HE WVESTERN GUARDIAN (N: AG ENT- Mre. John Pond. l4 Water Street E t-r|| 5UuLVlEB8lDE no u °“' w’ PRINCE couivrx maidens, Advertising should be 1m with m; p," HOII. awash ma! be Milli!‘ “u! l‘ Ill! 0f the following storey u; Ida:- ugfinpnokslore, W Toronto m5"?- G rdia n. “ilk Water 3L n will be delivered to lny hum In 811mm per day or 10c per week. Phone 2.89 for this ragga-e Gourlleg " u; Mu“ 65:5". fir-Glvivzsellrlus; B0! w" d“ Iu the boy respohllble fu- dellverlu on you; w", m; I001‘ 97 pflil! “ml! is reserved for news —r'on sun-sq " ' ‘T with litters of 5-12, bfmdie iflwiir? u [m] mwitlglTbbflllizjugzelt-Itgzilfi‘? row Aug 5 whim. 5 w k uewsy l1 _- _ _ - . ee s, Bay- cicévtgnaceuurd strictly pay view. Lam m“ A OPFORTU? ,?’*"' — v ITY -- mo t Summerslde -_- uptown half; 5mg ., ii. \.»...ui_: es. o.‘ .\i and h ,, l R":':1nlle:d bdum h" , "“ P"?! llndcr i. m“! the latest " Hard-mi mt." of Lime, Hyd- . ' 1.311;, Green, biuest.i.e downtown °m°e5 L-TSB-‘I-ZLJ. M Hon. Walter M. ...'.o ‘cam rrcmnr 0.1 tires blow out r4141: iora new’ set L-738-7-24-fi. Rczimorc of \vit.1 Mr. W. . ‘alllilllf to that prira- At the High .s .i'i.. in Lite pretly n the Island ‘rt MacDcn- . The occa- (‘so cf great rejoic- lrom all over Alli‘ O . ‘R ._._ R ~ w. irmzilrhas re. (5.1 trip t0 0t- u. ivicl. uni sic 2 DLniiy is spending and Mrs. Slllllillffl‘ cottage ‘ niini Rcv. xliie Birmingham ton County, N. Sumiucrside, the Vernon c, sCarlc rclircd CNR \ o.’ Georgetown. nectlons at Detrci-t f'o' Chicago will ‘c lsnnd and is at "aw: of Mr. and vices between Montreal. A-lfillva‘. Summer- Toronto. London and Windsor, the - and Mrs. ur- indsor. m- i; carried in wddltlcn to pacsengers. for less than $40.00 per t - A B o Sunxinnagrgidgw E,°.9,%'-;_7.§§.1§f —FOR SALE-Mower in 0d working am _ 5° Kenslngtgg? 9n $10. John £49,872); re —1$LAND VIEWS. films - g 1551x155 at Taylor Drug C0,, KQHZYQQ’. —REDUCE[) To CL séoxek of ladies, gents s white and sport. shoes. This summer's floods. Sheen a; Mac. ' Innis, Water Street, Summeysidl; 15- L-774-T-25-2i, Pro- —s'r. ANNE-s PICNIC-Lenny; Tammi Sunday. July 2am, the an- nual St. Anne celebrations will be éleg§~ 1H“ dogs. sandwiches and Q . aso ice cream and soft drinks will be sold on the grounds. L-773. -—TYNE VALLEY FIELD DAY_ A VETS’ pirisnnt (lay was spent at Tyne Yul-icy on Juli; 2i! W.l'?ll the rliQlil‘ sclnools, Port hill. Birch Hill, l"? BUPY and Nortliam gather- n the ‘dvfirl’; ed for their annual Field Day. Th3 T, 1'10 - afternoon was spcnt i . t -' Rev,_ Mr. ‘Buniain inn cfifiygg.“ltx 8996111,] price of six months sub- SBFiDtIoII to the Summcrside Jour- nal was Wcm by KnilL-ccn and Wil- mi Dlment. Northnm, for comim. first in the girls’ three-located race’? Byron Ramsay and Rough Dennis, Port’ Hill for coming first ln tho bOiS three-leggsd race Byron Rim. say for coming first in the free-for- nll. Supper was served by the 13d. ies of each district, after which i; bun-fire and sing-souig was enjoy. ed by all. In the evening a large crowd gathered in the hall which was decorattd ln red. white anj "olue to hear the folowing pro- gram: Chorus, “O Canada," Tym Vallev School. Drll‘, "Toe Half; H0059." Nnrthzim School. A Scotch Dance by June Strongman. Port Hill. Girls Chorus, "School D1 , Part Hill. Dialogue. "Vlnitinrz for m? DIWYOII". Birch Hill Schoo‘ a Chorus "Tm- Maple Leaf Forever" 1321c Vallcy School. Aftcr an in- ierrnission during which ice-cream was sold the pupils were present- dd with prizes and certificates. The teachers of the schools participat- lfllsfl namelyr-Mr. Wcndall Mac- Neil, Port Hill; Miss Georgie Bur- Jeigh, Birch Hill; Miss Hazel Stewart, Northam; Mr. Dcnalfl Machean and Mr. Stewart Wil- liams. Tyne Valley had addresses. read to them and were pressntsd with presents from their pupils. T0 EXTEND unans- CANADA AIRLINE scnvica MONTREAL, Que. Julv 24 —'I"he ‘ .0 having“: extension cif ‘Prams-Canada Air id” v. 1L w Ejgewater, Norm Lines scrviCe from Tsrcnto to Lon. don and Winfscr on 'l‘hr'rsdaiy, August 1st is announced by Gscrge C. Wakeman, general traffic man- ager TOA. This new service w.ll make it possible for a passenger to fly from Montreal to Chicago in less than 5.x hours. The new trip leaving here at 3.00 pm. and go- ing mrcugh to Windzcr with con- also give two daily TCA plane ser- Ottawa. transcontinental plane leaving Montreal at 7.46 am. making con- nection at Tcicrnto frr London and Mail and cxrrrss will be Prvecieus TroiiimEngland n lblflrn x ‘oea which narrowly med their lhlp ‘Y Gnhnm, trundled uhore at an eastern (Jun- h" lie of older brother Anthony. The boys were an“ l" "W" Iflflte" who arrived in Crnuda rC- ten British Tommlen, brought over to glrrd prl- found thunlelvel noting u nureemndu to the onu- .-_\_ SUM ~ _ 1th a disulusioned eye." .ggwlgrfdsrezson "for despair." He cast _-._______ AND PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE AndYorfll Jun! Outelleel h the "Whine Ruin’ u» c» The liver h ld liquid bile in':»'§'<'>ui-'§¥¢§“<i:ii'," inlet flowlnzfreely. your food doesn't digest. It Just decay: iu the bowels. Gu Mo.“ u .- ur owmnch. You get eonetipnud. flung‘: poisons o into the body, Ind yqq 15¢] "u, Iuxk nu ‘the world look: punk. ' b6 ' entdoeeiflelwn get z: Tafcfilallllh You need something m“ an“ Carter's figttl.‘ filvleiygiheathol. ' old pounds of bile flowinI freely 18:5 ma’: $3 mP-filkeutpleargia ua". Her-mien and gentle. they e ow freely. They do the work u?!‘ cslomel but have no celomel or mercury in es tninlrle-l-Eetkhfg; Cnrter’: Little Liver Plllu by u raly refine anything s1“. 25¢, Sh Germans .. illapture Arch By Louis P. Lochner Associated Press Staff Writer BERLIN, July 24 -—(AP) —Otto l9 Strasser, arch foe of Nazilsm whom bl Heinrich Himmler has accused of organizing the Munich bomb plot against Adolf Hitler's life, and Hor- schel Gyrnszpan, the young Ger" man- Polish Jew whose act of assassination precipitated the Nov- eipper, i039, anti-Semitic riots in (Jsrinany, have fallen into Nazi hands in Paris, a well-informed ‘German told me today. Authorities declined comment, but my informant was in France at the time the Germans took over. He said Giynszpan was found in La Smite prison, awaiting trial for killing Ernst. Von Rath, a German diplomat, in the letters Paris of- fice Nov. 7, i938. He now is held for trial by German authorities on a murder charge. Another Rauschning, was said to have es- caped to London. most persistent broke with Hitler in 1980 and form- ed an _ His brother, Gregor, stayed with Hitler, and died in the I934 blood purge. Sci-asset fled to country after country, always waging his cani- paign. His black front newspaper. "Deutsche Revolution," was smug- gled into Germany by the thou- station dinncd forbidden propa- eicpeled from Gris-ace and Switz- erland and jailed in Czecho-Slo- valria, but he always got away, Fi- uiaily he enter-ed France. last Nov. 8 the chief of the Ges- i, tapo, Heinrich Himmler. claimed Strasscr had organized the plot. h lsh Intelligence Service. l" "W "irwtfl that Himmler. himself, had organized the swept Germany the day after‘ Gryriszpan shot Von Ruth in Par; is. German Jewry was assess - $400,000.000 in collective fines. 8 Sudden French Help Britain B Kirke L. Slmliw" Associated Press Staff Wallet‘ WASHINGTON. July TIP-MP)- Five weeks have now. 011F891 8m“ Pm -= Minister Winotcn Churchill piqfymeqi u; Parliament the end Qf the bat-tie of France and: the beginning c-l che battle of Britain. 0n the lat-tier struggle, he said, depended "the survzval of Christ- ian civilization.” adding that Hit- lei‘ kncws he will have to break us in this island or lose the war. At that moment, five weeks ago. Bintairfs peril was_,_obvi0'l15\l' mere deadly than it is today. yet her wiar leader. "wmmulatma our up t-hs "dread balance sheet’ or Britain's chances of wlnmnfl through and found lt not too dis- heartening. Shculd Mr. Churchill review to- day the known factors on which his hcrpes rest he could unquestion- ably state Britanfs case even more stronfiiy- For one thing, the paesam 0! give wcek; without the launching of a total attack on England seems to indicate that the Hitler hish command was as much fill-QM Ill-l)- ping by the swift disintegration of French resistance as was Britain. Within two weeks after the Ger- man victory in Handel's had cul- minated in the nureculous with- drawal by sea of more than 350,000 Allied tnoo , the battle of France had been ought and loot. Hitler's armies did not pause to take breath before they crashed against the Weygund defence line. The most propitious time for en all-out Nazi attack on England would have been at the moment when France bowed and signed the armistice. It is only reemnable to assume that neither Hitler nor his gereraLe had actually expected so sudden l-n end to French resistance, perhaps had made no more than tzntauvn clans for curring the Lgh-t to England. It may well turn out that the very opted wit-h which France was crushed operated to give Bri- tain tune t“ make the necessary rte-adjustments in her defence sys- tern. Japan hns ‘stcblished an office in Tokyo w“ " prospective bride; ,O0mDfl 111. and grooms re-y get advice as fht-ir ms}? and psychological Q c ed. an militar lifem _ Rev. Canon Casgrain of Quebi-c, - 7 I _ r giéthOlic Archpisgov) 0i antl- ain has lost one battleship, Nazi o; new the Bumm- Hermann aircraft carriers and three crlliscfs among her larger naval unns sliLe the start of the war, the Admiralty announced today, Lnher lossesFusted by (the Adlmir; our arme mer: iar. unlike“ “f me cruisers, 26 destroyers, I1 submar- es, ll small Iiava. vessels such as Otto Strasser has been one of the any were, Nazi cause. m A founder of the Nazi party, he sloops, gunbcals, nlmeflayc). _ , tOiJIl , dUi li..ilI.' opposition “black front.‘ 8&1‘; o‘; Ifisani,“ typefima‘ L“ ‘my pressed into war service from civil- ran duties. At the bcginlng of the war, Brit- ain had I2 uutiieships and battle cruisers accoiciiilg to Jam's figgdféllliillsiilpfnttlfilléd in Ncvcinilicifi I I ' . "i 1e pa icsnip listed a5 ca. fi L P . a .~ tiA.~'-~-"..="-."' sands of copies, his s.cret radio lull Jr . a u ~ ‘ 4 ,- s-a ma» He i» airt-s,..i. wartime worth ton class under ccnszi-iiczi Ari undisclosed numbc: of LACS» rirc in service. After the explosion in Munich me Courage-bus helped with money from the Brlt- vice-Furious, Hermes, Ari: Jdagle. AIEAIS, Courageous and L. cus—and si‘: others unncr coils: bomb lion: IHUSLHOUS. Victorious, muniti- gian co a WAKE ll P YMIR ‘Temperance Heads [WER B||.E— Sock Dominion Liquor Restrictions OGTAWA, ,_ __ _ strictlons on Jill}: tie (C?) m of alcoh 1i T911898 during the war, and an: demobilization rlod were urged the government” on "on reuresentinz the Canadian ‘Temperance Federation. ' Hon. J. G. Gardiner, War Servic- Mlm-‘ilfif. who headed a CBDILILU‘ committee which received the deic- gation, said would be given the prnposal “x1188 Olgegllcerlsgiig bervgraizics in tav». . a w ne , discontinued, that sums be emment stores be today by 8. delega- careful consideration that sale from gov- permicted ozilv m 3 p.m. to 8 pm. on week-days, at liguor advertising be pic-hum- that __l wet canteens in esmblisnments be closed rs of the delegation esenting Cardinal Villeneuvc; Rcv. E. (sagnon. lTfpfti-Ellllllg the Ottawa: J. W. Judd, re resenting me v. Social Service Cuunc l of pie church 0T Eiflllland in Canada; Rev. Jilzn Coburn, representing -.'-.e Cliucl. of y 3",, Tl-umson. chairman of the commut- Vnzxrd Canada; Rev. J I! (n Life ‘rid Work oi the FITS- ltzrian Church in Canada; Rev. Jkan. Wilkinson, reprcseving the C_ALGARY_ PILOT PRISONER Pilot Officer Harry Davidson. Cfllsflry, is reported a prisoner of war in Germany. flu w“ repormd musing July ‘l, Baptist churches 0i’ Canada; Byig. adlei" C, Sparks. representing the salvation Army in Canada. Mr. Gardiner‘ said the rlilht to restrict the sale of liquor in pence- iime belonged to the provinces. Dur- ing the last war. however, the Fed- c. .'_ uovurnmc i. mill TH’ Heb-On in lhf national interest to restrict ‘brill.’ ivtciiufacture and movement c1 ill u; Britain ’s Naif‘ Power Imposing Despite Losses LONDON. July 24.—(CP) —Brit-~dcstroycd Nov. 23 bydthe pocket I . TWO Etilll “like She pauclcsliiir Deutsclilai Iiklllfis listed I79 (icstroyers for Britain at the start of hostilities, and o‘? submarines, as well as nine training submarines. Sixteen des- troyers, under construction, ivere scheduled for completion this yhar. None cf these figures take inw ac- count thc Large building program laid clown last Autumn as soon as Winston Churchill entered the gov- which \\9‘l'€.6l‘lIl‘|1(’.lIb as First Lord of the Ad- miralbv. ficmmercial The aircraft carriers sunk wire ojrrAwA_ July 24___(C.P) _ An l. 220mm “m1 m“ \-"°“'-'“5- ‘flicicnt commercial air line is 0,9,1 ' L, (m)? _ “L _ _ waving valuable to Canada in war- e“ ‘w M“ *1‘ c“ 511m 1- ivnc and ‘Trims-Canada. Air Lines is ad seven aircraft carriers in PM“ able indomitable, implacable and Violent anti-Jewish disorders Islgéféafjxfiiltlffgée ‘if! s1eJI-_l‘{y3e_ @0115- She also had 15 fter st r >- P 8 n FE‘ o 5 .- year; the The armed merchant cruisers sunk includgglihe 16.69j_-tQn Traiviilpindi, i PRISONER OF NAZIS DIES Flying Officer Albert Ransom (Dickie) Ball, 25, of ‘Vcstmouni. Que" died while a in Germany, accord ng in word re- celved from the international Red Cross by his mother. Mrs. S. H. Ball. the British alr ministry said Bull was "missing" following an rucrlaliAh-igiui troops. engngementflltlay _l3. rlsonrr of war An earlier notification from YOU'RE WHO owns TH; - RIGHT. RING DID snow uP..A GUY WHO GETS ACQUAINTED WITH A CUTIE M’ heavy crvisersi ‘ and 43 other cruisers iinCiblding .\vo l comm - under veckzlzlnstructilrzm and six anti-i rcr ft (i lld' ‘ - i ~ Qci-“l-‘WTEQ’? 5311:3313 killed f Vim gttflgbrlfctllfjlii) ‘i112 colgiiiiiilfoiiulluer""‘“'“" Mnmls " " “ll m?» 0W °f three czuraers lost were the 9, his fflmlly. elpeued 1T0!!! 961111011X cruiser Ijlflllgilhlll, ::ui.k The -l\ the 4180mm the wars start, uiiih four mare ie riizie under construction. five were to be completed tiiis other four in 1942 claiinlnl: to maintain its service and mun cicvclop iurtliei" in the next (illtillf: straiosplicre Diaries By rho spring oi 1941 the present flect of l5 Lockheed “l4" planes will b: considered oui-of-date for the first-class service and experts are nq new types of planes t0 question is far from sav it is p0ssib.e ithat some stratosphere Diaries mielit bv introduced. These Dlanes recently were put on the regular trans-continental run of a. United b6 Us . While the asi; the 4,290-t0n anti-air. , i _- . cm" firms“, Curlew sunk by Enemy Stntcs uuline and are believed to be planes Mav 31, and anti-aircraft cruiser Calypso, torpe- deed June 10. Nine cruisers of 8.0004011 dis. plaxement were under construcirm of the same class to lu- bui t. Oi‘ practical for use in Canada. The fliclit from Montreal to Van- COIIYCI‘ now takes about I6 hours, __witli four or five stops en route. stratosphere planes could make the hop in 11 or l2 hours with one stop at Winnipeg. On the return fl ht Jthe present type of aI‘0U.D_d 14 hours could bc reduced proportionately W nine or ten hours Cabins of the stratosphere lanes arc sealed so passengers wil not suffer from altitudes of 20.000 fe or more, which is the fllglht level of.’ the huge new airliners. Present T.C.A. flights arc made at between 5.000 to 8,000 feet on an average. Those stratosphere flights neces-i sariiv would stipplemcnt regular llltPT-ilfililll service by '1‘.C.A. across alie continent for which smaller planes would be ilfififl T.C.A. again will act, as a connect- ilig link for Trans-Atlantic flyin boat, from Britain when they star bflllf-illlfl mull ucrcss the ocean soon _ ns ilicv dxl lust summer, It ls n ilciiniiclv known here when the first nlunc wiii urfivf‘ at Boucherviljl’. Quin. l0 miles clown the St. Law- rence River from Montreal. saxruxirlzn T0 PENITENTIARY AMHERST, N. 5., July 23-(0?) --l\'lurous Dahr, who gave himself up voluntairily- inst week alter es- czipzng an acting sheriff's custody, was sentenced to penitentiary for three yours tnday on three charges 0i forgery, He pleaded guilty to all counts. one laid by Amherst po- lzrc, the others for offences in New Glasgow unhissfiirrous Tubal-z COPE TOWN.-—fCP) -Unlque b0 ,.ihc Canadian soldicrs with their brass hiittnnlcss “battle rompers" ,ilie hllibllhSlifk familiar in other l wars. is a favorite gadget for Smith It bunches the but- __ inns from the khaki for cleaning. ‘Two 0f “Lost Legion." Return To England By HAROLD FAIR Canadian Pres: Staff Writer LONDON. July M-(CP) - Two young Scottish Tommies, Inemberl of Britain's lost legion — the 6,060 men who were captured at St. Val- e in the retreat from the Somme — ve arrived home after 21 days of do ing the Germans. They were the ony two known to have escac. The lads, both 20 years old. brought back a story that sounds like an adventure tale of castavyays. They slept by day. foraged for food in fields and abandoned farm houses Bolted from Prisoners When the prisoners were beina marched alon aroad from the field into which ey had been hordvd “just like cattle." the two lads bolt- ed from the column, and Silppvd into a, peasants house. After the troope passed, they crawled into the woods, so weary "that we just lay down and slept." For four days they went without food. Then they found a bottie of rum in an abandoned truck. From a nearby field thev dug up some potatoes and the meal or rum and raw potatoes "was like a banquet. _ Next night they prrlved at a big nouse, but decided it was a Gor- man headquarters because there were many telephone wires leading to it. Two hundred yards farther on there was another house in WhiCiI they took shelter because it seemed unoccupied. Luckily they slept up- stairs because they were awakened in the morning by voices. Two Ger- man soldiers apparently had re- turned to sleep after night duty Not daring to move, the two Bri — ons remained there until the Gcr- mans left at night As they crept downstairs the lads saw a loaf of bread left by the Ger- mans hut decided not to take it. and crawled into some woods. Hun- ger got the better of them, however. and they returned for it. A iew days later, just when they were be- coming weak from hunger, they tir- rlved at a. large mansion and found tinned meat. scraps of bread. some butter. sugar and rice left. by Fronch officers. Lived "Like lords" "No one seemed about. so we lived like lords in the mansion—but slept in a. wood nearby." said one yout l. "At night we heard cows mount-g. and we crept out with inc-s. The cows were tethered and feeding in a "Theme were potatoes in the gal" den, too. So we had some pocrl solid meals. Every night for fit again, we made Escage by Boat After search g the mansion aboard and ' Wm“ 9059M!’ l0 the extent °r 1mm‘ four more for a suitable tide. They‘. ('- <l0~i2itc ’ W! slipped out of tlic lmrbor bursts of machine-gun fire Next night, after the wind had ripped their sails. they sighted Fug- lsh vessel. “We couldn't speak. We ills! luflkvf‘ at each other and grabbed harms." CARR. YON P. E. I. Motorist Tells 0f Narrow Escape In N. B. A narrow escape from a serious ac- cident was told to a Monctonii-an- script reporter. when a mOtOrist from Prince Edward Island des- cribed how he had narrowly escaped crashing into a her-iv mid busily carrying no ll his in the Acilac to Cape Torment ne road Monday evo- gze. said: "I had been told to al- ways dim my lights when meeting another car, and I always do s0.but I find that the motorists in New Brunswick do not even bct-hoxj to return the courtesy. Lust evening when drivln with some friends from Aulac Cape Tonnentine we met a car coming towards us with the lights dimmed. However, Just before we met, and after I had dim- med my lights the other _ car suddenly switched his on, too bright. For a second after lie had b d l could see nothing and then, .. ci- ly k1 front; of my car. was B l10l‘5(‘ and carriage driving along writhoiit even so much as a red re lcctor on the rear. I swerved mv cm". and even as we were passing I expected to hear a. crash. as I did ‘not scc how we could avoid striking him. We passed without scratching him, although other passcnaers in - e car could not understand how wc had missed him. as he could not have been more than ten feet 111 front of our car when we first smv him." Enacted 10 years agozllblifli" Mon by a. newspaper in Malaya of a translation of the Arnbinn Nights as a serial has just reach- ld, the halfway mark. SYMPATHY , Have Olose 00.11 ~ field. We milked them each night. _ mm- ior at iii-s’, luui‘ Years. nights we milked those cows. Tlicini , - for the 0.11mi‘. We were only two miles from port. m, manv nights, roniu actuary lillglll. have modified ithey found a. 20-foot fishing smack. e-"llli 01 , t fou tti tore. from , _ men r days Re "g s ivaltczl I hearing 0t YUpPCSQIIlLILIOIB today and they refused to answer a challcngc. land and were picked up byaBrit-y | MESIE ADIAN , YOUR FAMIlY T00. Wlll PREFER QUAKER 30R HAKES DOUBLI YOUR MONEY BACK It’: malt that makes the diEerence! And that's why ' i Quaker Corn Flakes are so popular that we can v make this amazing offer. Buy uaker Corn Flakes from your grocer today. Try t em any way you like-for crispness freshness and above all for FLAVOUR. If nu o no: agree that uaker Corn Flakes are (he est you have ever use "us: return the empty carton to us and we will gfadly remit double the cost of the package. . .....~.:v;-,_,-; m‘ __ ‘Han-nu y“ ;/ a. ‘l TONIGHT t}. The dance of the week. Preeby‘: Geehestra. Exemptions Sought ylinder Unemployment insurance Bill l ___ _l______ arrows. Jul air-lop) iiii H. Wuliciidoii, o? Toronto, ma spoclui (fOli-IIHHLQL of flu; Hgugg of Cunuzmns studying the uneniplhy. Lncnt insurance bill, that the Incas». H11‘ 1s "autu f iIIUCEPHIIiIIliT/G al w 1l-‘l\i-J,"fl(.iLi.\l‘ll_y speaking, in tliei . tiai-k. | ‘ A consulting actuary, Mg Wolfe“- den. was 1l(l\'l5i.‘1' to the governmciiti in the iihllllllg of the unemploy-‘ mciil insurance bill which i lmrliument in 19136. Ilavuig Icgufili l0 coiuiilions prevailing in 1935, hei , iclt safe instatinpz the former bill; ' was "SCLUHIILV sound” but he could‘ not siiy yl-iie same for the present; biiivlli view of conditions now pre-i vailing. T118 Toronto actuary said he was? i101. (jpposai to the present bill go- Inil lIlLO effect. but ixished the ut-i {H059 care taken l0 ensure that when i i it nici it would function on a sound t Q1 basis, and not impose an unexpected burden on the treasury. . '10 this cud he suggested that the l plan oi arliiiiiiistriiiion wntaincd in the bill be referred to an impartial vcxilmiltcc. of employers and eni-‘ “ bible-o; for study on methods cf urocidui and that contributions Lo} not collccleil until this committee‘ i . I1 JLKIST DH». Mr. Justice Nicol Ji-ffrcy ii.- (ll-at, The T0-_\'<“;\l'-Oid rewind m-u-ui-i‘ in the Ontario supri-iuc- wurt iiii-d July 2i) in tho holni- n! his sistcr who INHI’ living in tfll,‘ vc "H. chief actuary of the i, Jllflfills furmn- iumlc. JAHIIICIIL. who uoiiucdi ~ - ~ — ~- ll bill, said if Mr, WolJi x . an ublo to study ius. ris i‘; zliu puvv-riimcnt the Til-f r: lillJiulCKi its studios. ond tlic aci- vi. -- , ' ‘ \. LIUIIS iiicliczi cd the insurance fund, would be ziblc to IIIGOl, all illibliliivfii ‘AD his opinions. ’llic rommiiiee completed the v1.41 IQ moo‘. bcinini closed doors ior ciiscussion of Lin: bi.l. i i vvs of banks, insur-l aiicu complaints and truinways, ask-i ed vxcmption from the scheme be-i cause cmplloymcnl condgilions among ‘ ill: .l Ulili) (MUUS lift.‘ Sill. B. , id Tlli“P.1‘i_l1\\'l1\\ ULILIUOII of Cana- _ ___ a t/Ql_l\ll_'|(‘f ‘a -p'.io_ii_ oi nlilencq ‘n‘.i\ Bx" K“ u f}?‘tiiiivififiiiiiafii.§°i.§‘3~fi§..‘§§‘i1§§§¥§3?fy Tho min-lulu hn- armour-m ,,,g,.t_,,~,,,-m, ,,-,,,~;;,.1~5‘0n11ne5 °pe¢~§1;_,bhilt waters of!‘ the “mist coast oi um my‘, the United Stflbel illnrand and the south cu. i oi “Phi-re was (iizposition to a. railway i l" M"! hi"! D0011 Illlnfli. llflfllm‘ association proposal that beiiefiisiilbly as H fllrlhi-“r luv-brill!” ils-illlel mid n5 unemployment insinumriilnvmziiui. Vcssi-ls livisllzlng to I ‘r ellfillid be reduced by the amoun Jhe Irish sou. or tie Kristal (‘I i- iii an; udjiisiinciit allowance puidiiwis, the unnouncu-u... said, mus! 1 odor the Canadian Nationul-Can- p35! hrnullll ilii- uurlh of Irclzzizil. ilian Pacific Act of i939. That Actiyhe anal-rm,‘ is ha...‘ m, lhg Yllllbflis t0 fiofllDeriflilliEnglish side, at "flfllillld Puuit. -s laid ofi as a result ol co- ‘ “flu Devon’ and Tr€v“§a “mm “greemtmW betlvefl.‘ M“ which h half-way down the north A a . - - . . _ luquirffilzvy fiziieellfiéfifi‘ coast oi’ CovnuxnII. From those smut was loft ovcr for further con- g’, fflcmkd m "M1 ‘cm fildfffilliOll. “ w‘ ‘m’ W. L. Best, representing railway iirczncii and engine-men, urged that the scheme be extended to workers earning between $2.000 and $2.600 a ywur. As the bill stands, itoéidiplics‘ pulv to persons earning $2, or ess. SENATE, CONLMONS, DISAGBEE (YITAWA, July 24.—-(CP) — The Senate iLKidX refused w concur in’ the Commons‘ demand lhnt the! Farmers‘ Credit Arrurigi-liivni. _Aii. be restored in .yliiiii' . 1 ‘ amcziclinvnt. TUB vote was 33 l0 25. The Sv-uatc llihiiilsi. u ,. ‘ providing for an appear which us, Commons would not acct-iii- two Hcuscs inc now dmirliockcd and i a (OllICYtllCt) likclv will be arranged‘ l0 straighten out the matter. uquirccl nouns-ion mam Is 11m UP FLORENCE. N._5.. July Z4.-—-(C?~ —‘l‘nc Nova Scoua Steel and Coal Company's Florence mine W35‘. lion; up to-zluy _\\iI(‘l1 iiic colliera refiisid; to wrirk Wltlh three mfn hirid from; _ _ , p ihe ' orono mine a ur-ar v 1.111% "h, H- . p y 1 - fix-Qt‘ Api);-()Xi'l'|In‘t.i‘1i» ,l_hnlli‘nw(lifiir;(rcl) evils innyqgmz “rwr ),‘fl"e“élol‘;fl§)xi‘ol‘lc1gn Tfip ‘pix ‘WU iwn years‘ scvvivc will ibi- Tiny-ill . ‘, ..‘ ' ‘ Air Forcc. Inter-nor] in “l lniuui m Gama“ tomolum‘ ‘February uflcr hcing forced vlnun The Florence colliery men protest- > . 0d Mains,‘ “hm: m‘. In“... Toronto when [Ii-lzilun was still _ii _ncutr.il n“ mon’ bu‘ dvnded m “(m-n he was rclcnacli \\'il"l\ Bciclum PI‘.- vvork tomorrow" wlicn zissuraxicis WW5 "l" “"1" "I - - “hill l-“l were received from tlic lIIfllIfifZPTrK-‘lll ‘hcard RT hi‘ bull l luliirc incn who alrcadyhuvn ihc captaincy nf bomber pri-i 'iir.l in a “kuliucton By Wesiovcr —AND MY FIANCE AND r Bricks oer oug ENGAGEMENTAND v0 as nu AN AWFUL $PO__T IF I COULDN'T GlVE IT BACK sosi-ur YOU WANT ME TO ill It f1. k-a who. ~