vans. FOUR TliE LIIARLD TTE I OWN GUARDIAN Morning Dally ll-‘oinded Ill llfll fralilcut. ueul. Cur W UIIBIIWI 5- Nil-i" vice President: J. It. Burns“. I-l-l- ggorsury; maul. Uul. U A Mawlslmsnn 0.5.0. £41m mud lllnlllll] nun-cw: J B. BIIIIIOIR FJ-l- Limousin cumin: trunk wuuien sun no A Burnt" SUHSUIHFYIUN NATII fly man iu l'.l..l.. ai-uu yrs year, saw for I out-In 51.21’. lur 3 muums; 50o for one month um uclnury sa.uu pa: year. >100 NI 0 nil-I'll $135 n“ 3 muuuu; we for ono limit By Man [.0 other Provinces and u. s. A. 65-9" P" Ill! B"““M’ “ugh”, ;_,|m ya yo-él’; $1.00 [Ill I Ulllil 5C0 nu 3 mvllllll uuunliuu may b0 obtullllll l! [nuns uquun. new lurk; 0|! u A cur . turner Alilh sail thnhlnltol. zz:iq.:u|hlrcs.ltopiflllallf mm- IINWI- l“! P!" ‘\- lluuiruli J sins. km no; 51., Toronto] howl Haul. UIIILQIII calm... Ullllflll; “MIMI MM Ill-ml- Iillhilw Onn llub Putnam-u lillup, .\ln|| N. U‘: 1n; Uhlflvltclonu Muluhug‘: noun 113M111. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker than ll! Weakest Ink.‘ wi-znxesinx, JULY 8. 1942- Misleading Propflgflflda It will surprise mam" to learn that the I135“? of Nations gocluly in Canada is still in existent; and l5 in fact pycpziring to mzikc a drivo flgomiof ilt mciiilicrsliip. llllll Iii!‘ ll"? Organlza n. student Qroulis iii llili\'i‘r='llle5i Colleges and h1g1; ' - . - . ent issue 0 schools. It one ma; yuilfs? iron‘, a fee k. d 0f the Society's iicws- lmllciiii. this lS thed 1i‘! d ‘ - ' - a . 1 ~ ffo to 0 can1x)gllgilrw\"illcll L-‘HWL? “(flillllid “rCanadian “-i[],(~,lll_ lln- lciiiliiig‘ ziilit L. Unity” COIHISIS chicilv Of excerlns from all‘ , . . I ~ Civi amcle 13-" Iirflnk rain’ Plififhessgr Oeiired in Law i" ‘vchin. I nlvclfn)‘ “F 1C ubligaiiiori and the Forum. a lriikvili" (f C‘ t.‘ g t S ‘he 510st which 1s zis_ziii_ii-l.iiiiil~lli ii_i 15ml im n a rabid isriliiiitiiiist criu k \\'i:l. . y - - - this The “yummcg he,- Pressdtaltes no: Oafs fol- srime article by Prof. Scott an sums it p lows: » . lain Ostensibly the article “as deslflled 9° exp objectively and in sympathctip telrmséhe ‘T955311: rm- the attitude taken by the N° ‘if "d “kmu, bcc; but actually it is advocacy. Bub‘ ° m fife m; 0g the case for a limited contribution to“ Zine to which My; s59“ I5 evidently Came?’ s“ hllxldred per can“ Rnd- “hichdqeie effort is continued a, misc until the who war subordinated to the fulfilling of the PIQCFQ-mm" iéiitregrtizcylehigrfsierving the purpose for which it was written by Mr. Scott and f" ‘Vhichthlt was 5w’: publicity by the Forum. it replaces c e n time violent harangucs 0f Mr. P°Ull°t 9 51 5 empt if pretentious appeals of Georges P91195191‘ by gyverltable masterpiece of haif-truth-t m!" analogies, misleading deductions, skill?! 111119;‘; gnces tending to strengthen real or faric ed gre . and incitement to continued intransigcmy- ML‘ Scott's arnumeiit has become the "case" for those who are icsesistiiiv the passage 0f "is leflslalw“ before Parliuniennt; it has been ropllblhshed m m’ French newspapers? 1i has been “med a‘ ‘ pamphlet; and it is being continually warmed over in the editorial columns of the neWsPfll-TQ" and in the columns of Himfiflfd- As an example of the mischievous nature of Prof. Scott's arguments the Free PressBcites hi: bracketing of Quebec ivith liidiaand ufmfl _ the elucidating of hi5 thesis that it is natural. 1f indccd not proper, for “non-British Peolfles" to resent “British rule." The fact that illfi PEOPIe of Quebec have had self-govcfflmfllt 501' a Cen‘ tury is brazenly ignored. ,, _ _ According to the League of Nations Society bulletin, PiOf. Scott ls "one of the best qua"- {led of Anglo-Saxon observers," and his VIEWS are quoted approviiigly. One wonders liow many supporters of the Society_arc auiarc that its funds are being spent to give publicity to such propaganda. ' remap,’ m" all it i, just s, well that our federal representatives are not too often on their feet in the I-iousc of Commons. Dr. Grant! performance in the budget debfltd 011 lull’ zfi though it had its good moments, is the 50ft“? thing that would easily stale by rfiPfitlllofl; e best part of his speech was the fimlihasls h‘ placed on Prince Edward Island's contribulwfl to the war, both in means and manpower. {ind his repudiation of the idea that Patnotfsm calls only roi- greater wsr P'°d“°“°“' “Th; is not so," said Dr. Grant. "Our farm"! src not producing for patriotic reasons alone. because they are receiving as E005 PTIC" a‘ the ever received at any time between 1920 an i930. They are sending their S0n_S_0V¢l_'f@35 for patriotic reasons, and that ‘is sufllcltflt- _ Dr. Grant said he agreed Wlfll the budget m principle, but did not think the people arc taxed equitably. “For example," he said, take _a mar- ried man Will] four of a. family in instlwt10l15 of learning. Three are over twenty-one, and h: I. is exempted only for the one under twenty-one. This family cost that man a great deal of money. but he has no exemption iii regard to three of them." May not the reason be that there is a war on? Surely a man who can afford to keep three sons (over twcnt_v-0ne) in institution; of learning in wnriiinv, can afford to pay stiff gqxcs 1o ciijl: other men's sons to fight for him. _ The King Government has long been 565M115 an alibi for its frlilurc to provide adequate trans- portation l0 lhjs Province since the loss of i116 (‘/;g;-In//.~/n;.~ii_ ])r_ (irzmi came forward oblig- fiigly with a post-war iiiimcl proposal (the same proposal which ilic Sirriis Commission-a King (iovernmciii Cl'f‘i'llifill——fl(‘i‘lfll'f(l to be impracti- cable because of ilic "enormous cost" involved.) In iiiiroiliiciiig ilic llilli1l‘l proposal. Dr. Grant made an urif~riiiiinii~ filfiiPlllClll. “I am not go- ing," 11¢ said, “in follow tlic argument used by tiie IPFUICI‘ of the (lpposiiinii. I do not suggest ilint we should immcilizitrly build a great car ft'ri'_v cmliiig perhaps $5,000,000, equal i0 tllf? one ilini \\'.'l~' lit-l." \\‘li:ii iliil lllll‘ Kiiiigk ("niiiilv member 1110-111 l)\' ilint? 'l‘lii~ ‘Yirgiiiiii-iii il<f'4l liv Ilie lender of (he ()ppn.~;ll.,n" \-,-;i< llli‘ ‘IilllP argument which niemliri-s of lli.- limii-lii-ll lifl\‘f'i'lllll(‘ill profess ii» llIl\'(' ii-iwl on lii"ii‘ irip< ln (liiawn; the unic arciiiiiciii which \\"i< un-il in Board of Iirnili‘ ‘ ' King (iU\'Cl'lllllCll{ and to ,....:.;.... . M" bccn nine King personally; namely, the urgent necessity of replacing the S. S. Charlottetown as a_ WM measure, Mr. Hanson used this argument in the House, not because he had any obligation to d0 so, but out of the kindness of his heart, seeing that we had a. strong case, that we were getting no attention and that our own elected represen- tatives were too tongue-tied to speak. Now Dr. Grant breaks his long silence to throw discredit on the idea that we are entitled to a new ferry at this time-“a great ferry costing perhaps 35w ooo,ooo, equal to the One that was lost." Could downright misrepresentation of our claims g0 any farther? Dr. Grant knows that the S. S. Charlottetown did not cost five million dollars or any-thing like it. Yet he spreads this misstate- ment on Hansard, and leaves it in the minds of the taxpayers throughout Canada-and for what reason? Simply to discredit Mr. Hanson, and the claims which he advocated on our be- half. Dr. Grant lardcd his speech with fulsoiue compliments to his party lcader.—even citing. as an example of Mr. King's hold on the "cori- fidence of the people," the returns in the recent manpower plebiscite, What follows is from HZHlSflfdZ 1m. GRAYDONZ “The do with confidence." ma. GRANT: “Had it been a ‘no’ vote, the hon. member would have said it was no confidence.” ma. iiimsou: “Have another glass of ivater!" It would be to gild the lily to add anythng to this by way of commentary. N0 More "War Debts" plebiscite had nothing to There is unlikely to be any dispute over allied nations’ war debts to the U. S. after this war. if the sentiments expressed by Assistant Stare Secretary Dean Ascheson may be taken as of- ficial. The leiid-lease aid which Americans are giving towards the common cause, said Dean Acheson in an address at the Institute 0f Piib- lic Affairs at the University of Virginia, will no doubt be greater than th; aid they receive, because American resources are greater and the drain upon them has been less. But, he asked, “Do you wish an accounting of benefits given and received on the theory that they represent mutual debts, to be computed in dollars, and set off against each other to measure a balance owed in money? Do you wish to set on one side the value of a tank, its guns and ammuni- tion, and on the other side an appraisal of those who died in it under a. desert sun? What is the equation between the planes sent to Russia and those figures in the snow before Leningrad and Moscow?" “Americans," said Dean Acheson, “do not want that sort of accounting, or even to think about it very much." Thinking about it, however, docs no harm. It may prove to be a very salutary reflection. And not for our American neighbors alone, but for all who imagine that we can escape equality of sacrifice in this titanic struggle, and collect “war debts" m boot, — EDITORIAL NOTES- c“ joseph Chamberlain, form and Imperial fiscal 1836. champion of tariff re- union, born this date ##1## This is a sampleiof the ivorking of our demo- "My. Mf- G- Davidson, Liberal member for ‘Standstcad, who W35 unseated on the ground of irregularities at the election has appealed to the Privy Council in London. \Vhocver wills will be ‘hugely out of pocket as the result of the litiga- ion. o u a m An American merchant doing business in Nassau on a very small scale has been arrested on an arson charge of causing a fire loss of $2,- 000,000 when his own stock was insured for only $13,350. He had the satisfaction of having H. R. H. Duke of \Vinds0r as s, fireman and his Duchess as a Salvage operator, w: a n: s A story is going around Ottawa to the effect that when the embargo went into effect On the sales of tires somc dealers had their licenses sus- Pfndfil for Supplying a provincial Premier and his Minister of Public Works for departmental Purlmses. The dealers have been inquiring at Ottawa why they should be madc to suffgf through obeying pyoviinciil authorities. _It take; money to instil moral uplift into the aircraft industry according to a relilfn laid over in the House of Commons. Mr. E, G, Hii-sr, T°f°fli° Prim". recsived $5.197 cash from the Government, $7,682 for four individual letters "W Pl". $I.527 for an illustrated booklet In addition ‘ there _was $5,450 for reprint of a geographical article, $1.500 for purchase of magazines, $15527 for Victory pledges and $2,- 000 for trophies. Aircraft companies donated $7.500 to the moral upbuilding fund ivhich wag l0 be returned to them On their contracts. 4- a- :- n- a a. serious war problem in the ‘hmag? °f Pfvlfifl trained nurses. An urgent appeal is being ma e for more trainees, as wcii as for former nurses to resume their occupa- tion._This problem will be discussed at a public meeting to be held in the Cundal Home at 3 p. m. tomorrow, the speaker being Miss Karl-dun W. Ellis, Ottawa, emergency nursing advisor of the Canadian Nurses Association. Shc will address a similar meeting in Summcrside on Friday. It is to be hoped that the attendance _will be large and representative, as thc mattgr is one of real public importance. m w m n- Canacla is facing Automobiles in South Africa are using as a substitute for gasoline which is rationed “pro-. ducer gas" made from wood charcoal. On a recent "round the Union" tour of the steel commando, C. Weinbren of Johannesburg travelled 3.500 niilesnn the new fuel. Supplies of charcoal were picked up ntvarious pninlS along the route. Charcoal gas producers are now being made in jnliriimcslmrg fnr commercial vehicles, farming null prirnie use. li is r-siimaicrl fifty pcr cantor more can lie iavcd m1 fuel crisis. A man who llTllYf‘ from _llllilllill."rlilll‘fl in Iliirlirin in ll 1-2 hours rii n (‘list nf ilirco fllllllll"; for fuel said ilini if lic hml usvil gasoline lhc Cost would have dollars. Tnigcgiiaizcorreroivw GUARDIAN NOTES BY TIIE WAY We can trace - u W-nslon Cnuichiu traced it uh.“ u.- JPCKC to Congrtss (Ll: u.s gli oi Prevalence throughout ms war. m mo ruenm ieyxtiou 0t offer in ms 110-611(21)’ oi Pearl Harbor, in the dscmhaiiou of war 0:1 the united Bates oy uamany and Italy. ihese llmngs brought AIIIGHCB. t0 our six, ri.t wilu ine contioversles Whifit] s.ill Glalwpllfiid me parico of iue IJEaS-‘lmifld Act. but with the, wnclenearted acne:- enoe of ans-incl gear. cower threatened by uie same enemies. ‘Ine most far-signed laeaiis-s, here and m America, could n.t have imagned that their dxsms wound so soon come true. 1i we are a.l determined 0:1 bah s.d='s oi Atlantic - as w.- a.e - io y firmly the foundations of peace and to rebuild the world on equiuty of opportunity all: a square d.a , soc- ial and ecohcmlc, for all clscent c_ilzens in this n.w uurlo, t-.:.n we must do it t¢s€.h.r. 1~Lw me J00 gets done is mum i._s .mp..i.ant man mat it. shown oe done. C-early we must retain, cat-u o. us, the es- sence ct our C-ILLILUIALI] and our own indiviaualiiyi. pill, iii one form or lflfltkkl‘, we must pOJI our re- sJLCES and lederat: our lives. sunaay Express KLODuLII). There's a steady, purring hum over the fields and not. the insistent, cir nun-flying plans anuhg cloud-banked nlguways u! the skies. fllanulhr a,:coin_.a;ii- hail of tue b:g WDLCS. Its the sectlC-n of m; gflfdJl sym- phony, me ricn undenone fcr U16 composite OYLUQStIBLIOII of ulizmai crpues, p.onlee, and Jusss. It's ow-pltched, iesJul mum in the field, of red time: and in me daisy-dotted meadows. One item's" the gentle song in Upland no.6: and oouider-studced piutures as the honey gatneiers go uier per- sistent way among iiie blossoming grasses. This is iue 56.5011 oi Lh: bees. FJOXH dawn uli.i. S-LISGL LLB)’ are busy at tueir appoizrecl tasks. They make music duling sunny hours as they stoze up fccd for the tine of winter and pZlIllflIB man's fruits and flowers. Amid souncs of a glimmer nature, their friendly hum brings a Ci’l€l‘l'ill2 mesage. Cnlusiiaii S: ence Monitor. Trying to keep one jump ahead of the palpable dcmagogy of the 0.0.5‘ program, Hon. Ian Mac- kenzie has come out for the con- scription cif wealth. VHIILUS 0.0.5‘. speakers have at 1e st tiizd on cc- caslon iolindicate wiiat they mean Ry conscription of wealth. Mr. aokenzic was less deflnte. He himself with a vague and contented meaningess phrase "Mzs hLvous equivocatlon" The Vancouver Prov- ince calls his remarks. “Bunk" is tho most succinct designation of The Evening Telegram, Tortnio. And ‘Ihc Ottawa. Journal puts the facts clearly when it adds: "Most of this talk abziit “conscription of wealth’ is loose, muddled talk. The government ls already con- scriptlng wealth. Coiiscrptirg it with a vengence." That is a fair gomtmentary. - Toronto Financial 0s . ._____ Sir Stafford Cripps and all other new world mongers may be assured that there is no wlck:d cap-Ii-alist so hard of face or c-f heait and no business entrepeiieur so bind the light of the motherhood of man that he desires for the pIople unemployment, bad houses, lil- health or any other of the plagues which afflict an iirdu tial nation packed like sardines in tcsvns azid cities over a. smail ifand. They m8)’ also be assured that when they offer their specifications for brave worlds Wlbiifiilt saying from whence are to c:me tile bricrs and the mortar i0 build it, and the food to feed these who build, thcy are SIOHIIB‘ u‘) for l/"l(‘l\‘5 l rs ilie eventual wrath of a cheated m of dupes if it poves ma, ihe cuter worlds conception of a new world is a hunci competitxe mart from which Britain ard British goods and services are —'I‘:,ruil1 iLonclon). Japan proper consumrs in normal times aipproxisnately 90,000 tons of rice s day. About half of [he um requlremmt is grown home. ‘Ihe rest in recm: years, has come from Formosa and Korea. If reduction in these derendcncles lned, famine wis threatened in TOKIO. The danger oi’ stzck xocd shortage has bxn o (.1 thc arguments which the Bock Dragon milltarists have used with effect in dealing with their prcliisrlc o p051- tion at the ccuri. of the Mikado. Gross gains for Jaran in te ms of rioe thus far rspcrt d in less than four months of cam/pa galrg in- clude. The Phllipginc Islands, 1,- 30),000 tons: the Dutch East Iri- dies, 3,220,000 tcns anzi B itksh India, an undertermired quantity. Rangoon capital cf Bixrira, was the world's leadng lice pcrt b2- forie the ouibreak ol ho-ltl tes what extent its famors elcvawrs were wrecked is problzmatcal. No doubt. however, as to the richness of surrounding teiritcry risw 1n the hands of Japanese armies. - Washington Star. -_____ Most any man can be an editor. All an editor has to do 1s to sit at s desk six days s week, [our weeks to a month and twelve months a year and edit such stuff as this: "Mrs. Jcnes of Cactus Creek let a can-cipmer slip last week and cut. herself in the paniry ...John Doe climiird on lhe rnof of his house last we;k, lookng for a leak, and fell, landing on his M03 mrch...whilc Haold Green was escorting Miss violet Wise from the church social last sunday night, asavagc dog attacked them and bit Mr. Green on the pubic sqrare... Jim Hank, while hamessing a broncho last Saturday, was kicked just south of his oornc lb " Vifhitevills, N. 0., News-Reporter. m what ls sum-J to b: m. first roorgcuiiorlgrpf its‘ kind lundsr die a fme cos c, BT71! C1- liirmbiu. Box Litd. Vlan-izouver pa °d some test models, but - working on the problem. E tional wiiieLabzir Bar . R"b:ri. Fbigie, department cf Labor in- IPQCW the ccmpany The increases averaged 7 i an hour. About 150 emp oyres were concerned. C. . M~rtln on. secretary of the B C. R‘g'onal Wai- Labor Bcard rad itie firm had made applicrtion fcr namin- sion to raise wagrs but ths had not. been grantsd. AIYIICW P Hirvey. manaafw-rlrcewr cf tn~ rrmpany. stiied he hiifl QWVYCJIZCTI the wage increase: nrtr s gnu-a of mrre than 40 rmnloyws licd mid him that they must have more money. to be frcnen out. 1,, ' the new bee from the WORDS OF CHALLENGE ' wanted B01 II remodelung out hi: that nobody ville lot started on the hog. They now dues a perks: with the weight rnnsferred to bacon and hams- plus a few other innovations. The were turning! .. MSIIIC is "All of us must. now this I minute. associate ourselves with an all out war effort and - there must be no slackening- —E. H. Banks. Press Repres- entative of the Canadian Pacific Railway. _ breed in the world, but weak back. weak fest, and l. white u plexion which would be sub- liect to sunburn in most hog-rais- ng areas. Beltsviiio began to Danish hogs to American strains. "Now. after several gen- ‘ erations, the main characteristics Improving Nature (After Tooinbs in the American Magazine. At the Department of_ Aflrlclll" turefls Research Centre in Beltsviile, Maryland, hens lay colored B885 and apples defy the law p! 811N151’- ThGPQ are hugs that wont. sunburn and bees with betwi- dispositions. New ty of birds, beasts and W85 are buit to order. In this WORM!‘- land of agriculture, scientists are remodelling nature to meet mod- ern needs. Beitsvlile can turn out just about any kind of plant 0r animal you can dream of -such thlnss as fuzz- gree peaches, tearless onions, a family-size watermelon. Apple growers have always been up against a, dilemma; it the fruit is allowed to ripen well. much 0f it drops; if it is picked earlier. it isn't attractively colored. Poorly colored apples bring a poor price, but fiallen apples aren't salesable a Beltsville scientists. seeking a. method of making the leaves stick longer on Christmas holly wreaths. found a hormone mixture helpful. So the apple men at Beltsvllle be- gan earperixrienting with plant hor- 11101185, They discovered that a. mixture of only hair a teaspoonful of hormones to 100 Gallons 0f water, sprayed on apple trees just as the fruit is ready to drop, will keep it on branches for another two weeks. Thus growers could pick the apples when they had achieved lust the proper rosy color- Ii the treatment is repeated at regular intervals, the apples will never fall . One tree at Belisvilie had fruit hanging from its limbs in January. O O O O some years ago tomato lants were being wiped out by a. light known as tomato rust, Beltsvilie began to experiment. and after rais- lng thousands of plants it came through with a new model that aid no attention to blight. Then a orig came a new disease, known as wilt, which attacked the new plant. Growers sent out another SOS. About this time someone remem- bered a funny little wild tomato that grew in Peru. 1t wasn't edible and the fruit had a thick crop of whiskers, but it had deflid all dis- ease for hundreds of years. Tho Beltsville men began crossbreeding and tlnallv succeeded in growing a big, smooth-shaven tomato on the Peruvian disease-resistant stock. But it. was necessary to turn out 40,000 different crosses before they got what they wanted. After years of crossing and re- crossing, Beltsville turned out a streamlined turkey. nearly all white meat, designed for small to families and modern refrigerators. It can fix up a. chicken with almost all white meat, or all dark. It also produces a fowl with big drumsticks. During nutrition experiments it was discovered that certain foods and dyes produced colored eggs. It was also found that other quali- ties in eggs could be developed for special purposes. For instance. there are chickens which lay eggs with whites especially suitable for poaching , O O O O One problem ivhich vexes oultry breeders is the early separa. ion of baby chicks by sex, so they can con- centrate on the hens-to-be. Belts- ville has been working on this. try- g to get nn arrangement whereby nll male chicks will be hatched ivith an identifying mark. They've BIPQBCIy bred a. line whose male chicks all have a black stripe, and it looks as if the trouble is licked. ‘There's a kind of college course for canines. This experiment has two objectives -to produce a. bet- ter farm dog that can do chores around the place, and to deter- mine whether special abilities and traits 0f character mitted with certainty generation to another. The dog experiment with four types of dogs: Pulls, a talented Hungarian sheep dog: Border Collies and German She - herds, chosen for their inte - gence, aggressiveness and sheep- h~rding ability; and Chows. which had no record as shepherds. but were stable and smart. Pure-bred young doss of each type were given extensive tests. When acterlstics of each dog established, the wori; or crossbreed- ing began. Would a pup born of a Pull-Chow union have the Fall's shecphcrding ability and the Chow‘ stability? Ada was one of the dogs born of this seccnd generation. Her mother was a German Shepherd --a former - Seeing-Eye dog; hei- fathcr was a Pull. She was bright but not much of a shepherd. ‘rhen she was mated to a pa Pull, an nce amon the sheepherders. when the pups rom this union had com- pleted their final exams, it was found that four of tho nine had Ada's extraordinary intelligence, and the other five also stood near the head of the class. more significant, they handy at herding shee can produce another generation of prodigies. Beiisvilie will be well on way toward breeding s, super sheep dog. from one started O O O O " ekeepers recently demanded a new model with a longer pro- boscis, t0 dig into the bis flowers and let more nectar. Beitsvllle men have turned out they're still Thev know what they want -s bee with a gentle disposition, a lovc of home, storage to fly in cold wea- ther. extra storage space for honey, and some dlstingui g character- istlcs-llks stars on the wings -- that will make it possillzils to tell o Séekiflg a strain cf Knralrul sheep which will flourish in this country, Bcltsville has worked out a for- mula of three-quarters Ksrakul and one-quarter native sheep. 1f mo ex- periment is successful the Ameri- can farmer will have another source or income and American women will got cheaper Persian lamb eonis. A few years ago when vegetable 0H5 began to replace lard. and farmers realized that their pigs of the new h have been pretty blishe -u. strong, arched back, laden with pork chops and hoasis. and the Landracets long, streamlined body and thick legs that are heavy with bacon and hams. The new hog will be red- oblO to stand the summer sun of Kansas or Florida. They've even tested the temper- ament of the new pig. Nervous hogs don't get fat as £1,183! should. -'=" EXAMINA I IUN Fitting and Supplying Glasses ii. J. iiiiisoii OPTOMETRIST Montague. P E. l. Office flours: l0 to l2 n. M 8 to 5 P. M. llollda etc. 0y nppolntmeni 0f co Connected with DRUGBTOBE — Auction Sale __..__ Inventory of the property of the Into Alex. Ross of Wheatley River. P. E I on Saturday, July 11th, at 2 P. M. Farms-about 50 acres. Builmugs - dwelling house, 2 barns, one shed, one wagon house. - hinery and tools-l truck wagon, l driving sleigh, 2 ladders, l hay fork and r0 , 1 set spring tooth has-rows, 1 mow , machine, 1 wood sleigh, 1 set spike barrows-S sec- tions, 1 seeder, 1 roller, 1 disc hor- rows, 3 forks and a shovel. Live Stock, eta-l milk cow, I two yea-r old heifer two two year olds, nine old hens. C cwt. hay. Home Furnishings, ctc.-l kitchen range, kitchen clock, kitchen table and covering, 3 lamps, 1 spool rack. 1 kitchen dresser, 1 .bed kettle, 2 kitchen curtains, 1 set. scales 6 glasses. 8 Little kitchen utensils, blanket. 2 quilts, 2 lkets, 1 door curtain, 2 little tables, 1 bed, spring and mattress. 3 linoleum squares, 4 little linol- euin mats, 4 window curtains and~ blinds, 1 chest of drawers and mir-‘ row, 1 commode set, 8 window screens, 8 kitchen chairs. 1 llttlu bench, 1 lounge, 2 pillows, l wash tub and wash board, l lantern l crram separator, 1 frying pan and l bucket. Terms made known at Sale. ALEX MacDQE, Auctioneer. 7-8-31 . U NOTICE - The annual meeting of the Masonic Temple Company will be held in the office of E. R. Brow & Son, 144 Rich- mond SL, on Wednesday the 8th day of July proxlmo, at 10 o’clock a. m. J. B. BROW, Secretary. Charlottetown, P. E. I. June 25th, 1942. s-w F‘ M "n July s _ . IqpDuQfl m rcgulati valued at $15 or more. person who buys delivery after poses of the order. THE DEPARTMENT 0F MUNITIONS AND UPPLY S Honourable C. D. How's NEW PRIORITIES REGULATION will Affect Every Industry a ' io 1m. s new Priority mvhflw will b» o“ my ' 0mm m every Canadian industry Untm" n m businesses. ow moaitiea it seen to P111611" on whi Ohio!‘ the 512319;: uilicor, Députmem. of Munitions and guppiy, estaolisnel l system known as the tion uiassmcatiopls System. 0am o’ comm es purchaser o! Io or other than a reta-iler or if a re imssif st ones with the 199m fate symbols. must indicate the correct Iymbfi “’ fiaftlilfitflta, (s) All purchase orders or contru reg less of the date 0s i for delivery after y 31. 194 . chaser who has l den or contracts plsoed ' and tha end of July. 1942. advise his supplier of the apnropriaw symbols. u. "'t"'i"°' ‘mtstillniittmlfiii... er us nesm fildllfllfY. shall not. be deemed retailers I; B1113’! billiflfiglll is in on r filsilslil; busiiigsa shoilildlbbtain correct information from the nearest Prioritzes Street West. Toronto; 604 Marina Building, Van- couver; or ‘I02 Dennis Building. Halifax, or from the Priorities Officer. Department of Munitions and Stliphly. Ottawa. 009168 0f be ob ned from the same sources. ch in No, 1 of Alloca- Under its terms every any kind must acquaint “HOD He OB 3— ard- call Dill“ order for before the laoement w ch A paced on t. date must. warehouses, and functions for for the pur- ioubt as to how it should what symbols it should office at 34 Adelaide the rstillstion may Minister Queen's Canadian Fund Correspondent Reports 0n British Air Raid Til? Added Protection To Be Given Td Historic Buildings. air raid cas nited total of This hen "reprisal" raiding by the sted as killed include m unspecified number who are miss- ing and believed to be dead. They number 359 men. 448 women and 2 children-and i1 whose bodies were so mutilated they could not be classified, Five hundred men vysre injured and detained in hosplta . 41B women and 78 children. Civilian casualties from June, 1940. to A£riL 942. wen 44.401 killed and 55 1 injured. The Queen's Fun reports also that the Lord Mayor's new Empire Air Raid Distress Fund Proiessional Cards “COMPLETE McLEODnS-‘B NTLEY w r. vacuum. K. o. J. A. BENTLEY L a Banister: and AlWfIIlYI-Il" Low MONEY ‘I'D LOAN l“ Prince Its-m INSURANCE I SER VIC ” W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Phone 540-541 Morrolland Company ll. F. IRCIIIBALC Chartered Accountants lantern Trust Building C‘ lotMloII ALEX W. MATHESON lmaxnrrltll. souclwgogl. no m ooflosl 01:2: O0 (Inn (hurls linol- M. ALIAN FARMD IA. IL-l- BAIIIITII, IOLIQTIDI I10. obnulhn flank sf-Oonnnm II; NONI! T0 (DAN. E. R. Brow & Son FirefAato, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside. Lloyd Lewis 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown Kinsdo din-i A l 938 kiligd andngiis irlolunded. Q toll results from the d correspondent . now amounts to nearly i800, his money may be used in - United Kin dom or anywhere e in the Brit h Commonwealth, =- ueents Fund remittances to ~- on are sent to this Empire!- 1t receives support. according the last list of contributions. fr glyph varied te efforts by fire watchers that - fabric of Canterbuig Cathedral ~- saved when the erman air were making concerted attacks -~ Meanwhile laugh. The it the following illuminating remai- mad’; by one woman in a bus ~ ano s "Bo I said to him: ‘Tom Th5 the second direct on the block i ten minutes. y don't you co here in the shelter with me?’ for was under the stairs. And then i third cams and the roof fell - And you know my. husband w never one to use d language- dossn’t op vo of swearing-b my dear. heard him say. ‘i damn them?" ew State Summer Toilet Specials Deny‘ lflnllottlsPtslTno nu a: rouom arm's» liar Denny's Fun Powder. :3: Qg___—---- I) t8 i B mldoll I-lrlfl .6375: at Cold. Cream. 11-" volufor--——-——‘9° J Intlon m! ‘if’. $2 a“ 31w- r-c- r“- dor, 41o for the two. Inning in Purl: Face P0111"- Llpotlo and Milli. “his: I?“ 01h of Ouhmsro Boll- Cmmssnnplziélnelt" :61?“ 12;‘, dsrfor—--,——"”" IILIIVI SUNBUBN ‘nit m um m o e 0mm 8W‘ gm I Given PM“ the British can -i i sman repo ‘