously (loulilcd 111:1‘ l\'1'.~~ :1 could cxlcnd 1101' \\'.'1r beyond 151- "1111 1 11.1--»1'1‘11p;11i1111i 11f 111111111111. $uv1l111 :1111l la 1l1c 111111 of fir~1 111111110 11- . 1i11l\' Russia could 111.1 qomrol 1l1c .11 c11111pl1xi1>11 of 1111.- c11111111'l1-s 1l1ro11gl11111t _‘ nothing of 1111;111:1111] and 1111‘ 1 " 11 $1 . l1 li1-r1nru1y1 dufculs ltussizi 1111.1 i 1 111u~1 111:1l<1_- :1 scpcridc pcucc with ll x 1:11.11); 1l1c slllllllltlll rcvcrts 10 approximately’ 1l1c fuurlumcutnls existing during their non-aggres- sinu p.111. 111 Ilcithcr event do the (ii-integrations n11 1111: 1111111111111 forcsl1zi<lrnv (1111111111111-111 11s 111111: 1'1111< 11111. 'l'l11-_\- point 1n Zlllllfflly, 1111l1-ss 11:1; Uuitctl Nations‘ victory c2111 come 1|11i1‘l<l_\- e11- Ough, or they point to comm] by 1l1c Nazis -— who can 1111-11 not only seize linglzmrl, but flank the Western Ilcmisphcrc. lt is not true 111111 11111 Nazis are fighting .1 war against (‘111111111111is111 except in 1l1c nnrrou/csl scnsc. 'I'l11'_v arc fighting a wz1r for hlnzism; enough of a Nzwi wnrh] 51. that 1l1c rest will be "fed through a cage." p111. l'111"11]11, {r1 Fertilizer Production frrulucliou by factories in Canada which were epgaged principally i11 1l1c manufacture of fer- tilizers was valued at $I5.IO_'4.SIO i11 11740. :111 11mm“ “l 14-7 per cent ovcr tl1c $13,165,164 r°1"~'1'1°‘1 1111' 1939. In addition, there was a pro- ducfion of 229,831 tons of cyanamidq. 111111110‘ nium sulphate, mixed fertilizers and fish fertil- izers valued lt $4,914,731 111 194°» 11102971413 tons at $4,351,364 in 1939, by establishments which were classified to other indusmal $10111)’- Tucnty-six plants were occupied chiefly 1n mak- iug fertilizers and of these nine were located I11 Ontario, five in British Columbia, five 1n Que- bec, three in New Brunswick, three in Nova Sco- tia and one in Prince Edward Island. Capital employed in these works increased to $19050.- 457 from $r7.s61.474 in 19s9~ Tvlal P_1°d"°"_°" of mixed fertilizers i11 1940 from all industries amounted to 302,842 tons worth $3.154-3°5 "- factory prices, end included 293/22010118 at $7.- 967,132 made by plants in the fertilizer manu- facturing industry and 4.522 10115 it $l_37.173 madc i11 the meat-packing and glue factones. 1n 1930 1l1c corresponding total was 279,425 tons at $7.=23.177- - EDITORIAL NOTES- It is all over for another year in Parliament. including the shouting. a s1 s» u hlinisters are busier than ever now the House has risen, so many departmental matters were p111 off durmg the sittings. s a 1s 1s Outgoing trains from here both morning ‘end afternoon are crowded to excess with vacation- ists returning to their homes. II 151 41 1F The priceof cattle is reduced-that is the farm- er gets less but the consumer gets no more for hcr money when she buys at the butcher's. >11 II 11 i1 IIavc you become a booster for War Savings stamps? Here is a practical case 0f “where every little helps." The children, too, will be laying up a nest egg for themselves with every quarter 1n- vcsted. ' 111 n1 a n1 Ileroism of a boy, described by the Daily Mirror as “bravest of the war" was related by Gunlayer john Wood of H.M.S. Cornwall who said when the ship was sinking, a phone call came through. “What shall I do, sir, the telephone room is flooding,” asked the voice of an excited boy.’ “You had better leave your station immediately.’ advised the officer. "I can’t, S1r," explained 1l1c boy. “Both my legs are off." Wood said identity of the boy was unknown to him. 8 i i1 1i Mr. L_ W. Brockington, K.C., who went 10 Britain recently to be associated with the Dc- partment of Information in matters relating 1o North America has started a weekly talk over 1l1c National Network of ‘the CBC as delayed broadcasts. Mr. Brockington enjoys the reputa- tion of being one of Canada's most celebrated after dinner speakers, and he has broadcast on many occasions. He is a former Chairman 0f the Board of Governors of the CBCfand a lawyer of i111cr11a1io11al reputation. 11 i1 * l Lord Baldwin, British statesman and philanth- ropist, born this date 1867; was practically un- known politically until it leaked out during the last war that he had given anonymously a quart- er million to the nation; in 1916, Mr. Bonar Law made him Chancellor of the Exchequer, and when he died, Mr. Baldwin succeeded him as Prime Minister in 1923; was re-elected in 1924; ancl after the Ramsay Macdonald ministry was again Premier in I935 with Neville Chamberlain as Chancellor of the Exchequer; successfully handled the abdication crisis in 1937 and 0n his retirement was raised to the peerage as Earl Baldwin of Bewley. 111 41 . 111 I The Canadian National Railways is proving its value today, justifying the foresight of those responsible for its development, Major F. L. C. 1101111, Toronto, Vice President and General Xlruuigcr, Central Region, who is renewing ac- 1|11:1i111;111ccs i11 this Province, said business is about 5o per cent ahead of the 1929 peak and a still greater traffic volume can be handled. ldillions of dollars are being turned over to the Govcrnnicin in repayment of p.151 deficits. Major b01111 11:15 pleased at the cooperation of rail- \\":1_\'111c11 and shippers in preventing was1c through idle cars, A splendid esprit de corps was evident among C. N. R. employees, many of 111cm 1l1c third generation in this public service. 1k 111 111 1k .\s is generally known, Mr. Jean Francois 110111101, M. l’. is the playboy of the House of Commons, up to every sort of parliamentary in- tcrrtlption and device 1o attract attention and dc- l:1y lmsincss. lle wrote to the Ottawa journal l1l'1\l(‘§llllg against their criticism of his actions, :.111l 1101c is that newspapers rejoinder: “Many who have been watching the Commons for :1 11mg time doubt the value of Mr. Pouliot in a 111111- session. They won't urge or even recom- 1111-1111 that he be throxvn out for they know that such ncliou is 1101 only impossible under Parlia- mentary rules but is undesirable. Even his sever- est critics would prefer to have the democratic system with Mr. Pouliot sticking into it than no 1lv11111cra1ic system. Thus Mr. Pouliot will be with 11>‘, we trust for many years 1o come; Mr. P1111111»: or succcsssors 1o his role in the Com- 11111115, lle represents at 011cc the strength and weakness of our way of lifc—but so long as he is around we will know that Hitler has not 1'1.'1cl1c(l our shores. Hitler, we suspect, would 11111111 short shrift of such a man." n- r s Arc we to have children bonuses here? It is practically certain that the next great social re- form to be inlmdilccd in Britain will be family :1llr1\\':1111‘(‘s_ There is known to be a very large body of silpport for the reform, although the (Fovcriinicnr, it is stated, is not likely to make a 1lccision until Sir William Bcvcridge's compre- lvvisivc report on social insurance (it embraces 1l1c 11110511011 of family allowances) is received. :1111l 1111111 the Tradcs Union Congress meets in September. As a matter of fact the T. U. C. at- titude is likely to be favourable, for early this your 1l1c T. C. General Council decided to ru-ccpl the principle of family allowances, pro- vidmg they are paid for by the State, and are non-contributory and free from a mgang test, This stop was significant, because, until then, for fcnr 111m such allowances would dcfrilncntally nfff-ct 1l1c wagcs system of the country, the trade unions had hitherto opposed them. l! 11-11: cumzcorrcrown GUARDIAN IIDTES BY TNE WAY Theee who n!!! tstnbllslsed firms to mstntetn the velus of their trade-names by advertising during a. parted of restricted buy- ing} gve good counsel. This war wi end one of mess days, and I very fine day that will he. ' All the folk who have not been buy. machines or sir coolers, will come Into their own. to say noftilng of the new products for more grac- lous living which will emerge from the crucible of war‘: industrial drive for destruction. - New Or- leans Item. Bu] the ember Im- Gupe made the statement outside the House, which 1n effect really gave the enemy the information he wanted, there would have been l. case for action. No member of Parliament. should abuse his Pflvl- leze as such, and that. u 11st whet the Quebec member did. cover, 1f he enrolled every able-bodied 1mm 1n Gsspe tn the armed Serv- ices, his constituency would have better protection than he sought by handing out valuable informs- tdon 1o the Hum, within the halls of Parliament. - 5t. Cathsrlnes Standard. “Bestlal hntq nnlqne ln hlstofl" 1s a Czechoslovak comment on German mass executions of people of other rations. Terrible truth - Ottawa Jourial. Standing 1st Heydrloh’: bles- Bit. ler refers to the hangmnn as ‘thou. dear comrade," again revealing what a hybrid mixture of the classic and gangsterlsm Nazism is “Hamilton spectator. Thirty thousand members of the Italian Fascist party have been purged. The Italians will no doubt be disappointed at not finding Bcniws name on the 11st. —- Ottaws. Citizen. "Anyone," says Mr. George Crulckshank, MP. for Fraser Val- ley. "can be a Member of the House of Conunons." That chorus of sszorts comes from t-he few hun- dred Canadians 111110 have fried 1t and not been so fortunate as Mr. Crulckmank on the first. attempt. —Moncton Transcript. There ls no crime against hu- manity 1C0 base to be committed bv the "Beast of Berchtesgaden." His twisted soul seems to delight. 1n tortures of the most horrible kfnd. Nothing like ft has ever been known 1n modern times. Not even the massacres of innocent Armenians by the ‘Terrible Turk" approaches the terrors of Hitler's. bloody pogroms. He has turned Europe into a shambles. I-Ie glozles In his saturnalla. o! wholesale ‘Ihls is the demon In human form who aspires to rule the world. What he has done in Europe 1s s sample of what would happen in Amenca, If he ever suc- ceeded in conquering this hemis- phere. His diabolical hatred would be vented upon countless thou- sands of innocent men and women. The most depraved isnmaginadon cannot picture the tortures and torments we would have to suffcr, if Hitier wins 1111's war. - San Francisco Argcnaut. Services were read; a volley was fired 1n1o the evening dusk, and twenty-nine nameless members of the crew of some unknown German U.boat were lc_-u'ered into their graves 1n Amencan soil, with full military honors 11nd respect, ‘Ihese invaders. at any rate, had reached their goa1—fn death. ‘Ihesg con- querors of the earth had gone out upon their hand, merciless and murderous service, and one corner of the earth whlzli they sought to subjugalc had claimed them. Thev had achieved a. new western limit for that spreading empire of rcath which had left German bones lying 1:1 every soil now from Virginia. to the whentflelds of the Dcn, from the North Care to the Egyptian deserts. And they were buried, as many hundreds of thousands of their fellow countrymen have been buried, among a distinct people whose first bitter thought, even as the formal honors were paid, was a regret that there were not many more of them to fill more graves. These men were doing what 11121‘ c_ould 1o strangle out our life and liberty; they compelled us to hop: that the fuJl fol] was far more than twenty-nine, that. scores more have been buried by our forces 1n the great seas which they infest, that ghousnfxds are bong klllrd 0:1 1111 land fronts. Theirs are the lonely and unregretted graves which 1n- evitalc-ly await the barbarian, 1h: brute conqueror, the architects of aggression and dlsruc-tlon. But that stark fact Ls enough; 1t 1s sp- proprlate to pay them the military honor, as s brief rccognmon that they. also. are victims as svell as authors of the hatred which they have helped loose upon the world. They. too, are o. part. of the im- mense, incalculable waste of all lfv- ing and human values which the vast, vicious folly that t served fIlLS exacted frcm our clvlfzatfion. The rifles crackle and are sfent 1n the darkness; the earth closes over thcm, one small pant. of the neces- sary foundations for s. better ind saner world than this. Prom New York Herald Tribune. Deadly nightshade tbelladonn) Ls being cultivated at new. BstanL cal gardens 1n Surrey to m, 151-1. Lam's manufacturing chemists have the 2 1-2 tons of medicinal herb needed for rheumatic ailments. Kew is sLsorpruwlng colchfcum, sn- other antl- eumatlc herb, from bulbs collect/ed by B: Sccuts 1n the English countrysl e. Once the ‘h Drlvato gardens of England: kings. Kew has also set. out. to show the British housewife what can be clone with the traditional English herbs. D111, fennel, sage, diervfl, marjoram and thyme are some 0f the many herbs now being rovm there. and all of them prowl e st- tractfve flavoring for soups e-nd other wartime dishes. In the midst of its 28B acres, where MIND dif- ferent species of plants from e11 climates flc-urbh as they do st home. Kew has nc/w s regulation ‘ IO-rnd allotment. with gardener 1n attendance to amateur foodgmwers with their problems of raising potatoes, swcdes. pflfafllpfl, ca , ms and other vegotables. - London Exchange. Taxes collected ln the l8 states now total 12 times the taxes col- lected 25 years ago. Wu- oon - tlons and the necessity for saving the country st any cost do not ex- plain this Increase. of taxation began to rise eh ly 1n 1915. That was long before he attack on Peon Harbor. m was even before the world war broke in 1917. It would take volunes, Perhaps to explain this terrific In- crease ln the maintenance cost. of stale gcvernment 1n the 48 oom- monwcalths Even 1f fully esrplatn. ed. It would be difficult to under- stand. Butffyau sretoobrtssy to -§-.UGU§P3._19q nv NEUTRAL swan“ ' LHWI"II>"""""""‘""‘“"’““' " Ni -—--__ _ Professional Gard; "Victory will some to us - only mm mood. wars and I ll TNESE SUMMER SKIN TRDIIBLES? i ("MIQOD , ggphé- Here’ s easy, quick way to joyful relief - "' " "“'-"~ '1 <1 J. s. nnxwuv g q Barristers enIKIAtIurnen.“ u<-~xx>nu¢~>0<--- .c‘§k~w~ . Bard Ho: "$1,323? His Cars _.___________§ (CMlst-lsn '= ‘enoe Monitor) v _ l this a ,1 \ Mauser... “ssh-c — a 51113111‘ m“ "f? ‘"1’ b‘ ""““‘°‘"" susvms 1111111;- MDITDNBM culling" -*T116'1N11E?I$11T§S1iiii'11ii iimpw- Qmhuflftf; you y Romeo an , - “How: Ifpletiwngeiiobmes m" - mggffif-“m D. F. — n “Anddielff i111 engine fit for my ' chukka Menu“ u 900011111113 Two Gentlemen of erons, II '1 1. “You shall see how I bundle 1:1 ." -Messure for Mes-sum, V. I. “To steep bills s-‘egufxes flow pace at first" - Henry II, I, I. I :0 most wicked speed!" — Ham- e , , . “How dost thou know that oon- ~ stable?" - Measure for Measure, II, ‘This Ls 1th Lb .1...“ am?“ u" " = “Which of you 1111611116111 of thll Itpvzyniw-Merry Wives of Windsor, Theirs’ Is A War Role (Halifax Chronicle) 00011510111111)’ one of the soundeat suggestions pops up strangest: source. When T. L. Church, Conservative member for Toronto Broadvfew, suggested than lantern Trllel Rnlldln‘ Charlottetown . _ ALEX W. MATHESON QARRI§AER~ SOLICIT 1 , u"!!! l0 Loan i°m°"l.§£l_9°°1=, g Sh»; M. ALBAN rum; B-A» LLB. MIBBTER. Boucrrou gm Uenedlsn dank o! Commerce Bu. MONEY T0 LOAN. INSECT IITES. Quickly stop she lrchin; of mosquito end msay other insect him wish this grand, medicated cum. TIRED, BURNING FEET Rub in e little soothing Nox- zems before bedtime; before dressing. See how l: relieves burning feet, how soon you feel “beck on your toes" - sgsin. SANDS acclaim the snow-white, medicated ' | ‘HOU cxeumNoxzema, for sh: quick relief if bringsfifryi: protect Your C lolheS much of the Go 1n V b11011. . . work might be mlgdegnogelglum m: as pbovs and for chnfed skin; yvindburn; and other sldu G“ 4 1,, y," bu“ a; Ffom newspagers’ he emphaslud B pomt irritations. See how many dffferpn: yveys it can _help wart at any drug er which as been my w‘; n-eqrmmly yon! It: grearclns-vvou: sod odnng or bed linen. rauvrlirrnunlerlodayl L A R V E x’ MOTH overlooked. That point is 1.111s. The newspapers of this country know more about public opinion and pub- licity problems than any other group or organizations 1n Canada. Public opinion and publicity is their busi- ness. The Government has abeaoy recognized this fact. 1n relation to B A L L S. NAPHTHA- LENE FLAKES DICH- LORICIDE- SAPHEX SAVE! IANGE NQXZEMA now only 98¢ RENT 01m nuscrruc - S A P HEX SPRAYER such matters as Army Week and other national endeavours which re- quire widespread publicity in every home and hamlet in the country. Yet, curiously enough, me news- papers have been largely overlooked 1n the matter of routine publicity. Ottawa. talks of such things as a. “consumers newspaper." and pub- lishes countless thousands of buf- letlns and pamphlets containing reams of statistical material and fwtiual information. But in the vast majority of cases this matter never reaches the eyes of the readers for whom 1t 1s fntended—the great mass of the Canadian oe(._ _e. . Here is where the newspapers come in_ There is hardly a home in Canada which Ls not reached by some daily or weekly. Not only does that newspaper reach the homes of Canada, but what ls more import- ant still, 1t 1s read by the people 1n those homes. Read not only once, but twice. or thrice and sometimes more often still. Mr, Church's suggestion that the work of government publicity he turned over to the newspapers of this country 1s one svhfch shoud not go unheeded by the Minister of National War Services. Publicity is the newspaper's very lifeblood. Pub- llclty-wlde publ1cfty—is essential to the success of the Government's pro ram for total war. _ ejmpllcatlons 11m plain. The master the sublect and digest the details, you 1n1ght entertain your- self with this quesficn, "Is state government. worth 12 times 11s 11111011 10 me us 1t was 25 years 1180?" -- Dally Okichcman, Okla- y. hcma C11 A ROAD SONG Up heart, away heart, never heed the weather. Leave the lowland reaches where the grains fn seed. Take the powerful wind 1n face, all in highest feather. . Lift your burden 111th a shout, fit for every need. Fkont the mountains, cross the passes, Pioneer the sheer crevasses, Where the glaciers breed. Where the imminent avalanches Tremble with their air-held motion Where below the balsam branches Start the rills 1n the 52105101111, Follow where meytle bbpm e oceans. l 5. Where the sunlig Cast away your load Life is not the goal- It is the road. —Duncan Campbell Scott 1n Satur- day Night, .1 1 pHow Are Your Eyes‘ If on ere having 11 Moms of ell-sin — hesdac es. sore 1 we t. At vonr service with veers of experience and e thorough .. retracting service. Oell ln end dlecnse 1on1 difficulties. ti. F. llutchssen t 1i eyes or d cs: — consult 1 I. (l. BUTCHESON G. F. IIUTCHESON EXAMINA TION filling nnd Bllpplyln] Glasses 11. .1. “Anson OFIOMETBIST Montana. P. E. I. Oflloe Bonn: l0 to ll n. M I to I P. M. bv nnoolnlmem Ice Connected with DBUOBTOBI Holldeye etc. 0t newspapers of Canada are already R.A.F.'S LITTLE JOKE performing n vital wa-r role under --i RUISLIP. England —(CP)—Re- the scvercst lmndicans. They 11111 continue to perform that role rfl- sideuts of 1.111s Middlasex town cried gardless of the consequences. But. HpM-achutjsts" when they saw d“- ens of tiny black 0b1ects floating that they could rform it more ef- fectively and eff cfently 1f the Gov- down m)", a cloud cemng o; 3'00‘) feet. The "invaders" turned Out to °1""“°“‘ 111i’? “i11-m ileiifiira; tonal 1m n erpre a we. a ' b 1 f grass, some with earth 112111 "*.:‘:11".1*.:i::11.1r211; 1.11511111811111- ~11 we w» iilnvld lihidir filial); into the waswpll-Del‘ plammm‘ was mm’ m“ my. basket. results which havie not Yst. “I010 17111311118 '1' Placid“ 1° e- been dreamed or Could amos Ce Use M1nard‘s for Dandruff. tafnly be achieved. Wanted For Government War Work At Dttawaand Larger Centres With dependents Experience c1611., 01.11161 $66.60 monthly s 71-91 monthly New Clerks, Grade 2 $99.90 monthly $101.91 monthly Two years teaching, office-clerical experience, or l1111V81511Y_ 9111111101111"- Salories subject to savings deduction for retlrement. Without dependents Candidates residing where local demands are small and who s," not. prepared to serve at Ottawa are not encouraged to take these examinations. There are heavy demands at Ottawa, and at some of the larger centres where War Departments are located. Examination to determine nblllly to do routlnc clerical W011i qualifies for ltmpilfsuy appointment. only. No fee. Candldates must be 16 years or over. Men eligible for military service cannot be appointed. Applications, obtainable at. Post Offices ln larger centres, where detailed posters are displayed, must. be filed with the Civil service Commission, Ottawa, NOT LAT HAN AUGUST l7. I942. for only $1 per day 111 rid your house of months. We have a variety of MOTH BAGS for your choice. BEACH BALLS 19c to 35c. COLGATES TALCUM 2 for 25c. SUN BURN PREPAR- ATION S. SKOL- NOXEMA TAN- GEL NOXZEMA SUN TAN OIL EXTRA SPECIAL ‘Petal Tone Face Powder Petal Tone Toilet Water 69c Reg. 90c value Special --- REDDIN BR-DS. l1. M. DOUCETTI B. M. SMALLMAN AUCTION AT BORDEN Having sold my m 1 wu] “u by Anal-Ion on thZIIaT-emIses OI] , WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 51.11, i Bvlllmlnl at 2 P. M. ' _ A“ m1 5 ' lltl ' "' ef- s1nnoironronnnslnunnnnnnnlsinnu 1.1251. ‘Swans. up [DEC B CANADIAN ARMY c... RECRUITS WANTED C W A C A large number of girls can be accepted for immediate enlistment in the Canadian Women's Army Corps. Ages 18 to 45. Sergeant Taylor of this Corps 1s now at. the Re- cruiting office and can supply full information to all 1n- forested. VETERANS GIIARD of DANADA An opportunity for enlistment in this splendid regi- ment of the Canadian Active Army is now available to all veterans of the war of 1914-1918. Service in France, Eng- land or Canada, qualifies for enlistment. Age up to 50. Catc- gories A. B. or C Sgt. Major Bruce, Sgt. Arsenault and Sgt. McRae are temporarily attached to the Recruiting Station to give special attention to recruits for this unit. GENERAL ENLISTMENTS Recruits are needed for all branches of the Canadian Active Army, and are beig enlisted as usual at. the Recruit- ing Station at the Charlottetown Armouries. MED-IGAL BOARDS Medical Examining Boards for the examination of all recruits meet at the Charlottetown Armourles on MON- DAY and THURSDAY of each week, and at the Summer- slde Armourles on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday in each month. P.E.l. RECRUITING STATION GNARLDTTETDWN ARMDIIRIES illfilfillfillfil ilfillfillfilli Ill-Q. 1 plnno, sowing (Singer new) 4 bedroom suites com- plete. Chesterfield and chairs, severed) r All es snt cooking utensils found tn e well Wills)“ home and e lens qnsnttt ertl es not enumerated. oeeh, If shy ts unfit ssle on Wednesday. August. 12th at same hour. MRS. EDDIE HENNESSEY. HUGH F. MORRISON, Auctioneer. MAX FAGTDR NDLLYWDDD FADE PDWDER Crested by Max Flclnl‘ Holly- wood . . . In correct w!" harmony to blend with lndl- vldnel complexion eolostnli- u your nkln mu dull and lifeless lry llsls powder - see If your slfln doesn't I00 loveller. Price 75041.35. M‘; lifiqlnr Cltllllllll Cream - — — - — - 75° Mu Factor Msltlnl Chill!‘ In Cream - — —- — 31-35 Factor Foundelhfl cram _ __ ,_ _. 150-4135 Mn l-‘lotor D1‘! 5H“ on“, ._ _ _ _ 1110-61-31 '1- rssswonn so “$111611 snoorn snsvss lntl n _'L"'1f"_ ..s."'i§i"'....1 n11 Mennens Skin 31""- Pflo. _ __ _ _ _ — - 6N0 Lu: 51mm; cremLPIQ: Pris __=3.» firs": s": P's-ms’ m‘; 8 "m" Schiller: TIIE TWD MAGS m Greet 082m 11"m¢"°*p‘ sun 0rd wen 3'11...