[HE WESTERNGUARDIAN ‘g _ AGENT: llln. John Pond. Ii Church Street-Phone :39 QUUIMEBBIDB and "News. BIImrivii-vl- Advert-isms. should be left with u... p,“ raj . ilie (iuardlaii may he bought daily at any of the following stores in Sumiu u," noollsiore, Water Street. [ironic Bakery. Water Street. ilio uuarauan will be drllrered to en [IITIH uoy at 2o oel day. or iui- per wees Phone m y; give your order to lne boy responsible for deliveries on your route. p’? m, column la reserved for news lll luciii inlereJ, but advertising 9; a liulvsy ualure may 0o IIIXIHQJ i. z cenis a wurii. strictly payable h, guvanvc. Lbiioiaii Green sliogii 55o st. fflylllllliiil hinder Twine Distributed m. gm 5, L-im-a-i-zi. ,_BL.~\ZE RED! The new pop- npr siiaue in Adrienne Lipstick, pa. Gturiies Rexall Drugs. L-o. .-CAPABLE MAID WANTED im- u-xll’ at ‘westview Lodge," gin}: iiysil. Good. wanes. L-iluo-B-l-Sl -DAGGETT 8t Ramsdell Cos. H.335! gfiptfllfll preparations for n, (593,, o1 skin. Gourlles Drug 5on2. 1P5- _l.0SI‘ — between Newton and Eflifiilll l license plate No. '.l‘-fll9. ]-.i1i].l' llOtliY Layton Green, Al- w,“ L-l178-B-l-2i JONGRATULATIONS — The miny friends of Mr. and Mrs. Al- lied MacKeiiiia (nee Mary Eileen price; are extending congratula- {inns on the arrival of a young son PB-INLI COUNT! e: i‘ Dfllnio . w ' "l" Blvd-l. lnnlinallil: 3:13: I home in Suinmeralde o; for this service, _FILMS DEVELOPED Willi en- llggfigggigfLm i" T5Yi0l’ Drug Cm, -QUICK tl f on your ling? suxbcutflli-gs Drugs. 1P6 -GO0Dltl CI-I bicycle. auto or trsilcrlstidll ‘£3. ‘if: tamable at Braces. 1,-1174-g.1_21_ -BEDEQUB UNITED —The services for Sundg‘ "55 3rd. are as follows: liedeque Iirl 1m.‘ Albany 3 p_m,; gape reverse 7.30 p.m_ Reih George Ayers of Summerside will be the Speaker at all the services. Rev. Ralph W. Barker, Minister. L-4, HON. J. G. GARDINER (Continued f£0_lh__page__1)___ to bring the production in tre glantimes closer to the consump- 0l’l. At DPCSODL these provinces are not producing as much as tney consume. However. Prince Edward Island itself is producinx more of these products than the province ilnterprcting The War ii. iStubborn Battle (aOhtillllQd from pg‘; 1) __.ic°ntinu'~‘.ll_i_l’°iifi_flage l) “"118 0f the invading Nazis. thrust at Lani d has been via. zlgltbv glidwPi-ilfk‘: 11°“ F01‘ flsys Moscow we: bulletins have reiterated re- ports o: violent battles in the Poiichov region, indicating that the Nazi attack south of the Peipus lake system has been held "P. still 150 miles and more, air line, from Leningrad, There were Berlin unofficial intimations two weeks or more of the sources declared, the worst that send. The flgfluwaxlillimitable weight was .lbs0l'bln¢ the Nazis could Behind u" 3031i. the Soviets coliecti r ed to z: ‘were proclaim- battle-thiit of the by harvesting a. vast bumper crgp i of serious German interfer- second great grain fields- The harvest. it was said offl- ago that the Nazis had fan- chilly. was not only extraordinar- ned northward. east of Lake Peipus. and northeastward to- ward Leningrad from Pskov ily fruitful but "Did. especially in the Ukraine. extraordinarily The Germans, said the gong junction. The ll miipisi party newspaper Pr d been confirmedyand Btiieoy Eflfif h“ l°°=°d ti"! invasion at ably referred to air attacks. when the Ukmil" 5985a to bloom s s 0 heavily, hoping to hamper the Measured out on a map, no German approach to Lenin- Gfiid within 150 miles or so can be detected. whatever may be happening in Estonia. Nor do Finnish-Gemini advances via the Karelian Isthmus or east of Lake Locloga. appear serious- ly menacing of themselves, although they are closer than any reported German stab harvest. But in this the Nazi had Ylliied- the paper added. 5 The Soviet command's after- noon comm i hang conuixlliaéiéle again spoke of by t e offe si Red air fleet 3122-2123;? ation with Russian troo s 5:111 “Killing in the old sectorg-Pork- hov and Novorzhev below Lenin. Brad. Smolensk standing a; the centre athwart the approaches to from the west Moscow, and Zhitomir in the Thus a factual military basis Ukrlme" for tiie Nazi assertion that He" in u" "lliill- the Ger- Lcnlngrad is about to fall or mans were repulsed l1 anti-air- be destroyed under Stalin's "an 3m“ “i” lllll I‘ Pianos "scorched earth" decree has while Harry Hllpkllls- President not men established. Roosevelt's cmordinator of the United States lend-lease program, f? l DUKE OF KENT .iit'n"ifir..“".tl“"...i“zi °'.,.:.';: Pliontracts awarded July ll to 22; Island firm listed VITAWA. July 3i -(CP) —Con- tracts awarded from July l1 to July 22 by the Department of Munitions and Supply numbered 3,980 and to. tailed $40,089,346, the Department announced today. Contracts exceeding $5,000 (ex. eluding capital expenditures by con- tractors) included: Foodstuffs: I Maple Iieaf Dairy Ltd, Halifax. $12,045. Shipbuilding:- Pictou Foundry and Machine Co. Ltd, Pictou, N. 5., $15,000. Personal ulpmontz- 'l‘. S. Slmms and Co, Ltd, Saint John, $7,015. Beds and bedding- Copp Woollen Mills, Port Elgin, N.B., $5,888. ' Gasoline, oll and fuel:- Dominion Coal Co. Ltd., Sydney. $15,425; R. F, Tolscn, Bedford, N. Super- Board to Direct American Economic offensive WASHINGTON, July 31 -(AP) A super-board to dl ect. the United States economic of ensive against the axis was established today by President Roosevelt. As its head he placed vice presi- dent Henry Wallace, long a stud- ent of economic strategy and of vitally affected affairs of the Latin American nations, and to its mem- bershlp. he named the secretaries of state, treasury, agriculture and commerce and the attorney general. An accompanying order gave the new agency a long list of formal duties and responsibilities. In reli- able quarters, it was learned. mean- while, that its activities would in- clude such things as:- Handllng the frozen assets of the axis powers, keeping a close watch on 1,500 firms in Latin America recently blacklisted as over-friend- ly to Germany or Italy; watching export controls designed to keep essential war goods from reaching the ax‘; nations. and recommend- ing anti-trust suits to disestablish axis-influenced monopolies here. at the same time. the day's de- velopments included several closely related to the economic defence of the nat‘on:— lives as bombs smashe (War correspondent Robert St. John of the Associated Press pic- tures the bomb ngs he underwent in Greece in this chapter of his Balkan odysey.) By Robert 8t. John Associated Press Staff Writer NEW YORK. July 31 -(AP) —— When you think of hospitals, you probably think of white walls and operating rooms and efficient doc- tors and all that sort oi thing. But the hospitals in Greece weren't- I-ike that. Yet the lives of thousands of maimed air raid victims were pro- bably saved this spring because iri- side ii"e small, badly-lighted, bad- ly-ventilated places they called hospitals in Greece, gritty young nurses went on tying bandages a- round arms and legs, even though tile bombs kept dropping from the 5 Y. When we arrived at the hospi- tal in Corinth, Greece, we found there was no doctor in town. They had all gone off with the army. But several nurses agreed to look over Leigh White, of C.B.S., who had been badly wounded. Pictures Hospitals And Bombings In Gritty young Nurses saved hundreds of Greece d down all about. 'the Corinth Canal. And they were flying so low that they hit every- thing they wariied to hit. A British truck driver said we'd have to change our plans now. We couldn't go to Anions, where we knew we could find a real hospital for White and communications for ourselves. He said there wasn't any way of getting to Athens excepv, a- cross that bridge, which wasn't a badge any more. We decided tn head south for Argos. We got there early in the morn- lag. One or two ociock. The hos- Dlial was just like the one at Cor- inth, only smaller. We put White right in the operating room. Then there wouldn't be any question of his being the first one to be operat- ed on in the morning. But there had been planes over Argos already. and the people lying around the ward room were mak- ing funny noises, like ‘you do after you've been hit by bombs. so I guess nobody slept that night. The Stukas came over as soon as the sun cracked the horizon. They kept, coming and going all day. The hospital was near a railroad yards. Maybe that was the reason the hospital kept getting bombed. Z J 1 36m t consumes. he said. iiijj,,“,,f,§§§' fizéuseuy 3,.°ck'.,“; A fl House, the residence of the Am- 5» 99-6581 Yml‘ sale! 9°» 53"" will“ “"'“°<C°“i°'°"°' While they were hauling him in- Anyway, we spent most or that n’. s i i g culture in Canada (Continued from D888 1) erlcfln Ambassador, John. $78,750. d, side the building, a grey-haired day carrying cots out of the hospi- 03m or ' speaking o! a no n 1 a “wv” '_ *1‘ “ ‘ __ ——-— A whine Him?” conference, 5' woman who spoke a little Engiigh tal when it looked as though tho ccuoxr nay r0 inlvis ax. a1 across Canadg, n: slliilodnilzifixti-i ma; to ketqli ti“ engagtament? He k111i: “Vifiglilsfllicitrllirgortgontlglelallg%pd i (ionstmctian and Dame m‘ 132.5%: E"""b°d ‘he W“ "i ‘l’ “Y °‘" "ms PM“ Wm“ "'3 “"'"""d by m’ " ~ * u, '_ w escor e mo urcyc es- e ec s:—- .' - .. b, ' i i i. llllllTloN " Mr‘ x’ o‘ Gaunt’ ellleadpaafst flliliieewelisltaelg héfllléggvtrdlllld 6°“ °i' city will libyfli Cans-diam a???’ gngalnmuig jglhel" ma" bl! Pfellarflilllfl i~° emimwer the “d” :10“ dmlfggfiggilaii: $531K? hZ,§"?-'d ltltiiantleeyeMtbaisltrlcil tthleeniiietliltinuntlli an was mus u“ M-F- Sfiliiifmfin CO- Lld‘. Slim- mlnistlaim“ w m‘ maximum prmes ' cots were Australians. Some of them president of the Egmont Bay and min Carmel exhibition was in summersidc on Thursday on bulli- 21s agar-south ssfNew (wleaiis. The Mounted Police. egoo rom nnoclzto AtUI d il hi y, on th xhlbition which is willie JggilkrrglrlgVr/riiilite p§¥JiS°oi8 reameg gg°jigllgi°yllcg'gii’zklntil“z “iii-ii e e Se fem“ 24*; Yeflson for i l is unfavorable morning all" ‘m "ti!" lwrssback tab. hi: on“ mg forward Bad.‘ wean,” The grain crop is down g5 ride in Rockcliffe Park, he walked Frill"? 1°05? “gt is b! er md Er cent in Ontario this season for under a blazing sun through the rosin-i Plflmls m0 112685, a e ca?“ fslggodftlixil-‘iiltikil-ahllgglfiyiei- grille extensive barracks and classrooms. ii? l in“ elm“ "a P 5 5 r D Ce‘ e and mounted to the control tower . ll t till l ll h liinis [rigililleclllli-glnd a 800d entry xlilstaiogrbgd". gllilie péastuiizesfie while student's put i‘ “e95 9i Hal‘ In Quebec the coarse vard training planes through their dicated he would travel through the Far East. This suggested he niightavisit China to which he has peclged immediate aid. Open meetings were dying, but they joked with us all the time we were there. By that time there wasn't much left of the hospital. We pimped into a trench outside the hospital just in time. We crouched on the bottom when tits bombs started landing. and rents. Secretary of the Interior lcklels. 33‘°§§§."°.'.§Z'°§T‘§?.. s» we or» n3 100 n00 eastern service stations . room. The boys all grinned when from 7:00 p‘ m‘. to 1,00 L m‘ There i we offered them cigarets. They w“ a mm that nations refusing were a ‘cheerful lot. even though to comply would lose their sources imiiny ° them m” 3°“! i” ll" of supply. Yiony s few hours or a few days. department am Just then hell broke loose. A merslde, P.E.I., $227,270; T. C. Gor- man Ltd. Halifax. $5.000: Hagen and Co, Halifax. $23306; John Fined and Sons Ltd. Saint John, $8.000; Diamond Cnostruction Co., Fredericton, N.B., $40,851. Australians Cheerful Tile wmmerce Half-Buried ln Trench _PROB.~\TE COURT - l-Ion. H. I Palmer, Judge of Probate was n Summerside on Tuesday and rid a session of the Probate Court i: iiie Ccurt house. The estates of ivid Adams, late of Sea View and iriinel E. lluestis, late oi’ Ken- igion were closed and the ac- s passed. Col. C. J. Stewart, on duty officer was in at- nda .. Heath strong, K. C., and .0. Stewart were the lawyers at- so good. irgén crop is not up to average, Le s Continuing he said that there is a. great need for more hogs. cheese and butter in Great Britain. An encouraging thing to the farmers is the fact that the prices of every farm product. excepting cattle and grain, are higher than thev v-"ere in the last war. He pointed out that. at hogs are selling for eight cents a hundred hlaher. butter for Iivr, cents a pound more cheese one mid three-fifths cents higher and elzizs one cent higher On the other hard the price of wheat is 35 cents iow-, paces overhead. At both fly'ng fields work and training went on without interrup- tion at the Duke's request so he might see everything in a normal mosphere, The only display was a guard of honor and the R.C.A.F. band which greeted him at Uplands and gave the royal salute. At Rockcliffe. after visiting the hamars and "Vminlng types of planes, the Duke had tea different To iron out Labor troubles Member 0f Quebec Legislature Sends Protest T0 Munit- ions Miniister Howe. ARVIDA, Que. July 31 —(CP> - Processing tax llas been removed CYITAWA. July 3l—(CP)—'1‘he processing tax cf l5 cents a bushel, imposed last year to help finance government measures to assist wheat growers has been removed, effective tomorrow, first day of the 1941-42 crop year. Trade Minisioi- MacKinncn, in nounced Japan liad sllsiifliidtTd trade with the Repubic of Panama since Japanese ships were stopped from passing through the Panama Canal. The department pointed out it was the first time Japan had suspended exports to any Listin- American country. The office of production mcnagé- merit announced that an order was in preparation which would wholly or almost wholly curb tilt! flOW 0i raw silk lo hosiery mills, to con- swarm of dive bombers roared over Corinth. The hospital shook, like those big buildings back in Rumsn- la during the earthquake. But the bombs really were drop- ping quite a way off. at least a mile. We ran out and saw the planes roar down from the clouds, one af- ter another. The target was a 39. car train. We knew then that neither Leigh White nor any of the rest of us would get any attention in Corinth. That train had just pulled into ‘Then something else happened that wasn't so pleasant. Somethin| hit me on the back of the neck and flattened me out like a pan- cake. I thought it was a piece of a bomb. I tried to put my hand tn the back of my neck to feel if f. had made a hole. But I couldn't move my hands and I could hardly breathe. Then I realized what had happened... One of the bombs had filled the ‘iilillng 0“ behalf oi the Execumrs‘ er. oats four and one-half cents less. a. Lie 0i. ccrs’ mess and watched . . ism‘, _ . barley. 20.8 cent; lower. flax l3 ‘_l e bjind ’n a display of counter. Representatves 0f the National flillwilindngi illili bill? iélX r155 bii- Serve eXislml Slilcks i!“ 211$, oyt town/rm; planes probably had been trench with rubble....with the Cam's 1°55 and came 29 “n 5 a‘ marching on the mess lawn. Catholic syndicate of aluminum silaisffiigeillfglog “zguig £5293“; élxlliéiiictleid lsstglifigimorrimgofls following it. The cars were full of $55: ltlgglv d5?! 98:15.’! l3? Pllfld 2:: Ailllllli-TO-BE SHOWERED— » ES Jeannie Boates. an Augufl rile, was the guest of honour at ' jolly party at the home oi’ Clovis Peri-y when her friends d to slioiver her with love- v g1 i5 and good wishes for her ature happiness. The da‘rity gifts ere ironglit in by Mrs. Albany alnicr and Miss Run Lambe in plalttle to the United States could he was not the demand for wheat in this war that there was in he hundred lower. These are wholesale ces. l-le explained that cattle are not being exported to Great Britain but 2o to the U d States and the price is higher than it was in ‘Q29. He doubted it this year's ouona of d. Mr. Gardiner stated that there flying No public engagements been announced for tomorrow but Saturday morning the Duke and his party w'll fly _to Trenton, Ont.. to inspect the big R.C.A.F'. training centre there, and to Camp Border '- lays ending Tile-Hilly- lvliere there are both military and establishments, to Ottawa in the evening. Snndn-i morning the Duke will workers met with offfcials of the aluminum company of Canada here late today in an attempt to find a basis of negotiation in a dispute that tied up the big plant for five returning At the beginning oi‘ the trouble the men asked for improved work- ing conditions and increased pay but no definite statement i285 been threatened increase of bread in Canada. The tax, levied on wheat pro- cessed for use in Canada. was said to have borne heavily on bakers whose labor and other costs have increased because of the war. Since its application a. year ago the processing tax brought in revenue of more than $5,000,000. the Minister said. in the price of silk from Japan. The house military committee approved a bill aultorizing Presi- dent Roosevelt to seize military and naval equipment, supplies and mu- nitions. or machinery or tools and materials necessary for makinS. servicing or operating such equip- ment. supplies or munitions. wounded soldiers. In a few minutes they would be hauling them into this hospital. The grit of those pretty Greek nurses was soon go- ing to be tested as ii never had been tested before. Naturally they would have no time for a couple of newspapermen with a few bul- lets scattered through their legs. So we starts-d looking for trans- portation. ground. That blow on the neck was probably just from a big rock Atherton, of the London Daily Mail, was half buried, too. But be- fore we could dig each other out, some of the people in the trench got panicky and started running back and forth. 01 course they didn't notice us. We were all mix- ed up with the stones and dirt. preity pink and white basket. Miss w°fld w“ because Canada is "my gt d h i, _ 1 m, gh made on the exact demands which REGINA, J 1 31__(QP)_J_ H, _ _ 1m blziceiilarrle rend the verses lfgéugzrsgfigilnoemksdnrflgh, ',',‘,,d",'§ aaofigmgrjggnexfgfv caendw Princes‘: the N_Q5_A_w_ Wm make on men- wessom presigeat o’ the sash Boards Functions while we hunted we could See some of them had on hobnailed ' name; shooting up out o; the tram boots. so I goes they were all sol- sd M rs Doris MacArthur asssted '1 arrrnging the gifts. A very jolly me was spent and at the close .' the evening a delicious lunch us "rvcd to the guests and they spirited wish rig the bride the best. i luck-S. —D.'l‘iTll 0F MRS. ANTHONY 0_.ii..i.i.l‘ - one of the oldest esiteiits ff Coleman passed away ll wcdnesdav evening in the oer- n ci Airs. Anthony Lockhart in rtitli roar. Mrs. liockhart was a inve of sell View but had resided ll’ over lurtv years in Coleman _.iei-e she was loved arid resoecird .r ner niiiiiv line Qualities of heart be supplied. said "they have _ well to the request to increase PTO- ducti0n," and adds-l, "zur prone- tion of every farm product, ex- cepting grain, WJS higher in 1940 than it was in the also the first six months shows an increase ever the ccrres- pending period of i940" Island potatoes finding a market in Great Britain, the Minister 0i Agriculture, said that he had tak- en tlie matter u Trlubie To Farmers Paying tribute to the farmers. he raspondxi" very prevous year- in i941 Asked about the chances of with the Briti=h Li Euro Th Alice. have an early lunch, leave with his entourage by plane at 3 p. m. A.D.T. for Winnipeg to begin ris western tour. Soldlilifrican (Continued from page 1) where Canada could sell her bro- d ct. Before the war the botatoe were obtained from the continent of De. e Union with only 2.000.000 white people has over six per cent grid behalf. The men were unorganized when they stopped work last Thursday. but since they chose the N.C.S.A W. on Tuesday to represent them, it is believed this body is making a re-examirlation of their entire situation. Meanwhile, Antonio Talbot, Un- ion Nationale member of the Que- bec legislature for Chlcoutin-il, made public a telegram he had sent to Munitions Minister Howe claiming 5 '.l"at statements made by Mr. Howe concerning the strike of 5.000 work- ers at the plant were "false and unjust." atcliewan Wheat Pool and chair- man cf the central board of the Canadian wheat pool organizations. commenting on Trade Minister J. A. Macifinnorfs announcement today at Ottawa of the lifting of the 15 cents a bushel processing tax on wheat, said the tax was inequitable, and is better remov- ed if it cannot be made higher. T0 TEACH MOTIIERCRAFT LONDON—(CP)—Doctors, teach- ers. probation officers and soc~al workers agreed at a meeting here iltat the only way to wipe out ju- venile delinquency is to teach In establishing the economic board. Mr. Roosevelt gave it these functions:- "Advise the President as to econ- omic defence measures to be taken or functions to be performed which are essential to the effective de- fence of the nation. tions of the several departments and agencies carrying on activities relating to economic defence in order to assure unity and balance in the application of such measures. "Develop integrated economic de- fence plans and programs for co- ordinated action by the depart- And we could hear faint explosions as the bullets in the rifles on board the train got hot and went off. It sounded like muffled machine-gun fire from hundreds of guns. Then we began to hear worse noisesm the moans of the men be- ing hauled through the streets on "C°'°l'dlmll° m‘ P°u°i°5 ‘ml 3°‘ ‘ stretchers. The parade of stretcher bearers was eontinuous....all ef- ternoon. The men were in bad shape. Bombs. then fire, had done a nasty job. At the hospital they hauled them right into the big hell and rolled them onto the floor and then went back for more. diers. l-lobnailed boots on the back of your neck aren't. fun. I 8W8! that's why I was w Atherton called "goofy" the rest o the day. Adterton finally took m0 down to the basement air raid shel- ter that was a hospital now. I stayed there most of the afternoon talking about crazy thing; like my farm in New Hampshire and how we had better steal an airplane to get all this news to the Associated Press in New York. destroyer.) Labor Minister no mind. lVilS. Locknart enjoyed , I m‘ lo: c. Gcvflnmem will‘? "Lmlrland “f of the opulation in uniform. Five Mr. Talbot added in his tele ram 3e and dtuliikqghkgelllilmlrltvliiiafstlorig “ulumnl He w” ‘nhmied m“ i“ per cenpt oi‘ the population is on that o.“ a“ justice-to out. £01,,“ mothercrnft in the schools to every merits and agencies concerned and The hospital attendants took one aiiiiuiiirv and church affairs. Peillile there were pro”ll1ciflZ_ "l '°_ active service outside the Union. . , k M Minis,“ t [Mk girl between ll and 16 years of use all appropriate means :0 as- qulck look at each View“ The“ nsie are left to mourn nine out "m" we“ the“ ‘my “bu” us?‘ It was these troops with the In- e s’ ' as you’ r‘ ‘ o ' axe. sure that such plans and DYOKTlm” he as ithe ut ide I cnveii children born to Mr and ost of these were grown in their ma“ soldiers Wm; cleared up into the matter anew and to make are carried mm enact by such d” w e r p as or pos- c a y u us. Lcckliaw “mam paurm Mrs, back yards Howey»; Hon. VJ. A. Abyssmm h; added Because of as soon as possible the necessary G1 EN NAZI A m) t t d a "we: sible attention when and li the ,- R- penis oi Coleman; Etta, Mrs. MacKinnon. iynnlhs x105 "rrtocg orig the S,” '0, South Am“ he m, mcflflcgflgnf’ V WA barn/mil; smivrésugfiuons kind advise red-eyed ririgsesdgottejrouni is him, - I I r inner ~ s ori" o 0 lOll _ g . Palmer of Summerside. Commerce.wl I! not familiar Wm, condmgm our. (In the first public announce me President on the remuomnp arise W! 1110 Oil blot swllrt nni Mrs. Fred Dohertv and Ma- " l\ll‘5. Earl Shedd of Braintrce, America to see if a Canadian potatoes nuulv be estab- riarket for side the Union. ment of the trouble Tuesday night. Mr. Howe said it was "a suspelifhi DUBLIN-(CP) - First war-time of gconomic defence measures to I didn't hear the planes come. ' ' ulilllclle- MYS- Elmer Willi?‘ lished ilififff- TlV-‘ie Willa bi? mill‘ Mr’ Meyer was surprised w Ge d corat‘on to be nferrod ost-war economic reconstruction . m, g- H . - ,, . . know liquor could be purchased o; m 50m e," adding "m"! e - ¢° ~ P Nobody did. They werent making . _ _ _ L“ M15" bamud Taylor‘ kemd l" that “mum? h" 569d on the Island from licensed ven- ma: aooegeenyogathe iotroom de_ on an Eirean citizen on Eire soil and on the step‘! to be taken to my “ohm ma“. engines seemed Jhi/illguiility if‘? wgzy ‘iliiiiin, Moodv all cf Coleman mid i d with whom Mrs. Lockhart purposes and for table stock if D055- e. The situation in the Maritime dors. He expected to find it "bone dry" because it was a. Prohibition partmerit had seized control of the plant. He said he did not know if has been received by Miss Mary Nugent of Derryfunction, Co. Cork. protect the trade position of the United States and ‘to expedite the to be cut. off entirely. But I dici see them. ‘Iltere were eight or l0 of he will leave for Nova Scotia lin- mediately to gather first-hand in- . - " . m. Also one brother, Mr. John i d u _ ne siacriclilltlisrfgiibbticill-elgblifionaxbi provinces is that’ He‘ fiaimfi" ‘fr-E prgiinilgle way to this province he there was any real )'l0lenCe and l?’ savinlh“ Germ?“ Sllercewhwe Tlitiglggltlllgxfglli °gcxlézflcveie°ifatlon_ them. They were monsters. Three rormauon with a View to emm, ailviiclon. N. B. and to all of “'93 pruglfing $105,512 uni; g3; visited St. John, Halifax and alto commenied: "so far as I know illgalleucffi; Ed i: Ere-n fwd ma" 2i or {our engines apiece‘ They were lng a settlement of the "slow down" an lain, u .e , ga. on ere as an ou . s p8. jug; gkimming the wage; They strike or ma, ‘nine womb“ on Cap. _.i:in inucn amp-atliv is extended He iuncial is taking place on F ri- lrom iier late residence-I in. a ducts. Production is actually less than the consumpticn of l-‘ISCO prsducis. However, th's province has o. su lus in each, with the er- oeptlon hcgs. great friend of lvIr. Wilfred J. Kennedy, a successful merchant in Johannesburg, and a former Islander. l-le is of the opinion that Ho mentioned that he was a Sydney. , there was no sabotage of any k‘nd attempted except insofar as the loss of production caused by the shutdown was concerned.) Mr. Talbot, in whose constituen- may have been made to the con- trary, I deny categorically that. that sabotage was in any way con- nected with the strike." "Review proposed or existing leg- islation relating to or affectins economic defence and, with the ppprovai or the President, recom- mend such addltional legislation couldn't be enemy planes. This eight or i0 bombers passed all the nests except the last one without anything happening. ’l‘hen the last. gun started spitting out. its Breton Island. The Minister will go t0 Hill!!! first and then to the mino lillldl- It will be his first direct personal intervention in the miHP-iflbfii‘ P9 He referred to the recent ieduc- y c m, “yids, workmen live, said .. ISOIIHIS tion of 33 a ton on the price o‘; glee 122155 wgaglhieruliré igill again? "gm. workmg class respect ".9 law ciigppeltgltigirelaflwaiagmiagialA22‘: as may be necessary or desirable. message m steel. I do,“ bane", trouble which Office“ of We d" mm “eds immmed here ‘n and its institutions; they are hon- my one of the bombers Were even pntmmg haw bw, trying h, 59;- ~MiS5 Elizabeth Dalton u visit- ‘! fricnds in Halifax-S. Hwl/ils Aiiie_lvluirhead of Chai- vion-n is visiting in Summerside. ~.\lr. Kenneth Mathieson of B'- me iiws returned from an enjoy- e visit to Halifax-S. “lit and Mrs. George Sheen of- ggnmerside were guests of the Rev. l‘ ind Mrs. Sheen of Springfield "i on WCdllGSdQYn-s, thought this would be of assistance to the farmers. Referring to his trip lo Eniliiliid last autumn, he said he was there when the bombing of Enslisli v ti" was at its he'ght. A few days ago he was talking to l-lon. Ian M";- kenzie and Hon. C. G. Power. woo recently returned frrm there and they reported that the bomibinss have practically ceased. Mr. Gardiner was twice Premier of Saskatchewan before entering the Federal cabinet. l-le was Minister of War Services also but recently dropped this. l-Ion. J. T. ThoPon. Winnipeg, is now head of the war guest of the Charlottetown Hotel liim before leaving. _ The distinguished visitor was a last night. Plan to regulate Hours of labor UITAWA. July si — (CH-A plan to regulate hours of work throughout Canada in such a way industrial activities are places , transit controller may bear fruit. , iabfliflse-‘i est, loyal. hard-working and merit the esteem of everyone." Alexis Dal-is, president of the N. cs.a.w. would not comment di- rectly on Mr. Rowe's statement, but said: which likely the ' work of the "Despite any statement where eration of Catholic workers, par- ent body nf the N.C.S.A.W., said the men had been seeking wage in- creases since last. May. ("The workers have been after Wage increases since last May, without result,’ he said. “The dis- satisfacivon started in certain de- partmenir, notably among the pct- room workers, but there was no BRINGING UP FATHER WARNS AGAIN ST RETURN LONDON-(Crli- Ernest Brown. Minister or Health. has sent e mes- sage to mothers evacuated with .their children wzi"__~, them not to be "lulled b: a irllSC sense of security" into returning to their lromes in towns which so far have _ rot been bombed. hit, because they went right on. When il-e last machine gun went off, I realized for the first time that they were German planes. They had fooled everyone. Bridge Blasted is Bits A minute later these planes were r'ght over the bridge leading across tle for some time although he has already addressed personal mes- gage; to the workers by radio and through newspapor advertisements. Mr. Mcliariyis intention to make the trip became known just after he conferred with a delegation rep- rescnfng striking workers at the National Steel Car Company's plant _in Hamilton. llv George blcblanul lrsim-eserr-gg. %Q"TH' F - HE m,“ '__"‘ Services. as to avoid undue congestion on d ‘ "5 Famlie Mm" h" Mimi‘ Accompanying him to the pro- street cars and bosses with work- IATER‘ | 1' I E m h“ hm"! in mlrllnlwll *1‘ Vince is his secretary, Mr. D. M. ers going to and returnin from kgAEN HA5 l" an enjoyable visit to Montreal. Allan and a member of his staff. their taslm is imminent. i W" w T? D Dowih ‘5- Mr. C. B‘. Parker. learned today. Munitions Minister Howe said ‘Mil devise Rowe of Campbell- “6 li- B. is visiting her husband oll-gull! fl member of the Home a stationed at Bummersider fill-n Ruth l-ambe of the‘ mu hemlsiliflr and Stewart Ltd, sum- ’; t “has returned to her duties Munilwui no two weeks holidavs m!’ reatlves and friends in g, lisid- fie was the guest of MORE SEED NEEDED IDNDON - (OP) — Saying that! "without seed we cannot we s0 badly need." Alrricu vure Min- ister Hudson has urged ai farmers experienced in seed pr l ""- to ‘Brow more seed. DISOOVEIIS GOLD NUGGET MELBOURNE - (OP. - While tlnfl near Inglewood. Vic- a. s miner unearthed a Rodi weig irig ounces at a mother. Mrs. Andre H ’ . i“ Jinn“ w ugnes _..m~__d_l¢ nuqeet h 7i . depth of six inches. When smelled it weidied 6| mmcss. , . . i the government would shortly ap- oint a transit controller whose ob will be to see that daily travel fncfitks in centres of war activ- ity are used to the best advantage. The appointment has not y" been officially approved but. it was learned W. J. Lynch. Wlifl W" centiy retired as vice-president and general manager of the Que. bec railway. light, heat and power company, will likely get the post. (“tows with its war-expanded civil service. Hamilton with it! big war plants. Toronto and Mon- treal areas and other centres ' x ‘lfirx . .0 ‘ c4» m I\ v. i s i