..----q--»w "v- qr‘..- s’ ""-"'“1"4'7~.‘?~.'>'." r'f~.*~':....-. sac-warez" ‘~<.-r‘._':~f.'t.-a.-2. ~. ' " :2‘ t_-tr~ "J ' a v . I _ . "same." "“UWT""$*.?’..’“1;'1'"\;\_52,§=I,P_, ,0;- :;_'<~._-;:iv3 a Qggg ,. r1 w» . _ .-... b 1- PAGIJ FOUR rue A l’ GIIIILIITTETOVIII GIIIIIIDIAII Iorllsg Dally (Ialndod ll lllf) Proslclnts Unit, 00L W. Chooser l, llnI-Iro Vloo Pnsldmlt J. I». Btsrloll IJJ. loomuyt Llsut. 00L D. A. Inc us; 0.8.0, Illtor lld In l g Illroolor. J. I Burns“. IJJ. lloiohlo Bullion: Irnnk Walker, Ind Llsnt, Ill Burnsi- E.O.N.V_I_ t0: Anslvo lorvleo) SUBSCRIPTION IATII fi lull In P. l. l. HAO on you; 81M tor I months Iljl lor l uonlhsi l9: for on noolh (It: Delivery “.00 per your $8.00 for I month: ILTI [or I uonthlt Ila (or osso month lull to other Provlneon and U. A. 86.00 Ill’ you Ijlfll, In“): 32,00 on you: 1.00 for I months. Mo low I months n ‘Ibo Charlottetown Guardian may be obtolnd at llillllll['l Nun Alnuey Tlmnn lqluro, In! Porky 01d Iotropollton N lgy It, Toronlny Nun Blond Chllfll Oscars; Walls’: News Blond Iudbury, Outs Huh Ioblwo Ihop, Houston. ll. B. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” TUESDAY, JUNE 1, 1943. An Urgent Appeal Of all the nations now subjected to Nazi tyranny’, none put up zt more heroic resistance than did the Greeks. They are paying an appal- Hing penalty for their pztzriotisut. Hundreds of thousands of them have perished of starvation and others are ureetiiig the same fate. .\'ot eveu against the Poles have the Germans shown such rutltlessness and cruelty as they have against the Greeks. litiowitrg this, the people of Can- ada will welcome the opportunity of contribut- ing to a fund raising campaign in aid of the starving [x-uplc of tirccce. This futtd is to pro- vide the bare necessities of life, and will be handled through the Red Cross. The national chairman of the campaign, which opens on June 7, is .\Ir. Jackson Dodds; the provincial chair- man is H011. Dr. W. P. MacMillan. Speaking st Rotary yesterday, Dr. Machlillan stressed the importance of this appeal. which is deserving of the fullest support. There are, of course, many calls on the pttrse in wartime; but this is one which, in the name of our common humatt- ity, cannot be ignored. The need is urgent, and the response will need to be prompt as well as generous. The Rotary Club is sponsoring the campaign, which is a promising augury of its success. Increasing Importance The more we hear of the damage done by the British blasting of the Mohne and Eder river dsms in Germany, the more important this dar- ing rsid becomes. One of the more critical of Hitler's internal organizational problems is transportation. Our sir force has made this tto easier for the Nazis by its long-continued raids on rolling stock in northern France and on the German rail junc- tions. In order to keep supplies moving out of the Ruhr basin, the Germans ltave had to con- centrate more and more on their inland water- ways. i The Rhine is important, but hardly more so than the Dortmund-Exits canal, over which great quantities of materials are moved in barges and scows. The pressure of flood waters released by the blowing of the Molme dam may wash out many of the weirs and locks on the Ruhr river and the Dortmund-lifts carted. If this hap- pens, and the reports are that it is ltappcttiug, the ensttiitg chaos in llfllapflflllfltlll will take ntany weeks to trntangle. All this will bc in addition to the extreme dif- ficulties the Nazis are going to have supplying water for industrial and domestic use, parti- none. R.A.F. Transport Commlnd is doing in- valuable work u s military unit. To suggest it should assume other than military functions in operating world air routes would be to court disaster." "There is a strong case for starting now to design transport planes," says the Econgmist, “But civil aviation will offer such a vast field for enterprise after the war that there seems to be no justification for restricting it to monopol- istic control—-unlcss the greater goal of full in- ternationalization can be achieved, with all its manifest benefits. But, while internationaliza- tion might be a boon, nationalization or any kind of sectional monopoly might invite inefficiency and restriction, without countervailing advant- ages. The shipping companies are anxious to get a footing in the air, largely because they re- gard air transport as s dangerous competitor to ocean travel. _"There is a substantial danger that Anglo-Am- erican rivalry will develop. In order to avoid the danger of an internecine feud, steps must be taken now to arrive at some understanding for the future, not a purely Anglo-American un- derstanding, but one covering all the United Na- tions. ‘The British Dominions and India should be parties to it. In the Soviet Union, air trans- port is highly developed. The Dutch have a strong claim; their subsidized company, K.L.M., was second to none in efficiency before the war. Its vast territory and backward communications make China's interest self-evident.” — EDITORIAL NOTES — Lord Woolton, British Minister of Food, announces that Britain faces the prospect of reaping the greatest harvest she has ever had, while Mr. .\. \'. Alexander, First Lord of the Admiralty declares the U-boat is still the great- est threat t0 the United Nations, I Q i i According to a statement laid over by Defence Minister Ralston in the House, Numberé Mili- far)’. (Nova Scotia and P.E.I.) stood next to Forontodn the number of recruits voluntarily enlisted in the four mOuths ending April 3o for general service. So far as conscripted enlist- mflnt 1s concerned M.D. t) stood ninth out of eleven districts. Gciod ‘showing for volunteering. s john Mascfield, English dratnatist, novelist and poet, born this date, r878; Poet Lattreate; has many published works to his credit, includ- ing "The Everlasting h1ercyg" “The Street of Today", "The Faithful", "Gallipoli", “The Old -Fr0nt Line", "Enslaved and other Poems". And he who gives a child :1 treat Makes joy bells ring in Heaven's street, And lte who gives a child a home, Builds palaces in Kingdom Come. III 11 ‘It l‘ The farmers around Yarmouth, N.S., are in a dilemma. Their Jersey and Guernsey herds produce rich creamy milk of four per cent and five per cent whereas the milk order No. r95 says 1t must not exceed four per cent. Ottawa culztrly the latter, to the llultr valley. 1t is zttl- ditioiial, 100. to the great dnrttztgc done to elec- tric power strpply, factory operation, blast fttru- aces. t'<r.'1(i>, and n» the effect of forced evacuat- tion of tltotrsztnds of war workers from their homes iu the ltitv-lymg >CCtlU11S of the river cities All-Empire Air Service Lot-ll l-lcuuctt is lit-mg widely praised in (L. . .1 t i=1 _ttt>. u-nt tut" his speeches, which are kccpitrg bcfuro the public. llrc importance of tut zttl-mmiplrc zttr ll'llll>]‘LJl'I service alter the war. llc sccs such a service not only as a ric- \'\.~$ t_v t< r trztllt- t-xpctu-ipit. but also zts a tncaus whereby sttttanstirt-zr of the Iiflllalt Llmtitnottweztltlt can ittcct tn t't>|1l\‘1'L'|l\_“.' :11 4t few days notice t0 deal \\'l‘.lt intricate and. difficult after-the-wat‘ urobleuts. “The liitrpirt- rzm not h’: nraintaittctl by sea coruutttincatittn tilt-tug" he sud tn an interview. "We itiust have fast air comutttuiczttion every- whcrc-fi. llritish Ljumrttonwealtlt round-the- world service. ln this Canada would be a big factor, for we can trsc the North Polar route flying in lltc stratosphere. Action should be taltcti 111m; l fztvotir an litupirc cortfcrcttce t0 rwwh in. zt- snort 71S POSSIIIIC. We have the equipment; we ctut g“ the ruztcltincs far more .,......._t man m prztcc-ttttt and we already ltavc a fine and tvcll-trttittcd personnel. With an ade- qttate litirpire air service Prime Ministers could he in Londurt or Ottawa within a few days. Such constiltntions should offer no difficulties HI ;\.l. Endorsemcttt of these views of Canada's for- mgr Prirttc klinistcr is general in the United Kingdom. A representative comment is that of the Sunday Times, belonging to one of the big groups of English newspapers. “Lond0n,“ this journal points out, "is now only t8 hours from New York, ten hours from (jail-o, eight hours front Moscow. Even the great ocean barrier of the Pacific is flown reg- ularly many times a week at speeds of 20o miles an hour or more. Air communication will play s tuttjoz- part in the lives of nations from now llnvnllYl. Public discussions ort both sides of the Atlantic are ahead 0f official thought, and reveal such a weight of enterprise that Interna- tional :tgrrentents mt the air rntttes of the Wfifld are a pressing cuncerrt. l _ “A prim:tr_v llritislt need today’ ts for a pOIICy for Empire air transport. At present there 1s has failed to give a definite ruling as to whether the farmers should sell the milk a5 it comes straight from the cow or dilute it, although a Nova Scotia Dairy Commission officer has ad- vised thctti to standardize it, but how? I! i‘ i 1i The Provinces of Ontario and Quebec are heading toward elections. although war and in- ternal conditions combine to make the dates still uncertain. Harry C. Nixon, new Premier of Ontario, would have liked to hold his election at once but difficulty in arranging for the sol- cliers’ vote overseas seems likely to delay it until August. In Quebec, the expectation i5 that Premier Joseph Atlelard Godbout will call an election in October. In each case atty grave turn in the war ntight cattsc a postponcttrcitt. In any event it scents certain that these provincial elec- tions will be held later this year and that the outcome will have au influence in deciding the time wircn a federal election will be called. r 4- s u- Attrerican dottghboyrs have raised a fund to present to the little village parish church of Cranslcy in Northnnrptonshire a stained glass window bearing the figures of President Roose- velt turd l’riute Minister \\'iitstort Churchill and depicting historic Anrcricait scenes. The window is intended as a pcrniaucttt memorial to Anglo-Antericztti friendship. The idea for the window arose on Thanksgiving Day aftcr American soldiers stationed at a catttp rtcar Cransley village, which has clitmged very little since the days of the Ntirmatt conquest, had attended Thanksgiving services in the parish church. The window now is in preparation and will be dedicated this fall. 4K =I< I 1F Right Rev. Dr. Norman A. MacLcod, of Brockville, Ont., will constitute the sixty-ninth annual General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in Canada next Wednesday evening in St. Paul‘s Church, Hamilton, Ont. As retiring Moderator Dr. MacLeorl will preach the scr- mon at the opening session, and his successor will be elected. The names of Dr. H. Beverley Ketchen of Hamilton and Dr. N. R. D. Sinclair of Allandale, Ont., have been proposed by Pres- byteries but Rev. A. C. Stewart, Midland, Ont., and Rev. G. Carlyle Webster, Charlottetpwn, P.E.I. have also been nominated so far. They are ineligible as they are not commissioners to the General Assembly. The report of the com- mittee appointed by the last General Assembly to investigate the two theological colleges of the church, Knox College, Toronto and the Pres- byterian College, Montreal, will be presented by Very Rev. Dr. Robert Johnston of Ottawa. One of the highlights will be the report of John M. Thomson, Chairman of the Foundation Fund, through which Presbyterians are en- deavoring to raise half a million dollars to put the church on a sound financial basis. Since there has been criticism of the scheme used, this report is expected to arouse lively debate. A proposal to establish s faculty of Divinity st McGill University in which the Church of Eng- land in Canada, the United Church of Canada. and the Presbyterian Church in Canada would co-operatc in training students for the minis- llotss By The Way Gm- Glrsud predicted that. Tun- lsta woma- be conquered by Jiiite 1 and Germany beaten 1n 19-44. net us nope he was equally conservative 1n mp1 nredfctlorts. -Edmontou Juur‘ no . Alotfcr recently recelvcrl from Spain was signed "The No- 1 Churchill Club." It came from a small town 1n the northwest of Spain, and says that over 500 W0‘ pto there collected 132 oesetas to- wards a statue tn London of Mr. Churchill. The “Churchill Club" chose as thelr symbol Mr. Church 111's clinr- —London Calllnz. Speaking 1n Inndon, Ont. Dr- Bldney Smith. President of the University of Manitoba, warned that dtotgtorshtp was possiblfi in _ this country and might become imminent 1f people refused or fatter. to work out. bases for social security them- selves. Dr- Smith has ample historic precedent to Drove his point. —- Brantford Expositor. A square doorway cut‘ 1n a ‘hill- slde somewhere tu Britain lcacrs '10 feet below ground to an arr~coiidi~ tloned military hospital which can accommodate 400 patients. explain-s Loncon (Jhmnicle. Wards. dormitor- tes for doctors and order-lies, an operating theatre, kitchens, admin- istrattve offices, dining and rest moms are all included. A tutmclin: company of the Royal Etrgineers completed the excavation Lu a little over three months. An enemy sup~ ply ship seized by British naval forces proviced the panels of grain- ed plyywood covering the corrugated tron rooftmtz. ~Exctrangc. The retreating Nazis 1n Tunisia lavished great thought and me- chanical skill on tricky little wtivs of leaving, death bcftlrid them for lndlviduil Allied solders, states The New York Herald Trburie- The Wat" Department cesctibed sortie of the latest booby traps: A whistle that does not explode until it is blown. The vibrating pea hits a detona- tor. Thermos bottles that do not explode until they are tilted to the mouth. Earphones that do not ox- plode until plugged in on an electric circu1t.—Exchange. It. Is to be wondered why Canada cannot follow the British example 1n referring to its parliament“ ' utider-sectetaries as “the trudc retary for war," "the under- tary for air," and so forth, i of the pondeous titles ‘the mentary assistant to the Mi of Munitions and Supplv." "the 11111‘- liamctitary assistant to the ntuustcr for the navy" turd s0 on, through the 11st. Why has Canada such a passion for verbtalzeil-Petcrborouzh Examiner. There was a gathering nf femin- ine phllatelists recently. The ntay crity cume from the uplift" forms of schools where the staff thotizh: stamp - collecting educatlorml - hence, perhaps. the faint feeling of gloom. Specimens wfre cxatnltrett obedicntly, but there was not tnuclt enthusiasm. "You can lend buys irtto this hobby," said a schcoltnnstclt“ who shepherded one bleak batch of wrenches, "but girls seem to dis kc 1t. They stop as soon as 110s ‘ale. It ls surprising. because girls are usually more amendrtblc about be- ing CLUCMNI!" The mectius: broke up pleasantly with buns and tea - whlch got more attention than squares of paper from the Dutclf East Indies. —Glasgotv Herald- Reports from several colleges and other schools are to the effect that “mauv students" have been taught? to sw m as barf of thelr compulsorv physical training. This cause The Springfield Republican to ask: "How come so many needed to be taurtltt? It. 1s "ol‘ swimmiu‘ hole" 1n dis- ropute where these boys canto from?" Perhaps most of them live in cities and ‘the o1‘ swimmin’ hole" 1s too clstam for them to learn to swim 1n the old fashioned way. No child should zet out of the enrlv 'teens without learning to swim There 1s no better exercise. and none more lte-althful. The rolls-pea. training citv students, d0 wclt to make learning to swim Pflllltltll‘ sory. _Raleigh News and Observ- er. This newspaper recently printed a report of the height“ ~1_v activity of the Tranquility Ladies‘ Continuu- lty Chub, relating how that enter~ prising and public spirited group organized an 01c lnshtoticd “bet” to newfasntoned purpose. One of the trclghcors had been r11 and was un~ able to get 1101p with tier lrousw work. Everyone rcaltzed what that meant to the conscientious cltt e- laine. so the wutrteu of Tranquility tranquilly but purposefully went to work to relieve the situation. About 10 o'clock One morning they arrlyid In force armed with mops, pails. cleaning cloths, brushes, brooms. clusters, polishes and electric cleari- ers. A5 also transpired, they brought along some wall D8130!‘ as welt. In a few hours the house was spring- cleanec from cellar to attic; floors and woodwork were washed and waxed, curtntns laundered and re -hung, carpets were cleaned and t1 blt of paper-hanging cone. "Every- one,” The Etxposltors account relat- ed, "enjoyed the day and noon tnenl. which included stewed chicken pre- pared by the hostess " And the enjoyment was heightened, of course. by satisfaction over tr gen- erous task wcll accomplishec. -- Brasttford Itxtnosltor. From twenty to lhtrty tons of the strongest, blttckest chewing tobacco that ever turned a man's insides out. Ls now being shipped to Australia under lcncrlease, and some of it; 1s also going to American forces ln the Pacific sren- Reason ls that the natives of New Guinea use 1t for money. passing 1t from hand to hand fri place of dollars and dlmes. In a way, this shOWS how much more advanced the jungle people are and how much smarter than clvlllzed folks whose coins do not Improve the soup and whose pap- per currency 1s no goof; to eat even with mayonnalse on rye. Hardened CLEWCIS couldn't stomach this Pa- clflc brand of eating tobacco. It. is called ‘twlstf’ but 1t Isn't the con- ventional 100p Canadlan chew~ ers an brought un on. This New Guinea baccy 1s twisted llke rtme and out 1n seven-inch lengths whlch are pressure-flattened tntn sticks a quarter of an inch thick and half on inch wtce. It looks something like a stick of flat Ilcorlce, but. don't let. It fool you. The tobacco Ls made frr t stronger, lower grade scram and stems, flrecured like snuff nnd the sticks are heavily "cased" with a secret. dressing wh‘nh makes thorn blacker than 3 Jan's lteurl. But two or three sticks will buy a down~ ed airman‘; way out of the jungle \_ try, will be considered. snfl back w civilization, complcto rue CHARLOTTETOWN cusnotm We Don't Wantt The Facts (Bruce Hutchfson In the III-Ills: hm 1c C n 1e) l-Ifstorfans are dee ly distressed because the movie of) Ambsllldfl Davies’ book “Mission to Moscow" totally distorts the history or our times. But the historians can never do anythtn about ft. It 1s movie, not he history that W111 be believed by the publlc. Indeed, all history Ls beginning“: wear a Hollywood make-up. most- of the current generatlon King Henry the VII of Enkland his turned Into Mr. Charles Lfltlflhwh- Half the notables of Vlctmdan times will be remembered not. for themselves but. only as Mr. George Arhss. tatesmen and scientists will go down to posterity as Mr. Paul Mum. Now-a-days you are only assured of ‘greatness when yoRr 11fe has been fictionalized tn oelltl- lold and a love interest added. when a book of history fs wrlt- teu rt 1s subjected to the attack o! critics whose corrections will glen- erally be read by those who ave read the book. But. the mass mtnd which sees the movie will never see protests of the historians who W111 write obscure letters to the papers. As always tn great. affairs the 1e3- end will soon overwhelm the fact. If there ever raves any doubt about. this it was removed by a recent; sur- vey of American co lege students. The survey. conducted by The New York Tunes, showed that. the Am. "with students. the future lntelllg- entzta of the nation. simply knew nothing about the history of their own country. Marty of them could ifirliiriileiltécltlllvflnllk was dPtXIiZSIlfIi-nt ar an World; War. e i“ This however, need not, give u; any sense of supcrlorlt 1n Cflllfldfl By and large, the peope of Canada know riothtng_ impoytgn; about gm 11151013’ of their country. It may be that the students now leaving school are equipped with blinding uston of tltts country’; ha, which they ttrc unable to arrctrlgm m their elders, but 1t ls certain that. the generation rtow in middle age ucttt out into the world with less u"d°1'5lm\d1"€ of Canadian affairs than of the wars between the cfty states of Greece, This may not. appear Very 1m- portaut rrt practical affairs, A man with no krtotvledgegof history can often ruake a good living, Such men me frcquenlll’ rich and powerful \\'l11l8 scholars are poor and un- known. But recent events should Irate showed us that the most prac- t.eal and the most; essential sub- JITL of n11 in our schools 1s history iporrkvvtthout. 1t democracy wonf 1A ljc-al knowledge of Canadian 1151011‘ would not cover merely the Battle of the Plains, the charge up Qunettston Ilefgltts. the Quebec Conference and all the spectacular rntcrltttles which merely reflected the sleeper Cllffflltls of life. It would cover the deeper currents. If Cmlfifllflm trencrally understood how thlscountrv grew, 110w 1t, de- "$191M _1!,$ Present economic sys- pm. hcv it makes its living bO-duy, _ro\v 1t secured prosperity and way ibeticourtters depressions, then the problems of government here would p0 lrrrisclyi solved. That we do not; thou tnese things is completely proved by the tucredtble bungling of the last twenty-five years all “"111” ' ' . atlbroved" by ‘the ClPCFQY-Y It 1s Proved again and rtgam by the perfectly cOck-Qygd prcyicszrts for prosperity which are eagerly endorsed by large 59mm“; of the public: in complebe defiance "Yvtllfllltslvrv. Our resources and 0111 '].(1.\.111011_ 111 tho \\'01'1d_ YThese Vthttrgs Wlll never be con. “pr-d by the movies or the radio, v. rose business l5 to tell an exciting story and sell rt for money. Cm {:19 °Q1tt1'qry_1he.v will be 10st m us process sum; pcoplg who have seen Mr. Laughton as King Henry will 1110C bother much about the or- lclllif- Y! ‘PW dull fellow by com- p““$9“~,"1ld People who see H011 - woods ‘MISSION to Moscow" HFIWY-"lly assume they know the 1r1story' of mode l no further. m Russ a and seek cihtiréitTtTon Hitler (Winnipeg nee pl-eg) 111 a ktobal war such as this too often do we incline to overlook‘ the ltumntt eltrmcrtt, In that caleggry very (IJIIIIIICIV belongs Mr, (illlllY-‘llil-ls human and seething hatred for I-Irtler. For MLISSOIIIII, Mt. Cl1t11'('l‘t1lI ‘has a loftv contempt. He called tum “Hitler's Jackal" es E when 1w 101111011 upon fallen mine and when he rtdtculog 11 Dflce 1t 15 with withering scorn and the use 9g sun-h epithets as lackey, Bu; Mr, Ctrurclttlljs hatred of Hitler 1s some- lhmtz which 800s beyond contempt, As_ t1 civilized man. the Brltlsh prime ntinister ls lalnly outraged by the fact that ltler could exist. tu 11. tnodern civilization. He 15 out- Yfltlgul by the fact that such t1 Er- gnntftcrtttott of evil could take p ace in the twentieth century, no 1s gut- ralzrd by the prestige the man has Ptllll l?!‘ hlfllsvlf as a mllltary tilttllvsst. And what. probably 1n- flmnes ll"? fcelitlgs of Winston Churchill ntcrc than anythlng else :5 Ulitiglll‘ BHW so clearly what was irtppetttrtg almost from the begin- 1111.3 ithttv others turned blind eyes to the facts. Because all this Is so, Hitter gets spcclal treatment 1n all of Mr. glllpirchllhs speeches. I-Ie regards tcrs reputation as something whtch tt is his personal responsibil- ttv to cut down to stze. Until Hit. It‘; and all he stands for ls destroy. e there will be no Cthurchflllan pence of mind or serenity of soul, éfiifitmtitttt aster: blazers‘ vlous relish, a ' O O O g I 11. as.1;fl’.‘i‘é°l%.-i‘8réi‘°pll.’%lé°f;.il2%§i tznve full credit to Hitler‘; mtg/don fm its run m the Axls acre“ tn orth Africa. 5s a student of’ war, t . Churchill regards Hitler as a slllilllif“§.l"2§€°”..1” a“ “mm” Wfll‘. ii/heit the Gtcermhn ays o’ m! ftrll of lyrlcztl pralse o efislflvelylf‘: military izenrus and his infallible 1ntul‘1 Chtépitfiill _ll're;i§§n¢iv§ll. ‘II-Ila wo mg tnupetlrtg. There 1 come . day’ that/ell] come a day!" l‘ . that d _ rived. Hltlerlsay iri§1rl?f$%,'“lfi§e§§_ went. Into a tall tn after the fall c! FPRIICB. and 1t. as never emerged mnltc wloruld have happened, for sxl - he hfld launched ht; tn- “l8 On ‘If Eruthmd immediately after U"? 0011-11150 of France, whefi ma; fencdl was almost completey d9- e css. ls something we shudder to contcm lave. And what the n- gutt Woul have been 1f the lull orce of the attack Hitler launched against Russltt two years ago had been dlrected at, Britain l; “other question that Is utmost. unnervtng l" its Implications. But; Instead 0t pursutng ht; m- vnntnke 1n the west. Hitler decided I0 8° 9115b Ev dotns so he has lost the wnr. And as Mr. Churchill ma S0 lefllllly. hls campaign 1n North Afr en has turned out to be n erttshlntz defeat, How many men Hitler hns lost 1it_/Rus-s1a_nobody with trimsportatlon vtn lltter or ine Mr. boat, food en route. and l Iulde. —New Glasgow Iwws. urlty. part to play In your future Consult a Great-West Life will best suit. your needs. IIYIIIIMIIII & Provincial Offices: Charlottetown lfsrls 8. lousy-Representative Dollars For Democracy l Whoa you pay the Great-West Life AssursrtceuComp- any your premium dollars tIIQY-Illlmfllla-“IY 3° ‘c’ tlvo” in the war program and are pooled, thou of‘ your neighbour for , You should take real pride 1n the effective job these premium dollars are doing in keepill! 110W" inflation while stabilizing your Count-I)’ 5 W" FY0111"- tlon effort. Your premium win the war and the peace which must follow. Thomas MoAvIssn, emu-spun Roprooonhll" n! WTWII- Allison P. McLean, CJsUFlllst Cyrus A. B. Shnw-llapruontstlvo at Monllno. Peter G. McELohem-ll. Josentsllve ll ylfiwfll- along with your protection and sec- dollaro will have a largo security by helping now to man for the policy which 00. LIMITED Managers Summer-side Montague Mslslgor ll Summers!” n 0'10“!- Are You TroIlIod Wlth r. L. MlcNull-Bepresonhtlvc at ev- II wgw lavyuggrs ghzliybest B A C K R I T E PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND - NOVA scorn FERRY SERVICE VIA WOOD ISLANDS, P. M. V. “PRINCE NOVA” “The Connecting Link Between These Provinces” (nstnv-surwnsvs mcnuncn) nvnmo may AND JUNE Will Leave Wood Islands 7.00 am. 2.30 pm. LUNCHES NORTHUMBERLAND | Six acres of land, more or less, the property of Stirling MacLean. This property is in a good locality near Char- lottetown. 5-29-3l-6-1-3i. Valuable Properties For Sale Steam saw mill at Souris, suitable for the making of rough and dressed lumber, barrel _ cheese boxes, complete with office building, tenement house and extra building lots, suitably situated for lumber. Also one lumber farm at East lot near Connaught Station. phone for inspection to the undersigned. knows but, the German high com- mand. In dead, wounded and pris- oners 1t can hardly be 185s than 3,000,000 men, and may well be double that figure. In the whole North African campaign the Axis losses for the whole war are near the million mark, as stated by M!‘- Churchill. . ' ' But. 1f Hitler's intuition has been thoroughly discredited, the 1mm- tton which told Mussolini to jump mm the war on Hitler's side B180 lies 1n ruins. The sure-thins 811mb‘ ler, Mussolini undoubtedly thought. he could pick up some "l territory without incurring any rtSKi True, his ambitions were smal compared wftn those of Hitler. A11 he wanted was Nice, Corsica, Egypt and Tunfsta. In trying to pick 11D these mere baubles, he has dIOPPEfI his whole African empire, an em- pfre whlch Italy acquired before Mussolini was head of. Italian Somslfltsnd 1s gone. Iilbya Is $0M. Ethiopia has been snatched away from her Fascist. conquerors. What. 1s more, Italy's North African em- plre 1s probably gone for good. Mussolini of course had little to say about strategy tn North Africa, or anywhere else for that matter. North Africa was Hitler's show, just as Stalingrad was Hitters show. Mr. Churchill, away last Ieb- ruary, gave credit where credit: was due tn these words: "While 1 have always hesitated to say an thing whlch mtght after- wards ook lke over confidence. 1 cannot resist. the remark that one seems to discern Inthls potlcy the CHARLOTTETOWN» P- E- l- ic ON NORTH RIVER ROAD THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 1943. AT TWELVE O’CLOCK NOON touch of a master hand-the same AIIGTIOII SALE AT MONTAGUE Thursday, June 8rd at. 2 p.11. I am Instructed by Mrs. C. G. Clay to sell by public suction the following Ina- chlnery and furniture and other articles: Grimlstone, Paris Green sprayer, turnip seeder, spin- ning wheel, jack wheel, a set of wheels, Ice box, oil stoves, scythe, shovels, hoes, 2 sets o! barrows, muffler, beam scales, 1 set scales. 1 set blocks, collar and homes, pad and breaching, ice tongs, fox wire, 4 egg cases, I room stove, cross cut saw, wheel barrow, buck saw, crow-bar, 1 set of swings, potato drag. 2 couches, 2 clocks, 1 cheater- fleld suite, 3 beds, bureau and commode, table and chairs. ‘Terms cash. _ W. H. BEATON, Auctioneer ll E. I. — CARIBOU, N. B. Will Leave Caribou 9.00 mm. 4.30 pm. SERVED FERRIES. LIMITED hill" W. H. BEATON, Auctioneer. staves, shocks, lathe, Lake and a lumber and wood Applicants may write or E. E. SHARBELL, Portage, P.E.I. master hand which planned the at- tack on Stalingrad, and £11118 brought upon German armies the greatest disaster that. they have ever suffered 1n all their mllltary L0 . Asrfhe might of the United Nat- ions grows, as ft 1s grvvrlna 110W b! geometrfc progression, urthcr dls- asters wltl be fashlone . we can safely leave 1t to the British rlme minister to see that the credt: for these disasters will be glven 1n full measure to the same master-mfnd of the infallible intuition. Adel! Hitler. steer m i AWAKE IIEFIIESIIEI poisons and wall‘: malt so tuafliaitu. m. At u» fm tip a kidney houbls lulu confidant] lo Budd's Kidney Pills-Ins our ItsII s century Ibo hvsrilo kidney remedy. Easy lo lull. 1H Budd's Kidney Pills Trcivel byAir! T0: Moncton... Saint John... Summarside... PLANES ‘DAILY:- 3 Luvs Anlvo Charlottetown Moneton 7.50 mm. 9.00 on. 12.80 p.111, 1.85 pm. 4.80 IIJII- 5.40 lI-lll. i? hm - Charlottetown - Monolon IBM llnllo - $11.10 Return plus tn. Information - Reservations Phone 540 1403 Iscops Iumhy Maritime Central Airways LIMITED Especially effective for Lum. halo, Sciatica, Neurttts, Jotng Muscular sud other forms or houmntlsm whlch ordinary treatments fall w reach. Prloo 50o per Box. TIIE TWO MAGS 149 Crest George Street. Msll Orders Glven Prompt Attention. IEWER UNIT CHURCH MEMELERS REGINA, May 31 (CPlA . from 248,399 to 230,495 1n the mun ber of milled Church adherent 1n Saskatchewan was noted whe the 1931 and 1941 census figure from the Dominion Bureau of Stas ttstlcs was reported today 1n th 19th Saskatchewan conference .. the United Church here. Drive ouIACI-IJES s I‘ ‘g’ Professional bards McLeod f‘! Bentley W. E. BENTLEY. K. C. J. A. BENTLEY. K. C. Barristers and Attorneys-al- LII MONEY TO LOAN 154 Prlneo Street Ilorrelland Company l1. F. AIIGHIBALIJ Chartered Accounlan‘ Elnora Trust Bulldln Charlottetown H. F, McPhee B.A., KC. NOTARY 0o. IARIIISTER SOLICITOR llley Building Charlottetown p A. s. IIASLAM. a. s, u. n. BARBISTE ETC- Blnk or Nova Soo 1s Chamber! Charlottetown P. E- l MONEY. TO LOAN n Phone 85 P. 0. B0! BELl 8. MATHIESON _ MONEY TO LOAN Cameron Islnrclsm‘ mnghsrlotutowfl i4 ‘ ‘eves tzxttmsen GIIISSESNDFITTEII J. S." TA YLOR OPTOMETBIST New Loostlon Corner Kent and 01!!” 5"‘- Opposllo Ell’! BMW" Ivan np b A I trnents l Phone Eeutflliii»: tors Your Eyes 7 I t " tear." _":.:'.':r..r:'".'I-'-’= us“. ._ consuls I Osll In and discus! Y dllllcnlltes. Wrlu or obouo f" . lllmlnlmonll. G. l-'. llutchesnn I‘. 0. IIUTCIIESON “ O. F. I-IUTCIIIBON