ti: 81.! _ n: I s. ; I 1 g} . . . iii‘ if. 1.‘ I 11.1 ‘, l r v . l‘ : _ . i; .1 .3. .;. I“ i l . ' ' . i vi .-' ; ' g . s" i I . :. f: h l‘ . g . i . - ‘ . I l I 4 ’ l t ; ~ t i l$ t,- u’ § u} . i", i ll l d: t ‘ l y’ i i . ti - 4,, . . -_- - l; '. i: ~. . s, t 1 :5 1 I: Z q = . . i 1 I’ T , l: Iflnhl- ‘J- - - a I {air-v 1155.15 1'91"‘ IllE GIIILITTETOWII Gllllllll oar-H. are the metals mined; Iorllln] Dill) (Idlllrled In 1K1) . ‘ ant. Lieut- Ccl- W. Chester K MGLIIII Vloo-Pnsldeut: .l. B. But-nail. FJJ. Scent-dry: Lleut. 00L D. A. MloKlnnou. 0-3-0- ldllor and Mun Dirac Burnett, B.U.N.V.R. (On Aollvn Sea-vial ‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker Tlfl the Weakest Ills.‘ SATURDAY. JUNE l1. 1944 Liberal Debacle In $askalchewan The election rvstits iu Saskatchewan cannot fail to have l'Cj1Cl'\‘tl~5i-\llv at Ottawa. ludced. judging by the compla 1's of stich leading l_-il.i— eral papers as‘ the “iinnipcg Free Press and the l\‘<‘ginzt lafflllUf-lbffl. federal matters were made the chief i-stn- m the czunpaigu. lloth papers prott-stl-d slftlllgil’ against (“Lilf candi- dates capitaliziw- on fcdcral grievances, and also against thr i ~ lt’.lll‘.l>('l' of “outsidt-rs" lak- int; part. claiming ziti- t-icctiou “as of purely (llnncsiit- concert: l the [izlhny days of the King ti-nt-rnttvn: the ' .- “(l4 tlllllk‘ different. Liabiuct ruin from Ottawa in carluuds t» : il .c in provincial contests, t0 dangle ht pilflllligs‘ llllllllw before lh-s voters and dt-u i . l arrive n-trpltv tItt- atltanz; of keeping pi'il\'lllt'lt.l rt-‘l . - gnvcrititiruts "in lilte." Lindcr the -r l iii llon. _l.ti. liardiilcr. lfetlerzll .\lnt'.-t‘t' of .\Ql'i“lilli‘\’. this policv worked l‘l\t' rt {farm lTl .\"t.~k:tlcltc\v:tll until Tihttrsdlfl dt-lllaclr. which -:tt\' the Pmtersv-ti llovcrtuucll sucitt rill office ztftvi nut: years and the CCF pa under .\lr. T. (i. llotiglas returned with a large overall titajority". Ever sine: Saskatchewan was created ' in I905 it had been a Liberal stronghold with the exception of the years 19291.4. There is no doubt, therefore, tint: despite Liberal talk about the issues being purely provincial the Kitig (inv- ernulent made every possible effort to retain its prestige. Its failure to do so may reason- ably he taken as the forerunner of rebuffs for .\lr. King and his vollcagttcs in other provinces when the opportunity of administering them is given. On the other hand. it is more than question- able whether the CCF triumph can be repeated elsewhere. The party bad its birth in Sas- katchewan, and the labour element there to which it chiefly appealed is luadc up largely of foreign born population. The Progressive Lionservatives. who had held n0 seats in the last legislature; failed to capture any on this occasion. By all accounts. however, the new leader .\lr. Rupert l). Ramsay. former head of the extension (lclwartmcttt of the Uni- versity of Faskatchcivntt, and his colleagues put up a good fight. 'l'hcy are young men for the tuost part. and can afford to wait. In the new Lcgislatttre there will be 55 seats —thrcc luorc than in the last-tnakittg allow- luce for three titenlbers to be elected from the Saskatchewan tncn on active service. These elections have been deferred. They will not af- fect the issue itiatcriztlly in ally case. Prairie Wheat Production During the four war years from i940 to 1943 inclusive. the wheat production of the three Piarie Provinces totalled: Saskatchewan 862,000,000 Alberta 520,000,000 Manitoba "- 215000.000 . , _' Total i i r l,597,oo0.000 During tne same tour yiears the wheat pro- duction of Argentina and Australia was as fol- lows : _. Argentina. a 1,019,000,000 Australia ' - ‘f . _ 507,000,000 i! 1 ' ._ Total ~' t,526.0o0,0oo It will thus be seen that the one Province of Alberta produvzcrl more wheat in these fotlr years than did all Attstralia, while the wheat production of the one Province of Saskatche- wan was only l5; utillion bushels behind the total wheat production of all Argentina in those four years. This Czuiltrliznt grain Iirodttctictn has not only Snpplipd .1]! of Lltuarlzrs domestic requirements and been the principal <mircc of thc cereal needs of the lil'll.l.~ll people. but it has also been of substantial aid to the lfuitcd States. Br:- tween .\ug. l. ml uid May 2!), 11744. airm- crs of (anatlitk pra tv rtygioits supplied the far- mers of the lWiitrd States with over a quartet‘ of n billion bushels of nnzch-ncetlcd feed grains. Furthcrtuorr, over JO nvlliun bushels of \\'cst> ern (‘ztuztdizui wheat haw- been distributed as mimal fad in the five Eastern Provided and British (‘olumbia in the same period. Reclaiming Soviet Deserts \ _\ld)§(|\\\ l|l,'\\S])lll)<‘l‘ recently‘ printed a brief telegram front Ashkhabztd, the capital 0f the Turlmieniar. Soviet Republic, reporting the completion of the stirvcy~ of the desert of Kara- Kum. the "bl'lcl<“ or “cvil" sands. Over 60 Soviet scientific workers. including agronom- ists, zoo-technicians. hydro-technicians, ex- perts iu plrvlo-geography", as well as the usual cartographers. have been ivorkitig on it for ‘fiver two years. The survey of the Kara-Kuiu is only part of the gcitcral plan for the rcrlzuua- lion of Soviet desert lands. for rendering the earth fruitful and providing food for utan and beast. Less than 50 years ago the Pantirs. that huge mountain massif of Soviet Tiiliikifililll- “TF6 W"- sidered as inaccessible, inysteriotis and exotic g5 Tibet. To reach tlic Patnirs the traveller crossed from the Caspian Sea throttgh Turk- menistan. Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Tijikis- tan, over about 1.325 miles of desert and semi- arid sleppes. tor: J IL Burnett. IJJ- Alloellte Editors: Frank Walker and Lleut. Ian A potatoes. First Class the business: >lll'flllC€. ed than in this carefully which is a model of its kind. moved. I it 1k l! and sent overseas? thinks so. 'I‘ltey are of the * R X iu Saint john. X.B., fairs. councillor and women on all the housing commission. i I I ponsible government. the party he reprcscnrs." l >l< i graphic line here. cost of wiring frotn Halifax. 0n satisfactorily, and received But today ticarly cvcr peak in the Pamirs has been made to yield up ll$ riclt strlrcs nf rare 1nd precious ntctals which have lain hidden ‘inc; g1“; maze of mountains in the llllllllll‘ of turned down by him Publicity EDITORIAL NUILS _ While Nova Scotia threatens t0 withdraw from the joint income tax arrangement with the Federal Government, the Manufacturers .-\s- sociatioti recommend that it be continued after the war “s0 that there would be one collection of income and corporation taxes." w n- : w Should the dottkltobors be allowed t0 dispense with their clothing which could be collected Vancouver Prinlrose Club teach the Douks a lesson and help the war cf- fort. if every time they start to disrobe rheir clothes are taken fronf them and put in bundles for Britain, and forcing them to remain with- out clothes until such a time as their "Sons of Freedom" supply them with some. A resolution t0 this effect was passed uuauiutously at a tueeting of the Primrose Club recently. i A women's forum was agreed to be llCCESSElf)‘ by a. ntceting of women t0 consider its organization and discuss public af- .\lrs. _l. \\'. \'. Lawor was uatuetl chair- man for the evening and agreed to act in that capacity in the interim before another meeting is called. She will receive the suggestions of ivo- men on matters for the forum to discuss. ferent walks of life were represented among those present and there was unanimity in the advocacy of ltaving a woman candidate for city Mr. Frank K. Malcolm told Saskatchewan elec- tors that when he was nominated CCF candidate for Milestone C0l15lllllCllC_)' in the last provincial general election be signed an "unconditional resignation" t0 be held by the CCF executive and accepted by them if at any time "I am not act- ing in their best ititercsts~that is. in the interest of '.ll€ constituency." Mr. Malcolm said he had always believed in the principle of recall. The -CCF provincial constitution contains provision for recall of sitting CCF members of the Legisla- ture. 'l'he Leader-Post declares that constitutional authorities in Regina cotttcilrl that this report- ed recall procedure of the CC]: was "a definite violation of one of the basic principles of res- Once a member is elected. he becomes the representative of all the people of his cottstitttcltcy‘ and the province. not iuerelv The late .\lr. _l. F. B. I.ivcsa_v. former manager of the Caitadialt Press, was an cxccpiionallyi good friend of this province. .~\t the formation of the organization the three newspapers in Charlotte- town, the Examiner, the Patriot and the Guardian took a leading part. but subsequently found that they were to be deprived of a service except at a prohibitive cost, because we had no C. P. tele- Evcry endeavour was made to ltave this ivrong rigbted, even to the extent 0f getting the Borden (joverutnent to grant a special subsidy of $10,000 a year to covcr the or other, the Halifax and Saint John newspapers opposed this, with the result Charlottetown dailies were out and had to make their own arrange- ments to cover national and ititernational news. The Littartlian. by special arrangement with Tor- onto and Washingtmi agencies, was able to carry service as did any of its contemporaries. Then Mr. Liresay visited the city. grasped the situa- tion. and within an hour. had negotiated special news cable communication between here and the ntainlantl. From that day until his retirement in I039, he took a special intcrcst in the C. I’. ser- vicc for the Island, and no reasonable request for development. expansion or improvetnent. was ever Asia was hurled up by the tremendous forces that molded the contours of the earth. The importance of advertising froln an edu- cational standpoint is fully realized by such an organization as the Canadian Life Insurance Officers Association. which at its recent annual meeting decided tittanintottsly to continue the life insurance institutional campaign into its twenty-Jiftlt consecutive year.‘ Tihe advertising is aimed at building up good citizenship as well as greater uttderstatttlittg of insurance benefits. lt contains pertinent. factual, non partisan in- formation conccriting many of the questions about life insurance that are being raised these dzlyxs on political platforms and elsewhere. general objectives were designed (t) to cm- phasizc the democratic, cooperative character of (2) to iufornt policyholders and the general public of the vital part played by ‘life instiraitcc in the ecouontv of individuals and of the nation. in wartime as in tieace-titile: l3» to prcscnfthis economic truth so that all will agree it is good citizenship to own life in- Tltc continuing recognition of the cditcationztl value of the press and publications of Canada could not more effectively be express- prepared publicity, France sued for peace this date I940: Marshal Petain informed the French nation: “We must cease the fight," and asked Hitler for “ltouotlr- able" terms of peace; Britain had previously of- fered to conclude a Franco-British Union by which the two nations ivould become one; this offer was rejected by the French (ioverntuent; meamvhile .\Ir. Churchill declared the British people would continue to fight on in defence of their homes until the curse of Hitler was re- npiilion it would Dif- boards. especially l’ or sortie reason as good a news Not only refineries have been built on the spot, among the ntoutitaitis, to treat the ore. Scientists have acclimatized vegetables. fruit and grains, have bred entirely new sorts of plants. and even of animals. A remarkable botanical garden near the Afghan border gives a glimpse of what can be done in the Patnirs. This botanical garden, by the way, has what is believed to be the world's largest collcctiott of Its Notes by The Way worse. the year wont be as u-uelnh Mercury. rear whlcn drovidu wear-end lay-on. And it will a; was May Standard. Scotland reports n bagplpes. We don't bell Mlllenlum ncuore. llvhlk-Staxtrlard. Five sets been born ln Erlgtaud year. Wno sald shorter because of the irar. Never- theless me true natrtot will keeu his eyes on the great tasks con- n-onttnx us-lx he can. — Stratlozd Beacon-Herald. Illome has fallen before, and wllh lwin surveys m recent weeks lg- _\'64l tnar a lllljOfllV 0| wurncti tn industry Wlll return I'll-HIE alter the war. and tna: {nu rushes will be waltlnJL-Detrott. lvews. The Japanese people must, be thmkmz its a IOXM‘ lane IhHVfldfllS between victories, tutu setback; 5nd uexats conic lucreastllglv close lr/ilctncn-Uttnua uihililll. What happened to all llmsc Ger. man "s Tu. weapons" tutu-h were unierlv to CXCIDOHSL] any force at. temolml: l0 limcl lll lLLlrunel Atlrl those lhUlCtL: "T06R61. uuljs’ “high could olcl.‘ ziniziana t0 cits?—O.. tawa Journal. He t5 Judge at. Sneroruoke. Que. Justice Garon Pratlc. trtusne judge l" Quebec Ulla‘. 1S tiexi youngest. He is ~53. ulucst flCtlVt! gucuzc 1n Canada ts Jusltce w. P. funded. oi the untarlo Ucurr. of ADDEEl. who was 92 0n April u. vax120uvel' Sun. l! "fly be that 1n a few years u: shall nave abscrbed all the traol- Lions 0f baseball rnow being play- m 0v Brlllih troopsr, \\lll r159 m a bcdv to stretch u-UISELVES a. tue slecm/ Set/cum‘ and Willi. oi uxe Eflme m lmutunae as nalpsbli- 5D“. YOU-near generation 1s_ demonstra- wtl by the readiness yvtzh wnlch its momoers identity airc-l3.(r_ 5mm. mlng 0t wntcn most o: tnelr sen- lors are unctttmblc. ‘lnerc can be tulle uouct mat me aeroplane has Ten-need the motor car in the Imag- matlon Ul todayfla Youngsters. _ Brockvtlle Recorder and Times. _ No system that is llcvlsell for pub. he 0r private security Wlll ever t1 a E ~< 5 n 5 5 =- o divluual. l-latiaittg 0s (lt-‘ld t on all such sclwines will he founn those who Wlll 0e active ilelth: lu U161!‘ DWI} IUILIIFS H01‘ ll] lfll: JIM! 5 0t‘ auv other. human urlltivosd in tne llreat tlue 0t l1te.--i/lcicrut Cul- orust. quite different consequences. zavs ‘the New York ‘limes. IL tel.- to tft Gouls. who SflCKUtl u: in aw l3. 0.; it was largely burned in hero's no m o3 A. u. it uxts sacked 0-,- Alp-m 1H ‘H0 A-_U.. by uen x1e tne mn- cbal 1n Q00: ll _\va_s taken by ‘iotilg m? GOUI 1I1_ n40. bv to: dermsn Aluuu m 59b; n was Dltlndertq by me constable ul bsuruon 1n n2 ; 1'3 “'35 5911641 0'; .\'.t0o.u0n the Orr-at In A808, M10 bv Napalm-on the Llttlc tn 184v; 11112111)‘, the ccusclcnccless auventurer. lur “ltom me n95; mm lcan lalelsaid is that ln- ultl not be- ieve 1 5 own horrid nansgn _ ll. ln 1922. he ml‘ ll ls evident that with Mr. Will- kles eclipse no a. uoarl many Anteri- Oltn hopes. for there were manv Rt‘- puollcatts who thought blm m9 onlv man capable ut beuurz the President. ‘Ihcv rated his ure zmu fervent: mterttatlonuhsm higher as an attraction t0 tlze floating vote than Mr. D€\\'€Y's caution, and a better thing for me zuittcn. because llllllhr. secure contlnuitv XII for- eign policy. Thev are tzow 1.111191- btrter and lncllned to be (ugpmd- 9m. partly because they tear a Roosevelt smcess. and its inevi- tably domestic friction, partly be- muse they fear a Dewey success mlkht mean a return to Isolation- lsm. or rather to its ll€W"IOI‘lll Rkkresslve, unco-uperattvre American paltltlonallsm. — Mattchestel‘ Guru":- Q v» 0'" 05 "IE mvst nslonlshinx fea- tures of the air war Ls that, planes 9TB fl1t._bv sncls und other trues 0! ammunition and ulben make them way back when the ivlngs amt ruse. lane have hart ill-sat licks knocked ln them and lmlf the motive poirer out out. of bpslness. lt‘ a shell h t, an automobt-e on the mound ll: would nrobablv be demolished. ll i; also amazlnz. however. to 1mm that the l6 airlines oucrattu tn the United Slates und nll the passcn-z- ll the liquor lihorlan lr w; any um that not a av tlua um as usual July l falls on a Saturday this tor a ROCCI be a national aura not a hybrid hollnay. 24.—»St. Catharine's khrrlaxc o! eve it. We » have heard false reports on the 1-w- r-uaszcorrcrowni- nnsnorkw 1y Normandy (Montreal Gazette) Then l; a true sense of unfoldlnl; late ln the invasion of Normandy": coasts. It ls the sense of a pattern being unrolled. revealing how close- sent lle woven together. ' Men from Normandy sailed un- der Duke Wllllam ln the Channel- crosslfl8 eight hundred and aven- ty-elght their invasion camp farther east B10118 the Frfinch coast. where they mg the weathercock on St Valcryk belltower and I .The Return To the threads o! tue past, and pra- yeara ago. They undated: weeks on the sands, watch- waltlng for Klngswn of quadruplels have rwltlun a tne English WOJIO never learn about lllfl§S uroauctlon? __ ‘czjdn strangely changed. yuunge“ Super,“ CM" judge Now 1L t afuj; so itianv centuries < . . -. . . , .. ,, that tile htraonur armies return. in Lanada is attsuce ..o.....i l). .. . v .. 1 Laugh“ “no Wm W ‘i: u, ALAHS‘ B. Thcn- ate me tncn f.0.n Ena and l the present. Dd the L, dasT. 1'5 1"°°"1@1'@h‘~‘1151bl°- "' streams gt race and ' e lurn n on mes‘ __ buck with thclr gvtnered power to The alr-minllellness of the ;. job. Btu it is n0: t0 b: believed that change to favourable wlnds. One morning the weathercock motlcnless as the sun rose over calm skies’ All throuah that day went forward the work 0f camp- ralslng and the preparations for ._.Pg5epbgfgugh Exalmuel; embnrxcltlon That evening. backed ___ by a favourable breeze. the flotilla Bathing suits are to be even 0f four hundred salllng ships and a thousand transports Put out into the sunset tmvards the Eng- llsh shore. Frmi the coast of the Norman peninsula. many ¢enturles later. there 19ft another and a different invasion. one that. was to conquer the wilderncsscs 0t’ l1 New World. From tn:- towns ot Normandy. ln the years of the seventeenth cen- turv. came hat-iv farmers and trractical warluucn to take up the tasks 0f the pioneer. And they brought Normandy with ulcm in thciy heart; and mlnds. and rebillnl it in tho forest: and along U19 s-lmres of the new wlvers There ttxev established the same sleep- roofed stone housis. the tame ttitn spired village churches. the same handicrafts. the satne customs of life. Thcv brought with them the N -' n accent cf speech. and the nnl Norman folksonszs echoed their old gaiety and pathos in —fr:ui a laud made beautiful by Norman churches which the years have mad? trad! rllly Eiztgllsh, and of n nation wh has the Nor- man strain in its b;00d S0. too. Sm across the immcn=e sea came the men of the stock that. founded a new Noztnandi‘ in a fill‘ 11ml and lhl“: came tsgcther with tin-tr fellow countrymen who opened up the va'ter wilderness into which the St. Lruvcrrnce settlers had driven their spearhead. So t: t. that the past finds lul- flfmeut liberate their ancient 501F095 The Recruiting Problem tl-laltfax Chronicle (Lllllffilll) Canadian troop; arc well in 6 fcrcfront of the war f0." the libir- alion or‘ Europe and they are, as was expected of them. doing n flue they 810 doing it withcut loss As the penetration into France grows dccptr. the losses will mount. And that mfans. if Cllllfllllilll; me t0 he cuttintztittcd as self contained units, that. a constant sit ctzn cf reinforce- Xlltllis mus: be av vtously. the basis of the appeal madg tn veal: bf: the Catiadlan Deputy Apuant Gettcral tc young men who time n5‘. . -:t, recog- nized thclr nslbltiltcs t0 Canal and chase to consider sections 01 the p . to .u:I\ print imp ssloncrl ; as that tr." so ted "Zonlllle anny" shall irr 1c"at:ly' be called se and that the “will 0f the p as expressed in the famous i: te. sh be lLHDlCCUEDIEd ivlthcttt delay. There will lie furious diat-ribes against the government. for standing upon political exped- iency iveq when thc battle rages and the nccd rtrmvs greater every IIOUY-JIHCI so forth. One ivishes that the were as easy ns all shooting an. the would suggest. But everyone in Canada. whatever his political party, knoivs vczy well that the "will of tne people" t0 which so manv retcrenczs have been made lit the past. was actually the wlll of Canadians minus Quebec. If there were n0 Province f Quebec, there would be no rcci ng prob- lcrn. But Quebec is a salid tact and cnc that has to b: taken into ac- count ln some way That province, from all indications, would like to shape the pcllcle: 0f the whole Dominion. Falliuz tum. it can and dcrs impose its \\‘lll tn a neg- ative way upon the rest ofrus. Vlho wotrd care to forecast what would be the result of a blanket transfer of the "zomblos" to um Active Army? The current disgraceful - Montreal and else- t, prove to be only a faint urrludo to the situatlcn which problem lhls sharp Government. er and lretzht-carryntiz DlIIIIES of m would have on our hands. To {Re A" Tranajplo,“ cilnmand M"! creati- an citn breach between '1” Nfllval. M‘ nallslmri SQWIW Canadian provinces at. this thine hi; “Jfiifgollflflelullagfiffleifi in“ wculd be rcflrchenslble and could _ There are Debme sflnaé-"lgfeegtfil- onlv servo. n5 giving comfort. t0 charv about making nn nl-rln jcur- ti“ “mm” . . . "9."- ‘DFBTEITYIL! the s-ectlrtlv of ground travel. notivtrhstaudiui: the annual toll of life and limb tn auto- mobile accldents. With s-ttclt a rec- ord of alrllnts flvlmz under oondl. tlons that are more rltfftcillt. than thev will be when tic-ace contes. and with an airman mn_ ln almost cverv famlly wants "sold ’ on flying as l; means of safe transport. the dread C! ll. 1R 0118M to be eliminated. A generator: ts lzrowlnl-z uu that will never have known what lt was to ésamllrz: “tf‘l“’““tl"“‘°“ n e r - _ ._ 8t. Ihomaaclfigmes-Joixrniaxl. ‘ears E MIST FORMS Ncvertheless. Quads needs the men. and rtoart from the appeal t0 pntrlctism. has no means of obtaining thc-m. slnce any nppll- cation of the principle 0f conscrip- tion must except. Quebec take the consequences. It may re- membcrrrt thwt Brltnin. durim: the First Great. War. ‘had precisely the slam:- problem ln reaper-filo South- ern Ireland. and conscrlpdon which was put into force tn Great Brltaln, never applied to that country. It l: Ju. pwslble. one mav suppose. that the more lrreconcllnbls lead- ers ln Quebec have the hlstory of Ireland before lhelr eves. nllfl would like to follow the llrles cf policy ._.._._ .. .l__. . M rllnrvlrttro nlctncnrl Hat luck mind-chi The apeet; 01f‘ nllrht mlst travel a VB , l know why viii: céme all sundown 1n a sea-rt mm What. was ll, we touched lwkl m and aaklng all? flow menv tlmss can emtm come and nav back what we saw‘! m u» oath of the m. the um out In the oateli of "will mist. nothlna lull nlunblo-mpop —uln couldn't In lnrodfluoull- In! mnlld with III lriunh nu y. llor mm ndviuil l , ,5’ ta”.- onwgy llll‘ Iii: spin ab: ll5 Say coon" to ucncnl will i "T p A rlddle “l; here no mun tells. no woman. —Olil'l landbulq. Dodcfs Kidney Pllls l 1111111111" .3111!!! JIIIIJ checked . .all colors. Sizes u!) $1.95 to $3.50 and rich neat patterns. v Prices from Wide sele 75c to From 50c to “BETTER MEN’S WEAR" I 1-13 Great George St. Charlottetown SHIRTS for all occasions, striped, and lo "7. TIES that please. Colorful prints. stripes ction. $1.50 SOCKS. All colors, sizes and materials. $1.00 P. E. Island the whlah eventually produced Eire "ho are "hldlzig solved a and making Ireland as a whole. -=ll itnuc! certain They themselves ' into complacent concerning tit-zit" itiviclv few cl the problems obsclvc-s lJEIW€EI1 the Meanwhile the question of wlml. and do with the "zombies" ls ucutem their country. cannot feel tool might be left of a postwar ACUVO "IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII’Q'I GIFTS for FATHER'S DAY , JUNE l8ll. but sort. of thcm would dlvlde them- Army. the munitlon ilvorks and the farms. 50 give more useful service to The rest 0f them to face the ohtoquy Canada wulch wlll < positions these days. Perhapsl not regard delinquency from publlc _ b l! thev were taken off the publtct duty as lightly, perhaps. in- active payrcll and disbanded, the better aftcr the last war. A tremendous post-war is to “save the children." Fund of Great Britain, during the war. has plying rescue homes, food, clothing and schools for children of Great Britain, M raltar, found shelter in the British Isles. In co-operation with International Rel orities. arrangements are now being made the starving and destitute children of Euro earliest possible moment. The Save The sible to send aid to the liberated countries P.E.l. Representative, Canadian Committee, The Save The Children Box 249, Charlottetown. IILV. "PRINCE. NOVA” (DAILY-SUNDAYS INCLUDED) Wlll Leave Wood Inland: Wlll Lcav 1.00 mm. 9.00 IMO an. and 3.00 pm. L00 p m and 5. LUNCHES SERVED ' TETO I Save the Ghildren THE MORE YOU czvc THE MORE YOU s4 v12 i PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND - NOVA SCOTIA FERRY SERVICE VIA WOOD ISLANDS, P.E.I. -- CARIBOU. NS. as 1t; did problem and responsibility Children been sup- nursery alta, Gib- the Channel Islands and others who have let‘ Auth- to rescue pe, at the Any person or Organization interested and desir- ous of contributing to this worthy cause will be cheer- fully supplied with literature describing the work. Countless thousands of children face death frdm famine and diseases-With your help ll will ho pol- J. O. HYNDMAN, Fund, ."TI|e Connecting Link Between These Provlnceffi. Dayllghl Saving ‘Ilmo Starting May M the Nova Booth-Prince Edwin! Inland Ferry lmleo will open-ah lhno mmd trip par day. e Caribou l-fl- O0 p m. NORTIIUMBERLAND FERRIES, LIMITED ' CIIABLOT WN P J. NOTI-The ll n-In. and l run. nlllnn will be cancelled on ‘ T "' ’ urln; Mo! ‘n6 lune by order u on"!- and -' will In announced Inter. l arm.- w, t... Streamline cues: (Chicago Sun It l: wholly out of the m,“ for a Conservative member o; "t Home of lords to advocate ex u‘ mentlng wlth royalty. em, mam" my o! u» chess board, "t Lord Brnbazon. who sho ' unafraid u‘ the f posltl Th I and throw the ed ripe ' middle game. “ llliYefs right u, Slowing prellml [sparring would out. and m“ would open as n slugging mmh I The Brabazon games thus stoma ‘wipe out virtually all the lltm. ture of chess. for the boo based on openlngs, and dele for opening . all worked out l. the nth degree. whereas the mm 'dle and end game are largely gem ‘lncognlta, as systems of play Speedy chesls might. be cxcetlm ° wlt i 1h be but tn the one thinks of chess, one thlnk; Jndeed 0f.’ a long run-its possum that the Brabazan lrlea \\'0\1ld m sult. not ln a pure slugging mam. but. ln the devlslng 0f new symm. ,0t openings. Thus. in a Cfiltluy, or two. chess would be right bark where it started from. Keep hllnurtfs in the home PLAN To Attend THE 215T SESSION | Mknnlmfi I SUMMER l $0HO0L l MOUNT ALL SON UNIVERSIT ' JULY siroTtToiisfir. __________ Courses given in SCIENCE ARTS MUSIC TEACHER TRAINING FINE ARTS AND CRAFTS MATRICULATION Write for Descriptive ' Bulletin ‘I The Director Marllllue Summer School slfillvlllh New Brunswick ARE YOU TROIQBLED WITH LUMBAGO on SOR E BACK If I0 we have 0m: ol the remedies m oflu- v BABK- RITE TABLETS Es ciully ellcctlve for go. Sciatica, Neurills, kin! muscular and other forms of Rheumatism Wlllfll nrdlnurv treatments fail to reach. Prlce 50c nor box- l We Have the Proper TRUSS For your particular cast- To those of vou who are unfnr Innate enough to have to wear a Truss we ask the questlon. Are vnu satisflul with the nne vou are nonr- lnr! Does it m cumforlublv or la It In out of date slsle. We luvs lust rol-elvcd a shin- ment of new rtvle 'l'russr<. All sizes and at nrlces to sull evervbndv. TllE 2 MACS H" Great Grnrze Street Mall Omen Gin-n 1"‘|\'I\l\' Attention. , ETE INSURANCE SERVlC ” comm. W. K. ROGERS Aguncios Ltd. Plmla Mil-Mi