Eiortable living and working conditions, PAGE roux Ill! CIIRUITTETUWII Blllllfllll "IOTIIIIII Dally (Founded In lasii Allliorhod as smum Class Mall. PM Olin Department, Ottnwl- The Gunriian may be obtained ll: Bub Tobacco Shop, Monclcll. N- B» The News Shop. Moncton. N- 3- George McLean Pictou, N. S. walker. wmu Spot, 11 slum 5a., namu. N-S- Metropolltun New; Agency, 12448 Peel SL, Montreal United Cigar Stores, Chateau Laurie: Ottnwl. 01'4- B. Aitkeu, Lord Elgln‘s Hotel, Ottawa. Ont- J, Fine, 354 Bay Si... Toronto Ont. Wolfe's News Stand. Sudbury. Ont. 0h! South News, Cor. Milk and Washington Sh. Boston Holding’: News Agency Times Building, New York. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” SATURDAY. JUNE 29, 1946 Dominion DH)’ Despite the snap Yefdl" Oblalmd fm the HOuse of Commons to chanllfi “(mdaYS hol" day from “IDniiliiiiQn Day" to “Canada. D3)”, the bill has still w 2o lwfvre the éttlale- a.“ 31¢“; i; n growing opinion that this ill-consid- cred legislation will never become law-that It will be thrown out bl‘ [he UPPEI House’ 0r gwen the “six illontlis‘ hoist" which amounts f0 the same thing, But b,- wllatever nzgeriek it) ls cal-led officially. lull’ I will continue to ll “u a5 “Ilnminion Dav" in this Province, we hope. Next Monday will be not only ill? 79$ anniversary of our birth as a nafIOIMEIé Wld also be the 73rd anniversary of_ Prlncleh nil?! Island's entry into Confederation. e H161’ vcnillg years have lVYOUEhI "5 filmy ChanQQF most of tllcni for the bClWf- “It? may b‘? 51m 1 long way from realizing our claims ujxflricthe Dominion, but 011T lOYHlYY 1° fl"? 5P"? ° _°“' federation has never faltered. We still believe the jcuther, who met in Charlottetown “build- ed better than they kneiv," that our dcstln)’ 15 with our fell0w_ Canadians,_arld that we have a great arid glorious future in common. w; an a, people lmrchmg down the a83- 0'er golden seas, beyimd m? moumakw “w; i Our legacy of warriors, bards and sages V shall guide us still on truths and beautys quest. God, let our dreams be deep, our deeds be 58-11’. And let our spirlfs be Imbued with all that. was, that future than shall see a new Dominion which will dare, For right. and liberty, Attaln new peaks and victories more silbllmc. My country, Canada, land of auspicious birth, Arise, and let. thy youth inspire the lands 0f Earth! An Honoured Visitor Prince Edward Island is to be honoured next week by a visit from Lady Baden-Pow- ell, G. B. B, \\'orld Chief Guide and widow of the late Lord Baden-Powell who foundéd the Scout movement which ranks among the very ‘runes: 1Uuth—or¢ani13.l1i(1n5 the, world has ever seen. She will arrive on Tuesday, and will rennin until Friday. The programme arrang- ed in connection with her visit is one in which Ill our citizens should be keenly intercscd. Lady Bmlcn-Poivell has been on this side of rhe Atlantic since last January, during which time she attended the Western Hemisphere sub- committee conference of the “Iorld Guide As- sociation in Cuba and visited Mexico, Jamaica, Baribaclloes, Trinidad, British Guiana and the United States before starting a. Dominion-wide tour of Canada. She is also fresh from a tour 0f many of the VVCSIQITI European coun- tries, France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Switzer- land and Scandinavia. She found that Scouting 1nd Guiding on the whole has greatly increased its numbers in these countries in spite of being forced underground for so many years. - Iadv BIlflPll-PFHVQ“ has been “Iorld Cliicf Guide since I030 and she may fittingly be term- ed the mainspring of this great movement. Be- fore hcr advent the Guidcs were all more or lcss separate units. each working on their own. and it was she who united them into One big family. _.i_______4_ School Meetings Are Vital The annual school 1ilccting< are being held throughout the Province on Tiucsday evening, July 2, and ill this connection the Department of Fdilcntion lills madr an urgent appeal. Rate- payers are being asked to take all active inter- cst in ilicsc lnvctitigs. on which depend the suc- cessful platiniilg of next year's educational programme in our rural schools. Among the duties of voters at the aimual school meetings, line are of special invporhnce. These are: 1. The election of trustees who will real- ize their responsibility to the Children 0f the district, and endeavor no discharge that re- sponsibility efficiently. 2. Tlic provision of sufficient funds to ensure that the school and its surroundings will be clean, cmnfortable, and reasonably well equipped- 3. The provision of adequate supplement t0 enable the trustees to secure or retain the serv- ices of a competent teacher. The ouklook for procuring a sufficient num- ber of teachers to staff all schools for the coming your is still far from encouraging. Competition ‘from other sources is very keen and trustees and ratepayers are reminded that unless com- 1'63‘ jcnnfly well equipped schools and adequate sal- t Jrils are provibd, properly qualified teachers in be mined and retained. “In many districts the increased supple- voted hat yerir were very gratifying, and snout part fliue ifiairicta in _ffOD¢fLY qualified searchers. District! Dr wwilfintu make prover provision. 4 bod grwytjcflfficulty in maintaining my $11M service. ‘The consequent lou b -‘ can: w the oorlnunfty, ' " 1"‘ for the colu- 1M1 gain face a ibuchershort- Ilppugnn “it in hop! that with the district: voting generously and the Government continuing the payment of duplicate supplements, the situation may be improved and, .f0r the future, larger Mum-IRIS of our mOre capable young people may be in- duced to enter the teaching pf0fcsslnli. If not, t-hcn the prospects for IIIQVQdIUCZHIOII 0f the children of this Province will be lull)!‘ indeed. No time should be lost in rte-engaging or en- gaging qualified teachers." With a view to distributing the supply of teachers to the best advantageldui-ing the pres- ent emergency, it has been ordered by the Lieutenant Governor in Council that schools having an enrollment of seven pupils or less shall not be pcmlitted the servict» of a teach- er. Such districts must either make arrange- ments for the transportation of their pupils to an adjoining school (in which czt>c the Dc- partnlcnt will sliarc generously in tlic expcilsc) fir else make use of the correspondence courses provided by the Department. Parents are reminded that "children now in our homes and schools will be called upon t0 face a world in which the lack of education will be a handicap that cannot be overcome." This strong statement is quite litcrzlllv true. It dwarfs other considerations, and gives added emphasis to the Education Department's ap- peal. \ _- EDITORIAL NOTES rs The Feast of St. Peter. i‘ 1b >h i Income taxpayers will breathe a little eas- ier next ymr. lrkilfi Monday DOluinion Day——p€rliaps the last socalled officially if the Federal Government has its way in the Senate. * i X His Majesty the King visits Edinburgh today on the occasion of the Silver Jubilee of the British Empire Legion in Scotland, which Occurs tomorrow. m u n- x A board of appeal from Income Tax decis- ions is a step in the right direction. Both the bureaucrats and the assessed felt the unfair- ness of the present arrangement Wh-lCll throws the onus entirely on officialdom. 1k n: at r It is pleasant having visits from the French navy and the French diplomatic service at the same time. It is also a. step in the right dir- action having the reopening of a. French Vice- Corlsulate here, closedjk now for no many years. * * t Dr. J. A. Clark is deserving congratula- tions upon being chosen President of the Maritime Hospital Association. He is an ideal citizen, and has a long period of useful public service to his credit, especially in the domain of the sick and helpless. w r =1: Cardinal Henry Benedict Il/Iaria Clement Stewart, Duke pf York, younger brother of “Hoiinie Prince Charlie"; born this date i725; took holy orders, and received a Cardinals hat in 1747; was made Archbishop of Corinth, and later transferred to the Archbisliopric of Tuscu- lum; on the death of his brother he assumed the title King of England; bv his dcatli the line of James II cnd-ccl: to the Prince of “iales, after- wards George IV, he bequeathed the crown jewels which James II had carried with him to Paris in I688. I i l l The Red Cross has done more to put wo- men in the forefront than any other organiza- ti0n—tllailks to the example of Florence Night- ingale. “fonlcn ncill be represented at the Bikini atom bomb blow out or up. Almost every- one has thought it ivould be a strictly stag af- fair. But now in ringside seats, so to speak, at the test will be a group of ilurscs. They will be the first women t0 see an atomic explosion. The nurses will be aboard the hospital ships Bountiful and Benevolene, which will stand by with other task force ships outside Bikini La- goon to give aid- to any injured personnel ill the fleet. i!!! Warm tributes were paid to the sea cadet nl-Ovcmcnt by members in all parties in ilic House of Commons the otllcr (lay and the minister, Mr. Douglas Abbott, said that tllc work of the Canadian Navy in the \\‘3f‘ prov- ed the value of sea cadet training.- At least 6,000 sea cadets, lie said, passed from Sea Ca- dets Corps to active service during the war, and among them, he added, were some of tlic most distinguished officers and lllcll. “Should Canada again be faced with a national emerg- ency," said Mr. Abbott, “the training these youths are getting today will stand the nation in good stead." i‘!!! Seventy~six per cent 0f those eligible voted in Canada's 20th general election June 11, 1945. The percentage in the 1940 election was 7o. On the voters’ list, in 1945, thc report showed, were 6,952,445 persons out of a total population of 11,494,627. There were 5,305,193 votes cast and 59,063 ballMs were rejected out of that total. Saskatchewan had the largest percentage turnout amomg the provinces with 85, Prince Edward Island second with 31, Nova Scotia the lowcst with 72. The Yukon, with 64, was actually the lowest of all. The electoral of- ficer's report mvc this summary (oods omit- ted): ~ Rd. V0603 fleoictl Ont. 16 1,832 2,458 Que. ...... 19 1,433 N. S. ..... 2 312 N. B. ,2 204 MB“. as p: s 433 P. E. I. 63 379 315 I 'n. % 1041 75 73 3.333 578 " 73° 95 -_- 54°! 818 om‘ Tlilifi CHARLOTTETUWN GUAIIDIAN Notes By The Way More “Ill! 808 lhlpl - one for every d‘? of the year -- will be under constrthuizllon ‘in Béllttsh ‘mm our agex mon or pendent. ‘mi; "minim-m for at leasl three years. —lorldnri Dally Sketch. T» the mm; m;- 00ml’ i... investment- o! gratuities or wru- Dllm earnings ano to the older man lookln for u. way to set up n. son or sori- Jaw in business, small towns offer manv of the best. up. Pflftunltles ln Janada loda. to- Eelller with a way of life (ha cour- blnes city ocmfcrls wit-h more leis- ure and satisfaction than me ufban ‘gifocfln lWPe w achieve. -Al¢on:-i In Montreal two-piece bathing sulls on d0partmerlt~sl0rc dnml- mles have to be removed because of a police order Pefhap5 when 1T. has finished fills ostenmfjgus clean-up of shop windows, I've Montreal pollce force will sh llltle more zeal in clear .5 v _ merits, WhlCh do not. dlSpluy their 800615 1n the window. --Pétcrbor- ough Examiner. Before Guiana’; gates an thflpwn Q9911 I41 the fuglllves the farmers ‘if "M? Dfimlnlon. and particularly of western Canada, wlll insist in one condition. It is that masses of immigrants will not be duznped on the doorste of western rlcul- iure. but wll be firm ln the mend that mile; industries shall also absorb their roper propor- tion. —Country Gu de, Winnipeg. A superman of lhg tomato pawl, has been announced by Wisconsin flfzlrrcultlural experts, a. Yomato said to be larger, tastier, hardler than the best of current varieties, says This Week. The fruits gfqw to 1m]. form size then ripen evenly and m? Plants are immune to blossom- end m! and have’ resistance to other common vine diseases. The yield averages 30 went more than rbe present, “bes " tomatoes per acre. Ottawa officials flhlnk that 811m CHAT. the Communist organizer, has left Canada and may never re. turn. That, wlll scarcely be a, ent national loss, and them are o of the same ilk whose departure would be equally welcomed. -—Brioc.k- ville Recorder and Times, Kins George of Greece (George II of the HelIones) was divorced by Queerr Elizabeth in 1065 and has {lo clguldxflyi. He 712C155. He is watt.- m: or e pleb te on Septem- ber 1 which wlll decide whether he ls to return to Greece Called "the lonellest man in lnndon", he by two or three mem- slmff. and seldom leaves his hotel. —-U.0ndo1l lllxpress. the emblem of truth, the star-mud of virtue" we rend. “Unpollutod by chemicals, natural as the all", well water can vanqulsn an other bev. 0138c for utter sausfac lon. It may also be diseased! And city dwellers about to move to the country for lhfl Elummer, arunry from the bene- flvs of chlorine-loaded water, 5,119,114 bear that in mind. All that, is coal and spalkllng from the rural well lsStélrOf- necessarily pure. --M0r-|Lr3a1 A sad eommenfary on the tines: An American Legion post in Ncw Haven. Conn; was unuhh, in get flags ip dcmrate hero graves on Memorial day because the vet- erans wouldnt pay black marker prices for the only available 511p- Dlll. More power to that kind of American spirits! Alnd we could hope that at least. that black mar- kelecr ends by seeing 513115 and ‘Ye-Willi; strl s of another sort. {Milwaukee ournhL On the grounds of humanitar- lanlsm and justice, Wang Yr.- luen, s. Chinese workers’ delegate f0 the marltirrle session of the In- tenlatlonal Labor Organization. flllbealeci to delegates of the 00n- ference In Seattle last week to put an end “lntolemrwe, dlscrim. lnntlon and exploitation of seatar. ers of any nailonalit ", 11¢ also advocated the princlpe of “equal pay for equal work" fdr Chinese seamen who have so fur been dis- (Ilmlrlaled agamsl by shbyuni- ers of various countries. —Ohlnese News Service Democracy bases Its foundations on t-he "timiy of oncllnary folk of every’, country" ‘and on the cleans- {113 lltzwcr of 1's free ballot To- Qfly lllls great forcg Mid grower inheritance is begng pushed Into ii bQCRSPOund _ of silence-an lnartlc- ulate Isolation that gives neither l-fllmle f0 its lfllcrests nor honor to its hopes. Well mlgm mos; Canadians like mos! Americans ask thurlselves this; "Apart from any clnlrrs cr coulltcr-trlulnis nbout n.1,- Tllllll» and ivrongs of the scmallrd " rn ivlio has I11." most tn lulu by l ll_ cnntln ‘ll in" doll- bzzralcly’ frustrated and ; om; Who is ill the bacizgpcunn? who ln the nlosi clamenlnry query of all gets the cash? Pfiflvle of the Lower Mainland can br thankful to a rrrrcilul Pro- vldellcc for llllS perfect Jun er. It is just warm cnn comfort and just (‘col crio mill tile ivorst flood ill lilt‘ Dro act The hatching grounds of floo s, V the filterlor of British ‘Iolllmbla. had recorded their snow- lcsL Winter hlsmo inches measured at G1 .. of it was weitlsh stuff yielding rm inch of water for l0 Inches of instead 0f the 14012 rutlc In year's of "dry" snow. A not Juno would have incubated a ~—VGJDO\WGI' The former lervioe rum need not fear that we shall soon fo cu: obligation f0 him but he l galn most If the obligation ls std Ln service to the nation u n. w ole rather than to any special class no matter how deserving. We are some five to l0 years behind, be- ‘3788 wart amonthmrewncdcg‘ turn from the foxho . 457 meat: n o - if we dowotvbtock i» into puzncl minor-Mel neck! tecuvm r; a |...»;'*. lil leldum lkifd full h de- 15 ers h . 0 in. ency; dlsssle: of canrparmble than‘: blg flood of 1894. ‘fibrillation {E__ PUBLIC FORUM This column h open fo- flio dllcualcn 'by norm opondanh cf question: o! Inherent. ‘Ibo Chm-lowdown Gun-dim does not nouns:- lly endorse Ito opinion of crrecpondanh. _ QUALITY DETERIORATING? , . Sup-The’ writer has been puuled over a mutter for the past year. Why ls it Uhat oranges offered for sale in the shops are so hard, small and suur?\We have always been fond of oranges and would cat many of them at all times for health sake. Perhaps some of the fruit sellers can give the public some Informa- tion 1n the matter. Has the climate of Florida, California, West Indies and Brltlsh Columbia changed and frult does not ripen in those coun- tries as formerly? If any one kno-ws the cause of our complaint may we ask them to impart the knowledge they have. I am. Sir, etc. LOVER OF ORANGES. “What Of The Nl|hf." X. Sirr- who has ever attempted to convince a member of the class known as Moderate Drinkers that his use of lntoxleants harmful or dangerous to him- self rnust have realized that the task was not an easy one. Usually the person ls not. convinced. Why should this be so? Two persons, A and B. are approached upon the subject. A ls an albsralner. B drinks in moderate quantities. At the t/fma u. roach , both may beieve that such use of l non-injurious. In dealing who has had no personal experience upon himself of the effects of liq- uor, facts are presented which are reported by competent and relfabc observers. Having no experience o! his own, A, lf the evidence suic- mltted to him ls believed to ba trustworthy, will accept it and wlll be convinced. e case 1s different, however, with B. B has fidenoe rights owil. own person eiuper ce. r first blush, B would a to have an advantage over . B's know- ledge, one would suppose, ougiht to be greater than A's, since he nor only has the evidence 0! others whlch is presented but he has his own experience besides. Why hhen should B. not be in better mgtlun than A to form- a. correct o lnlon? When the evidence of of presented to B , his answer is, I need no such evicence; I have my own personal knowledge and experience and I accept that. This he does, whatever may be tihe weight of the tcstlrrlony that may DQPPESCHtRIIOhQBLHUWCBJIllDC claimed that. B ls at a. disadvantage Anyone they-hare B-PS uor ls The explanation lles 1n the effect of alcohol itself with regard lo the discriminating qualities of‘ the per- son who drinks it. Alco ol blunts the use of the hlgheir faculties, the flue keen edge of one's judgment. No platter who uses it, the effect of alcohol ln (this t ls the same. B, by his very use of alcohol, although in ivhiif may be very modh uantlty has brought a/bou min affect himself. This impairment. c! hls qualifications to assess the af- fect. of alcohol upon himself, he cannot be mule to realize. All this ls attested to by che very highest suthorltles. This is the rea- son why a moderate drinker can- not be convinced that the alcohol he drinks is harmful or dangerous. The following are but. a. few of the statements of the many medl- cal writers that might be cited‘ regarding the affects of moderate drinking. “A100 o1 has a primarily decep- llve influence on the mind, and interferes with the power of fonm lng correct judgments; 1t is, 1n fact. a false witness." “Alcohol limits the range of men- lal vision and our judgment is the first thing to full" / “Incipient. inloxlcatlqn, the fee- ln of being jolly, shows itself ln a. fa lure to form involved and ab- siraci relation of ideas." "when tried by the touchstone of cxlperlment, alcohol is shown to be B. deluslve agent, tihus proving lllC accuracy of the statement in Proverbs that ‘Wine lsa mocker’ ." Without signs of intoxication ln the full ordinary or legal sense of the term, a man under the in- fluence of even small doses of alcoholic liquor becomes an altered individual, and always altered fp: thc worse rat-her than the better." "Alcohol has n drugglng effect, and so lt- begins tn am er with the running of the mach nary, or ‘to monkey with the machine.’ as in America it would be most flu- ln-lv termed. The machine it, mon- kcys‘_url'h ls of the most. precious k)! t '1 lfflhlfll c-cts by desenslllzlng the nervous system and ln consc- qnrncz- removes the disagreeable sensations. and herein lles the darl- M," “Experiment. shows, with a coll- slstency and thoroughness which cannot be giilnsald, that oohol, even ln lhe smallest doses, dead- activity briilll. wcnkcn ltlcn, lo ileum-muscular eo- lon and diminished effici- whllst jn larger doses it tn- duces cleflnlle paralysis." "Alcohol numbs the cortex, the. flnal product of evolution, through which men moo-Inc conscious at tunes of gran/oer and better things, conscious of those moral twln est joys of llfe; n never in world deeRIened the wndroli oy ofimo MQIIIOOG nor enhanced c I hollow: a eqi sorrow uor con secured c great passion. new really e mun or woman your and aspire towards a its: pr“. . s, m-n¢ii.n-.in actual“ l-n 111:1! minim thA,f fainter-now. nmrl _ tfsr oil-ram. Bought with our blood, not Another chi-me we hlwe. To work wllfll all who will It seals the trust by which ho! on critical judgment. Wllllsi errors were increasing under the of alcohol the subjects," the moderate drinkers, re be sub d to the tests), ‘had the plea subjective sensation that they were doing better than usual. This subjective delusion has been _ observe em" nuuly . “Various psychgipglcal wihowe ological mats eeterioils effect qf am Sir ei:c.. w.1-:. gENTLEY Fresh Buttress For Free Speech (Montreal Gazette» The wndlflons of our time 8W0 a. special importance in all measures taken to assure and protect 11"?’ dom or! speech. The decision of r e U s 0mm judges in for their handllng “d om" “mm bli peratars ha. “hi2 Mia-m Herald Md l" associate editor were cited for 00n- tcmpi; of court by two 116885 0f; the Dude County Olrc t. $01111 and after lieu-inn. W" °°" w the who cited mafia-rt 1° Florida sfilPmme V, no: my 1945’ upheld this con c Y. by a, five to two vofn- AP “a? men wk‘? mstthésflupreule Cour nffiledgvgfi in, bplnlon of tllle Billpreme Cour watch reversed 11h; rather than an advantage over A?’ w; ilflres v fadrness and efficiency 01 th 3130M. roam“ ‘hahoiiourf monies as a shelter from reasonable crit- lcdsm. Justl Frankfurter m slvlns hi! eoncurroleng judamwnf mlllhwud eces_ t j lyregervhi “the illinl: saiiiul oioriruhllc =11W=',',°§ “the domain for fearless and crl ca COLLECT FOB DOLHNION DAY Father of Nations! Help of the gilt f hflmdur l t hcm Stren o t e s o . 0 W nhe nations Stay and destroyer, at whose just command Earth's kingdom tremble md her empires reel! Who dost. the low ilpllft. the small make great, And dost abuse the lginorsntly proud; Of our mutant. people mould a mighty sta e, To hhe strong stern. to Thee in meekness bowed! Father of unity, nuke this people one. Weld, lnterfuso f-hem 1n the pa- trlotls flame, Whose forging on Thine azwll was 981111 In blood late shed to purge the common shame; That so our hearts, the fever o! faction done. Banish old feud in our young rio- Lion's name‘, -—G. D. Roberts. Drive ouf ACH ES 1x “COMPLETE insurance lsriiviar " w, xy.wnoasiis Assad» I Lid. ~lloninion' Ours l. chl-IIQ-to keep Omndlnn: ‘Ihroudi our vast Dominion there is peace. a pence to Int. We serve the world and would not overlap. Our chine of old hath beuiupon the deep. To wutch and ward om heirloom o! the past. Justice and Liberty that; stuldeth ma, Our hand has carved A Covenant. not lightly with the world Our word's our bond, rior can be fussed and vwlrled Like scraps of paper that. tlhe winds release. _ fiiasisy Stimuli: RIIIIIQII to be butercd cheap. for the world's peace. the world is healed. Jvlllfnm D. D9005“, Oaundfaxi Army. (formerly of (Jharlottetown) ooh . prove: f-he appetite. Don't dually. Order you Bottle today. Prion llc, mes mun nlisionn A d ll fcly perfumed within“ which new: mnnhem and beautiful flu If wlll restore Guy Inh- ls It: nflflnll color, Promntucncwnnlnpu- t-bchsfrh ent. and not: least the admiri- . He disposed t that jqldggg mjghg influenced by bljr; v PM. the words: ‘ eak characters ought not m be judges and the 500W allowed the press 1'01’ wfliflyb sake may assume that‘ held f? Jgtstlci Murphy u e rs t t e ens "cldiflclze “r an e even though the terms be vl ollc scur-' rllous or erroneous". 'I'he Supreme Court ju ent in the wand Herald case oes mt allow the new total licence. The Judas still, Iiive to sue and’ Wper for libel personal characters. Orltlclsln and Opinion should be withheld while casesuependlngtfllkelv icin- fluenoe or interfere with the bal- anced adlullnlstraztllon of justice. Bu’; n3? Us. decision does pram- lrm e most lmpcrtaii. n- clple that l! cmlclsm is to be real- 1y free the-re must be no dark fhI A ‘Dim illafnfaohnf for Whul. Olll. Blrulg. Ono Pound fresh b! b ab, Get our hound fully. If pay! h use Cereuu. The 2 Macs corners 1n thacoimf-ry, where lrn- miurllty from criticism may be gain- led by the unjustified use of the 3W. This is a. principle which in Bfln- ‘Dtaned M896 com . par d with . fiffédhfi g°aggdg°_°°lfgd“=ig 358,53; 66s i: the end of April? ' n’ which there should be sustained _'-"-i-—— and vigilant. effort. wfigalgg-E- Wm! — $1 i_____ Young, PLAN FOR. EMERGENCY tired Iondvon shlpp i here Bite! his first 11 _ LONDON. June 2B—(Reuters)- I?” ‘rlf, ‘mil sydnfl" "I "M" Frederick Bellenger, financial sec- very u ' retary of the war office, told vhe House of Commons last lilght that any aggression against Brltalrl “no doubt" would take the form ct a heavy alr attack and plans already are r1 existence to deal with any emergency. He said that so far as dangers can be foreseen, precau- tions have been taken. HOUSING FROG-BIBS IONDON. June 28-(0? Cable)-—- In a monthly report an ‘he progress of Britain's housing. the health ministry today sald that during May 2,376 permanent houses were completed. New permanent dwell- ings under conatructlon at May 31 . , NOTICE As we have taken over the business recently howl p DOTS MEAT MARKET all accounts receivable are payable f0 II. PhoneNo. liaabeencbcngcdfrom 1887to811. Fur Foot Ailments OONSUIII H. J. A. BROWN. DP. Orthopedic BHIRDPBBIST ll Great Georg; Elton cIAI-OITIIOIICPJJ. . BURHOPS GROCERY MEAT AND FISH MARKET mom: onnnns smut Freedom From Fear * Removal of fear is the privilege and the duty of insurance. It was the fearful consequences of the Great Fire of London in 1666 that gave birth to ln- surance. It ls fear of financial loss by fire, accident, and other unpredictable and costly events, that Ia the main spring of the Insurance business, initialed and nurtured by private enterprise, and which for more than 250 years has conferred untold benefits on the human race. All lines of Insurance effected» IIYNIIMAN & 00., LIMITED Established 1872. Representing British, Canadian, and American Under- writers; also LloyiPs Corporation of London, England. Offices: Charlottetown - Summer-side - Montague QUICKIES By Ken Reynolds