irwuu- ‘WPAGE rout: C HM! LOTT ETUWN G IIARIILIN strong majority" would be excecdinglv difficult to obtain. And strong majorities are frciptctitly _.T"E CHARLQTTElYQWN GUéRQlAN fhln column In up“ l" 1|" APKll-__5_.,1249 presentation and the transferable vote would j d I " " ~ __ lead to such mcoiicltisive election results that a PUBLIC FORUM Conytza %n n i a’ m BR OOK VILLE A LIME Morning Daily (Founded In I88‘) P I’ luv-tit. LleuL-(‘ol W Chelfer 8. McLnro Vice President. J. R. Burneh. IJJ. Secretary. Licut. Col l). A. llacfllnnuia, 0.8.0. Editor and aizitiaqin Director. J. ll. Burnett. FJJ- i‘ snriale Editor. Frank Walker. SFBSPIFPTION RATES 85.00 per war tin advance) ellver/ k Cltv $4.00 pm .e:n I advance) mailed lo P E Island i.i.uu iu-t \l'CII tin advance) mailed to Canada and U.S .\Il'l'lll'|l‘l'§ Auilif Bureau of Clrculnflonl “The SITOILI/(‘Sl Memory is Weaker than the IVea/cesf Ink." FRIDAY. APRIL 5, I940. lll‘ City 'I'i"uckinci1 ,. . irlctztctttvvn have protested to :1 _ t titqt tlll>l. the introduction of a lii .; -‘ : w,» tltll -lcIi\t-i'_v scrvice iii the City h a o; thc tliiiiidiait Xzttiottal Rail- .' acfYlCfi is the railroads answer to zlte c~nzgt '.ltll'l of trucks which has made trt-tizcu. tics depriving the railroad of a (,i;|\:tl,1'_.li'r’ lttlkldlliléyc‘ of business especially on the ~ out llic service ltas been l'I opt-ration in a number of the larger Canadian " ‘ " s \ 11L‘ llllle. ' (‘\t“.‘\' farmer, fisherman, mer- 1 niztii in the Province has iii of the tmfttir freight rates, on aitcr tlclcgzttion has gone to Ot- ~_t, i-i_~;u¢_l_v~ the tnattcr_ Cheaper trans- vitnl to producers at a distance from the nirii-It-cys and also necessary if we are to fted and titlicr raw materials at reason- w». l hi> Citllllllg of the privately owned nljQl§§ p, o. itgptllltttll with the railroad has been a b ‘it 1 itxiztv of our people. On Prince Ed- ivzii-ti l . dd the rilllWlly has blocked the full use of up and coming competitor through a pt» 31- '1\'<' . ti on our only means of reaching the mzitziliizitl, the car ferry. ilcwcit-r, a tjtiveritnteiir monopoly that goes belt-nil a million dollars a wteek need look care- -,.. ltt- v. .i_~ s. i t liwtti» Li“ a i‘ ‘ \ fully p: own justification for existence be- fore ou~ i; citizens who tip to the present have givcn lt~ :.i sciwiwe at an hottest price. One ‘ting is ct-rhiitt. the truck-titan have never called llltitll the ?ZtX|>.'t_\t't'5 to tiiztke tip their operating deficit. "he rnilrngtl record of high salaries, cation of services, overstaffing, and union . it»; ‘ixtve all ritiictl the operating costs "l whore the iiihtc of its existence is .i ‘ I». \\'li~ n l)l't‘<.~III'C on all sides to re- dt c it. rtivs iitrcctl those in authority to ac- li- ll'l(l to take a. cut-and our trticYtin-i were sclcctctl. l- ~ -‘ < tiicrcliztnts and consumers llt ii h_v the apparent saving is taxpayers tltey are not asked to iht- ainiost certain increase in the ,_ u», t t... 1,. . nciilicr its merchants nor 4 ~o “to niitirtl to rcftise the new service ii (iilllll only be at the cost of further x ',.‘i't*ll\' tli¥crimitiatioi1 with other Can- \' the sztttie time it is unfortunate ' llrll, many of whom are eld- givull their life to this form fit" i"tt' ‘v ll‘ tilv uicti uhi- lrivc ,,|' ..,~\.,~,- ‘int! l\ll<‘\\‘ no other. The younger llll“! zyv he liilvctl into other employment. 'l‘ cotirtttitis l'\‘\‘(‘]\llf)l'l at the hands of Ill‘! C" - ("otuicYIl-irs i< btit a reflection of the sym- pitht; typo. l {pip flflfl rclicf for themselves aittl lt‘:tit~ l.‘llllii(‘~ until sitcli time as they can in Kc iitl"ii~illlt‘lll is iu-tifittblc. l.<'t its not fool ourselves that we Will he any htttt-r i»t'i' fiiiniiciiilly, because if it were a sim- tilt‘ casc- of rczd economic value. C.\'.R. vs Our fliutlviiiru, give its our tritclv-nicn. ‘a A Respite From Elections Tllcrv uill he general agreement with the lttfit-ixtri; r-l-tttrh-tl (‘fillllllfilll from the Cvlubtr an] ‘il.i l. "lite Inlcinil |.'tutl~litlt' in llie lfctlcral gen- erril elrction h l’- givcti rise to talk of an elfiClufiil fttlllC-"l in ,.\l:tniiolta. lt is suggested that when iht- l 1|‘ ..i,-.. mo. are tll‘llli|l';lll7.(‘(l would be an lll't‘llllll fttt‘ l'icniicr Bracken t0 l» widitirt: and stiatch victory and "I~lt‘l‘ lirlll‘ or five years. Premier €l'l\'.llllZt‘J,C of the Federal elec- . . a I'it‘\\' lczt-"c of life in Alberta. He ,~| -, ;, gitmil liiiir- to strike while his op- is \\t‘l.' llt\lllt'tl, ;tiid won powcr for an- ;i-, t-d l» ilirc his cut-mics could reform ~ i wics may lic all vcry u-cll from the ‘t of the politicians, hut they are defin- ‘ll to tlic iiiuii-ntil intcrcst at a time on itiotts >lllllllll be. directed to win- ll z» ~ \‘thiu ilii; pt-oplc of Canada need ~i~ i. ll rttspiit from political war- iuaty get on with the fart: :ti ii= lzl‘ ‘till tlit only thing {cit llliillfl’ Llccliun Anomaly .\'l ;i;i.iit I of tiic l-‘twlc-rail election returns lllillittlt‘ tmt ('\tl\' ldltll-ill lll(‘lllll(‘l‘ of the tiext lion-t‘ tit torii-iittiis \\lil ri-itrcscnt about ll,000, ui.tti:i~ t\il\' ltlll~1l'\'.'fll\'(' iiicitibcr will rc- ll'i‘~<‘lll nit-tin _;_~_o<i<> vittt-s-or three times as lllllll_\' .'i- "vs tippt-uciit. i’\ltl)lll the SiIlIlC propor- tion ziplt-ltttl l‘) tho ‘l:intlslitlc" sweep of the l\I‘l1 5n lti_{_§. i Libt-rtil iitid Ciinscrvative-prill- s lllli‘ iiiiitil-ci" of volcs last week as 4 \llll-\ :tgti_ tltv Liltitiil. took zibout 2.ooo,oo0 i» t‘ iwtit of lllt‘ total. 'l‘he"Cotiscrva- in. .- (‘lllltt wiiii~tl rgotrooo. Yci the Liberals vm" l"t :i-tl l‘ .ii'v f; lWl‘ criit of the seats in iW l’ "t iitt.i.t|.t iii. and all the rust, with 47 i ltltlillldl‘ Hilf‘ licbiiirl tlictii, will lit \'llll of llic sent-l lll tlilii't,lil'llll\' llilll tbc votcrs of ( i: l,‘ tltii‘ l-itllitls zigaittst rl partv lllfl! l‘.‘~ ll"\ llt'i1‘tliltlllf‘l'\ of tlic scat.» in parlia- l-Jlit - cd xiii-mt t ~- l" -~ l~.";\l i-f 7llll-lll“l\' gives rise tti frequent sitpptirlcrs Hf [irtitttirllflllfll repres- cuttfvtii. u‘io (‘Hlllvllll flint the svsfctll of ballot- it-tr in <"-~i.it"i docs not syivc anything like a tru" ltl\"l'l" of liltllllllll‘ opiiiiiin. 1.. int tIim bot-it vtr, it is coiitcltilvtl flint ft) dculop a llilllullill systcln of lIIUpOIllUIIEIl f6- zw w. tf~ l\\ ticeded; decisive tnujoritics, at least. Latest Hun Propaganda ‘The New York TllllCS observes that the first thing to be itotcd of the documents Berlin claims to have found in the archives of the Polish Foreign Office "is thiit they conic from a safchrcaker who asks crctlciice for his ivord to what he found when hc gut the door open- c .’ Reinforcing this impression is the statement of Secretary of State lltill: "I may say most emphatically that neither I nor my associates in the Department of State have cvcr heard of any stich convcrszttiotis as those alleged, nor do we give tlicin the slightest crcdctice. The state- ments alleged have not represented in any way at any time the thought or policy of the Am- erican Government." Denials have come from the American Am- b-“ISFZIUOT f0 POlZIHtl and the l‘olisli ;\llll)ZlS5Il(lOl' to the United States. President Roosevelt's statement is equal to a denial. So why should the Germans take the trouble to issue a \\’hite Paper accusing the United States of fostering ivar in Europe and undgf. taking to assist the Allies, wlieti it was nothing more than the word of a safebreaker against that of responsible authorities whom everybody otttsidc of Germany, and possibly Russia, will believe? @- EDITORIAL NOTES -. Sir Henry Havelock of Cawriporc relief fame, and who clicd as Lucknow was relieved by Sir Colin Campbell, born this date, 1795, n- a m m The list of liquor agents profiting at the ex- pense of the poor unfortunate “sick" of this Province must be a. revelation, if not, a scandal, to many. at ii- i: w- Now it can be told! There ls reason to be- lieve that Prime Minister Mackenzie King nam- ed Mr. Ralston as his probable successor to off- set Conservative propaganda being used among Oratigeinen in l\1r. l\lanion's constituency, that the next Liberal Prime Minister would be l\Ir. Lapointe. As a slick politician Mr. King has yet to find his match. at m it w Says the Montreal Gazette sclf-rightcotisly “the people have ceased to be pitrclinsttble with their owu money when great issues are at stake, they cannot be diverted from a great purpose by means of promises which may or may not be fulfilled and which, in many instances, the peo- ple themselves know to be ttnworthy of fulfil- ment." Poppycock! “People" were purchased by the Government wholesale, not only with pro- mises, but with dollars as well, and if the Gazette doesn't know if, it is about the only newspaper so blissfully ignorant, i ‘I II‘ =1‘ The only child of the new Governor General Lady. May Cflnlbrlclge, is married to Captain Henry Abel Sitiith, of the Royal llorse Guards, who acted as the Earl's i'\.D.C. when he served as Govcriitir-Gcncrtil of the [juion of South Africa, 1923-31. The peerage llis Excellency enjoys is a re-crcatiou in his favour in 1917. The original peerage ivas created in i630 in favour of Liodert dc (iinltcl, a Dutch gciicritl who crossed with \\'illi:ttii lll m Ireland and fought at the Boyttic and in the siege of Linic- rick, after which he was ctinunantlcr in chief in Ireland. Stibseqticully he served as SCCUlld in command under l\larlborotigli_ i! ‘F Ill l The fall rif rates in what is cullctl “frcc sterl- ing" has become a major plicnnniction of the international market. The British fiovcriiuicitt still holds $4 as the official sterling rate. It requires all British expurterg and im,,,,,~1@,-; m deal for their exchange with the Dunk of ling- latttl, at the r>fficial price. '.l'lir- difficulty’ uliicli has arisen is that the “tii.{|itciiiii§_;" of llritisli Government control has removed an ordinarily normal buying demand from the open New Yin-l,- tnarkct, while it has left thr- sollc-i-s, >ll\‘l) its incr- chants or batikcrs of other iiiitioiis, ()l' llritisli noti-rcsitlctits, to continue realizing on sterling" holdings at New York. It is a vcry tiiinntural situation. Something of the sort inviii-iitblv arises when the free flow of intcrnaliriiinl exclitttigc is arbitrarily ititerruptctl. As The Loiitlim licon- omist lately remarked, the uutiffichtl sterling market is not "a stilitcrrauenn ‘black’ market, operations in which had a criminal taint." Tilt‘. fact undoubtedly remains that the British Gov- ernment, in its wartime cxigcticics, is using cvcry endeavor f0 gct (lr:ifts,on the Unite-l Sim“ {m0 its own hands, and is doing its best to promote British export trade, especially to stich markets as South America, n a m =0- If scents Mr. \V. R. Campbell, one of the “$1 a year” men is retiring from the direction of the \‘Var Supply Board, A correspondent re- marks that the public will watch the consequ- ences of the Campbell rcfircmt-tit with kccn iti- tcrcst. Mr. Campbclks Elppoitlllllttflt was, throughout the rccciit electoral campaign, quot- ed vcry freely by (iovcrniitent supporters to in- dicate the (ljovcrmticnfs willingness to rise above petty considerations of political partisanship. It was used as a tnost effective answer to Dr. illflniotfs promise to form a National Govern- ment. including the licst llrnitls of the country. .\lr. Campbell was known to be frcc of political partisanship, and to be n patriot, whose conduct could not be influenced by a-iy political prcs- stlrt‘. The example of his appointment vcry powerfully afft-ctctl l)lIllI_\' who would Qllipiwvistg have dotiltlctl the i'l.<‘»('\('l‘illl'l|l§ of a political |t,'ll‘l_\’ that it \\'il\ no longer tiarti-nn in its at- titude. lii tlii- Cl|'t‘lll|l.~lIlll(‘t'S, tho (i()\,'CI'|I||l(‘|‘,( owcs the public mi iiiiniotlizite stzitcnitriit as to the aptioinfnicnt which will be made to replace i\lr. (‘nnipbcll with another citizen. as (listin- guislictl for lnisiticss coinpt-tcticc and as free of possible stispicimi concerning partisanship. The Conservative electors who Sll[lf)0l'l('(l the we. scnt admiiiistrtititiii 71ft‘ cniitlr-l in fll‘lll'|ll(l grcnf care in the appointment of Mr, Campbglfs suc. CCSSOI’ i 1 Butler prices ln Germany have been increased by eight cents per pound by order of the govern- ment. Possibly the spy department found out that In Ontario we ply that. much tax on gasoline. - Peterborough Examiner. Leavlng nothing better than a bad taste, the controversy over the “walkoutfl at the St. Thomas R.C.A.F‘. training centre has ap- parently been settled. The regret- table thing is that. it flared up at all, to give "Lord Haw-Haw" and other German-propagandists the chance to distort It, into evidence of dissaffection 1n the ranks of Canada's fighting forces. -Wtnd- sor Dally Star. Some people sneer at the "leaf- let raids" on Germany. They say we should drop bombs instead of paper. The Daily Herald replies: the sooner tine German people are enlightened. the sooner the war will end. If one German, doped and deaifezied by Goebbels’ propa- ganda, can be airouseci m mini; for himself. that German ls worth more to us than twenty Germans killed by a bomb. - Dally Herald (London). We all know that In comparison with the available resources o1 the two sides the war in the air has hardly opened. The twenty Ger- man machine; (with at. least three lost) which raided such shipping as they could reach ten days ago are a metre trifle compared wtm the numbers which might have been sent; over; two hundredwotild not have been an excessive figure to have risked. And, indiscrimin- ate as Ls the German attack from the air, no that llghtshzps and un- armed trawlers are ln Just as much peril as ves=els of war, from the enemy point of view these P0105 0TB Wgarded as a very real assault on the security 0f thls country and its supplies. ‘Phat. the assault has up to now been made so sparingly ls one of the present puzzles of this war. -- Manchester Guardian. Walfbanutow has established a flt-le to distinguished recognltzon of the virtues of its inhabitants. It seems that as the result of an 1n- vestlgatton extending to as. many as 3.600 persons, it was found by the local A.R.P. authorities that, only fifteen persons had lost their gas masks. It. ls needless to put the standing question: “Is this a record?" No intelligent observer of the ways of the British pub‘lc outside Walthamsfow, of course, can believe the answer to be ln doubt. It is the inveterate habit o! the Britt’ li public to mlslay or lose extraneous tittnchments, especially 1f they are the common possession of all. The habit has been en- couraged by chscontent ln the case of such n. burden ns the gas-mask case. which IS alyvays edging round to t-lie front or back, as I5 mos; inconvenient. -- Daily Telegraph and Morning Post tLondon). The real objection to the polloy of retrtctton (of land purchases by Jews in Palestine) is based, not, on the letter of the Mandate, but on, fundamental prlilClples or mo British political phzlosopny, 1t i5 against all our cherished concep- tions to deny to any group of subiects Ln a country administered by the British Crown the full status of citizenship In that country. The disastrous history of Ire- land ln the eighteenth cen- fury is a sufficient. warning against. the policy of permanently liinltuig the capacity of followers of a particular religion to acquire land. The Jews in Palestine are not. of course threatened with any comparable degree of disqualifica- tion. Btit the evil principle ls un- deniably present In the regulations, wlilcth consequently, however neces- sary tliey may be B-s a. palliative, are only tolerable as a, temporary expedient. Happily the Govern- ment. memorandum In their sup- port contains an assurance that. they are not. to treated as final and irrevocable. - London Times. The IlItIe fellows often get In the war of the big fellows ln a way that. cntiscs the giants great inconvon cxitre. Wlicn the name "Queen lvlatyv" vras chosen for the supcrlincr llt turned out that a llt- ftle tub not much larger than one of the supc-rlinecs boats was legal- l_v entitled to the niunc. and-now J. P. Marat-in and Company, priv- atc batikers. (touring to incorporate as a trust, company tinder the name “J. P, MOTHER 8a Co. Inc." find a little oil-burner concern in Queens, N.Y., already in possession of the name. - Moncton Trans- cript. Whatever the French may choose to do. there are excellent reasons for not trying to suppress the British Communist party Elections like Sllvertown and Stretford are not the least And tli same thing holds of’ the Fa;- cis s Give them rope. let. them nimpt-nl with all their ability to the electorate: the restllt. is quite sate. I'm publicity value of such de- fe immense. When the ab st figurn ln British Commu- In lshly on all c-lecfioneering aids, ca not rate more than 963 votes lrt a poll of over 15.000, even Mos- c must sit up and take not ce Tle stlll more dcrfscry 151 votes of the Fascist may help to bring h ma to Berlin what a mserable f lowing sir Oswald Mosley can m ter. _ Manchester Guardian. ‘One expedient adopted In the P ris theatre would seem to a g 0d many people to be rather d ubtftilly valuable. Alr Raid Pre- rhtittons in Pans. though not in s.me things so severe Br» those In tits country, will not allow any mtrifevn-v In thmtrw galleries. and sb the Theatre du Paints Royal di- ilectornte, thinking that actors lll be depressed If confronted ‘ght nfter night by empty gal- rlcs. hits had 47 wax ftgures mdc and placed in the front: row. o doubt. it ls to be considered some extent a complimentary rstttrt- to he itieludcd fti the 47t- iir own Prime Mitnlwor is one of fhcm -- but will lit not be found that, the effect of 47 wax figures ‘of people (however celebrated) in- capoble of nnv change of exnreh slon will be fnr more deprcrsslnw in the long rtin than em/"t/ners? Whoever fins liad to do any pub- lzc apeaklng, ln circumstances however modest, must have felt that a neizatlve audience was ‘tr m0"! living than any amrunt of Olmosltlon. To people with n-nv platform lilsflllfilt oppmltion is ienerally at-Lmutatlnl, and If than dluuu lol an“ uuutlon rlntorod-"Tg-‘(glqfi mlrzfkndlzlll-lgn the onlllnn 0| VEIL PARTLY LIFTED $III—NOW that one or our ener- Etta City re resentatlvea In the zlslatitre. . W. tewart. has bv his uestlons hel llft, the vell off the Idden work ps of our hy- gocrltlcal ll uor taw. l ls to e oped that: e will b further ques- tloigs be able to enllg ten the ublic as to the make ll!) of the Af united Offices, which apparently have quite a connection. Who are the Officials of ft, for instance? I am. Sir, etc. CITIZEN Which Way Italy? , (New York Times) Hitler wanted something when he hurried to the Brennor to meet Mussolini, this much we know. Exactly what he wanted, or what response no received. we do not yet know. The only vlslble response l0 far has been a dense smoke-screen of rumors, warnln a and outrlzht. threats of n fa In kind from Berlin. Italy, we read, will stand by with her strong right arm to hold off the Allies, vyhtle Germany gobble: Rumanla ‘a "peaceful" persuasion; Italy will oln the Ber- lln-Moscow partners p; Italy ll ready to incur Vatican displeas- ure while she sldles up to Russia. Everything. it seems ls the subject of noisy discussion -excepf the essentials of Italy's posltlon. These essentials have not chang- ed. as latest, reports from Rmno make clear. In the Balkans Italy's greatest Interest; now, n before, ll the maintenance of the status quo, the nvoldance of war throughout the Balkan Peninsula. Any Ger- man attempt to swallow Rumtmla, even without armed invasions, would run counter to Italys strategic and economic lnterester; for ft would inmterwel heighten the risk of war on the Danube and would lessen Italian influence in one of the few regions of Europa where It still counts for something. Moreover, Italy would not find t as easy to turn an ideonislcnl somersault u Germany dld making peace with Moscow. ' Above all. Italy In In no candl- tlon today to wake WM‘ $01‘ I11!- thlng. Her finances are shaky, her strategic position ls vulnerable In the extreme. It. ls true that the Italian fleet and the army 1n Llbyi could make lnflnlte trouble for the Allie: In the Mediterranean. 8nd would add to the potential dangers of any Allied adventure in the Near East. But. it. ls also true that the Italian coasts remain danger- ously e to the British and French navles, and that the North Italian plain could provide the Allied armies with the battleground which they cannot find along the Rhine. Mussolini knows these things better than some of his ‘voluble Axis friends ln Berlin. Planes For Allies (Christian Science Monitor) Both sound policy and D1151" opinion suppor the agreement of’ the American Army and Navy to permit; Allied purchase of 000 Iat- esf. model airplanes. From the standpoint of develo lug the alr- plane Industry, redllc 8 0°!" V’ the Unlted States Government, and testing military models, this tran- saction presents an unexamplod opportunty. The sudden and slgimtlc eXPIn- slon of the Unlted States alr forces proposed last. year threatened to saddle the Army and navy with I large number of planes built. with- ln a short time-and due to be- come obsolescenf. In a short. time and at the same time. Since Am- erlca does not intend tn go rf-o WM‘ ln the next few months. a setter- spaced plane-building program will be "advn tageous. Unless America contemplates g0- lng to war against Britain and France before the planes now to be sou have becozne out-moded (say one to two V9815). there can be n0 advantage In withholding the beat types of American rocluctlon, par- ticularly when cer aln secrets are being reserved. The 005m" 5d‘ itai-ifages from IariIe-SCBlE fowl" sales, buildlt-uz up the American In- dustry --'whlcli la the ultimate strength of American airplane de- fense -and affordlnfl WPWWMIY for fcstlnv various types 8N 870M and obvious. Moreover, much American opin- lnii must, 1'02"“ “W59 9'0"" 55 destined for defense of Ameflflfln lltlPFPslS and ideals more Gulch?! ma mare surely than lf they wre to go to the American Army and Navy to fade int-o obsolesoeme. "t-"ri those who think the Amerl- can frontier stops at the shore of th~ Atlantic and who Me Chlefly concerned to keen the. country Dull , of war must conskler Whether strenizt-henlnfl the Allies’ air arm is not one of the surest guaranteea of their purpose. people who. at electlcn titres, trv In cmll meef7ln=z= by “beastly be’- lowlmzfi" only knew ft the?’ 0"“!!! worrv the orator: much more ef- fectively by gettlntz front seats and sitting oicm-eeslonless and client from beginning to end. — Manchester Guandlan. _..il" 2w? WHEN APRIL COMES ‘they are st-lmng now; The earth ls restless with secrets It. wants to dlsclose; The why and t/he wherefore and ‘how Of the sap in the stun of the role To the budded tree, And the frflmnt vow of llllcs soon to be. Borders sllll keep the snow: ‘Iliey have made no opening alln, But the small birds know. And the rattle ol’ mall; ls loud On the gardener‘; cart. Tomorrow the startled held 0f n. crocus will show And Btprlng will start, And promlse of leaf and blossom Wlll move and flow Over the wfdth of the world From heart ‘into welt ng heart. Improved It. accordingly. in the In- (Bt. Thomas ‘Iimes-Journal) Tue ma: or an» u. PAM of war ma we sea-ire 01 cunuauanct carious are pit-wince: (IMF-Bu our by naval power! from Mme inane.»- 0mm. Au one (M116 these were put lnho effect. on I, sort. o! "msgiu. l5 taint" nuns, B1141 I "vvnat are you 30mg to no about It" aiitituue ro- ware the wanke power, but mere have been established rules for several hundred years. _ Yet there ll amt l. lot of aura» ment. about. tnelr scope and inter- pretation, even dllflfll this war, perhaps on no stronger ground than that pubnc opinion III tno countries inflected resent: semen and detention of HIGH‘ mainline trade. During the Flt-it Great, War the British Prize Court. Registry dealt with contraband SBIZILQ bu the value of over $100,000.01». On this occasion the Antes begin wtieie they left off In I018, me scope of ounds of seizure bavlng been from the Brookvllle, Balm Spring 1040 and part‘ Will sweeten your Land making it groin Larger and Better Crops. RUY NOW WHILE TIIE PRICE IS LOW $3.00 PER TON BULK. $3.75 PER TON BAGGED. In Car Lola of 30 Tons or more Dellvereil to you‘ nearest lhllway Polnf In P. II. l. Take Delivery Early and lvold the Rush. Order Iodly Brookville Manufacturing Co., Ltd. John Co, N. B. Mrs. H. G, S. Adams, Pres, We also manufacture Burnt Lump Llrne, Mason! Lime, Hydrated Sprly Lime. and Hydrated Land Lime. Prlces furnished upon , eat. 84' gradually enlarged u the war con- tinued, and the rat; of seizure l8 pIODG-DW Larger and more compre- hensive than ever before In n.5- ‘Ilu work of the British and contraband control In Balz- deotilned, ‘or suspected of being destined, to Germany l8 sometimes construed as meaning that the whole object of the con- Lrol ls to starve the German people. This I: fnr from being the cue, and It l: mainly with the object or starving the mwchtnq by prevent- lrig the entry of the necessary raw materials that. the work of the con- tmband control 1s proceeding - Agaan, although the Allied con- trol: have alnce the outbreak of war, intercepted over a 1111111011 m; of goods, this represents but a. fraction oil tho Imports of which Germany has been deprived, and me primary duty of the control is to see that Germany does not. re- ceive necessary lmipoIl-‘I, rat-her than to seize such goods. The cargoes of thousands o! ships Bnmh u well u forelim. have been examined, and an Immense 0118m- lty seized which might be useful to Germany ln many ways. F18‘ urea have not been complied for the flrist quarter of this year, but for the first four mouths 0f the war It bu been estimated that the fibre: approprlamd would have made nearly 50,000,000 sand b588, Ind the hides and skins could have supplied material for 5.000.000 pairs of boots for 021.0 German army. The Bmfah sacrifice! no for ma- P96‘! man way In In link ships and car- goes and pay nothing to anybody. 'I'hl.s Is something that titre neutrals who are kicking against the contra.- band system should A ember. But they seem to reserve their cmtclsm for mo Brltlm my and take no effective action against of her. Prophetic Brenner Pass (Brandon Dally Sun) It Wis won filstiorfc (round that Hitler and Muuollnl met to dis- cuss a "new" wom- Th¢ 379ml" Pass. under various names, Is the lowest, the most easily negotiated of lll the gateways of the Alps- Onlu 4.405 feet above the plains north and south, constitutes me dtvfde between the watersheds of the Black Sea. and the Adriatic. The valleys of the Acllge and the Elsak feed the Po, those of the Inn and the Bill the Danube. Nature was the architect. of the whole position, but her work has been "polished" by human genius through unnounfted centuries. ‘The Etruscan: used the pass ln their development of the amber trade. Drusus. stepson of the Em- peror Atigustus, crossed 1t m 15 8.0.. en route to conquer the bar- barians, Including the Brzbnes of of hls realm among his sons. No_ lea tlhan 06 emperors are reported to have journeyed through fr. bound for Rome between 7.03 and 14m, The Hapsburgers controlled it. from 1363 onward until 1918. For them It was a. portion of fine lne between Vienna and Venice. 'I'l1e.v forest of commerce. A carriage med was opened In 1172. and n railroad, "one of the grandest ‘i iiiiix I rlcroirs SOCIETY MALL "UP 1 We hlVQ just recelved from Hollywood a flul shipment of lull BMW!’ Beauty l-ldl. i Incltulul In the lhlpment are such Item ll I Mu Factor Skin and Tluue Cream. Mu Factor Honeysuckle Cream. mu I-‘nofor Clefllllllg Cram Mu Factor Downer soundn- tlon Lruin lll Natural -- Bunch: — Melli- Mu Factor Face Powder lll the rut-owing names-natural, manuals, nnuieue, Ouvo mu » alum’: Tan. l Mu rector Boole and flux l-‘mwr Llfllnlll- MACS i BLOOD rUOD the Iuell Uprinl Tonlc. A l olllllbllllltllill especially valu- able In the trusmenl. n! mane usual: yuan melt llfllln ll rruub-e to m impuvermneu condition o: the blood. Thule Pills are uud exten- nlvuy n! a general tonlc. will improve me appetite and Im- part strength and tuna Io the , whole system. . emu: PEI: BOX 50 CENTS. MAGS i lMl-lluvliiu CONDITION POWDER FOR HORSES The bent that monpy can buy. PIWCII PER PAC AGE 50c. ln New York Bun. “will Mead ,“rnr 2 macs , I FOR SALE’ Business Building l0 Offered for ule at Public Aucllon on Ihoopeemllu I ‘lb Monday 15th Aprll, 1940, at the hour of Twelve ter Secflona of CAMERON d Street. Charlottetown, l’.E.l., The Enstem and Cen situate on South aide Rlchmon For particulars apply lo IIIGGS d: clock noon, BLUUIL CO-l LTD. cataclysm on the other side o Atlantic, Etirope freezes into Arctic keep the fires llt in the universi- ties and laboratories of America A portion of the review attempts tn shatter the misconception the United Sta scientific leadership. In many fields leadership ln both compitrable. An ,__ poiaonl and wnlc name-your rul in likely alluring, loo. AI llie lint all" 0f kidney trouble lum confidently lo Doddfi Kidney Pills-for over lull a century the favorite kidney remedy. Eny In like. IH Budd's Kidney Pills works of the kind," was oullf 1n 1864-1867. through 30 tunnels and 60 latge and many small bridges in ti: course from Innsbruck ‘to Verona. The latter moves But modern science has not. al- tered the medieval character of the stpot upon which Der _ and I1 Duce met. It still is old de- spite the triumphs of engineerlng. It: saw Henry IV, in a. penltentls robe and barefooted, mlllng to- ward Canossa In 1077, V 1n flight from German There are shadows In e which the war lords might have guessed-shadows of men once as powerful as themselves, now forever. Fuhrer and Charles In 1652. pas: lost N0 Corner On Brains (Halifax Chronicle) The viewpoint. of extreme isola- lltmlsfs In the United Slates is dif- ficult for intelligent peope to un- derstand. There are so many ex- amples on every hand, to prove the Inferdepnedence of world, that one cannot. Germany because they am afraid people sincerely believe that affairs n the modern Imagine Europe are of no concern to the United States. Whether they like It or not, the outcome of the pre- sent war ls of importance to every- body ln the republic. The Rockefeller Foundation has seen the truth of that. principle. Raymond B. Fosdlck, president. of the foundation. has made public a portion of the review of the found- ation's activities of 1939 which re- asserta the Interdependence of Europe and America. to intellec- tual and cultural endeavor. Says the review: If, as a. result. of the present. f the an ' night. we shall not. easily: that tes hnlrls complete contlnents is ln many___ot_hers,_ S[EEROuf_ AWAKE IIEFRESIIEII Bet-uni. l. supposedly 991W m“ If doirlul ml] . for which the place Ls culled. PIO- 4',“ H, "PM", b57913’ ll’ w" lllmulh the “me Ill ed ynnlleunau convenient opening that. the Van- “kmymkidneyl dals Pflured l“ w‘ AD‘ me pasql llyourkidneyaueoul was mentioned by Charlemagne in . 0| "d" m,‘ M," h 808 when he planned the dtvlslnn, dun“ u“ b, leadership is still unquestionably In Europe ~01‘ was untl the outbteak of the war. In mathematics, the English are re-emlnent In analytic number teory; the Russians make Impen- ant contrlbutlmis to topology and probability, the Wench In algebra. The United States have no scient- lts to match the European group 1n enzyme chemistry and the or- ganic chemistry ofnatural pro- ucts. Nowhere ln the world can one approach this Bolndlnlvlan group which ls focusing prec o technl ue o! chemistry and physics on "oro lema of biology. The review has t a to say to those who would discount the lm- portance of Europe: America needs to be humble n» bout this tnestlon of Intellectual leadership. n spite of the anxiety and insecurity abroad during these recent years. of tb» 5L: Nobel priz- es awarded in science-In I939. live went m Europe and one to the Un- lted States. In countless ways we are dependent u Europe for stimulation and aderahl In rela- tlon to many u ments o our ln- tellectual and cu rural nctlvlt . If because of war-exhaus lon or chaos the universities and labora- torles of Europe should be forced to suspend their fundamental activi- -tle.s for even half a d to ni iiiiatieutdbili‘ consequence: o ec ua e of America would be Immediate and disastrous. In those words la one of the many answers to the claims of U. S. Isolatlonlsfk. i HAVE YOU nusn the new, filrfuflous saucy parfumo 7 BOURJOIS This is the name of Bour- jols new line of Toiletries. We have a complete stock on hand and would be pleas- ed to show them to you- Ask for sample. E. A. FDSTER Central Drug Store GETTING READY FOR THE ROAD 2' ARE ALWAYS READY FOR THE ROAD AS FAR AS TOBACCO GOES IF YOU CARRY A SUPPLY 0F THAT ISLAND PRODUCTS IHCKEYS BLACK Twusr lllanufncluretldlly IIIGKEY 8i IIIGIIOLSDN IOBACCO CO. LTD. —_. BEST KNOWN 0F 10c PER FIG STRAIGHT CHARLOTTElOWM