PAGETFOUR n: LIIARLUTTEIOWII aunnmu Morning ually el-‘onnded In llfll President. Llflll. UuL w. Chum b. McLlln Vie; pendent: J. It Burnout, IJ-l.‘ Secretary; ueul. UM. D. A. Mucluaunn. 0.1.0. Mini uuu blunagin; uuecun. J. u, Burnett. IJJ. Auucinic Editors: Pruuu walker um 1m A. Buruoll SUBSCRIPTION BATII Iy mu m P.r..|., stuu pen your; $2.50 for I month nib for 3 manna; 50o lo: one month Ultv Uelrvcry $5.00 per year; $8.00 NI 0 mlllllll $1.75 for 3 muuim; we for one Monti. B) Maul to other Province» and U. S- A. 53W P" "u lawn“; Iwciuy: v4.00 per year, $1.00 llll i munlll. 50o for I month! uuurulnu may b0 Oblllncil ll time: square, New Xurli 0|! loam Lump Agenry, turner mu- ud Wuhlllilol. Bunion; llulfupullllu bu»; Agency, B“ Poul i5 lluuircul; .0. IJIIIL‘, 4M Bu; 51., Shrunk»; lhln lllld, Iilmwuu Luurier, Ullunn; nultnn new; Build. lldbur) Olllp Lluh fubiwro hhup, Alouclun H. liq ' ‘The Strongest illemory Ia Weaker than 8M weakest Ink." aioxnsv, JULY 13, I942. Th; Charlottetown lluluuull noun Apnvy, Hurling Recuiting Cuerman ncvvspnpcrs are “full of stories of can.“ spjpgng u‘, Ore,- coiiscriptiop. I Saw big newspaper yr-Jiitcrg in licrliii declaring Canada ivas prcpzu-ziig 1o cur its 116s “Will ti"! kmsl‘ EITIPiYC on ilic ci-‘Iifivlliioli issile- so rePofls a British “williilll, fl-\\\' iii Czmada, who was C313‘ lured niul ‘v ‘ -r ltdllll-‘ttl h_v the Nazis. '_ ~ iiicil with an ail-Out W81‘ 6f‘ fort, Sllys the lxiiiiiciiil Post, will not be $111- prgsc¢ The gpacincle on pilfllillllfillDHlll, now, fortuuaiclv, tcriiiiiizitctl in I118 Pifismg 9f the notorious illil‘. S0 ("Um illlioll” Bill) has bee“ one of we y “W4 p, (‘Mun l, nflllOllill history. The dclriic unis zipproxiiiiatfily 300,000 words long, enough tu fill over 300 newspaper columns. enough to fill four and a. half average length novels: viiotigli to cmisuitie 36 hours 0f a con- tiiiiituus rxtlliu hronilcihi 5l‘('"l\’i".§’ at high SPCeCL ilcrc. nhiiiiilriiiily; was 1i demonstration of gov- ernment waste. llcrc, abundantly, is pr00f that the “p016 "qongcriplifllli, performance was a stall designed to strive off the government's day of decision. _ Prime .\liiii>tcr King has made another 0f i115 {muons coiiiiiiizziiciils. lie announces that he will again seek a vote from the House before 1h! government enforces any measure for com; pulsory service ovcrscxis. llcre is another "itali- Docs this lllCllll thzit again we will be subjected to “reek,- [if ‘hzue in the llouse? The exhi on is particularly strange coming from; a, govcriiiiiviit which ordered the arrest 0i Colonel liwirQc llrcw On the charge 0f making SlZllPlllVlllS “lllu ly to prejudice recruiting." _ \\'l,;,; Qulllil lu- more injurious to recruiting, ask; the lmst, thiiii for the government to dem- onstrate its unwillingness courageously to face and act upon tlic most crucial problem of our time? \\'i~,;\r is more prejudicial f0 rtcruiting than a (lfilllvvllélfililwll lhqir the government itself (i005 not recognize the gravity of the present sit- uatioit. Above all. ivhnt ivould be more prejudicial to rerriiiiiiig than f-\r tlic public to come to the opinion ilin: flu-re nrc facts about the conduct of the \\'£\l' vzliicli the gumriiiueiit dOES 110i \\'3!1t brought out: that any earnest searchers for the truth is in danger of being labelled a “sabotcii_r" or of being summoiiscd on a charge of prejudic- ing recruiting. An Ominous Reply Rcplydng to a question in the HOuSC l. few days ago as to the quantity of dressed beef ship- ped to the [jiiiicd States the first five months of 1942 as compared with the same period m 1941, I-Ion. James A. .\lacKinn0n made this 8.!- toriisliing and ominous reply: “Mr. Speaker, it scciiicd to me there was no reason why this question could not be immediate- ly answered, but I am advised that the 6611501‘- ship advisory coiilmittee has held several meet- ings recently to consider the question of the pub- lication of statistical information, and, after con- sultation with ilie representatives of the United Kingdom and the intelligence branches of the Canadian ariiicd forccs, it is deemed inadvisable straint 0n the dissemiriatoiii of such information, tion during the war period. The ivorrls “statistical iiiformatoin" cover any and every lv-iud of nuiiicrical facts; so, if the re- straint on the dissrmiiiaiion of such information, reported by .\lr. MscKinnori, in to be applied generally, no figures —financial or otherwise — respcciiiig the government‘; activities or ex- pctiiliturcs will be givcii, either to parliament OI‘ to the citizciis at large. To suggest‘ that a knowledge of our exports of beef to the [Tiiitcd States would be of any value to the eiicmy i5 ridiculous —-bccause he would no; lirivc ti» rrly n11 disclosures in the House of Cmiiiiiwiis iii virdi-r to obtain the information. AS Hon. R. l3. lliiiis-iin remarked: "What possible good could result to the enemy from giving the iiifornizititm snug-lii iii this question? This is the strife of iiiiiid of lJlll'L’{lllCl‘Z1Cy . _. . _.I protest against it." Lambelh and Canterbury t. may =ic~ii ‘llTlP-Lfi‘ to many that the official rcsirlciicc of lllC .\1'<"lil>i<liop 0f Canterbury should be l.:uiilu-lli lkilnce, in the very heart of London. lilll so if has hcmi for more than seven l1llll<lr(‘1l_\("\l'<. 'l'lu- l‘. L. A. Monthly (the migziziui- i-f llu- [hit of London Authority) con- Inins sfvlu: i‘ift'l1‘\lill{__' iiiforiiinlioii on the matter. ll iv.'i< li-clthi-Yutp llllll(‘l'[ \\'.-iltcr who, in 1197, c-‘lnhll-"hvil his llt’.‘l!l(|ll71I'l(‘TS in the Manor of lnuiliv-‘li. \\‘lll(‘ll zu that iimc was .1 favourite spot nu fill‘ '1“ -. lu lllP-‘f’ crirlv day's. we read. . u»; my! 4l‘ll"I‘ choice fish nboundcd "_ ,".'l.l <-\:-ii lll (jilccti Elizabeth's time , ill \l‘v"lll<. lrllrllfiClCi, all mrmni-r of °"‘!—f~|v,l- nlul i‘ rt liuiilg lvjils, conlcs, tlilClts flllll all muv. r if -‘ u._ |-.-d_ lullnw and mo" were to l1’ i‘l"~‘l 5.1"" ll l“illllllll'llllf\ll, i i' ' ' ‘i n lifillQw ivns built at Wesl- 111i": i l! amiss tlu~ river. (‘xrcyit for old l'-. i: lflilgt", some ilistzuicc off, was by means ioiirluii ‘l THE CHARLO1TETO\VN GUARDIAN of ferry or private barge. The ferry which plied between Lambeth and Westminster operated up to the year 1862 and its revenue belonged to the Archbishop of Canterbury. It was while crossing this ferry in i688 that King James II threw the Great Seal of England into the Thames, to be later retrieved by a fisherman. Lambctli Palace is a very ancient structure. At one time the waters of the Thames came right up to the ivnlls of the building The property originally belonged to Countess Goda, who gave it to the Bishop of Rochester. It reverted to the Crown, but was again given back to the Bishop of Rochester, who iii turn made it over to the Archbishop of Canterbury, Hubert Walter, be- fore referred to. Lanibeth Palace has not es- caped bombardment in the Nazi air raids, being damaged to such an ¢xtent, indeed. that it has had to be temporarily abandoned as a residence by the Archbishop. Its restoration. at a more conven- ient timc, is, however, assured. A Bachelor's Budget? Commenting on the new income tax schedules, the Ottawa Journal says: “The need for cutting doivn civilian expendi- tures was a. basic factor in the form of n:w taxation. “An examination of rates raises the question whether the objective is being attained equitably. “Take the case of a single man with an in- come of $3000. He pays $1,064 in taxes and has $1,936 left to spend. A married man with the same income whose living expenses are consider- ably heavier, pays in taxes $884 rind has left $2,- 116. The married man with two children, or three dependents in all, pays $668 ‘in taxes and retains $2,332 out of his income. These figures iiiclizilc the rcfuiidzihle portion, but that, of course. isn't available for spending now. "The married man, without children, has only $180 more to spend than the single person with no dependents. The married man with two child- ren has only $400 more. “This surely puts the blessed in "single blcsscdiiess." Surely a ivife should rate more than $180 difference; surely a wife and two children a difference greater than $400. "\Ve knew Bachelor Mackenzie King kept a finger in most government pies, but didrft su- spect him of tniich tinkering with the techni- calities of tax rates. How did Husband and Father Ilsley have this slipped over on him P" —EDITORIAL NOTE§— l 878. w- i: Yesterday was the "Glorious Twelfth", but owing t0 the war there will be no general cele- bration by the Orange lodges this year. n- v n- n: Berlin Treaty this date 1 v w Supply of penny candies now on hand will last six weeks, and before that time, Ottawa promis- es, a. scheme will be brought into effect “to the mutual satisfaction of the corner grocer and the neighborhood youngsters.” a- m n- a Listening iii on a Rome shortwave broadcast, Major Gladstone I\lurrri_v, of the CBC, was sur- prised to licar that lic liad been captured by the Italians at Alexandria, and was on his way t0 Sicily as a prisoner of war. The major, suggests an exchange, shOllld be the last man in the world to be surprised by what comes over the radio, 4- * v v The task for the farmer of today, says an ex- change, is to concentrate upon the efficient oper- ation of his farm, the increase of production and the improvement of his methods. There is a great deal of talk of the new era, of the golden age, of the hope that wlicii the war is ovcr we shall pass into a period in which mcn ivill get much for do- ing little. This conception of the day after the war ought to be blasted from our minds, for it would be a pOOr ideal to achieve if we could achieve it. We Slmll probably see the coming of a time when honest work will earn a. competence and easy money will be il11p0SSiblC_ After all, when we look at life in its broader aspects, languid ease is probably the least desirable of all the ends which man has sought iri his long pilgrimage on earth. n- u w i: u The Liberal Montreal Herald is worried over the conscription tactics of the Prime Minister. It Hays Mr. King was emphatic in his declaration that he had no doubt his policy would be justi- fied by events. “That remains to be seem It dc. pends upon the events and in regard to these even the wisest of us are in the dark. They may prove that he is right, and then again they may lwtfThe practical situation we have to face is that the government is building up a strong mn- scripted army for territorial defence within this hemisphere, and that this army will be instantly available for combat anywhere on a sudden call by the government for a vote of confidence, if that vote is in the affirmative, which, judging by the temper of parliament, it will be." In the neg result the outcome may be the same with the dif- ference that Mr. King has arrived at it by taking two steps whereas most of us would have taken only one. a i: or a What is mean by "total war" is being made plain to the Canadian people, remarks that thoughtful mentor of the "big interests", the Montreal Gazette. Thcy have asked for, have insistently demanded, total war. If any group of them thought this mean: war at some one else’; expense arid sacrifice, the awakening is now come. If some have harbored the belief that supplying men-other mcn——to do the fighting, and supplying those men with ships and guns and tanks mid so forth, would be the sum total of their effort, an effort which they could exert without discomfort to themselves, they can no longer lay that flattering unction to their souls, There have been such people. There still arc, but f'(‘7lliZ.'lli0|l is coming l0 them-in tcrms of money and of living standards, A5 in- crcnsfll taxation rcduccs or eliminates the abil- Hy 0f one clfl“ in furnish ilic money which the Government mus: lmi-rri\i'—~nl1.l "nlhq" "mm,- ivhal it srrvs-Jlic burilcn will have in be assum- ed by tlic iirxl group in line, mid so on, More briefly, total wzir cannot be nnylliiiig but war by the total population. A NOTES BY TIIE WAY Unlvaraltlea u n whole are aur- prlsed and gratified to find them- selves mil active and useful after nearly three yen; of war. Loss there fa, of more aorta than one. Of one son, there is no need to speak since It Li not peculiar to any section of the communfy. I mean the casualty lls‘s, ncl. catastr: he a! at the somme or Passchen ale, but steadily and Inexorablly lengthening. ‘men there are gwo other serlous losses w the wartime undergraduate. First ls ffle ab- sence of the young don, who can and should badge the gulf bstw er. teacher and pupil 1n the way tIia‘ roves the euentlall dlfference be- ween school and uruverslty. Perhaps the undergraduate cf tr- day does not realize this loss, but It. GXISL; and it is serious. szcorid is the curtefment of art. music. the theatre. and “speakers from outside." although It has bzen sad that. Ln recent years Oxfcrd and cambrldge under-graduates gave too much time to such nctfvltlsa qt the expense of their degree courses. Yet for all the confusion and gloom of the world situation today, the war may nevertltelcm result In g_ v- Ing the university a clearer vision of the Alma which It must. set b2- fore Itself, Its ccurtry and the world. - J. F. Duff, Vice-Chan- cellor of Durham Universftv. In Bulletins From Britain (New York! Deadly nlzhfshade (belladonna) Is being cultivated at Kcwk Royal Botanical Gardens In surrey to 1"» Britain's manufacturing wemfsts have the 2 1-2 tons of the med c- Inal herb needed fcr rheumatic ailments, Kew Is al"o grcwln-B colchleizm another anW-‘Ir-umotlc herb, from bulbs cclleccd by 81y scouts in the Engl sh ccunfrvslde. Once the private gardens cf En’!- landlv. kings, Kew has also, Sci 011i to Show the Brlllsh housewife what can be dove wl‘h th~ rvarlirrial English herbs. Dill, fer-ml. Mgr- mervll, marjornm and thyme arc scme of the manv IIPYIXS 11'\\’ being grown there, and all of them pm- vIcle attractive flavnurluzs f"r soups and other war-tlrve dares. m the midst of l‘s 2B8 acres. where 24.00!) different speccs of plants from all climates flourish as they do at- honte, ffew has now a regulation lo-rod nlotmssnt with a. wcman giirderer In attendance to help amateur food-sroivers with their problems of raising p:ta‘oes, swedes. parsntps, carrots. rnl-ms and other vegetables - The ROY-Hi Botanical Gardens. Keiv. Britain's dogs are nnt allowed to bury their bones these days. C"l- lect/sd from hoiischolfa and birch- ers’ shops. the bones are now rro- duclng glue for aircraft and tilt-ro- glycerlne for Iifvh exoloslvrs. One ton of salvaged bones gives 2 cwts. of grease. yzelclng nitro- glyoerlne for shells, lubrkat ng-cll for guns and tanks and 3 cwt. of glue In tre making of aircraft. ariks, guns, Ships and shells; 1 cwt of feeding-meal wd bone- meal, providing the proen rat-ion for 450 p12: for O11" day rr 83160 hens for one day; and 9 cw s, o‘ fertiliser stifflcknt for 4_ 1-2 acres of lend. Lmczl authori! cs in Britain are recoverlcz lrnes at the rate of over 19,000 tocs a year. The raw bores go to the fuc- tory where the flrt swp. in order to reocver the fallow, 1s to salt out any fatlv material which is melted separately The scrlrd hair's "re th-en crushed and cottv-ycd me- chanically to large steel vcs els holding 10 tons. Berzlne vacour ls passed through these ve=s"'s to sterlllse the bones aisd remove lh= grease, Th; [ZTTIFE is _r? Cvrrrd fro-m the baiizlve sauticzi iin. purified to give bcne grease for the manufacture of candcs, scap and glycerlrie, The bcnc is ncxt con- veys: 9,0 a revolving drum wlrcli ru off the meal. and fine bare ‘Ihls ls collected and mad: Iota protein animal feed and brtie meal fertiliser. The poll It'd bane pro- vides the glue so e=senfial to alr- craft production and the rcslrlira left In the vessels is used to make bone flour fertllisci- or 9, supple- ment to cattle focd The give ls also used 1n shell-casts and fuses, in making frc-zeslsllng and cam- ouflage paints, and lii the produc- tion of thousands of mies of gummed tape for A R).P. p os- ea. One factory alcne in Eng and produces weekly 60 tons of grease, 50 tons of glue, 1'10 tons of feed- ing stuffs azd 50 tons of bone fertiliser. - Brit's}: Industrlcs. German birth figures for last year confirm the evidence of prev- Ious years that Hitler has attained a. considerable degree of siicceas with his campaign to Increase the birth-rate They show, Inded. some small declire as compared with 1940, but the fact remains that, last year's total of 1,5?8,C03 births ln the Reich (lirciiidlng Aus- tria, the Sudetenland and DflflZlgl represents an Increase of oi'er 400,000 0n the ‘numbers torn In the same territories in the yeir of Hitler's advent t0 pcvier. -L'wn- dent Dally Telegraph and Morning Poe . ll, may have gratified Mr. Duff cooper t0 boast. on Empire Div that not. only are we the greatrst p:cple on the earth but that. p"s=ibly we are the greatest. vtec-ple therg rvcr ha; been. It. Is (Hflcullc Io se- who else benefits. Bo far as the British Empire means the dzmlnatlori of other peoples by an alien race if has to be morn ly justfffcd by our effecfuallv making their hiur Inca; and free cm the object. of our mi- tlcnal policy. Empire Day siould remind us not. that we are grrat, which History can be le't to decide, but that wehave inescapable difes and should be satisfied f0 d0 fllem. -Manchester Guaidlzm. An American general once staked out for himself a. permanent pl ce In dfctlonarles of quotation» by observing that. the way to wfn wars was "m than" fwtvst with tre mosteet." A: hei- way to loo. uoon things during such Vilng times Is "do the mcalest with Vie leastestf’ Ard many Canadians are doing great and sped ihlvgs these days with very 1f tie - no‘ izreat In the sense , po-slblv, of biil‘d'ng tanks. piloting dive bomb-m or presenting a Eprflre to Rumla But. they are doltig 51118711111 Sometlilm that ‘s wlhfn reach. They are buying wzr Swings C'r- ilflcateii, ccnslrevrv, evcry pay day, - Vancouver Bun. with summer nelson Iclrcely under way". two hither; have loaf their lives 1n 11:1 ad‘oln‘r¢ county. As the holiday season b-cziris and bothers flor-k to the beeches on the coasts and to the r'vcr.=i and streams. there I! evrrv reason. frcm nut. eirperlenco. to wpMc more f-ztalltfles. Yet nYSI, cf from wI'l b2 needles: becnws moat of them coii'd be avoided. 'T\cre is T10 more erijiynbh? sitmuirr 1'l"‘“l"1— Hon than bntliliirr anal no b-"lcr sport than strflmmlrg and lt. is oss- sIble to enjoy Lhcm wll'~oiit dan- ler. mverv Person wltlfn rrach of w‘uu< i» ur CHALLENGE "The WBI‘ ls here. friends. and we need tiol. only the h spirit of sacrifice but. the Im- D acable determination to stay with the lob until the Nazi menace Is forever du- troyed. We shall not be found wanting when the testlm time comes.’ - Brigadier F. Logfe Command i Military District N0. 3. PUBLIC FORUM ‘IN: column In npu IOI tin dllculllol by nlruplndolh ll qunlon- or Interni- Ila Ghulnttnouvu Gurllnn don not IOOOIIIIIII undone Ibo IIIIIIIII nl nnnucnondalh WAR SERVICE POSTPONEMENTS S1n~Now that the number pf men to be called up under the National War Services Regulations Is to be greatly expanded I should like to take this opportunity of emphasiz- ing Sec. 10 (l) of the regulations reading tn part. as follows: "No ap- plication for a postponement order ma be made otherwise than In wrl lug. by the man called out, to the Divisional Registrar who Issued the “Notice-Medical Examination" and wlthln eight clear days of the date appearing on such notice." The Divisional Registrar 1s re- quired to furnish a c-ertaln quota of men each month. After making his llst. he must estimate necessary replacements from the number o applications for postponement which come in pursuant to Sec. 10. Fall- ure by the man called therefore to apply for his postponement within the time required by Sec, 10 will In- evltably mean a. refusal of postpone- ment In a number of cases on the ground simply tha the application was made too late. All called who are desirous of postponement are urged in thslr own interest to read carefully their Notice-Medical Examination and comply with its provisions, as out- lined above, without walling the Iat- er receipt of their report. for duty I am, Sir, etc. ll. L. PALMER. n“'Ill’TY|'Iv1 Provincial National War Servlccs Board. Charlottetown, July 10. 1942, “They Can’t Tar. it" (Brantford Expositor) Mrs. Ruth Mitchell Knowles, als- ter of the lat/e Brigadier-General William Mitchell of the United States Army. returned to her home- land the other day from Nazi-dc- niliiatod Europe. she ls no ordin- ary or superficial observer. She Joined the Yugoslav Chetnik guerilla. army In April of last year. was subsequently arrested by the Gestapo, and spent many months In Nazi concentration camps before being released and repatriated. Ac- cordingly, she had ample oppor- tunity Lo see Germany and Ger- maii-occupled territory "from the inside" and to form more accurate impressions than most. lvfrs Knowles’ advice to the Un- ited States is to continue and ln- crease the offensive. She evidently shares the view of Air Marshal Sir A. T. Harris. ratheror the R. A. F5 “Thousand Planes." Major De Seversky. the Russo-American aer- onautical expert, and others, for her terse recommendation," lii thir- teen ivords, is this: "Bombing by plniies is the way to beat Germany. They can't take It." That ls not. to say air power alone can bring the enemy down to de- feat. but. the opinion grow that air power, striking mighty blows such as those scored on Cologne, Essen and Bremen, can s0 "soften up‘ ilie Reich and Its satellites as to iriake counter-Invasion by land a practical venture and one assur- ed of success. Living In A Shell (Si. Cstharlnes Standard) , The criticism has often been heard against the Prlme Minister 0f Canada. Rt. Hon. Mackenzie King, that he Is given to leading a secluded llfe at Klngsmere, and that he has failed to get out and get in touch with the people, On his sccondgo lust vlslt to the Un- ltcd Shiites he displayed the dis- courtesy of refusing to give an In- terview to United states news re- porters. and yet. the men of the Dress are playing a magrifflclent part ln the war. They -have been n battle lii the Mediterranean and were on the Repuise when that ship was sunk. From authoritative circles, out, of Ottawa, comes the word that the secretaries who clutter up the Im- mediate landscape surrounding the Prime Minister, are strictly enjoin- ed never to show hlm a newspa r crlilclsm of his actions or pafc- fes. Fulsome praise, o; com-go, might be taken as acce table, the same as every radio Isterier lri CIIIIMIB gets whenever the CBC. which is often, finds It, politic to brink in the name of the Prime Minister. For a man who refuses i0 56¢ YlBWBDB-Pe!‘ men of the Unit- ed Siam. when this country should be advertised, this policy of rudlo Rlorlffoaticn at. hcme. ultra-public- 11v 0n small 3111188. Is all wrong. It just. doesn't add up. It is a very pertinent question to ask, lf Mackenzie Kl 1s living In a shell? "Or Ia he wr lng p, book," E. C. JOHNSTONE, C.L.U. Provlnclll Muulfl’ SAYS: It only takes 81.56 per vvuk to provide A DOMINION LIFE SALARY OONTINUANCE PLAN vvhloh wlll pay your Dependent: $500 In nah and $50 n month for 5 yearn (and 35) Let’: talk Ihlsiover. Enqulro at: 111-115 Grafton Street III kfiifiv“ and Burma. have been overrun, after the long-dravmout, exhausting cam- paigns in China, 1s convincing evidence of the striking power p05. Bosied by this formidable opponent. The erolc resistance of the Chinese, in the Light of these ex- ploits, assumes epIc proportions. Ihough the situation In China to- day ls admittedly grave, the ru- solutlon of the nation to fight It 011$. and the confidence In ultlmafn victory. me stronger than ever. Gexierallsslmo Chlang Kai-Slick’: message Ls a Ionic for faint hearts and doubting minds. “Japan is nlunsinz deeper and deeper mm E moras," he asserts, "she l5 now be- Wfld 16001191’? . . .In the neai future the collapse of the enemy wlll be apparent." Is such optimism Justified? Well. Chlang shoifd b0 better able to Judge than others of tfne true position. He bases his hopes to a great; extent, on the increasing assistance he expects to get from the Allies, and especially the United States. as well as on the latterm mwlng power In the Pacific. The - blows already received by Japan upon the sea, he holds. mark "the beginning of the decline of he.‘ strength." predicting that her final defeat wlll "start at sea and end on land." As for the triumphs n1- readv achieved by Japan In the South Sens, they "will nrove the prelude to her disaster." Professional Cards McLEOD a. BENTLEY‘ l W I4. “ENLEY. K O. S. A. BENTLEY K. (1 Barrister: and Alwrneyu-nl- Law MONEY T0 LOAN 154 Prince Street ~ Morrelland Company ll. F. ARGNIBALD Chartered Accountant: Intern Trust Bufldlng Charlottetown ALEX W. MATHESON BARBISTER. SOLICITUR. mo. Money to Loan Collection: _9!.|'|=_¢d9_G".='_G@qr:e__§treen M. ALBAN FARMCR an. 1.1.4:. BABRISTER, SOLIUITOB no. Ulllldlan Bank of Commerce Bid] =__ MONEY TO LOAN ¢<__‘_—_———~— ,,,,-..,,_-_~' EXAMINA I IUN FIIIIng and Sllpplylnl Glance ii. J. EINABON OPTUMETRIST Montague. P. E. I. Office Hours: l0 to l2 n. M l to l1 P. M. Iiolldn I etc. nv uppolnuneni 0f Ice Connected with DRUGSTORE i Summer Toilet Specials Derny’: 60o Bottle Petal Tone Ill do Tollette and 80o Box Danny’: Paco Powder. 90c valuefor-——-———69o __.__..______.._____ Dane“. J: Rnmsdell large IIIQ jar of Cold Cream, 81.00 valuefor---——-68c China’s Contribution (Hamilton spectator) If is five years since Japan fired the shot. at Marco Polo brldge, near Psklns. whim hu "been heard around the world." so in * " seemed the "Tanaka. plan" of con- quest. that no one outside, Japan, and perhaps China, took It serl oiisly. That this llttle island em- pirc-a parvenu amon the nations, which had only with compgrq. tlvediy recent: tlmea abandoned l. primitive fo;m of feudallxn to ape the ways of an occldenb which she affected to despise-should have the audacity to challenge her mast- ers M so early a stage of her pupil- nge Wile Inciedlble; still more ab- surd did It: seem w suppose that. such Impertfnence could have the ro- moteat, chance of success. Just how thmoughly Japan had prepared for the test of strength. thus deliber- ately provoked by her, la now on! too apparent. The rapidity vvl WIIICIL M41115. the lbgh nut. Indies the water should be able Io avfm, for the enjoyment that. may be de- rived from if, far the exerclie II nfrords Illld for Ille rssivance It g.v:s nznlrfst (lrcwnrig Tlirre are Itcwcvcr, a few slrgple riilra which should be follow - Moncton Transcript. 50o Illa Jar en: Lotion and 25o Illa of ergenl Flee Pow- der, 47o for the Ivvo. Evenl In Psi-Is Face Powder, LIpItIc and Range. Ill fa I‘ —-____-_—Q1,]fl Free Cake of Cnhmera Bon- auef. Soap vvIIh large box ol ‘uhmero Buuquel m0 Pow- lhrlor--—-—-— c BELIEVE SUNBUlI-N Front: Tango! (Grouelcm i-Ice——-———B0c n: oxema Cream Prlce mag: B-BHIII Petal Tone Sim Till! 0Il — - - - - and 50c Noxemn Sim Tan 011 I00 bot Polnrold Sun Glance, sin. 0mm - - m 1-111! u.» TNE TWIINIAGS 149 GrenI Georxe Street Mall Orders Glvrn Prompt Attention. JULY 13, 1943 _ In Slap with " Total War Effort " m obliged more than eve: before m brindle you: affairs carefully. Paying Your Bill: by Cheque uves dim-aver money-is safer- provide: a record. YOUR SAVINGS ACCOUNT! ‘Voluntary Saving rum go inf-By saving u you have nevu- uived before you mike l vlul contribution to the Wu EEon 1nd your fuuire lecurlty. Open n saving lccoun with our mum hunch. i Will 12g have Coal When Zero Como: Again? By akin delivery a: one: of all or part oftyour coal needs, you an avoi the unpleasant possibility of n col home next Winter. Enquire from your coal dealer o: a brunch of the Bank for detail: of a plan Io: Inanlmln: payment. ‘The-BANK of NOVA SCOTIA Imlilhlid Ilfl-Ovw u Canvurv of Sorvlcl Branches In Prince Edward Islam! 0‘Len Alb M rd . wgziatlimln Snmmerlllze M Muir? Vllorlau 4i l J1: MIMERSJ r “PERENOIW IS HERE, The New Remarkable Spray for Pofafo Bligh! 3°" i5 i °°PP0I oxide Ihatdhlolvel Inunedl It: control valuo liu been proven In IQIIIhIaLY-{gliivqllisdi cam“- n" ‘IWIIIIIBIII If!“ at Frcdlrlchn, Chm- gpflglfohvin or: Kaufvlllu and loading grower; h". found 0 v lcfivo uqelnnf poIaIo blight-u well u against molt other diuuu for control of which a copper fungicide In recommended, All you do Ir I111 your tank sprayer with Wlb: (80 g5]; ) Int-d? to 2% Poundl of PERI-ZNOX, and n» lptay i. A; y. or early control of potato buql, add Cnlelum nah Io the mlxhuo of PERI-IND! and, was", PERENOX USERS HAVE FOUND THESE ADVANTAGESI 0 l‘l‘ owls lxcnmn comiioi. or nuom 0 lummuu NOZZII nounu 0 mum mxmo nuns UNNICISSAIY 0 oivs: A MORI mu sniAv O CI-IAN TO HANDlb-SAVES TlOUlll AND TIMI ' BANAIIIN INIIISTIIIES LINIITEII {'15 IIAIIFAX, u. . CIFIIY ~ IMPORTANT JTMNSPIIRTATIDN" ANNOUNCEMENT FROM MONTREAL, BOSTON. ST. JOHN, MONCTON AND OTHER. MARITIME PROVINCE POINTS I I ll you can! obldn PEIENOXImn your Jooln, wrhe lg FOR SUNDAY CONNECTION VIA BORDEN-TORMENTINI ROUTI- A-rnngementr have now been completed wIIh The Canadian Nu tlonnl Railways, The S.M.T. Bu; Services, and The LMJ‘. (P.E.I.) Bu! Servlcen for a Sunday connection Io and from Prince Edward Island. The necessity for IhIl ha: been brought about by Increased gtnlrll travel and we fell also that II would provide an extra day at hnme for members of the armed forces on leave. TIIII Ir the (Int IIme that such a connection has been mode and vva trust II. vvlll be well patronized. B! nrrangemenh made C. N. Rys. through tlckeIs I-o P. E, l. are accepted on the BUS Irlp from SackvIlIe to C‘ rlcttetuvvn, Summerslde and In- Iervenlng Bu; PoInIa on this Sunday Irlp ONLY. Leave Montreal Saturday evenfng vIn Canadian NaIIonaI Railway!- Arrfvo Sackvllle 5.03 Sunday evening. Leave Sldrvllle by Bu: Immed- InIely thereafter for Tormentlne. Arrive Summerslde l0 P. M. All’!!! Charlottetown 11.35 P. M. Leave Boston by BUS 1'2.01 noon Saturday (There 1| no Iraln on! of Boston SaIurdly nlght for st. John) nrrIvn Sukvllle sundry at 11M A. M. Leave Slckvillo nbouI 5.03 P. M. for P. E. I. Service from P. l. l. Sundlyn. By Bu: Leave Charlottetown 4 P. M. Leave Summe ' 5.35 P. M. Connect at Auho at 8.15 P. M. vrlth Bu! for Moncton and SI. John arrlvlng Monclon 10.80 P. M. and SI. 101111 1.55 A. M. For Sunday connection for Ihllhx nu! Sydney go vh Wood Island:- Bill mm Charlottetown a A. m. o A. M. and 12.4: Noon. splenflll servlce. The regular Week Day Trnln. Bu: and Afr Service; no In efMI n usual. Through Pullman In Montreal leave; Charlottetown dilly (B? wept Sunday) at 7 A. M. Mil-Mme CouIrll Alrvvsyn Ivvloe dolly e166?‘ Sunday n 6.85 A. M. and 12.4! Noon from Charlottetown and from Summe ‘ It 1.10 A. M. and 1M P. M. SPEND YOUR OWN HOLIDAYS 0N PRINCE EDWARD ISLAM‘ SEND FOB. OUR. LIST 0F PLACES T0 STAY AND FIND OUT ABOUT THE DELIGIITFUL PLACES AND MODERATE COSTQ AVAILABLE RIGHT HERE ON PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND- KNOW YOUR OWN PROVINCE The Prince Edward Island Travel Bureau B. Graham Rogers, Supervisor, CIIABLOTTITOWN ti. 1-3! +++++4§+f++¢¢+++++++++d-fi-El BRANTFORD amosn rwms We carry the well known SILVER LEAF BIND- ER TWINE manufactured by Brantford Cord- age Co. Ltd. This Tvvlno Iiinaile from the high- est quality fibres, clean, strong, uniform and free-running. Guaranteed full length~550 ft. Price the lune as last year-order now. CARTER & 00. LTII. Wholesale and Retail +++++++++++++++++++£¥ " ‘bééé-b-bé-l-i-‘b-l-d-i-é-b-I-