‘R->-wr_1w.=.-v~ro=m—~_-a.s.-._,,. _,, 7 M” Wu‘ p "sect-nil ii" " pfiShlllll‘. Tl‘ vans voting,” LE LIIARLOTTE i UWN GUARDIAN Alurnlng fully tFunnded Ill Ill?) rresIur-iit. |.tcui. Cot. H Ullflll" 9- “"4". kw: Pfliblflftlll; J. IL Burnett. I-J-l- Secret-far); Livul. UuL U A Mnululmun. DJJ). Edit-n uuu Managing Uinirlor J IL UWVQAF ‘J3- Aflwint; Ldllurs. t-iunx Hallie: and lull A- "Ill"! 5LliaClflPIl0N RATES u, u," m r_l.__l_ 54,0“ p" “gar, $2.50 l0! l5 IIIOIUII $1.15 for 3 llluhllh; 50o In: one month um Uclfhfry 55.00 pet your. $1.00 w v m“!!! 51.15 fol it months; we for one Ionll- Bi Muff w other Provinces and U. S. A. 55-99 P" I‘ aatuiiu; \\\;tlk|\2 s-Zw pt-r t-wl‘; il-W l" 5 "Wm- 5th: for 3 ruuutnl . ,. . no obtuiunif n [our]! New: Agent-y, Corner Allllf 1nd Wllh-llllkl- Bullul| “Elftlpullllll fiimn _ "f! P.“ '5 llufllfvlll] .|. i-ii...-, ssi lhl) so. lawn”! M" Chin-mu Lalllrlrl’, Ullilflfl; tlulln‘: n»; Utimll budburl. Ont; Hub ‘rtitiiwi-ii istiiiu, uiinctou N. ll.| ' Agvut-y, ‘Th; strongest ilfemury is Weaker Hum MI Weakest llllfl" 'rt"r:§ii.\v_ Jtirv 2s, 1942- lncruuscil \Vuol NEEdS Canadpn, “girl ruiiiiri-iiiciits have been sub- ltfllllltflly llliii‘ ' i i izist fciv years due largely t) t! iii in military clothing. and “m, ,.»_--.i' * ticYLigplllCIllS threatening to restrict itttimrts t - iitiziiitii)’ and ‘W311i!’ of the home tiroduct fiSilHllFS greater importanflfi- Hence the r ‘l6 illlYe. 5P°l15°T°d _b)' the fcplpfél , ‘lill govCrIIiflQntS, to tn- crcasc LYiii s p pi-piiltitiou this year by 25 per cent. l‘ r Fruit-c lidward Island this would tiican a ‘iiitcly r2,ooo more breed- ing eweg on lsf . i‘ is. As pointed out ‘by “f. \\', R_ 5h lwpiiii; Ministcr of Agriculture in an at" "" . .-\:v‘$ (itiariliaii Otltlhtliig ll" new sile{)}) p, ..ii,iii ptiiiCy, Prince Edward [Stand a, on,» t- hud a, sheep population of over 150,000 d. 'l‘<.ida_v ir is less than 50,000, and the" is no i -.‘iit that apart from any ques- {inn Of tn lllt’ iiii,lii.<:i-_i' can be dcvclopcd . to ‘illc c. ~‘ I planned 'l,,c i of all our farm readers is dii-cqitd to .\lr, Shaw's article, which is self cxpltiiizitiiiy. Chm-iv ;.==i- iati-d with the programme of incrc:ist~rl ‘iii l‘ ills‘ ‘lllcfilon 9f Pr°"ld' jug an Ci}. ' system, based on fed- "ai “W1 tions. With the intro- duction of 75th ions in Canada in I941 the VtillllVL’ tit’ vpi-I graded reached 8._783,223 potuids ci ' ‘iii 4958-754 Polmdi m 194° ll on an optional basis. The tics most of the shorn fleece . .‘<'l tlirwiiizli commercial channels. Tbs! grailiiig rvuiil ti: do not apply to pulled wool, ‘t-ashcti “hi1 rig‘ iht-tc wool uscd in home hand- icrafts. Dtiriiig ilu- past ycitr grading was carried out in a total of l\\'i‘1lY_\ six registered wool ware- tmm-qg i,,,-;._i.-,1 at 5i dc points throughout the lloiiiitiioii. liriliil ' \\'-'\l'¢l1f>ll5@5 manufac‘ tin-cs can buy ( .ii grown wool which is free front rcjtvts am! piaiilcil according to length and fineness of staple as well as degree of shrink- age. A fcatiirc of the present regulations is that thc idi-iiiitv of "' ii"o\v<""' (‘lips must be main- IZIiIICil until i’ 2:0 officially graded. It l185 thus been po ii to return a grade statement t0 the prOilllterS indictiiiiig to them the merits or shortcomings of tlcir product. Bird Sanctuaries Now ’ It l: an irouical fact, notes a London corres- pondent, that all of London’: blitz ruins are now bird sziiicttiarics, Tens of thousands of Cockney $llZll'l‘<J\\'S and starlings have made their nests amidst the tragic debris and even in the gaping bonib craters. At the nesting season these cheerful alert fea- thered creatures sought out desirable semi-de- tached blitz CYCViVCS, and proceeded to set up their houscla. ,.:' ‘ ries, right in the ntitlst of ibc devastated 8N3!" Today these tragic sites are alive with feathered denizens, "l‘lic~fr cliecrful twitter sounds in joy- ou; orclicst iion from all sides, and tiny grace- ful little iiaigcd citizens pop in and out my- 5teri0usly' fqoiii all sorts of cosy retreats. The Dawn Chorus from any expansive bomb site, which has not yet bi-cit cleared, is impressive. It sounds rzitlicr ilkc Iiltitlier .\'aturc’s gently ironi- cal rcbtilc ti» man's iirzauc obsession with high- explosivc pi-IL-cs. Second Front Talk Too lllflllv pciiiilc who are talking about a " ~ lllc (llimvil Journal, ti" thinking oi it iii lls‘ iii the despatch of troops to France 1,, ioij-tS. The conditions, unfortun- nrcly, Ire vcry different. llctivcen 19x4 and r918 British ll‘ - \‘>< h. rig sitit to France ivcrc landing on frivi ill ilic country of an ally. Bctivci-ri igii " l VHS llriiiiiii had complete Colllllillllil hi‘ i -: =; hail the naval assistance n5 ivcll of fir, li flcct and, toward the end, of thc h.‘ .‘l . ' Xi-il States flccts. Between 191,; and iiiw’ i il' hail not challcngcd 50-1 ],,,“-,,,<_ |;,~. 11o... Vnqnq; could S(‘llfl across the Chantal .~.-, an with lfuiips and supplies and have thciii diii‘ l.l.‘ llavre and Boulogne and nth;- lill without danger of air 'fif i"i ]i~i:'.:s ‘Mi iii\'I\.<iiifl troops to any riiiztiiiviit must run the risk of (lg‘~l(‘l'.'lit' .‘lil subinziriiic attack. They must hs- d‘ _i- i] llll1l"i‘ conditions which, b6- (Qngo m‘ .'i‘i- ii: ui-wiirc. innkc surprise ini- ,_'.l'\‘_ lit- liiiilt-d, not at the Allictl -i.- ui- la; llavrc or at sortie other prepared fi-v. . ' iilicti, but on bcachhcatls. that are hcaYiI-f n, ' ‘ l ii] thc face of artillery and [nflfillll ."l f tfii on to face strong forti- (lOChS of liu Y Status ziuihoritics, ship- ‘_ nidiiig _illl_\’ I2 were the . iiiiiiiiiig. For something - fir. li(‘i'll sinking more - l!‘ -ii hiiiiicliiiig. \\"hat . . i UiflTl. and (‘speci- allv at ti it. v.' z. Vii lillllidl xtlllfllfi have to ~31! siniplii-s zui~l rcliifiircciuciits ovcr thousands K of miles of ocean through the Arctic and t0 the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf and across the Pacific, can be easily imflt-Zmed- Wile" a" they to come from, the hundreds of ships that \\’lll be needed to take a large expedltillllilfl’ force to the continent and to siiPPlY "d fem‘ force that army afterwards? _ _ In such circumstances, what sense can exist rri saying that Britain must latinclt a “Sefflnd "0"? at once ——to “help Russia P" _\\'oul_d it hclp Rus- sia if a premature attempt at H1v=1510l1 0f the <3°"' tinent resulted in catastrophe? j The Deserler Conscripls Even now, after three years of war, says Montreal Gazette, there remain a fair proportion of potential volunteers still in civil life— men who have not joined up for one reason or an- other, but who are at least well disposed toward the war and arc ready to be soldiers when called. The Government proposes to wait until these men are exhausted. until every device of pro- paganda and persuasion has drawn the last \vill- iug man into the ranks of the fighting forces. Then, and only then, will it go out to col- ect the remainder by compulsion. What sort of soldiers will this residue make? Some of them deserted the colours on the eve of the war for "safety first" jobs, and as conscripts their hearts will still be in the flcsli pots of civilian IlXIlfy. .- EDITORIAL NOTES_. It's a long Parliamentary session that has no ending-the present is due this week. i I i i This is the parsons holiday month, and as luck would have it there are five Sundays. v 1k It is sad to recall tragedies, bttt the death of Rev. Dr. Ferguson recalls that of the late lamented Mr. Bayer who similarly passed away at Stanhope beach. iii ii- it- it lVoodcn “tires” for trucks arc composed of thirty-six wooden blocks bolted togcthcr and held in place by an iron band. The speed of the truck should be I5 miles per hour. 1k iii i: iti The British Embassy's attache at \\'il.Slll-llglOl‘l i; Professor Scott \Vatsoii; he is an Edinburgh University and Oxford man, has visited Canada and the United States thirty-two times. Once he travelled over 800 miles in the “'05: on a freight train, disguised —to use his own words —“as a bale of alfalfa hay." w n- iii Hilaire Belloc, E nglish author and poet, born this date 1870; of French des- cent he has to his credit a large num- ber of poems, satirical novels, book of travel, es- says, etc., long a student of military matters he prophesied the Germans would invade France by way of Belgium; his most popular work "The Path to Rome: “It is the best of all trades to niakc songs, and the second best to sing them." iii ii- v Many will recall the Rev. D. M. Lamont who recently passed away in Glasgow, as he was Uln- istcr of the Central Church, when it was in a Prcsbytcuv of the Colonial lloard of the Church of Scotland, having succeeded the late Rev. Mr. MacLean in that capacity. He left here for Toronto and then received a call to the High- lands of Scotland from which he received att- other call to a leading city congregation in Glas- gow. His only son follows him in the ministry. v in ill iv Prime Minister Mackenzie King told the House of Commons that he will not table the Vining report on Canadian publicity in the Un- ited States. Tlie Vining report contained infor- mation and expressions of opinion from people who would not have spoken if they thought their words and names would be made public. Every government had the satire problem of publicity, Mr. King said, and he was as anxious as the Op- position lcader—- and more so-to see Catiadals war effort get as much publicity as possible. n ni iv ti Under the title, “Canada's War Materials Con- tribution to United Nations,” B. T. Richardson of the Winnipeg Free Press has written an ex- cellent piece for the latest issue of “Bulletins from Britain," a weekly publication of the Brit- ish Information Services. 1\lr. Richardson's ex- position of the Dominion's war effort is an im- pressive document both as to content and style. He is particularly shrewd in drawing his com- parisons with the American war effort. If his article catches America in a mood for studying figures, it should correct a lot of misapprehension on that side of the border. i I i i The Washington Post has gone “all out for war," and “all out" against snobs, climbers, and would-be social selectiority. It says: "We shall feature personalities (men and women) who arc contributing to the war effort, Visitors (royalty or commoner) whose arrival on the capital scene obviously is connected with the fight for the stirvival of democratic peoples, and newcomers who bring us a fresh perspective on the task at hand. In other \\'0l‘(lS, for the duration, and pro- bably longer —\ve are finished’ with Society as such." a n- o a It is a tribute to the versatility of the Canad- ian soldier that the Canadian Army in Britain which was specially trained to bcconic thc spear- hcad of the invasion of the continent has been selected also for training in the West, of rc- constrtiction and rehabilitation. The object will be to bring about a5 spct-dily as possible a resump- tion nf normal lifc iii areas now licld by the cu- emy aftcr they have bccu recaptured. lloth hu- man and material elements enter into this task. and to be successful the work must be carrictl on by men to whose native intelligence is added tne special training that is bring given so fll(‘_\' will know not only what to do but how to (Io it. These men will be called upon to undertake a work of tiiercy that will have yiraciiral and beneficial re- stilts for tli:- int-ailing armit-s as wcll as for the people they frrc. The snout-r lllf‘ rcsidruts of the lC-CflplllrfVl arvas are rc-cstablisht-il, the sooner they trill hi: ztblc- to fCllilCF valuable aid to tliosc who have frced them from oppression. THI-I__§I_I-I;A_IZ_I.O'I"I‘ETO\VN GUARDIAN llllTES BY TllE WAY A hobo who Proved n hero In I western factcry frc ls thankrd by being offered a j-b. That's ratl. tude for you. - Winnipr: Tri uric. Ontario motorist; used 7.500.000 fewer gallons of gasoline ln MBY. under ratlonimz. than they dl-f 1n the correspond rig monh lzi 1941. The sstcm evidently works. — Brant ord Exbosfor. Ley,.¢h¢ Null labor leader, Mes to lure Frenchmen to G=rmim war industries by assuring them they will be treated as rouaL-i by the German wcrkers Bu; vital true Frenchman de=lrcs to b: dragged down to the lwvol of NazLs. -— Hamlitim Spectator. m It took the Navy Dep-rtment qulte a wh‘le to ge~ arcund to lt. but when it did tell the full stcry of the battle off Ml-‘wait the a:- count was memorable There can be no doubt. that. this was one of the major naval engagements of modem times and th-at. the Ameri- can victory was a smashing one. --New Ycrk Sun. If ls highly unllkelv that Presl- dent Roosevelt. will find It, neces- sary to mqulslflon dvllian tires next week, or even n=x't mcntii. But hls statement that such a pas- rltflhv exists, 1:1 rinse the war shOilld lake a turn fcr the worse. ought to bc o .s'pn"l to the rsst of us: a signal that. tlis- time has come to end fuzzy thlnkng 0n the rubber question. - (xilcago Sun. All the forces o! the underground IIICVC-JICIIL, according to n, confidential re rt now CIICILHIIIIE in New York, nave bren moving toward COIISOIGHIIOII, but negotiations are temporarily at a standstill. Apparently the reason for this is that one of the thee rge movements, Lberaiton Na. tioriale (the ollters are Liberation and Libetxo) is sits-peered of having connections wiilr Vicli_v_ The rc- port says that. FITIICII anti- fasclsts do not regard Liberation Nationals as a German trap, but they do think that, it Ls the n- strument- of 50.113 V.c':y offlczals who are tic-w convinced that the Utiltzd Nailrns are goirg to win. These men h-avc asriciatcd tli m- selves with the underground in order that their future will be secure-win, lose or draw. -—SJIIIY. John Twlcgrapli-Jcumal. The administration lfs spokesmen (is. rve crdlt. for mak. ing the my . .5 of lnfiation tn- telllglble to average Americans, if not so simple as pbyfniz wlh building blacks. Mrst. thinking people are aivara that, ruinous ":1- flallon ls a possibility and that ft will rrqtilte skill. cletetminat on and the public‘; cc-rpcwitlcn to prevent it, But the subject is not quite kindergarten stuff. The president's phrase, if that ls what he said, was incx ct. as aaotlur in popular use An assumed c-crtainty is often dcs ib"d as sccne hing ' “every scfioolb‘ y knows " Usually it woifd be extremely dif- ficult, to find the schcolboy who knows 1t. — Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. French --____ When critics point nlll. the com- munal riots (in India) 1t, should l‘ ' i“ “" iP-"i the viuims of all the riots ln the past, fif'y ye-rs do no; nmiunt to as mary victims as one largetscale mivsticre of the "good old days." By (Pfendlng Indln from livasfo" ard bv sett- lllg the dlsfitttcs of he" warring races and c:'c'd=, Br"! ‘in broticlit India pence and s curl i‘ in w'"l~h alone tier paprltli n riild evpa d. The chronic farnlnzs of Ill" bad years were abOW-“ed by lmp-‘cvc- ments in agrctilt-ttr- and in com- munlca-lons, far. in the past, people in one itiliaac mivht st~rvc whll-Q grain wa= rottng ln the next, Modern hrclere 2nd strl ll- tlon have also helped to loner the death rite - The Nawab~da of sardharia. in Lczidon National Review. ______ Grammar ls snmrthtnc that ls linked tip iivlth oar rzre and bound to the pas‘. by a chti n of evolu- tion Without. n fairly general understanding of the rubs of grammar it wll? be difficult to maintain a. worthy lltxrriture or to prcduce orators who tviil arrioach 1:1 power and clarity the w-rp-i-s Cl’ the past, such as Edmrrd Burke and Daniel Websbr. True, if rammar is to be taught as a ooh ctlon of dry and unlnteruflng v infinite causes and sub-divisions it. always iviil remain a bugaboo for pupils If it can b: prcsezitzd with somrtj-ilng of It; romance, somcthirg of the gantor of the remote prst. frcm which it sprang it will becoire a prpular n; well as a vital study Wth wiae and tactful teaching of rammin- the tlnte may come when none wt‘! be so daring as was Barton Braley whcn he wrote: "The gratrmrr has a rule absurd Wncfsthl would call an outworn my ‘A preposition la a wcrd Ou mustn't end a Arntencc W . —Fort William Timr-s-Journal. It wag all right lo cut down the gasoline unit from five to four Fallon: for Ontario fokr, but sure- y h. was pcss bl-e to give the American tourists the W) galfons prcmbed them over the radio and through the nawspn-"ers Many of lltrm madp phrs to ("me lo Ona- do tblnkniz tiiev could get. 2) gal. Ions only to find wh~n t/rey got to the border that. they oould have but four units, or 16 gallons, wh‘ch would not take tticm ta their des- llnatlon. - Midland Free P1953- Herald. George Gordon McPherson, har- rfster, stratford, although he has been a practicing lawyer for sev- enty years, has no thouizht, of re- tiring desoltc the fact, that he ls in his nfrtctynsemnd tear. ". McPherson, who bvlrves ‘hat he ls thn oldest rracilcuig lRWyTI‘ Canada and the oldeit Ivlniz mrrn- Canadian Btr Associa- hf: olfl’: every working and stars on the job frcm nine in the morning iin'll five ‘n the eftsrnnrri. - Thomas Times-Journal Thom Clwfllnnn who relenl (he inlusdccs of the voiuntry sva em and who "cmmd the intrcdnc ton of th- princiolr- rf (vii-nit or sacrifice cre not, likelv to be airfa- flcd hv more admirers But. as Mr. Klan has =0 rft n std, “They elrCfo-l mix dHrvt fir?" B fr!"- unnttwr {onion crme: _around. Mr. Klnq doubtless firmer to llrvi h‘.= party ln the rrsl‘i'n whet" lt- vnn strv to "J." A.’l'.l'O“81"lf)llCfl'SI§. "We did not onforcc c risr-rlnlhn." and to nll 0'l1'r C*n"'l*n=. ""'e ‘cck all tho =‘*n- n"'="rv l0 on- fnrce crnscrlnlrn." Re h-nflw M once more vvrve the fatsity of Barnum‘; theory that Agricultural Accidents 9w (Halifax Chronclls) 'I‘h.e scarcity of farm labor and the attempts to offset. it are clear- ly demonstrated ln the M8188 "W cendo n: 531-1 ‘I accidents In all parts of ciinuaa. of their new" most. of these accidents are due. 11°! so much to carelessness. B! l0 ignorance of the farm implements and the manner in which they should be handled. On at leflst W0 occaslo last. week, young NOW! Scotlan girls suffered from serlm-l! leg injuries operations. A large number of these accid- ent; might be avoided if we would avail ourselves of the lessons o! Britain. when the male farm labor was largely depleted and women wo.kers went onto the farms, the wives and daughters of the farm- ers, who had been brought up and educated in farming pursuits, went lnbo the fields. Women from the towns and cities, who had volun- teered for service, went into the kitchens and the fann homes and performed the household 0110.65. To avoid agricultural accidents demands of necessity considerable care in the operation and handlinfi r1 1 of farm implements. Pitching hi)’ may look like a simple operation from the sidelines but it. can be- come a dangerous one lf approach- ed in haste. Similarly with iunnaig a tractor or mowing machine. Care in all these operations Ls essen-lol not. only to the beginner but td the seasoned ‘veteran. As a logical development. farm implements and machlner must be maintained ln good conoitlon arid best working order. Countless agzl- cultural accidents in the past have been attributable to defective e-qulp- ment. and carelessness 1n the up- keep of implements. A good farmer would not allow his mom and machines to stand under the trees overnight. Care of farm implements i5 pail, and parcel with their use. Effective ivorking condition ts doubly essential now for no: only does it allay the danger of accid- ent but helps to maintain product- ion at a high level. The food front ls today a prom- inent war industry. Military needs have depleted farm labor and the necessity of maintaining and ln- creasing production among the rc- muinlng workers puts the whole process under added strain. Accid- ents caused by ignorance, careless- ness or mismanagement detract from the total national effort and bdng added costs and sufferings to those engaged 1n agricultural ptrsults. Let us consciously endeav- or to restrict these accidents to the very best of our ability. ._________ Response T0 Overalls (Betty Moore, in the Christian Science Monitor) When I arrived in London for the first. time since war broke out 1 expected u few surprises and changes. But, however far any flights of imagination might have carried me. I could scarcely have zuessid the loud cackle of hens would awaken me on my first. morn- ing in the West End. Sleep was banished instantly. I got up and cau~ tiorsly looked out. Down below in a microscopic backyard were three bronze-colored hens, preenlng, shak- ing and strutting. One of them. presumably the one who had awakened me was still shrilling vociferously, apparently telling all and sundry that naughty ivorlu or no naughty world, she at least had done her daily blt. ul- ready that; mot-rung. One side of tne yiard v/as a tiny henhouse, just the length of the wall, On the other a sooty azalea struggled up from a gceu box. It- held two pale-flow- ers. pfrtlt-slic in an unequal struggle with their surroundings. They pro- vided me only bit of color in a gray dinllfness. Suddenly a, door opened and sur- prise number two appeared. A slen- oe: woman in overalls with a gar- gantuan volce- a cross between megaillioned talk and the timbre of n tuba. “Now, now, what's all this? What's all this?" she sold, address- ing the hens. "For to much noise and not enough work." She spooned out some food into an empty dlsh. Then she disappeared and silence fell on the little yard save for a few satisfied cluckings as the meal "l quickly disappeared. I went on with my dressing. suddenly another com- motion below. The voice was heard again and a one-side conversation boomed out, as a pan of water, this time, was provided. A large blac" . cat. now joined the family grou‘ 32% was lapping from the hens‘ I went down to breakfast. Affor- the cereals an enormous boiled egg appeared: I chipped 1t doubtfully. Was it really new lald? It was. It takes a war, I thought. The lady of the yard appeared and to my amaze- ment spoke tn an ordinary feminine voice. I congratulated her on having new-laid eggs. "Yes", she said, look- ing at my fast-emptying shell. "That is one of Prince Eugenb. I always know the shape." She wont on proudly. "Once she laid. one that weighed three ounces." I tried to look intelligent, though I hadn't the faintest notion what an egg should weigh. But the name Prince Eugen. I felt a little shattered and was pulling myself together when my friend returned with a relay of toast. "What name did you say?" I asked weakly. “Prince Eugen." she smiled. "You see, I named them Prfnoe Eugen Gneiseneau, and scharnhorst, be- cause I'd teamed how to pronounce them from hearing them no often on the radio and I was a0 pleased." "They laid forty-eight; eggs hut month", she continued in her soft. voice. Even to my ignorant earn this seemed a masterpiece of wor- tlme output. "There were fourteen more," the In went on. "but they had soft shells. Not enough grit, you know. I have to make them work for their food. It's not easy in such a snail space, but Ihlde ft among the cinder-s. Then ‘l talk to them like a man. to make them think they are on n farm." Thus was the tuba voice fcol u‘! of the mock 1'1 the rme. Jroronto Telegram. Curiously, Quebec hu chm strczizlv to Hi French tr . that. it. has not been whol'y ml. nillatcd into the Ornadln com- monwealth. It liver a p'ovlnc‘ll tifc of H4 own, largely isolated fin-m world currents Apparently lta oeople do not cormpehet-d tn ea- ‘PPIIflI fact you can't. Stu" received 1n farming . - u" PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND-NOVA SCOTIA FERRY SERVICE VIA WOOD ISLANDS, P. E. I. —CARIBOU. N- s- -_M.V. .. pRmCE NOVA " “The Connecting Link Between Than Provluceo.’ Daylight Saving Time-Sundays Included i Leave Wood Islands 130mm. 11.00pm. 3-00 ll-lll- Leave Caribou 0.00 un- l-W P11 5-” Fm" LUNCHES SERVED ti: llf» The Isle Of Man (Manchester Guardian) _ The Isle of Man's budget snows ln Interesting situation. The Manx government has more money than it; knows what to do with. ‘The l5- iand. as we all know, has fiscal autonomy, subject to vague aver"- dng powers at Westmtnlster. But as a matter of administrative con- venience its customs and excise duties always approximate to those on the mainland. The British gay- ernment. has gone on durin; me war increasing the liquor and to- bacco duties and the purcunse tux The Isle of Man does the same. wltn the result that it finished the last financial year vi-ith a surplus of £179,724 instead of the estimated £10,837. Precisely the same thing happened in the last W31‘. With n0 taxes other than customcs and ex- cise the island had a surplus in- come of a third more than its ex- pendltude. The inequity of this met- hod of taxation was one of the spurs of a vigorous reform move- ment, and so bitter was the opposi- tion of the then govemltig olig- archy and of the ivealthier classes that an income tax had to be forc- w on the governor, Lard Raglan, by the Home Office. That was tn 1918. The present governor's policy (the governor is a. chancellor of the exchequer) has been more pzogres- sive than LIOTd Raglanls. Iiord Gran- ville lntrocluced higher income tax and a surtax ln 1939, and the tax rates were raised again last. year. This year there 1s to be no change, and the income tax rates remnln at from 2s, 6d. to 4s. 1-2d., with sur- tax (on incomes over £2000) rising to 4s, 9d. The Isle of Man has no death duties, so that the wealthy residents who keep to Manx pro- parties and securities enjoy a great advantage over those of comparable income in Great Britain. At the same time the poorer classes have less protection. In the lust war the island had no old ave pensions or health insurance; it had hardly any rationing and prices were allowed to flnd their own hiizh level. The island has moved a little since. it has old-age pensions and health insurance but it has no unemploy- ment insurance. It ls Introducing rationing. though slowly. and Lord Granvlllek budget contains nrovls- ton.- for subsidies on the Brlttsh model to stnblllse prices. But the criticism still lies that its final system Ls biased against. the 1055 well-to-do. Manv Manxmen are dis- satisfied with this budnet because wealth escapes so lightly. A con- sciousness of this lies behind she proposal of the First Deemstcr for the setting up of a ccmmittee to inquire into death duties: offcinl opinion ls becoming sensitive. It ls not of course, fo- us to interfere with what the Isle of Man does with its fiscal autonomy. But ft 1:. fair to point out, how much of its present; prosnerlty (to say nothiniz of ffs normal prosperity) is dun to British government exnendlttrre and to hope that its voluntary fin- anoint contributions to the common war effort will be kuhstantlailv ln- creased and that at the sami- Pm» advantage will be taken to raise the standard of its social services The Isle of Man has a unique opportun- ftv to begin reconstruction now, Understatement fExchanze) The British penchant. for rind-r- otten astovnds Cica- De=plte fh~ f"n been uoked at them on tl~e one and in the press of tf-elr own and nfher countries tho Ri-ltlsh refuse to _v'eld an inch. The latest ex. smote of iltslr s"hl’m¢ vevli-s for ‘hemselve- crvres frrm ls=tie cf the Yondsn rtcoriomflst. and con-ens the un- riuai report. or sir Ge-rve Rebor- i-eli. preydent of tlv Dunk-n Rubber Company, to his stock- holders, Ore of fhi world’: great rubber twmnariics. Dumb» m5 bcon ham hlt by the war Its great factcrkcs and distributing ugmclrs 0n m; continent long no wt to the Nazis. It; vast. lrivvafrrmfs rubber plantations in Mauve have been seized by the Jopo.___ But exnlalned. "That's why I get up sometimes ln the middle of the night," she continued. “In the middle of (the night." I exclaimed. "Well. you see they have to h rescued- he soft ones. I don't t" way; manage it. Her voice tails‘ off u she removed the plates. I "l" "P to my room and gained down once more on the bronze hens l" u"! my dfibths below. I wonder- ed. din my war effort compare? IIURTIIIIMBERLAIIII FEIIRIES l.Tll. CIIABLOTTETOWN. LEI. WORDS OF CHALLENGE -...__. , "The one supreme task to which everything else must be subjugatied ls the task or win- ning the war." on. Anl L. Macdonald. Minister of National Defence for Naval Services. QUA CURSUM VENTUS As ship , becalmed at eve, that lay, with casnvas drooping, side by aide. Two towers of sa-i , at; dawn of day. Are scarce. long leaguts apart. des- cried. when fell t-he night, unsprunz the breeze. And all the dtu-klln: hours they p . Nor clieumnt but each the self-same seas By each was cleaving, side by side; E’en so-but why the tale reveal Of thosga whom, year by yea-r un- c . Brief absence joined anew. to feel Astounded, soul from soul estranxed. At dead of night their sails were niled " And rid each rejoicing steered: Ah. ntielifhgr blame. for neither wlll- Or wist what first with dawn ab- peered. To veer. how vain. 0n, Onwflfd s rain, Brave barks! In light. 1n fill-Illa"! tool Through winds and tides one com- pass guides- To that and your own selves be true. But; O hltthe breeze! and O Brest ‘Ihouglieataéerbf, that earliest tnrtfnl fly Th0 Canzulmn Pres.) -___ tut.tii.ititr.ttisii.. ti? Paratxpnpgclfi Balkan‘ m“ 001mm But Africa. Exchange Store t 108 Richmond Slrert ' IIOLLYWOUD FACE PUWDER Created by Max Factor llnlly. wood . . . In correct i-iilur hnmony to blend with initi- vldull complexion Cfllflrinp, l! your iikln looks dull and lifeless fry fhls powder , _ no If your akln doesn't irmi, loveller. Price 75c-s1.35, Max Faclor Cream - - _ ._ ._ __ 75,. MIX Factor Melting CIOIIIIQ. in‘ Cream — -- — - ,- Max Clean in} -- 75c Factor Dry Cream — _. .... _ 75¢__ _. THE PASSWORD T0 QUICK SMOOTH SHAVES Yardley: Shlvlng Lorin“ — - — — - 85c and $1.45 Mormons i; , _ m“ _ _. _ _ _ ._ fill Lux Shaving Cream, Price ____._-_...___3g¢ Lu: Shlvlug Lotion, Price —- — — — — - 40c Mennena Talcum. Privi- ._._.___.-____._3Q,. Wllllam: Aqua Velva, Price ""——<-——-———50c Glllotto Bladu, Auto Stop Blades, Mlnon Blades, Schick Electric lhzorl. THE TWO MAGS ' I49 Grail George Street Moll Order: Glven Prompt Attention. On ptogigwlde plain they lOln 888111- Together lead them home at last. one part. methousht. alike they sou! t~— " one pin-nose hold, where-er they BIC; t b . O ruahfne sell!- gtdallnlasgleilfife them there! —Arthur Hugh crouch. . m s ii . the 11M- fiteeliiilg tiesiiibzaupptliesep dlslst 1'5 “b-rfllogs: difficult w comment usefully on the outlook. but stock- holders must have reflltrd "i" recent events in tte FM’ Eflit have materially affected the com- guy's pcsricn for the immcdlfllc uture. The ms in the m, is. like the Duriioo factories lnpFranoe and (Jertnlny. 10st. to us foi- the duration of the war, and our trio/lint; cmmnl" in china. slrgvpors and the Neki-rlands East Indies have fol- lowed certain of our Europe!!! omnpanfea into inactivity ‘Ibo rubber plantations are in enemy hands We cannot look for my nroflt from any of the? pron?!- tles untll after the wit. AN ANCIENT INDUSTRY The allk industry la generally be- lleved m have started in China 4.- 000 years ago. JULY‘ 26. IQIV-Offvwr: adopted strong measures to halt, Russ an r»- tmit. in csiiclii. All’ed troops with draw fbUrl TbPlflll EDWIN lid old Greece. Fwnoh Iffvtflfd 561'- man attack on Ohernh-i des Dania. ____________.__ U5: Mlnard’; for Dandruff. _________ If you on lining u utomi of llrafn — hendnc e0. w! eyes or ills-linen - consult - lflflillllll- A! your service will: year: of experience and a thorough , refrimtln: service. i’ Call In and dfmnu your p difficulties » G. F. llutcheson l‘. G. BUTCHESON G. I. IUTCHESON t Professional Allard: _ I McLEOD l. BENTLEY w. n. nuivucv. x. c. J. A. BENTLEY rt c. Burl-Men and Atwrneyl-I" Law noun fro 1.0m If! Prince Street . MucGUIGAN 8i TRAANQRQ | as o“l5il‘1?c'fiki’rl“i‘fi'ili‘iiiiu IL 6 rrfnerl. , omuoilay biomliihhnaiih f vu 0 ' Bl ‘ a’ street ' (thuriiitirtiiwr ivo TICE On Tuesday and Friday we will make collections of Blueberries and Eggs through Mitchell Rlvor, Primrose and Glenfttnnlng. We will also deliver goods ordered. R. J. MACDONALD & C0., Cardigan _ {i 7-38-“4-51. PERIL sickness. surance to protect llYllllMAll 8i Offices: Charlottetown, I On the sea, on land, peril of flre, falling aircraft, of automobiles, of accident, of lightning, In our modern llfe we are surrounded by per- ils, and that. la why we employ the system of ln- us financially. We are ln a position to provlde a complete ln- lurarice service, and welcome your Inquiries for advice and Information. i No obligation. 00. LIMITED Insurance Service since 1872 Summer-side, Montague _ __. _.________._~_.._. H. F. McPHEE 8A., K5 sonar as. ‘TOR mgfirsrn sohilghui‘? eves exiifiiii-zii lilASSignFlTTill J. S. TAYLOR OPTOMITBIBT Corner :3! filfuiiiicw U“ Oppodk Sh‘: Grocer! ' u» n: Arw""""" ’ ‘hi’... sumo 1°"- IELL 8i MAIHIESON ‘LOAN Gondola“)?! r-tnéllflflllflwn ztluturitgggf. mutants. - w, an u n13“ 83ft; C?“ l. noun 1'0 ygfg M1: "grrglliiiud lllllllpfllll U. F. ABUIIIBAl-ll W Aug-null" hi". fr". Bnlllllfll Gllrlolklowl