‘a n r..- _-.». wni- §1§kiLn-_-!4Ii¢4fi PAC-F. FOUR TLlE LHARLUTTE IUWN GUARDIAN Muruln; Dally iFnnndul In llfl) vies-aunt. LwuL cur w Chill-II l Isl-IN Vice President: J. IL Burnett. IJJ. ggei-gulry; ueuc UuL U A Mwnnnnu. 0.10. £01m: nun slamming Dueclor J IL llllfllill- lJ-l- Assam-Isle huiluri: i-mu wnulu um lll A Bill"! SUBSCRIPTION RATIO By mu in 121:4. sum on rem 81-60 I" 9 Bu"! 51.25 for 3 months; 50o for one month um ueuvcu sow pm rear. 53-001“! P 111""! $1.75 for 3 mouuu; I00 for one Iunll. By Maul tu other Province: and U. S. A. $5459 P" IUI Smut»; nectar $441" P" "an 5w” ‘u ' “"3 50c for I month: huuldlllll may ho will!“ l! rim»- aqua-a. MI llrlu 0|! huutu mm- Agum-y. Corner bulb and Wall-goal. unalulli Mulfupnllllll he»: lbw-u. l!“ P“ “- nuuireiu; .1. 1-111», 4&1 Bu) an. ‘furunwl hon load. Uimlrnu Luurlv-I, 01.1fm.“ num- New: null. Illlmvl Out; nun YUIMMTQ BIIIII), lllllllflflll a. u-i ' '11,» Clrurluttuluuu ninulnut- pens Alum“), "The Strongest Memory is WWII" "W" l” iveakest Ink." ssfltidnlliii-IDLY 1a, 1542. Manpower Muddle 1n a 1'<11i;1rk;1bi.\' lirtllllfi lllllfile l" th€ ‘ll/inni‘ pug lircc lllCar, its Uttztwu correspondent, Ml:- kirant l)L.'XlLl', tolls albolll- "MallPmveY muddle ' To btglii with. he stuff" all“ llllrtWfour months of \\';u', it is sllflllbdllg l‘) dlscover that the \ii>\'('l'lllllL’lll bus nn bnsic uimlpi>_\vcl'_flgufe5do “n.1,- .,11_ l-j; 11 dupuytiiiciit equips itself with ,.1,1..1,U“u1 gxlicfls, upon whose advice the Mm- istcrs bLise their opinions. .\lr. I-Iowe has man- power figures prepared by hi5 Own Tfixa-Tch nicn, 'l'lie Xntiounl Defense Deparffflfifft has it. group of cxpcrts. The WSQEIYCh dlvlslofl Pf llic liznik of Cziiiuclzi. tukcs :1. hand in the d15- Cllr-sluilb. The Labor Department has its ‘own ‘my o,- uylculuting manpower. The National \\'nr Scrriccs Department clings to the old 194C rvgi-ii-zuitiii, The lkpzirtiuent of Agriculture l5 thinking oi its own job. I ~-g,..1‘1'11.1._.11," says Mr. Dexter, “1s_ also ap- parent 111 the important matter of the Illt Of lhf! current army program_ How many mm s." needed for the active service army? Mr. K1118 szivs one thing, Mr. Ralston another. If you g0 back a few months you will find Mr. King Saying in March what Mr. Ralston say: now, and if you go still further back to February you will find Colonel Ralston saying substan- tially what .\lr. King says in June. There is a bewildering absence of precision a5 t0 _army pOllCy—-\\‘llll the variation in figures running as high as 30,000 men." . One group of Ministers favors natural selec- tion for service, each man choosing for him- 5clf_ Another group favors a large measure of wntml zutd direction. There are two sets of boards dcnliiig with men operating under dif- ferent Blinistcrs. Much confusion and over- lapping exist, but the important point, as the writer 5113's, is that the experts do not agree. null ilic Ministers relying on them are equally a1 cross purposes. N0 Reply lnslivv .\lllli.<ll‘l' St. Laurent said in the HD1150 oficliiiiiuous on Monday that he resented thC sugqe-"tiou of Dr. H. A. Bruce (Toronto- Prii-kilnlcl that a Government answer to a Que?” tinii \\.-;i< lihdilllfl‘ in frankness. Ur. liflln‘, Sfllll (‘of (ieOrge Drew, had made cp-u- .11 11... 11.1w; Kong inquiry that he would make no charge for his service a5 colmifil. bu! iii the l‘(‘1il_\' m hi5 question the Government had scfid C11 lli-cw had presented no account. _He lt"ill'l“l hi< reply would create a wrong impression. @1111 ;1>l\'L‘(_l if i1 \\'<*1'c not true that the Justice De- pnrtniciil lizid known, before the question was an- swerotl, that Col. l.)1'cw had told the inquiry h€ would lllillu‘ 11o charge. The .1.i.;~iE.»i1 io which Dr. Bruce had referred hziil b<~.:i :i‘.l~".\'ci'crl by the Finance DePaftmenti said .\l:". St. Latin-cut. Dr. llz-iice at once asked Finance Minister Ilslcy if lic n1" his (lepartment had been aware 0f ~unwit by Co]. Drew. "1 1 11.. lmiiu-lcdgi- of what went on at that Siifilisl Ill; ling." >lllll .\lr. Ilslcy. "I would like to ask iiiy l inorablc friend how he knows." C vntivc llouse Leader Hanson asked De- f('lll'(' .\liii§~t.~r l\‘:1l<toi1, who had attended inquiry ~ -d.-ii<. \\'llI‘lll('l‘ il was correct that Col. Drew ' .1 wzutiiiciit dcrlziriiig his intention to ' ‘go. , lliilszon sziid he had heard no such state- 'l \lllllll< of "order" from members, Dr. .1 11.1w! if the Government, in view of 1 111mb‘ Zlqzlinsl "(illc 0f Canada's loyal - ' ti/ciis" and its subsequent with- u »ii'.l Ullhlllcf compensation and an ap- _ :..t'.l.l>i-1»\\-. There was no reply. NNi/ar Achievements . ~ - ‘iiiii; l'l‘k"ll'1l of British achievements in .i-. iid \-. ll ll1l\ bvvu ptcpnrcrl by the Uflllfll wrniiiciil Ilfficv of Facts and Figures 11.] 11111l<1' llic ll(‘5\<llllg "Tillese Blake .. 4171f.“ l.lll‘l'.'lllll'C of this kind would be you!‘ ~i hilp in cviiiciiting “national un- 1.1.1 u ibis iinic. Retold in the rec- . -- llll’ lilllllf‘ of llritain, the great- $1 Iii-ii l'_\‘, which lasted from Aug. 11111». uHil which cost the Ger- llil',l\ 1l('~ll‘O_\'('ll in daylight alone 11- .11 night. U11 one day, Sept. I5, l . s wcrc brought down over Eng- -i.,|, 1' lllillllll cost 375 British pilots iiillllllwlj 14.281 civilians killed. .‘ il. Nevertheless production vi-iuiii: i ii-ii-g isii-ugb the months of this in- ‘ -., 1, _,,.,,.,. .\..1~1,(\1-~ >ii1ii1 dcciflcd l0 slay at tli- 11- .1. ..-* '- s ,11~..l lll'll\'llf‘5 during raids. and con- 1111... .1 -., i1 51., ~1|llll'lllll(‘S (if. hours a week un- til i-xliuii-"i :1 iiircnil flu-iii l0 limit the hours 0f work. \\".iiii llll‘ lif‘l'lll.'lllS gave up the day- light i'r1i<l< 21$ lllll costly llI(‘V continued llieir flight bombings unlil lllf‘ fiiillfflvillg June, when the lifllldl ifyzhl flier and radio (lclcctor made this foil exticnsivc. .\s the publication says: “A hand- ful of young R. A. F. fliers hid saved Europe . M-q-v-iftv- “‘*-' I and perhaps the world, from destruction." So in the year that elapsed between the fall _of France and the German attack against Russia. Britain and her Dominions remained alone facing the Nazi terror Without that solitary year, which as Churchill said, would be reckoned by history as the finest hour in the long history of the Brit- ish people, this war could not have bcenwvn; in truth, this war would have already been lost. Says the article: “Although the campaigns in Norway, France, Greece, Crete and Malaya end- ed in tragic defeat, Britain today is immeasurably stronger at home than ever before, after two and one-half years of ivar, during which _she has borne the brunt of the battle on man fronts. Bri- tain's armies have fought ten campaigns and gar- risoned strategic bases such as Iceland, Malia. Gibraltar, India and the Middle East. Britain's fighting forces have suffered 133.500 Casualtifii. 71 per cent of all the Empire dead and wounded. Britain's navy, with never less than 60o ships at sea, has sunk 5,250,900 tons of enemy merch- ant shipping and conveyed 100,000 United Na- tions’ ships with loss of only one-half of one per cent of these convoys‘. Britain's air force fought and won the greatest air battle in history; its coastal command has flown more than 50,000,- ooo miles. Britain's factory workers produced in 1941 twice as many finished weapons as the Unit- ed States, exporting five planes to every one im- ported, fifteen tanks to every one imported. There have been many notable additions to this record since the document was compiled some months ago. - EDITORIAL NOTES- Here is to “our Island," where heroes are bred, including Gloria Large and Jimmie Fraser! Ii i Ill i Tomorrow go to Church to worship, and add your petition for those of the "Silent Service," the Navy, which has done so much for us in our time of trouble. in a in a Do you recall when Hitler first made war on Russia, everyone expected Stalin's forces would be driven behind the Ural; before winter set in? Well, they weren't and the delay, like those of Dunkirk and London, has been so much to the good. u a i: n- Are our soldiers in Libya? Defence Minister Ralston declined any comment when he was shown a Inndon cable which stated that the Paris radio had broadcast 1 report that two Canadian contingmts had arrived in North Africa. a 4- a a The Marquess of Dufferin and Ava, Governor- General of Canada, visited Prince Edward Is- land this date I873; the Hon. J. C. Pope was premier at the time, and the Licut. Governor was Sir William C. F. Robinson, "part1 as a re- sult of whose judicious councils" the sland was at that time included in federation. a u u: u A preliminary report issued by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics gives the lumber production in 1940 as 4,629,000 M. ft. b. m. valued at $105,- 991,000, the third highest on record and an in- crease over I939 of 16.4 per cent in total volume and 35.3 per cent in value. c o =0- is The output of leather footwear in May a- mounted to 2,816,452 pairs, compared with 2,- 774,128 in the previous month and 2,843,157 1'11 May last year. The cumulative total for the first five months of the year was 13.602147 pairs as against 12,175,597 in the corresponding period of 1941, or an increase of 12 per cent. n: a i: ii- The Hon. Mr. Howe struck a match to light his pipe (luring a black out at Ottawa, it is alleg- ed, and has been summoned to court on Tuesday to prove his innocence. No doubt if guilty the magistrate will impose a substantial fine, telling the accused to “put that in your pipe and smoke n- iu o n: \‘\'e are now told the difference between a boarding house and a hotel is that the former takes only "permanents," whilethe latter also in- cludes “casual: and tourists." But the rental regulations for both are the same, though hotels enjoy concession privileges which do not apply to boarding houses. I n- n- n- The necessities of war impel ever higher air- plane speeds. Science is turning out cvcr more powerful engines, better fuels, more efficient planes. It may be that already there are long-dis- tance planes much faster than that in which the Canadian-American crew set its , record of five crossings in nine days while carrying freight and passengers. It will not be long until a flight across the ocean will be as routine as a flight across the Dominion. The old dream of break- fasting in London and lunching in New York may not be far from fulfillment. o u a Here is l modern Enoch Arden with a much happier sequel to that of Tennyson’s Woe-begun: hero: “Husband and wife were reunited under extraordinary circumsances before Judge Guerin in Montreal. Leon Trague, a Belgian, left Mont- real 25 years ago for Winnipeg, but failed to keep the promise he made to his wife that he would return afterashort holiday. When he actu- ally got back to the city recently lie-considered it part of prudence to keep the fact a secret from Mrs. Trague. When news of his arrival reached her she obtained a summons charging him with refusing to support her. The parties appeared be- fore Judge Guerin and when he heard the cir- cumstanccs, His Lordship asked whether it would he possible for the parties to reconcile their dif- ferences if the court adjourned the hearing, say for eight days. "I would suggest t5 days‘ delay," said M11 Alban Flamand, attorney for the com- plainant. "Husband and wife are 68 and 64 years 0f age respectively. At their time of life, recol- lection may be slow." "You think that perhaps. after 2o years, the fire of love may be cold i" asked Judge Guerin. "Well, Your Lordship, fire always may be smouldering under the cinders," replied Mr. Flamand. "Cinder or no cinders, I am prepared for a reconciliation immediately," interposed the hitsband. "I am agreeable," rc- spouded Mrs. Trague. Judge Guerin commend- cd the parties for their good sense, allowed Mrs. Trague to withdraw the complaint and wished Ihcewbbbwlilk; -*‘ ' THE cgiyigiéqmcroxvw GUARDIAN NOTES BY TIIE WAY A girl reporter back from‘: bicycle vacaLon ln Canada. 116ml concern expressed fri Brit-Ln 00- ' lumbll. about Callfcrgf ‘s unrele- ‘Ihe Canadians shrugged at their own air rald perls, but were dls- turbed lesl; we crack under the strain of the blackcu s. and the hysteria tkt-ry evidently EXP“! here lf the blow 1111's. And she encountered s, mlsapprehenslcri of American war effort and produc- tion surprising in ti-e light of tier own Information. From this lt. seem; evident that our n21 1b:rs to the north need srme in ctrnatltn about. us and our fr:me of mud. u we some time ago urged we should have more official news about Canada's trsmendcus war o'- fort and courageous splrlf. A dlf- ficulty Ls that the tyip:c:l ls not “news." We report filgiwvay cas- ualties. not how many got. home safely. In t"e Unlled Sales and Canada are fine. d'cerit mm 1n publlc llfe, and c-‘cea nut palitlclans, he"dl"e grab ers. renesrarfes Our ne'2"bor= hear us scoldinz Ccngress for the mem- bers that disgrace n and forge; as we often s"em to do. that 1f trere were not slncer-s, patriotic. hard- working men on the Job, the ras- cals would have had us on the rocks long ago. The “rews" that we exchange Ls extracrdlnary. not the typ’cal, but lt ls what we Judge each other by. We must 1nd a way to let our Canadian Allles know that ln California, as 1:1 British Columbia, we are not hankering for axr raid. but lf ft ccmes we can take it. — Frcm me San Franclsco Chronicle. The immunity which the hostile dictators enjoy l: sometlmes cited as an rdvaniage to them 1n waging war. ‘Ihat is s. very short vlew. To the extent that the dictator lmprses ignorance upon his subjects. he himself re- mains ignorant of smiethlng vltil to hLs strategy, (h? r2111 state of their minds; and pubIlc ccnf dense founded upon lgnotance must be brittle. Sooner or later policy 1m- mune from crltlcsm sways lands itself in the fatsl blunder. — London Times. ski e, i1- Our Llsbon corrwpondent writes: -Mlnnle. almost tire last cat in Monte Carlo la mfsslrlz, believed eaten. she a veluabfe Persian, and hoping a alnst hope, her de- voted mllllortare owners have of- fered a. handsome rewird for her return. But lhe advertisement has not been answered and as the re. ward offered was the extravagant one of two lump i-atbu if. must be assumed hat are has gore the way o! most flesh ln the principal- lty of Monaco. - Londcn Times. Mr. M. J. Coldwclls demand for a Canadian shortwave broazczst. In; station ls entirely 5cun.d_ A1- most alone among the no tons, Canada has no means o; convey. ing its newsvand views to the world. At a. time Gsnrany is pour- lng propaganda through the world, when Radio Paris and Rzdlo Vlohy are flooding tHl; continent with false reports atout Canada, we have no mums of reply. We have no radio channel which could carry the views of cur for- elgn-born Callflfllfllls back to lhclr homes ln Europe. We have no way of talking to the SZUlll Pmvlcan countries wlfdt should be huge markets for us after ‘he war, We have no way of placang u purely Canadian viewpoint wlthln the enemy oountrles. _ Vanccuver The remarks In the controlled Italian press advccatlng an 1m- medlate split-up of French terri- tory for Italian benefit, plus futi- matlons SECDITlg out of Italy that the Itallon people want to see some concrete gain 1:1 payment for the sacrlflces tuey are makng, are interesting though perhaps nzt very lmpcrlimt. I1 Duos realized long slnce that he was scld is bill of goods when he w?s persuaded to pull It-ly fnto the war on the wrong slde. This campaign for French territory proaiiliy is m. tended as a dlVQIEICII to kee the Italian public from convnually re- mlndlnz him of his bad Judgment. --L0s Angeles Times. "Dweller Ilseflll aerial operations may be ln weakening the enemy's pressure 0:-1 Russla, tuey can never have so much effect as a land 1.1;. tack. which would forc- 4.11m to withdraw men and flg‘tt ng ma- chines frcm his eastern armies. No dtubt wth the opening cf a sewn‘! frsrt we on our side c uld not affcrd to scnd such quantifies 0f munitions to Boss's. as have been going there re ettly. We should need both ships ~nld supplies for use nearer home. But the Rus- sians must surely have reskonzd with this fact DPICTG their spokes- men made their appeals for an Allied blow fn the west. There cm be no doubt that British peope would welcome the opening of silrh an offenslve lf it had any prrgpggf, of success. - Glasgow Hrralzl. Lord Woollen some time ago doubtless won the great frvor 1n the flit. world by allowing puss a. mllk ration, lf engaged on the na. tlonal service of protecting the nu- tlon’; food. The Navy 3055 {nit er, Recently a destroycr arrvd st Gibraltar 1n a fit state for the skill of the Pied Pprr, for ft was overrun by rats. slips ln port We're asked to supply the d‘s'r yer with cats. which they dld Un- fmllflfllely- l‘fe on the ccean wave, ln n. destroyer at least, proved too much for the cuts, for they be- came so sea-sick that. no rats ware boned When the destroyer berthe-d again on;- "srur puss" lm- medlafely made for the gang-punk and escaped ashore. - Givgow Herald. New Hampshire's not just slWng back and bewalllng the tm:s as they affect the Staffs vzry 1m- ortbnt recreation lnrlustry. It B! .1116?- wmpleled a survey that. wlll lo a long way tzwnrd elnr fy- lng its transportation pools-ms. The survey shows that most of the Slate's hotels. lnris and roadside- camps are wfmln five miles of railroad or bus services, Already a larr number of rescrts are flnd- ing some means of getllnq visitors free of charge frcm available trans- portation polnte It won't be speedy, stream-lined service, of course It wlll, however, ar1=wer an lmporbant. question, "Can we get. there?" No small numbr of places can orwlll be able ti answer, “OertolnlyP - Boston Post. A you American soldier wsflked into a U servlce club and mule a. request. He didn't especially want a cup of coffee, a. game of chess or 4 book. He didn't partlcularly wish to slt down ln an easy chair and lief/en lo the radio. He. wasn't in the mood for a dance. a fioo- show or a motion picture. He wanted to hold a lhrec-cnnntb-olrl baby ln hi; arms. He had one at home. He mated to remember who‘: It Ins u—@—- _ cannot be from criticism lo WORD$ OF CHALLENGE “One mini ll quite certain. That la that every country that 1s a member of the Unl- tecl Nations wlll nave b0 put forth lts utmost effort fn hslblnaz” to tvercoma the Cnemy- ——-Rt. Hon. W. L. M kenzle Klns. Prime mmifg; . of Canada. Post War Planning (C dl ans an Congress Journal) A great op t lglrulrcsponsliiilitylilnatih a “m”- is under wlfiizxftenlliiiitriim ilcifrftlofirtiifins have been mamtamecl ls challenged. ‘he world Ls suffering ‘avifiivfll-ULIOXI that w; we Pelaflvnsiiip that will ll'f€b?dllnTgl“axll lonz time to come. The aid order piannot contlnue. Neltner can we Nlm 0r wish our way into a. bet-ter- era. But the Slllmeihilllrriivoi-asg Tlfiee cgplfiflilslfr-iiyisg tem has functioned. has af- B 1 tter and a freer life for m U861‘ Proportion of the people an slavery or serfdom. That 1t ha: hailed to provide for lezftlmate w“i§’él£.i€°.§il‘.‘£§l‘$°é‘.."§ .311. °*’1"‘°.‘i‘f' . ry n e midst of bounteous provision for all condoned imd wlll not be by freedom and Justice n2 neoble. Trprat a broader, er e , avamlzzglecajré and sh uld 0m. an expressed b high nubllc positions. v Dgfrtsldenf. Roosevelt has said: "The baslc things QXPs-‘cwd by our beonle of their political and economic systems are simple. They are: Equality of 0b.. or youth and for others: ose who can work; sec- those who need 1t: the endlmz of special nrlvlleues for the few. the Preservation of clvll 11b- erties for all; and. the enjoyment of the fruits of scientific prowess in a. wlder and constantly rlslniz stand. arcl of living." Dead Hand Of Politics (Sydney Post Record) In a letter to the press. Hon. H. H. Stevens. one of Canada's most ex- perienced Parliamentarians. has stated once more the case for a. nat- ional government. The case Ls not by anv means a new one. Canada has stood in need of a. national zov- errunent. slnce the clay the war be- gun, But. Mr. Stevens has brushed up the old arguments, restatlng them more forcefully and has found new arzuments based on conditions that have developed durlnu the but few months. The House of Commons. Mr. Stev- ens points out. ls no lomzer repres- entative of public oblnlon ln Can- ada. It is spllt horizontally and ver- tically. and the dominant natty, as - Stevens suggests. has no co- hesion other than that subblled by the sordid political brlxiclnle o partisan control of national neutron- age. This tlme of national peril ls no tlme for ore-occupation with patronage. but. there 1s no way of getting rid of such ore-occupation except by banishing party politics for the duration. Canada needs. today, s. Roverri- merit that ls willing to stake its ex- lstence on wlnninlz the war, and s. party government can not do that. It. ls not in the nature of a. party government to do lti. Its bollcles are all conditioned by its Dolltical hobes and ambltlo us. The heavy hand of bolltlca has been busy in Canada. slnce the commencement of the war. It has proved its ultimate bower in refus- ing the demand of a. majority of the pporlajle of Cpnada. for on; use o t. e coun W's manlvow . Canada needs today Just what Mr. Stevens says lt needs- representatlve of l? merely representative of a. party. In that government Labor should have a strong voice. Labor unrest ln Can- ada. ls largely clue to the lack of lt. The demands made upon the neo- ple of Canada are without parallel in the country's history. The fndlvl- dual ls under heavy pressure ln what ls told 0t to o. these thlnzs the lndlvfdual Canadian wlll wll- llngly sacrifice for an all-out hon- est war effort. He gives and sacri- fices much less wllllruzly and Indeed with lncreaslxiz impatience for war effort with a. political strlnk to lt- tolerated THE HOLY 0F HOLIES ‘Elder father. thouxh thlne eves Shine with hoary mvsfeflles- Canst thou tell what. ln Life heart Of a cowsllp blossom lies ‘smaller than all llvis that b6. th d eves sel- lltfie house of seeds. Llke an elflnb izranarv.’ ~s ller of the stones and weed!- Sldiled tn Nature's crafts and creeds. '1’ ll me what ls ln the heart - Oi the smallest of the seeds. . lth Hlm Fllll all e y— Adoffgl E10hlm3 ‘G. K- Chesterton. _ It wasn't easy to I-‘lllfy hi! wlsh, but ll. was done. — Nc/W York T111165- ,,_ . Your Eyes ‘ l" “In”. the: ill-mum n .. 3.... or dlnlneu - Mllflll i lnecllllnl. At II service with NIH , o: qzdeorlonoe and n than!!! refnolfnl union. Coll In and that YOII dlfflellllel. l. F. llltchuon F. 0. IIUTCIIISON O. I‘. IIUTOIISON I to Immediate neighbors but to the he ls told to do and. what he d n d All runuc FORUM nu oolunl u can I" W llloullol by oorrenpondnh 0| Qlolflonu OI lnturut. ‘Ibo ullln loos III II G Bound!) undone Ila 6'5"" cl tluboihdl. our zoumc. BY-LAWS Sirz-At the last meellrt; cf the Clty Ccuncl. durfnz We dl5'-“15$°" of the Ncrtli East zoning By-I-HW- my good trend Councillor Chand- gr pxprgssezldvf; asaoggiifggeétiu: on ng y- a _ - H "Class Leglslatlon." ,A_ lltle fu th- er thought wlll. I bill"? Col. Chandler that. all Cll and By-Laws are Class [J8 In some cases thew re=traln use rlch. ln others twe pool‘. W119 many laws arednlenccd to Cllfb selflsh and makclous ptrson. wpo Tgiinlhcgriifffiaifiiirrizgts b iiiffihgfukli that the Golden Rule eves eXlslii We elect the City Coup-rill} 0 govern our clty in he best 1H‘- est of all well dlvzocsed pesons. t0 m-alntafn the health of our cHZEn-‘i and amongst their many other du- ties, so to raise the requficd iev- enpfb that taxes wlll be lcved eq- As dbalrznan of the Finance Committee of the Cw 0011M"- Col. Chandler l", no doubr, con- stantly aiming for as high a PTO‘ perly assessment roll as P034114 _°~ n order t/hat the mcney that 111* committee has w spend may be obtained without raising the tlX r to, aOur City assessor certainly can- not be accused of oier-YMIIIB W11- ues of rssidenthl pnpsrblfii. D11"- tlcularly ln the North Elsl e116 0! the City. These moderate valua- tions result,‘I presume, from the fact. that practically all Char-otte- town streets. ouislce of the Brighton reserved area. have bee“ marred by Uhe erection cf (hip. unsightly buildings, whch usualy have untidy surround ngs, and which have been allcwed to “b: JULY 18. 1942 IIIIIIIIIQIIIII§IIJ REFRESHER counss F08 ACTIVE All] mncnvs iiunsrs SPONSORED BY THE PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND REGISTERED NURSES’ ASSOCIATION To be held in Charlottetown, during the week . (inclusive) 8 P. M. July 20.24 MONDAY-Cundall Home Tuberculosis-E. M. Found, M. D. . N urslng Care of Tuberculosis-Barbara Smith, R. N_ TUESDAY-Charlottetown Hospital i Nursing Care of Pollomyelitls (Infantile Paralysis)_. - J. W. MacKenzie, M. D. Nursing Care of Meningitis-Mrs. Lois MacDonald, R.N_ Nursing Care of Poliornyelitls -— Katharine R. N. Demonstration Iron Lung. MacLennan, WEDNESDAY-Cundall Home 8 P. M. <Food, Facts and Fallacies-Mother Loyola, B. Se. Reduction Diet and other diets-Marjorie Chandler, B. st Instruction of a patient on a diabetic diet-Mr. Marjorie MacQuarrie, B.~ Sc. THURSDAT-Cundall Home Burns-J. A. MacMillan, M. D. Nursing Care of Burns-Sister Angela, R.N. Blood Plasma-Annie MacEachern, R.N. FRIDAY-Cundall Home First Aid-Mrs. Ina Beer, R.N. Fee for the Course wlll be $1.00. Please Save Your Programme ZIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJ placed alongside of some of City's most handsome rssl" . This Practice of mlxln! 111891 grade with 10w grade buildings Ls not only unjust to those WhO rflve invested large sums of mcnfy. but. detracts seriously frcm the gercral artistic appearance of the Cllv. There is only one way In watch bhis difficulty can be overcome. vfz, by placing a big/h mlnlmum as- sessmenl; upon all properties on high e135,; streets, eg. ln tihe East. end 0:1 Price and Upper Price street... North cf Fltzrcy 5th, and on Lcnzworth Ave. Then, in crder that rentals commensurate with the fax levy may be obtalrod. ths second rate buildings and grcwds on such streets will need to be improved. We have 111 Charlottetown me makings of a, beautiful City and I feel ft ls not too much to ask our Ccuncll to do all 1n 1's power £0 o flower beds, trees, fences, etc" and when planning fcr new residences to aim for the hlghest levels of architecture and substantial con- struction. Jerry building should be regarded as an injustice not only C‘tv as a whole. Most bulldlnirs will haw to be PERILA sickness. In our modern life we advice and information. sold at some future date and the 0n the sea, on land, peril of flre, lightning, falling aircraft, of automobiles, of accident, of lls, and that ls why we employ the system of In- surance to protect us financially. We are in a position to provide a complete ln- surance servlce, and welcome your lnqulrlel for HYNIJMAN 81 G0. LIMITED Insurance Service slnce 1872 Offices: Charlottetown, Summersldo, Montague ffl * are surrounded by pen No obligation. price to be obtained for them wlll depend largely upon the fee mg of pr de or otherwise held by the publfc for the Street or lot-at! 1n edi ons c which the are situated. Take, for xample, ol. Clian.dler'= handvme residence on Pownal Slxet. Were that building moved to Dorche-ter Sh, its sale value wcufd be d:- precfated 60 to 60 per cent. I clalm for the zoning principle that ft ls not only just. and equit- able, but that lt ls the only mo?!“ whereby the City can be fine-iced in. fairness alike to the rich rnd the poor. I am, Sir, etc, H. K. S. REMMING War Services Of The Newspapers (Sydney Post Record) The Dublfc know something of the service whlch newspapers are ren. critic in thls war. They do not know all. becaus‘ a considerable Dart of that servce ls abstention from the publicist-on of news which would be or be helpful to our enemies, At times the llne ls drazwn offlelally, at others bv the newspap- ers themselves. O11 Tuesday of 111st; says The Montreal Gazette. a lob came from London saving 1v Mull, 1n a. front- page article. had appealed to the Wair Office not to permit publlc- ation of Information rezardlnx a. Dowerful anti-aircraft vl The War Office was then ready, had indeed arramzed. to an- nounce the dent's on the followup: day. The device llself WC‘S rtescrlbrd as simple. but fl. had been developed ln the utmost secrecy bv sclintlflc eXDwts who had been sent to a tropical Island where snvlnz would be mpossible. ‘The Dally Mall urned very stronnlv that detalls of the new weapon be withheld. " v." lt ask- ed. "tell the C-crmars?" At the last mlriut? the War Of- fice lssucd r <9?) ortlcr and the “COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE ” W. ll. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Phone 540-441 t. t into print. In mil’ d“ fl; were 1s that Prime Mmlster Churchill himself was responsible for aocepbln the advice of the Dally Mall. Here s an instance 1n which newspapermen had been ln full noe- session of all facts 1n rezard to I- new instrument of defence. Corres- pondents have seen the de 0e action. Yet. none of the details had been published and when the War Office. 110mm no encourase Bullet- ments ln the Home Guards to one?) ate the machine. was prepared maké the whole thlnfl Dllbllv- u“ eflecblve protest ca-me from a news- paper. There ls a lesson in this 101' \ Professional Bards l— 111L161. a. BENTLEY ' 'w. u noun. L c I. A- BENTLEY K. 0- Barrhten and Atwrneyl-Ii- LII MONEY T0 LOAN I51 Prince Street . iMorreIIai-dliumpany ll. F. ARCIIIBALII Chartered AcconnI-lhll Eastern Trust Bulldlfll Charlottetown ' 'u'b'lsN'b'n'fln'ufifi' H. F. McPHEE 8A.. K.C. NOTARY lac. BABRISTEB SOLICITUB flllevmlllllldit fl asu. a. MATHIESON MONEY T0 LOAN Cameron Blockt Cillrlfllllilfifl P. . LAM JfH-“lfillf. “all. 1.1.5. MacGUIGAN 8i TRAINOR M GUIGAN. K. G. CTZAIRqERAINOIL K. O slihrftlffffilro n Olflce: Over Provlnelnl BM! Richmond Street CIIIPIBNBWW eves exmnm? BLRSSESNDFITTEB J. S. TAYLOR OPTOMITIIIT N" Mention l! t d Quail I10 “Efimli I12‘: Grocer! B A I t nu ‘"1125’... Iii-luff.’ hi“ C other h. '11:» bualneu of newsmnersfltosellnicwa. lrufwplp newspaper that Ls worth its salt open its columns folnformat-lon thn my be useful to an enemy. The newspapers want victory. want it more than anythlns else. .4 tn MOUNT ALLISON UNIVERSITY suckvllle. New Bnumwlok Dr. (i. J. Truman, Prddmi Degree Courses in Al". gefence. Home Eoonomifcs. Music, Fine Arts, Certificate Cour-loo 1n m- lneerfng, Teacher TYIIHIM, Ifommerce, Home Economics. and Becretulal. Preparatory Courses f0 IAW- pfedfclne, Theology, Dentu- ry. Cllllflllll officers’ Trill!!! Corps conducted during the school year. Residence Open: Sept. 7-1 Flnl, Term Bollm swl- l! For 1942-43 Calendar wrltfi W Dr. H. ‘Pucker, Bnckvllle, New Brunswick. i i Summer Toilet Specials m T no 22%’: °1°21§'.‘&"2.'.’.° .1. f» Donny’: Fun Powder. vlluefnr—— ———— t R d ll urn Ill-unfit olaColrl-nffrezm. 51-99 vslno|’ur-————-69° 50g l; jg]- Qn] 110N011 Ind m In: of mm m" W" der. 47c for the 1W0- r. enl m rm- Face Poww- Llvpltlc ma Bonn. fluff; Fr Clio of Cnhmero BOB’ 11:: Soap with Ior 0 ma)” Euhmen Bulllllol not m der for - — — — - ” RELIEVE SUNBUEN loll) ‘if-rat Eula... tub‘: Eloxomo Cream Price 19g“, _, _-— —- — T.’ Ferny: Paul Tongubflfld m 0 Noxema Bun Ton 0ll m m‘- Polaroid Sun chum w’; _@-—-——*_—d‘“ BnnGIun|—-35°‘" ‘I'll! TWO M65 140 Grout 0001!! 5m" 0mm Given WW” m" Attention.