PAGE FOUR ‘LIE CIIARLUTTETIIWII GUARDIAN morning uafly il-‘uunncd u: I881) fi-euueut; ucul. Col. W. UIIHl-fll B- Mil-ll" Vice President; J. B. Burnett, lJ-l. Iecretary; LICIII. 00L U. A. Mnclunuun. DJ-O. Emu-u nun humming Director. J. B. Burnett, lFJ-l. Associate Lanna; rnuiu Wllkcl m0 Ian A. Burnett SLBSCICIPIAUN BATE-I l; mu m LLJ, 54.00 per your; 52.50 In! I month: u $.26 for 3 iuuntm; 60o for one month u U“; Delivery $5.00 per year; $3.00 lur 0 munlll 51,15 m; 3 muuuu; we for one loam. B] Ill-II w other Provinces and U. S. A. $5.00 pa! all “sud-My jygeuy; p200 pcr your; $1.00 [or b lmllllll, _ 50o for I moat-Ill uuurumu ma: be ODIIIIINI l! [linen lquuro, New lurk; 0f! Mum ham: Agency, Corner Milk and Wllhllllhl. Ballot" Metropolitan: he»: Agnuuy, D48 l‘!!! IO. Alumna“ d. lfhm, MI U»; 5n, 'l'urontc| New! lhll, Chubonu Llurlcr, uuuuii; “ullol new; Island. Iutlhuu. 0n; Hub Tobacco bllup, uuuclun N. B4 ’ flip Strongest Jlemory is Weaker; than 8M ‘nu Charlottetown fluuflll‘: new: Aieucy, | Weakest Ink.‘ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1942 _The Duke of Kent h Empire was shocked last Qvming by itews of the death of His Royal Highness the Llll s, Of Kent, youngest brother of His Majesty lciig George Vl._Tlie Dill“. 15 Air Commodore in the Royal Air Force, had lbeen on active scrvic since the outbreak of the war, and set a _ E-l txauiple by his zeal and devotion to duty, ll:s dcaih occnrretlin a plane crash while en i-otue to Iceland. It is almost l year ago——on Sept. 2, f94I,—that he visited Prince Edward lslziiitl in the course of a Cari- add wiile tint." iii coitiit “on with his official duties. 'I'liii=¢ v. , privilrge of meeting him oti that it" : ..l recall his democratic liandclnsp and genial smile, - {The whole Brit manner, his \\ and the ltciwi I st he took in this Province and its ptiupl if‘, 5H in the officers and men 0f the ll. L‘. . . "ltl R. .»\. E. whom he in- ‘pcctcd at S1: " , and Chzirlottctoivn. Deep syiiigiatl:_v wll be felt for their Majes- ties and for her Riii-zil Highness the Duchess of Kent and f1‘ on this occasion, which is just another rcii of the grin-i sacrifices en- tailed in the \\.tr, aiiil how they aIfOCI the lives 0f all of us, from. the livinhlcst to the highest. British Manpower Policy Canada, which is only now beginning to utilize manpower for \\".tr purposes on a. selective ser- vice basis, will " d Great Britains example in- tercstiiig and i ciivc. Great Britain has gone a long \\';i_v iii ll‘ r-i icciilrzttioii of its manpower on the \\'.ll', iii ticiug of its workers at the tasks whcrc ti. tic’ lllifl$t iiccded and for which they are best fitted. The aim has been to meet intelligently the iiccils both of the armed forces and of cs = ' iiiilii-"trics. In a recent three- inoiuh pcr. i , "i- than thrcc-qtiartcrs of a mil- lion \\'0I'lt‘t'l‘.s \\\'Z'(’ tr;iii~fcri"cd to more essential emplo_vinciit_ Of ii. so, 413,000 were transferred I . under the dir Viu of National Service Officers, and 3Si,ooo ‘l . s xiiluiitnrilv moved from one job to a ' " ' largo traiisfcr took place , iuiits. It is the operation of ;:i tliitatla as selective service. Al‘! pi-IILIILIIIOII of 33,300,000 be- , 22,000,000 persons are ..ccs, civil defence or in- dustry of all typ twin-fling to a statcniciit of the .\lllll$li'f' of l. t ziud National Service. In addition, tiicre wure probably another two mil- lion men and women occupied part time or as voluntary workers who ll.'l(l not been included in the total figure llc stzttcvl that the manpower of the country w-as nti-iv mobilized “to such a point that the grctit tcst bctwccn now and the end of the war is not a tcst bctwccn British and German manpower; it is a tcst bctwcen British and Ger- man niaurigvrizil z. i ty. It is a question of whe- thcrc iiidti-iry can show its utmost capacity in the titilizzitiiiii of tllis grczit force. That does not mean that more pit} sical energy must be got out of the people; it mcaus that every possible labor aid must be tisril in ordcr that their mfirgy may be used to the ftillcst advantage." Every effort is llIJUlC to scctirc the maximum employment of w. r icn and to use their services to the best adv: ge. Those who cannot take with \cr_v itw what we rcfti Out of a ii tween I_[, and ti; yr now in the ziriizi-l full-time em )i0\'l .<'nt are cncoura ed to take I A ' v part-time Local ciitrmiittccs study how they can be fittcd into such work, Marricd women who accept cmpfiiu . an: rwstirctl of leave of ab- sence when tl ir hu-"hanrls come home on leave from the scrviccs, \\'omcn are transferred from rion-cssciitial cmplii-iiicitt. All women from 26 to 3O years iii-o lit r \\'illlill‘.‘l\\'ll from retail busi- ncss (except lil_ liwid Illltl ciizil trades) to more important \\")l'l(. \\'iiuicn students at the uni- versities are not nilowetl to continue after the l both year. _ _ _ The employment of children in agriculture is facilitatcd by illiiuiug tliiiso ovcr I2 ycars to be il iiii- scasonzil farm work ivlicre c of farm labor. absent from sch there is a sliitr“ The Rope Shortage L “Tron tlic _l-'ll>".ilt'-it‘ §€t'l7.(‘tl the Dutch East Iii- dics thcy cut riff from us a valuable supply of ropc-tiiakiiig lllill‘ rial, itlizriincd front the abaca, a trcc I‘(‘l'll"tl to lllt’ ‘ii: Hlllfl, 'l'licri- had nlrcatly been fclt a sliiirlzigw w: i ijw. priiiiiitizill_v in Great llri- taiii, for in lulu illt‘ llriti-li llt-iiip liibrc Con- trol Born-d \\'.l\' rriiiirlril as having made over- tures to tho (f:ui:iiliziii (jovcrnmciit for the growing of liciiip. 'l'lic ncccssity for economy in the usc of mpg lii‘l‘.'llll(‘ more acute carly this year. Thu ll('ll.'ll'illlr'lll of Xltitiitiotis and Supply, in Fclirti:ir_v l.l>l. :iiiiioiiiir<"d riii ordcr restricting the tisc of iiiziiiila fibre and rope. Rope from liriiip. which is I‘l(‘(‘(l(‘(l for tllr! Ships (‘_-,,;,-,,i;, ,-.nil tlti- l'niri-il Stair-s arc build- ing, roiiiil l‘?! " lii iiriiuii in this country. Llhf _l:uiii:irv llr . 1 \r<~liili:ilil, ilircrlor of thc (Irutrztl {u l"ll liirm, statcd cxpcriiticlal tvorit h til = 7 n». ruin l)!’ ;gi'own successfully in Rlniiiziiliu, tin: iiio nlul (__lllt'l1i"('. "We coitld llmiliici- iwiim iivri» iif IWIII)» for tiiarliic rope “ll'l "mlilflt" tiui",-i~rs." lll‘ said. Nothing how- PW ~<"-iit~ lo li:t\' li".l] Illllli" (viuiili lliln list-n uciirlv thrcc YCZITS at war, s“; f” the United States actually got in less than nine months ago. Yet, notes an exchange, this year 35,000 acres have been planted of hemp seed in Kentucky, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa and the Dakotas. Next year the seed will be used to grow hemp for fibre in a vast growing program. From it is obtained, also, marihuana, a dangerous drug, whose use was on the increase in that year. Llnlike Canada, the Unitctl States did not, at one swoop, cud the growing of lICIIIp for all pur- poses. It continued the policy of requiring grow- ers to register with the Federal Government, and the authorities kept their eyes open for in- fringement of the law. This is what Canada had done uiitil I938. Thcre has bccn time, ample time, since 1939 for an airiciidnieiit to the Na- tional Drugs Act. But no word that Parliament has done any- thing to remedy the situation has come from Ot- tawa. Apparently the members have been too busy. e- EDITORIAL NOTES -. l—-—i___. _ The continuance of stimmcr weather should insure our good and bounteous grain harvest, and pave the way for the garnering of root crops. n- a u u Apparently the‘ Governor-General is not in- cluding this Province in his Maritime tour. ls this because of the itiatlcquacy of transportation? a u i: u The Australian wool clip in the 1941-42 sea- son set an all-time record at 1,159,000,000 greasy shorn pounds, according to the Wool Digest of the International Wool Secretariat at London, a a i: a A new South \Valcs dairy farmer had a heifer which rattled when it moved. It dicd and the postmortem showcd it had catcn thrcc fairly large stones and 586 of walnut size. is u u n- Mr. Oliver Lyttelton, British Minister of Pro- duction, told an Aldcrshot meeting that "it would be folly to dciiy that the SO days in front of U5 are some of the gravest we have cvcr faced." That carries us into November. n- in- n- u Sorrow came to the Emperor of Ethiopia lilst wcfik when his 22 year old (laughter, Princess Tsahai died at L¢kcniptia_ The Princess married C01. Abily Abbaba. four months ago. She attend- ed school in Britain and Switzerland and lam- studied nursing and medicine in London I105- pitals. w n- 1 m Young Earl Haig, the only son of the great Earl, leader ‘and commandcr-in-chief in the last War is missing and believed to be a “im- prisoner in the Middle East, his sisters ltave been informed. IIe joined the Scots Greys in August, 1939. He is just twenty-four, and looked for ward t0 a great future as an officer in the we. sent hostilities. Iii!!! Iirproof of the fact that the British are dc- teriniiicd to hold tltcir own in the East after the ‘VIII. Illc Government has established at London lUnivcrsity a scheme of scholarship in oriental flllgllflgcs for boys from secondary schools un- oer thc age 0f cightccn. Scvciity four have l)('Cll awarded SCllOlitrSlIIpS out of 1,300 appiicants_ The object of the boys’ study of the language, hlstllry,‘ and culture of China, japan, Turkey and Persia is that they may serve and find a cal-em- i“ the East after the war. It m it n Lord Tweedsinuir, British statesman, novelist and historian, borri this date 1875; author of “John Burner of Barns," "The Half-Hearted," Prcstcr VIOIIII," “Grcciimaiitlc," and QIhQf novels“; ‘vThc yillarqtug of Alontydsc" (},,‘Og,-;,I,hi_ pal)’, Nelsons llistory Qt the \\'ar," Official History of“the South African Forces in France," volume of Poems Scots and English"; became Governor-General of Canada, and died in office 1940: "The robe 0f flcsh wears thin, and the years God sliincs through all things . . . He findeth God who finds the Earth He made" a u r r i with Haveuwe active German spies in Canada? F91" filllmgqto register in Toronto as an ciicmy alifin john Stvcrt Christianscn, 44, was sentenced to 12 months imprisonment and fined $500 and costs or six months additional. An additional cllaYgQ 0f having in his possession documents that might be of value to the ciicniy rcstiltcd in a similar term and fine. The scittciiccs were con. secutive. Magistrate T. D. Keith, recommend- ed that on conclusion of the sentence the accused Should be interned. During the trial it was .11. lcgctl that the accused was in possession of 1|. sketch of the Toronto heating terminals and atl- yacent territory which a Crown witness, a fly- mg officer, called a perfect plan for a bombing raid. I e .01 u Saskatchewan government will further restrict sale 0f liquor and bccr in the province. Deliver- ies of liquor from all Saskatchewan government liquor stores will be discontinued. Banquet p”. mits will be discontinuctl Special quantity per- nuts will be discontinued. lVhcn the present stock has been exhausted, the sale of 4o-ouuce bottles of spirituous liquors will be discontinued and permissible daily purchases reduced to 26 gum”, Liquor and beer and wine stores operated by the llflllQr board will be open one hour less daily Owning at I2 noon iustcatl of at II a. m. :15 {rm "will" B9" PQFlOFS will be opcii for thrce and one half hours less daily, opening at 11,30 ;_ 111-. instead of at 8 a. m. as formerly. a it» io- n- Thc C. B. C. directors have adjourned to 28th inst to conclude their deliberations on the PY°PQ§C<I rc-orgaiiization recommended by a committee of the House. It is reported that Principal I. S. Thompson, lit-ad of the Uni- versity of Saslcalchcivan, is to he tiiadc general maiiagcr and also financial controller, Another feature of the proposal changes is that (jlad- 5l"l_l“_ lllllrlil)’ l5 l" bf‘ rvlcgalrd to thc minor [NNIIIOII of priigiwun tnaiingvi- with headquarters tircfcralilyi in 'l1>i'iiiito, that l)r. .i\. lirigon, nmv assistant gciicrnl tnrinngcr, is to get .1 gizcnhlg in. crcasc in salary and zilso to l»? lcft with coiilriwl, of the lirciich nctwork .'l.~ \\'(‘ll as rcligiotis broad- casts. THE “CLIARLOTTETOVIFN GUARDIAN NOTES BY TIIE WAY Just. as the front llno soldier must ILIVB gcoa gncralslrp and I oareiul p.an of bafLe If he is to do his Job, so clceg tbs performance of the front llne ivorirer depend upon enterprising lcadsrship and an ef- fic.cii. p.an ct' picctiiction. The ‘ ‘It prccccupation of the pub. . says MI‘. Lyttleton, ls WIIHLKI‘ we are pioduc iig the right weapons. "To do that," he sand. “we have to show a great deal of foresgnt and vision." Foresight and vision must mt. only he nip- lIc-d to strategy and the dcsgri of weapcns ‘Ilny mus; be applecl more kcciily than evcr btfcre to organization In the workshops and 1n the Government Departments. Too many eyes that mzght. be visionary are blndfoldcd by red ifllpé today. - Lcndon Dally Her- a d. Just i; slmple lltlIe newspaper headline about a sknple little mat.- ter: "All-Day Suckers Will Be Two Cents." Public Authority places 9. stern restraining hand on ihe baby writ a copper cent clutch- ed In n tiny fist but In so many ozlier dircclioiis stiz-rlfce" Is a word drill to be found only In the dictIo1iarlesI...WIien It comes, sav to liquor, Public Authority ap. pears deaf, dumb 5nd blind. Otta- wa. says and goes on saying that liquor Is a. "provincial" matter! that. the Federal authority, In all its wartime might. and pcwer, must. kccp its hanfs away from matters o1’ "provincial jurisdic- tion." There Is scmcthlitg s0 unreal about situations cf this kind that; the average person wonders If there will b.‘ an awakening nftcr n. Ixzarre dliillll. fl Halifax Herald. A widening of the vlew of I single one among the Govern- ment's many control agencies will noti. however, achieve all that Is tiecdccl in the way of eccnsmic gr ', if ozlirr control - their conlrois with zuid along ccn- flicnng Iliics Mr. Liitle fuiicdons under the Iypaitrucni". of Labor. Hie could, If he felt, so Inclined, throttle with a labor shortage an industry Wlllill was Invcrctl by the x i iic nus plAO ties anti uud iiiicttici M try, with n t, id silpjily cf es- sqnliitl iiia:c:i.il.~_ \ 1h~ 1)I'.OI' iiics HUIIIIOIULY was throttling cine of Mr. Little's labor-c .pll.d In- dustries by depriving I-f 0f mu- terlals. We do not think tlils will happen by IIIICILILII, nor llLil. It will at» all g.n.~znl._y' cven by cvti '; but \\'c w sh we ivsre more c. nccd tux-u‘. things ' be so aiT-anged that If, cannot ha -that the labcr supply material stippy will a1 co-ordinatctt tnat no IICi ' ‘c ie 11nd the be Iisld up fc . k o.’ one 1c WIICII inc ct cr I.» plQlJiIIlIl, — Toronto Saturday Night. There ls no end to the list of’ monstrous bllsliluilillts pgrpea-ated by the Fascist tieiinris. News of face, nu and lo.t.iig" are re- ccwt-tl Iiciiriy IICLI: are some “Li; t‘ cit in ilio l.: I.w dogs In tc Aiiiirkov d " . ILL (Icons oi vnhagcs time bcrn burn. ed to LL19 ground. Of 50.) farms In the village of Olciiiiki the Germans burned V only 30 he village of Buriki Iantilies. In l1 among our Iigti l ;. ._- 110w s s it months cif the war have appeared German p brutulitics against peacclui iiilmb and Soviet. \\';ir j)‘.‘I:CIICI'.s 11 the Ra} Anny min 0 ncss. _ Enrict War don). VYhen a doctor told one of Iils patients to irnlk llIOlC the paiiciit replied that lie did sctnc wiilknig and hail it. healthful to Jilmp cvasic Iv. iiucidotc is i-ccalitd ' the I I t made in 105D by it siiciy oer, that "the offspring of today's pedes- trians Will be the Olympic champ- Ions of the future" A stgn that pedestrians tire learning the best w-Jiys to SIIITIVC is tliiit last ycar, u (lcatlis frctii iiuticmcbiliz- ccliislons rcsc 24 psrctnt, acciden- tal dcuihs c-f pcdesirians rose Olll‘ seven percent. Yet, In terms of human life rather than In percen- tages, ivtrkcrs who met. death frcm cars on the s‘rccts and highways cxccrdcd 13 6V0, or cric-thfrd of all fatalities frrtn nisfor vehicle atcl. dents. Reporting this In Its latest edition of "Aiccldxnt Facts," the Na- tonal Safety Council glvrs as the commonest cause cf dmth among pedestrians crossing bctiwern str:et irilcrsccfoiis; another 34 p‘rc"nt of the drtrhs wcrc (‘lllFCd by wak- Ing in roadways. Moreover. as many were killed In rural ccmmunltfes as In cItIes by cibsslng between intersections Cautious walkng hnbts may save 100f0 lives a year and orcvciit. inju I0 ltioitsands more. - New Yo. Sun. In times of stress there Is a ten- dency for weak-minded folks to resort to soothsayers, piilmlsts, and astrologlsts. Those vmo practise these curlous arts are not tn- frequently prosecuted as rogues and vagabonds I stiould Ilkc to poliit out, ticwcver, that the harm done by those people ls tnflnitcs- Imal when computed with that done by astrological predictions In the ress, A news-paper may have n wading article diwclling on the In- tense grnvlty cit the sItua-tlon and the nccd for t-hn most strenuous rxertions by every cum-and on the same page an astrological prediction that Germany will col- npse within three months. I clte an actual Instance. These prezllc- tlons are widely rend and popular, else no editor wcufd give space to thcm-ibut vilrn they dcal with national interests they are A public danger. Why should anycne go all out at war wcrk If Germany ‘s iiure to collapse In three months? Can- not the Newspaper Proprietors’ Assoctatlon arrange that at least for the perlcd of the war the as- trological features be rmIi-‘e’? — or, as an alternative, that the as. trolcgers confine tlicmselvrs to blrthday predictions for those who credit that sort of thing, and omit all reference tn pultrc affairs. - slr Benjamin “WHO In a letter to 'Ilh¢ London Tlmcs. Rlrhnrrl Fain-y, of London, was on the high sens His Great. Dime (log. JIOIIOIS Creepers. was sbvzrnl lhcusarzl mllr-s awry, Pl IIITTI" In England On Jnntiary 23. FairryZs ship “'11s tcrprdrctl H» w~s cnsf zvlr‘! In an open Ira‘. 0n Jririiarv 9.3 In Lrridca F"ll' "s m: stow“ '1 mtfiia. (Tn Jniiiuvw- 78 v was nlrkrrl no by an /lP71"'l‘RIl do fro);- er. On January 28, bstk In Ion- l cxnloslcns In the town of Mlaoblsse. Y Sll‘ A‘ ed to have completely occupied the lli ' liitc. Black Trackers (Australlan News letter) y A Kalgoorlie Yugoslav saw a. little bird capping on his window with its beak and beckoning to Iilm with one of Its wings. "They're going to kill YOU." it told him so he cook to me bush. He ran by nllht and walked. by day through the dry spInIfex country, with little to drink and for three days nothing War Situation In the Far East (Canadian Press) rmwrint ‘lbkyb headquarter; a:- serueu mat a snail force of Am- grlggu troop; eflecwd l landing It dawn Aug. I7 on Makm Island In the Gilbert Islands. 2.400 mlka southwest. of Hawaii. but were rc- _ _ "Y m" '“"“‘°‘° brill léliiémiliii- f” - two rac ers '1'!“ 35953959 "ml?" unclmflnn’ took ti” the txyall o e e ed el-sflwherv- Bald 91° 1mm" Pm? mm niid followed If ifllwalseiinfciiutiield consisted of about 200 I-NQPI- mm crouch! at the bottom of an Seized by the Jflpfllle" it If." old mlne will. outset of the ‘war. the 10mm B-l- To the whites the skIII of the fish-owned Gilbert Islands lip 0n black tracker Is uncanny buta nolloe the equator, JLLSL south of powerful officer who works regularly with enemy bases 1n the Marshall Is- them says It Ia not. Their bushcraft lands and 1,100 miles northeast of tkie says. ti; based iii sme- ars..." ..l'€‘i§l°"' c" dim?” sud‘ l‘ mm presumably ml!“ b? a1 (IGCIIICTIQOII 6mm y a o8 c‘ mile "w" “ha” a conhntmdo "mus" Boys who have grown up In civil- l° w“ m" m” enemy s derencui Ized surroundings are never so ex- l" me l6“l“y‘°ld battle 0r m“ pert as those who spend their early S°l°m°"-5- Alllecl ‘l’ “mm mulled yearn roaml the outbreak with m9 VBSF Blllllddlltwd mum “a? their tribes. he bush records for In quwfi 0! Jfllmle" 9"“ “llvl Y these boys I picture of everything amid reports the enemy was ugillfl- that passes. No two Deople have the 111E 119W Sllrellglrll l" 5 wllllllxfr l}: same walk and even If a man against United States Mar 68 changes his clothes his characteris- tlie Tulagl area. tics are still there In his foot- A navy ccntynunlque announces! prints for the tracker to read. Men last night tahe Mai-Inca now were have tried to throw them of! the engaged In mopping up renmnnu gjaallltt byxspnélklggubplckwarda. ‘gpeiy of Japanese garrlson troops on Ia- I“ ‘ism a L ave worn e lands “recently captured ‘at the 00%)“? “e B gum l d °*“l,°"‘,°“‘l °' ll“ °°°""l'“i'l°“g dock benifivias langtxliafissbllghastglilé; Arc ripe ago. ' ' w iiiii - “was w- “birlssttirrrriizl-bt":..ii:§:% "W" °l' “us” had bee“ “at an" the sharp eyes of the tracker by Allied aircraft and declared that Queensland Ponce employ '60 to bvmbflrdmentl by "W"? Flam‘- 'io black trackers m deal with cat- destroyers ind sllbmlYllle-l hall lll‘ tie thieves and they choose boys tlicted 0H1!’ "1"!" ‘la-mug °ll 51L“ from the stations who have had a shore posllloflfi- lot; of experience in hunting for T116 BRVYS anllflllllf-‘emelll l-lllll strays. From the marks they can several Islands had been "recently tell s. wether from a. ewe. a cow captured" Indlcated that the Ivm- from a bullock. ‘These are the sort of thlnizs the UNIVERSITY helor of Science i: given. athletics. practical instruction. annually. wlll be lent on request. Ines, cutting through tlhe mount- alnous jungles. had vlrtuall com- tracker does: pleted occupation of the s atsgfc In an arson case the trail was followed five miles along a road. buses. The leathernecks were known to Iinve gained beachheads on at least three and perhaps sIx o1’ hie eastern Solomons. Informed quarters In Auckland, New zcaland, said the Japanese were busily reorganizing their naval and riir forces In the northern siilo- a renewed "This man is lame. He wears his right boot much more than the other." A lame man “'21s the cul- prlt. In s. murder case an elderly mun was suspected. "No." said the track- er after studying the nrca. "It was a vouiig man. ‘ He ivas FIKIIL "llllls- llllllalelllll’ fol‘ . Horseshoe marks were all over a tittcinpt to drive out the American trampled Ilmvcl. garden nNot a 5011mm‘! lnvmlels l" lllle solllllea-‘ll horse," siild the tracker. "A innit with horse shoes milled $0 111-5 boots." The suboteltr confess/Cd. A boy was found tied up In the bush and said n. man Itad attacked him. "No man been here," said the track-er. "Boy tie himsclf up.’ The bov said he wanted notoriety- Thmfln days after a murder a tracker found mar-ks of boots and 8 cycle tyre and Proved llllll “d5?” pect wore the boots nnd owne e cycle that made them. d m“ Another murderer reverlsebifl déi tyre on the back wheel of l1 s to make It appear he was I-rav? "IR These quarters said Japanese troops In the Tulagl region were fighting a bitter delaying action In the hope of receiving reinforce- ments, and declared the outcome still hangs In the balance. Striking at Japanese supply basfls far to the west, Allied bombers again attacked enemy forces on Tlmor Island and toudhed off great Allied headquarters In Australia announced. On the China war front, Chinese Iicadquarters announced that Gen. or new imuiiswici FREDERICTON, N. B. LECTURES FOR THE ACADEMIC YEAR 1942.43 BEGIN SEPTEMBER 211! UNIVERSITY TRAINING IN ENGINEERING AND t SCIENCE IS ESSENTIAL FOR WAR INDUSTRY This University offers excellent courses in Civil, hlCCllZlfll: cal and Electrical Engineering, Mathematics, Biology and Geology. The degree to Bac- Excellent accommodation for a limited number of student; in Lady Beaverbrook's Residence for Beaverbrook Gymnasium provides every facility for llltlflg; This University offers also Courses Bachelor of Arts in the fields of Politics, Economics, Hi5. tory, Education and Languages; the Degree of Bachelor of Civil Law and Bachelor of Science in Forestry. THE FORESTRY SCHOOL is splendidly located for The University owns 3,640 acres ol forest lands on which lumber operations are Full Information . spoofing Fees, Courses, Scholarships, etc., Is contained In the Unlvcrslty Calendar. N. A. M. MlcKENZlE, LL.D., Prflsldenl. in Chemistry, Plwsps men. The Lady for the Degm of Conducted A wiry I 144 Richmond St. it; direction. but he drduldmntiizpidgisxelve the tracker. The boys are bald 6/6 a iiiw avid sign on for n year. Half their Dav 5 Clilmig KnI-Shekfls armies hnd re- captured the powerful Jaoanese stronghold cf Kwantrfene In Ktanzsi Province. thereby diminishing the h:- t of :1 Japanese Invasion of Pkirn Province {harm Dispatch-cs said Geri. Chlttnrlfi. forces recaotured the trlty yesterday morning after lay-passing It In the Klarigsf campaign In whlch they Iiitvc retake-n Kwelkl, Shnngjao rind other nolnts along a BO-nnie titan of the important Kiangsi- Cl" Qaiw, rnilwav. The Jnnnnese at one time claim- nem- future, however, all the crop i» Mlnlstery of Food and d5 ' to n11 Alli-rd countrlcs under lav: Interniitioiinl Tea Allncationuofia which ivill also contiol tcn ctu 1-H the small amount of ten ova! i118 for export from BritLsh EH5» Africa. Under the plan which IS - b ‘ introduced to solve Dfcblins Inidia’s Exports Qifiili... IroIrrIht? loss of I011 pa; ____ ports from CIIIIIR, Jallfm Illlll -l 'I'lic ncw Icu raticn ls a timely Dutch Eitst. Indies. (‘Mill ‘ll extent of the Allied countries equitable perceritng‘! °l l“ llomml ted requirement-s. rciniiidci" of the United Nations’ dependance ori India. This vast Aslatto sub-con- liriciit is one cf the richest areas he world and its plantations. ndufs ncrial as, forcsts. factories and mines 000,000 pounds are an ilblliltlfllll source of all klnds be reserved for the use of to the allied oountrles. Since the Nations. I055 of the Straits’ Settlements with banked for them and some who 5*," gtllllffl of Pacific Relations New Ionizer take bu: cheques home with JQIEEY- U. B. A.) i TO-DAY So here hath been dawning Aiiotlitr blue Day; I!“ Think, wilt IIIOLI let it. will obtain an slip useless away? An amount Out of Eteénltys b0 ~ t th Cri- ‘This new HY m‘ cquul to, if itogolgltfiilingigionnrgf Into Eternity t annually, will rilso At night, will return. the of products, both useful and vital armed forces of the various United ggllcllslg tllfaegligllgllme ever India's annual lea harvest Is now 5° 5°°ll °l' Id. flxclr rich resources of rubber and reaching Its peak and the extent of From all all“ l5 h Lin, India has become Canada's ghlpmfifliS during the next; p third largcst source of imports. months. will answer the qucsllflv Among the products she sends the 0f whelther or not Cnnadas Dominion vegetable clLs, spices, ltldes and cotton. Increased or allowed to stand. chrome ore, In nddII-Ion to producing SI.‘ ch few Here hath been dawnlnl n Another blue DAY! Think. wilt thoti let It are baa, jute, peanuts, w-eekly one ounce ration wlll b9 slip useless away? grhomiss Carlyle. The bulk of Indlirs wealth is 1 uantltles of tea, jute. cotton, _ derived from the agricultural en- siilfguer ‘land tobacco, India ts nlsoflie Keel) Ml“l‘l"l" l“ ‘h’ home tcrprlscs cn which 75% of her world's largest producer of Irdos inigc population depend for a living. and skins. If ls estimated than By modern itiiethods of flood con- bhere RTE In India about 225 nilllnn trol. Irrigation and cultivation, heiid of cattle and buffalo. 4b India's once perennial floods and million. sheep and 5B million 504115- famlnes have been conquered and The country also possesses vast. the Jungle defeated. Her lands forest resources which yield an are now tremendously productive. almost limitless supnlv 0f tfifmlhk and India leads all other nations nrcdvcts. tlmbcr. Inc. tnriwnillw- in lilic output; of tobacco, sugar and and bamboo piiln. Huge quantities jute besides being the second of vezctnblt- olls. wcol, silk and largest producer of cotton and tea. hrmp are also produced In Iridln. Tobacco Ls grown on a. orillllon By comparison with the output and a half acres which yield a of her agricultural enterprises, (BT01? totalling as much as 1.375 Indlafis mlneriil resources have becn million pounds a year. Another gcnrttolv tapped. She hits vlrluallv four million of India's acres are unlimited siinnllcs. Iioivovicr of taken up with the prcductlon 0t manganese and viist dcncsils of .—\- 1 l Mason ti. ssurttv . Professional Bards w. n. m-zzvurv. K- 0- .|. n BENTLEY It 0- Barrlclen and AIwHIBII-ll‘ LII MONEY TO LOAN I54 Prince SING! SUSHI‘ and In 1939-40. they produced hlizh grade bauxite. chromite. mlvit. a crop of 1.4 million tons. Jute Ia copper ore. mnizneslte and llmenlt". India's second most Important Her high griide Iron ore deposl‘; "Erlwllurfil product and the nro also nmoviq the world's lamest _ annual out-put averages about. The potential nnwsr rvsnvrrrs of nIne million bales. The country en- Tnrlln are also lmnrnsslvir Tiww tn- joys u world monopoly In the pro- elude can] sotims estimate’! tn con- duction of lute and exports about. taln thlrtv-slx bdlion of sixty bllllriri half of Its production raw, turning tons and ‘hvdm-eleclrle mower the remalnder Into cloth m It: own resources which, If fullv develotie "1111-1- T1" annual Production of COUIG produce an estimated 11.000,- cotton. India; moat tam. 0M horse-power. IIIZTICIIIWTBI PrOdI-wt. totals some (Facts obtained from tlhe Indian seven mllllon 400-111. bales a. year. Governmgnf Trqfl» (‘qmmleqlpyp Morrelland Company II. F. ARGIIIBALII Chartered Account-um Intern Tnul llulldllll "We 0f the Products Canada. ‘Toronto; and "Pnclflc Affairs", mi- IKHPOII-s from India forms sueh a nimrlerlv niibiimtton of m‘, 1n. Ch-rlottewwn 01-056 link betwcgn Lhg Qwo coun, gallium?’ tafl-mlfllihtte outdo!’ tein *“HHHHHHHHHHHHH“H“‘HUHH' r a estlmnted that. 8.500.». Jihad»; WORDS OF - ALEX w. MATHESON by the new ration order which “ARRBTEE soucn-on’ n-c EXBIIIPIS 0111? the armed forces and M w u, n cquugh-u; children under twelve. The Dim- 8m” . m d‘ ; Q“,- l, 5g“; Infants normal annual tea ‘mportg from Indln alone total twenty-five mIIIIan pounds. IndIii Is the world's greatest tea exporting country and rimlu second l} "It's ‘Wln or perish’ foib u! In this war and It's 101ml $0 take the unstlnted effort 0f every one of us to wIn."— LIeuL-Col. Frank B Murphy. U, S. Supreme Court Just ce 1 uiu .- ii _> ' I - . _ _. . only to China as t; produccf. H iinnunl export crop, which to- ° 3B0 million nvundr. Is about. 42% of total world requlrements outside Producing countries. Thfl huge "UP 1s grown In 5.000-odd ten _ gardens which cover upward; to I one million acres. In 103B, tlhese gardens absorbed more than $2,000,- 000 ln capital and employed more than 1.000.000 workers. Approximately 75% of India's ten exports Ls normally bought, by m, United Klntzdwii, which exports between 10% and 12% to other oggtrlcs such as Rpisla. In the dim. Policy's dcs. _wlth yeps of JOY M11 much vnggmg of the tall, stzirticd esitIn-i; again. This story t5 vouched for by a number of people. Hcw did the dog know about. his master? A theory has becn advrnc. ed that a dors mird lit kvrned h on that cf his master a‘. a! times FCIIYIUIIII? aflT the fa hlcn of a. radlo and n browlcastlng etatlan. -Ocntra.i Press Servloe ______ I I I I LLB. BAIIRISTEB, SOLIUITOB ITO. M. ALBAN FARMEA ILA, Unnodhn Bani of Commerce HI;- MONIY T0 LOAN. Burn Large’s Coal 71 Queen st. H.IR. LARGE a. c0. m. i000 E. R. Brow w? 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