SATURDAY, his lilo‘. Choose new superbly by Forsyth c WASTE PdPER- SALVAGE ivase p per ' 4 p1 ‘ i "mils offices tnriiugli- rm», ‘,0 m cm has for years Dlilv" u] it; part, in the eompanv salvage campaign "which ploduccs- a nlcntll- iv ire of 4c tons of material six: was baled and sold Q l g FATHER'S ‘ 154" its Always connect to clvs . Wish Dad well with a gilt “lot the rest of oi the famous Forsyth Pajamas . . distinctive garments fashioned from soft. restful and long-wearing fabrics . . . available in a full choice of colours and patterns . . . and tailored Fmsyth Shirts, Ties and Hanrllzcrchirfl M: ltrylcd together to wean together. piruvido the base for heavy building INSULATES BUILDHQGS u months 552 tons of oliifl- i PAJRMRS from our wide selection raltsmen. papers used as insulation. MONTREAII- Que. limo l! -l 97—HE NEVER SHAVED Yi “ l1..- contents nightly every! basket in Canadian SOUTHAMPTON. Eflkllihd — icP) — William Burrough Hill. auc- tioneer. who never shaved and never wore c necktie but sported s. costly diamond stud and s beard is dead at 97. Keep Mlnsrd’; in the home. s London no! 8M" “rings eon top alarm. Scouts nls mule than bii*_lh fis ( . fll-flflflll “roof watcher" sml his improvised The activity and daring oi those London niuonlsrly valuable ‘roof hoppers" during and '1 ' LNoticeE. lotietown Troop iBasilics) Th. following Scouts were infilt- Plrst C‘ TToorx-Wklttr Shepherd, Joe Fields, Dooky Fields, wish Mcijil- ly. May they enjog Good ScouAnB and the best of BmPlnK- A Mk9 was planned for Mfmdfll’. Jill" 9 at which much work will be done as. well as s. great deal of Dliill- Four boy; will be invested and in- structions given. Eight additional boy, we w be invested before Camp. The following is s relfl" °l m; mks which was planned at the meeting of June 6. ‘Ilhis hike W88 to Du! y's Point scross the bridsfi and up the river and slthoush iii ramad some tile scouts hMl s Bfiiid time. Second Lemuel White. Earl Gallant snd Karl MacDonald were invested. Wendell Byers passed the flag. uses o! Scout staff and scout signs. some of the boys went swim- ming and found the water was not as cold as they expected. On the way home the Scouts took the shore route and near the bridge nicked up s. coconut believed to have been from the Molasses boat which was recently in port. It was opened and the boys found that it was very good. In fact some of the boys were still chewing when they ream- ed Charlottetown. District Preliminary Indoor Train- ing Course for Cub Lenders All Cub Leaders who attended the Indoor Course which took place a short time ago are asked to hand in their notes before June l8. as the names of those who completed the course are to be sent to Ot- tawa on June 21. Certificates will not be issued to those who do not have their notes at this office be- fore June l8. NOles of those Lead- ers ulto have already handed them in are now available to the owners. Cub Camp for all Charlottetown Packs It is intended this year to hold s. Cub Camp for all Cubs of the City at Camp Buchan from June 2'1 to July 2. Application forms should all be distributed the first of the week, and we urge all par- ents to return them with the de- posit immediateiy. or as soon as possible after receiving them. 8t. John Ambulance Certificates There are still s. few of the 8t. John Ambulance Certificates at this office which are to be called for. Those who have not yet. re- ceived theirs are sake; to cell for them st once. Queen's County Scout Camp. July 9-July 1s Again we remind Scouts. Scout- masters, Committeemen and par- ents of the dates of this year's Scout Camp at Buchan. Remember July 9-18. Although many scouts throughout the City have signified thefir intention of attending the camp very few have sent in their application. The sooner these are received the sooner plans. programs. menus may be completed; so sgsin we wish to impress this upon Scouts and parents. "Get YOUR APPLICATION IN AT ONCE." Registration Cords Registration cards for s. number will be until such time so the Group Charters sncrenewsd. You Scouts. t! you wish to receive these cards, get after your s. M. to have the form for the renewal of your Charter signed by the proper cu- thorities and returned to Ecout Headquarters. ‘rhere will be no de- asydin receiving the cords l! this one. Vleiory Torch Ponds Isle on the instructions f0‘! Oubs and Boouis for the bfg Per-ode winch is to take place Tuesday, Mme 1'1. ‘Iihe Meeting place will be Kin 's Square; the time 5.45 p.m. All PM: and Troops are expected to carry Union Jacks. Pack or Troop Flags. ‘Ille Union Jack is to be carried on the right of the Puck or Troop ‘Flag. Flags sre not to be flown free but are to be carried st the slope over the right‘ lhoulder with the flog gathered in the right hand. btt um swi rig free. scouts whether in uniform or not cro to be unhond; un-ilrufcrmed Oubs and Scouts to be placed in s centerfile. will be the order of Pack. 8rd 'I‘roop. 4th Peck. 5th Pack. 5th Troop, 6m Peek. 6th Troo , 9th Pack. 9th ‘rroop. Bea . The Parade is to msroil off at 630. headers are requested to have their Groups at King's Square early so that they may be given their places and receive any special instructions. Hfth Chsrlottetown Troop ( Zion) A meeting of the Zion Scouts was held st. ‘I30 in the Scout, Hell lest evening ct. which ten Scouts were present. The meeting opened with flu-break, followed in- spection; then Rev. G. 0. Webster gave the boys s talk concerning Beout Comp. A bicycle trip was sr- rsnged for Saturday, June l4. ‘this trip is to be to the Notions! Peri, 1nd will take up the greater part of the day. This is the kind 0f out- door Scouting at which all Scouts should be active durin, this time of the year. and the F! th is to be commended on this venture. Pbliivw- in; the planning oi this trip in- structions werc given tn semaphore Slgnallin and other Scout work. The mee in closed with flog-down and Scout gilence. light Cub Pooh (Trinity! Thsmlsofitielizbtylotto- ed, ct, the last meeting of the Fl?“ N“ of Troops srs still st this office and said i THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Bank oi Canada's Status “Staggering” Says Mr. Aberhart EDMONION. June ls —(OP) — Premier Abel-hart. in c statement issued. termed "staggering news’ a remark by Finance Minister Ilsley in the House of Commons June 2 roqsrdi the Bank of Canada's lndepen encc of Parliament. Mr. Aberh statement meant that "Parliament is not sovereign in Canada." 1n the June 2 discussion, J. T. Biockmore. social Credit leader, asked Mr. Ilsley whether the min. btcr had nid the bank was not dlffltly under the control of the "lime dcorrtgnem and. when m. Us“? "filled "correct," Mr. Black- mqliég‘ Btskfid liurther: ‘- I» ‘ de ndent oi e finance depsrtrnenlnsnd shot-egg‘; llidfipondent of iliis house?" Mr; Illlfly again answered "cor- M}. Aberhnrt said "m. implies. tlCtiis 0f Mr. Haley's statement’ are 5° "Thus. the Dimple “must realize he has ralsed an issue of such vital national importance that they dare not permit it to ‘go unchallenged," Vic ting French Losses For Propaganda Purposes IDNDON. June l3 —(CP) ~39. liable sources said today that Vichy i; emnloyine a unique method of reverse’ propaganda by cnnounc. lng heavy losses to its troops in Syria in an effort to arouse the French people against Britain. The British Broadcasting Cur- POTHUOH iii a European emission characterized the losses announced by Vichy as "purely imaginary." Military writers in Ilondon news- papers stressed the British and Free French forces are doing their ut- most to make friends with the in- vaders as the advance continues. Summonses Issued Against Strikers TORONTO, April l3 --(CP) — summonses were issued today a- gainst 15 employees of the Canad- ian General Electric Co, wncre a strike termed illegal by Labor Min- Ester Norman Mcliarty ended early today, charging them with going on strike contrary to the industrial disputes act. Six of the men. in- eluding C. S. Jackson. vice-presi- dent Dlstrlct No. 5. United Elec- trical radio and machlre workers of America, also were chareed with inciting employees to continue the strike. 'l'l‘e summonses iveije sworn to at City Hail after a conference 1v:- tween J. C. M. German. acting for the department of justice at 0t- tawa, and Crown Attorney J. W. McFadden. Mr. German said he had caused the silmmonses to be issued on direct instruction of Jus- tice Minister Ernest Lapointe and that the men will appear in court July 4 and 5. -O-O—§~§4-O+ Th e Golden Sands Riddle By Alexander Campbell rO-O-O-Q-OQ ‘voooo-oooo-omo (continued from page ll. anything. "The mining stock? Well. 1 happened to have bought some. And this mornings paper said that the stock had rockelllcu overnight. 6880.1, sold out. Ana live made sill.- "You mean vou‘ve been gambling on the Stock Eitdlange?" “Not exactly gambling," said Pei- orer lsmelv. "I'd Just. bOUZht the stock as an investment." "When did you buy ltt 1t couldn't have been as an investment. unless you bought it years and years ago." the mining magnate! daughter wisely. "because the papers soy it's been worth nor-hint for ." "As s. mutter of fact. I boiillht it quite recent-Ly." said Peter lamely. "How recently?" “A day or two am." you knew it was going to "I thouarht it alight. You forget." sold Peter with dilmw. "that I'm a. eer. "Yes. but oven minim engineers com. foresee the kind o1 marvellous dlscovgty that has happened in this . said buoy- ‘aletk sey I had u: ides." said I‘. "Ilmt means you gambled." said Lucy. it must have been quite glgigogalrmble for you. if you've made - y l... But 1 didn't." Peter pointed out. Tney had come out to the front of the hotel. into the bl s e. ed wllite ‘Iihe Elise of the sues competed and blues face. sans-J bulk of the hotel buildinir with the iris-re of blue sen. Lucy lifted s. flush "I'm soirry I both those questions. 0f course. iiirwtulato you. You'd. better boned. if yowircizoinutobebackhere time m, ‘mm .. But the congratulations had sounded s bit thin. thought. Peter grimly. as he 0t into his stride to- hishote. ewasarnsrvvlith himself for hsvina deceived the girl about the purchase money. That wouldn't. do. He would sim ly have ake s clean b whole affair. and ho lieve s. story at. thoush mic. was unfortunately fantastic through and through. And if ii. came to a udder Mlllléll, would anyone else believe As he come round the comer. very hot with fast walking under the lsrins sun, he untied Inspector vle. stcndins on the pavement before his hotel. llllll earnestly at s. rot-her bette two-sealer drawn up at the kerb. It was Peter's cor. But Qusyieb grceiirls was ssuve and even cordial. "Ah Crosby! nndins it s bit hot. Peter nodded briefly. “Yes. Did you went to see me thoumt 1 miizht have s word." 1 . with a. difildence that. deoeiilqsudfieelther of th (To be Con e . tinued) town Cub Pack (Trinity) wishes all her Cubs to meet at. ‘Trinity Hall, ‘oncisy. June l6 at flve in the afternoon for s very import- ant short meeti . Parents are ra- m said m. nslers ° 4,500,000 Dozens 0f i. Eggs Shipped To Great Britain By Canlada In May This future shipments will take oars oi the entire storsge hshurplus oss egg c; l hi]. ll you have lots of sin it takes nly six pounds of no Growing you an early matured pullet. Follow the Purina Program to greater pro- fits! Captured Briiyisll Envoy Released CERBERE. Unoccupied France. June 18 -(AP) —— A sealed train bearing eu- Ronald lsrl Cunliboll. former British minister to W80- slavla, and 105 other Britons cross- ed into Spain tonight 58 days af- ter they were capiurcdby the It- aliuns in Yugoslavia. ‘Nlling the story 0f their ad- ventures, they said they had wait- ed in vain for s. submarine to pick them up at Kotor. a port in south- ern Yugoslavia. Thc Italians round- ed thcm up when tllcy occupied the town. took them to Albania in moi- orcars and then transported them in large bombers to Italy. (An admiralty communique in London at the time said the sub- marine stayed in the port. for‘, more than eight hours hoping in (tstabiit-"ll touch with the official Dally-l . They left their internment centre at Canciano. near Slena, Wednes- day. crossing into France Thursday morning. ‘They will continue to Portugal in be taken to England. Hale and hearty. Sir Ronald firs‘. learned from newsman (Pat he had been knighted in King Georges birthday honors list today. Strikes Condemned By U. S. Senate WASHINGTON. June 13 —(AP)— The United states senate today con- demned strikcs and lockoilts in de- fence industries, sending to the House of Representatives legislation which would give President Roose- velt specific statutory power to take over industrial plants where pro- duction is interrupted by labor dis- putes. Ending llirec days of debate. the chamber voted 67 to '7 to amend the selective service act to permit the President i0 take over strkr-boilnd plants, as he already has done un- der his powers as commander lll When your first breakfast . mouthful makes you think. . . That's when you Kellogg's Corn Flakes time. With cream sad Iood energy. And shoal FTops" say housewives. "Right!" say experts. Asked specifically by trained investigators “What brand of com flake: do you think taster best?" four out of five Canadian housewives said "Kellogg's." Asked to choose between several uniden- tified brands, taste experts nhesitatlugly chose Kellogg's! Those are the facts! Your family will prefer them, too! Treat them to Kellogg's Corn Flakes every morning. Order several packages today. Two convenient sizes. Made by Kellogg's in Louilun, Canada; BUY VICTORY BONDS SERVE BY SAVING O Pl “Thanks to Kellogg's Corn Flakes!" Flavour z z ; the rich, mellow, delicious the kind of appetite which actually helps there's the secret of Kellogg! coon-moo; Popularity attested year after e b i. sands of Canadian hoiisewives whb lgfunl llgeeilghol." Corn Flakes their family's favourite Cereal. gg a Keep two or three packages in the house all this Kellogg‘, ill the (tlplc-wrgppgd indhqyiud] Package. suPPcr for moors! No WHbins-un iillltfwdftlil can say flavour of gives y,“ digestion, P0pulariryl . a '. flavour which "S" 111E)‘ give you need d d you breakfast out, ask if)! Silver monsyl Kellogg's Co". likes makes n family breakfast or v st a few cents. Ami tile ‘ breakfast is so (‘My n. chief in the case of the North A- , lncrlcan aviation corporation. “lawn RFB-A-DUB-DPB 5 line on the ironing board. luunclrcss - and yourl New, m“ colored If yoiu‘ llilllfi SUQQCS- Do not iron bias @155 on the up and dawn straight line, but place the gown or slip along a slanting lingel'le—go to pieces ":1 l tl . t i l ' ~ lingerie .119 gm togfl,luv,,,_ hm, an, "‘ ° 1 ‘P “o iiglilly in i1 towel because it is like lions on h:w i0 be klzlil to lingerie when it is being tubhcd and ironed. Pcilifiilfi X011 may utwni in pa=ic tllcm on the wall sorviouiliere near reminder: ll’ l0 sliflfl- However. sucn spots com out; easily in rinsing the gal-men“ Cololed lingerie silollld be gmken (filli- and allowed to dry pal-glam, be_ ere ironing. Sometimes sheer Drliils 100k much nice: when iron. - ' i rmao HERO nl-trn FATAL‘ l i BIRMINGHAM igrp. _ ‘Walter Inwooci. ixlli» “,5 1.32m . into a bombed bililillllfl twice w brought ill) l.\\'(l ll‘.('ll all\~.._ med q asphyxiation when he went dos fol" a t-lilrtl. Hc was :i\\‘fl!‘(lt‘(l p05 e humouslv the Geo e Cross, HERE'S m: l."".§\x'l7l};\.1; AAIBORG. Dennlal-k _ ICP] Skeleton of a liilln bollcreri to h; lived 10.000 rears alzo was found du your lfillll(ll'0§'S' field of acticn as a ed completely dry, ti rayorj___i_rl_lloil_ing l lniz excavations hero. 6 Strand 30" high, HWY)’ Felicia}! lic Li‘ per rod. * b‘ Strand in" high, Heavy’ Fencing 43c per rod. 7 Strand ~10" high. Heavy‘ Fencing 48c per rnii. 7 Strand i2" h i g h. / Med Fencing - -— — -- —/iic per rod 9 Strand 35"vhiirh. Nod. Fencing 52c per rod. 18 Strand 48" high, Poultry Fenc- FARM GATES ing — — — — — — — - —63c per rod 20 Strand 60" high. Poultry Fenc- 4 Fl. high, 10 ft wide Galvanized — — — — — — —-$S.5fl ing - - - — — — — —fif%c per rod 4 Ft. high, 12 ft. wide _ .. ._ _. _ _ __ ._ _ _. 49.50 vanized Wire, 0 & A Wire LAWN FENCE 42" high, Painted Green — —-20c ft. 36" high, Painted Green — - 18c it. 13" Lawn, Border. Painted Green 12V: ft. We also carry Post Hole Diggers, Fence Piyers, Fence Staples Coil Spring Wire, Soft Gal Lawn Gates, Scroll Top 36" 8 ft. wide, Painted (lrvvn $5.00 36" 3V1 ft. wide, Painted Green $5.50 42" 3V; ft. wide, Piiinivi (troen $5775 36" 8 ft. wide. Painted (lrccn $9.75 42" 8 ft. wide, Painii-rl (lrvcn $10.00 36” 10 ft. wide. Painted (lrccn $10.00 42" 10 ft. wide. Painted Grccii $10.25 FOX NETTING Heavy Gal- vanized Eng- I l s h Fox N e t t i n g. Well assort- ed s t o c k. S p e c i a l Prices quot- ed on request Barb Wire in 80 rod reels, 2 pt. 8t 4 pt, low prices 74¢ 5i’ Wl-IOLSALE c. RETAIL quested to remin the Cubs. and to have them st the hall on time. Good Cunning All. , “Till PHONES 105 — 1308 Good Stock!