.",_,,,. .- gustlé uwrrsaayxtarr "x.".=-».a=:-. .. _"_"‘-.»';-1.-*1.’§I'B z.- z s s :- -' i» d r — r - r-eu- .>~'"--raur~.r" u QZI-t a; P "'f‘*1'G’k'tT-£ia" ‘T."“"n.= nary-m.“- "tr..- vfltrz“. ~. . ' " a "r PAGJLFQLLR_ - TllE BIIIRLUTTETUWII Glllllllllll Iuralng Daily (Initial la III" Proclrluii Llout, COL W. Chantal- l, III-alt Wm Prnldolli J. I. llnraolt I'd-l. leorofilryx Lllut. Col, u. a. lat-din“, II.I,O, ltdlior and lanagl g lllnctnr, J. I llimnfl. IJJ. ham-Ina rlrliioraxi Frank Walker ad Lian, Ian l. lluraril. ILUJLVJI mu Artlvc lcrrln) BUHHCIIPTION BATII I; [all ll P. i. l. “.\ll par your: BM for I laalla 11.25 Ior I amatiin I00 for can IQI (‘My Ilrlluiry 05.00 pll‘ yuan 88.00 lav I raaaill 11.15 [or a months: Dc for can month B; lluil l0 nllmr Pruvlm-aa and U.II.A. um in your ilaturdu Weekly: $19.00 var rniri ILD for I uaatll. on: far I Iaalha Tun Phurluui-iiiwn fluardiaa ma: to abtalaad at llonuiing’: Nun Iilonry. ‘Hanna tiqnan, Nay In“ 0|; loath Nun-n Anni-y. Corner Milk aarl Washington lloiatoai llotrunniltan News llrnry, llll Purl Ill. Ioatrrnli J. Ilnr l“ Ila; lit, Tnrunlflt Nrvra Iltaail Chllaaa IJIIIOH Ottawa; Walla‘! Nun Iland ludbary. Oil-r BID Inhac-m Minn. llonrlna. N. B. “The Strongest Memory ls Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.’ MONDAY. JUNE‘! 1M3 Each For His Own Land .~\ remarkable discovery has been nmde about liuropc, and as a result the course of history is being profoundly affcctcd. lt is still more rc- marlcziblc. comments the “linnipcg Free Press. thzn ih; discovcrrn nrc experts who have been for _vczir.. liltimiiitg the future 0f that COllIllWllf. \\'h:it has now bccn rcveztlctl tu thcm by the impact of hard facts ltzis been quite apparent t0 11n- rirtlinary> irl)>t‘l'\$|‘ right along. 'l‘his is that litirupc is m-iidu up of nations: that these na- liUlls arc indestructible entities; that national feeling, commonly known as patriotism], when aroused engulfs lesser ideologies; that liberty, beginning a total of 13,768 losses. Those are figures given by The Canadian Press. Australian casualty figures to the end of lilarch tolillflll 67,t9r. Greece Pays The Penalty for scraps. Every time a relief ship comes in from Canada . .. and there are eight engaged in this work .. thankfuluess. Bearing in mind our relatively mcnt in the. Dominion we cannot ignore this noble, human plea. Let us therefore give to help the living, to prevent any further holocaust of human lives. — EDITORIAL NOTES- ivhcn lost. bccomcs so precious to mankind that everything is subordinated t0 thc struggle for its rccuvcry. When Hitler annotmccd his new order for Europe. all itzitionzil boundaries to be wiped out, and Common purposes and objectives to replpce the diversities which had been developed by the events 0f centuries, thcre was envy as well as auger 0n lllC part of the ideologues of the far left. ‘rlitlcr had the right idea, but he was di- rccting it to wrOng ends; he had stolen a march upon the planners of the All-European Social- ist Comnioitivealtli. Hence the insistence by fhcm that thc war in littrope is not a. war of na- ginm. but (mg of ideologies looking to the tri- umphs of their policies. According to them, not only was it impossible to win the war, but it would not be worth winning if victory did not make a clean svvccp of the traditional pecular- ities of the continmt and its replacement by some kind of a Marxian paradise. How in- sistent have been the demands in the organs of lcft~wing opinion in the United States and Great Britain that unless the governments of these two countries avowed a purpose to as- sist in the establishment of such a paradise, the European peoples would not think it worth their while to resist the Nazi juzzernaut. This theory as proclaimed with the shrillest iteration month after month. and the obvious lack of receptivity on the part of these governments to the great idea. \\as the occasion for dire predictions of diw r. H lcr's confidence that he could establish his g Licut. Governor George Dundas arrived in Charlottetown this date, I859; was formerly a member of Parliament for Linlithgow; held his position here for ten years, during the critical period of the Confederation negotiations be- tween the various provinces, and which failed to materialize so far as Prince Edward Island was concerned until after he had left to become governor of St. Vincent, West Indies. n- : n: x The Mayor 0f Middlesborough, Sir William H. Crossthviraite, recently paid a. “fine” of £100 (about $450) impflscd upon him by his deputy, Councillor T. IVIechan, for failing to attend a public engagement. Councillor Mcehan suggest- ed that he should pay a fine in lieu, toward the cost of a £6,000 (about $27,000) canteen for merchant seamen. At the opening of the cau- teen Councillor Meehan said Sir William signed a cheque for £100, considering the “fine" rea- sonable and fair. 1 a Syphilis and gonorinea are infectious diseases I! i as far as the health department are concerned, the same as tuberculosis and scarlet fever," Dr. L. A. Clarke, assistant medical officer 0f health for Ontario, said in a press interview. "I feel that until they are treated in the press and by articles in magazines. and discussed the same as other diseases are discussed, we are not going to get very far. Tuberculosis began to show a drop in its incidence just as soon as it began to be freely discussed and methods of its eradica- ion published the same as other infectious dis- Offlct‘ and “t lisilin \'.'<.-ttl(l become the capital‘ cases. It has been considered by people acquaint- Of a great Nazi cnlpire where slave states would toil for the benefit of the master-race, was so great that he believed it safe to solve the obstacles that remained by the systematic and ruthless ex- termination of the minorities that declined to accept him at his own valuation. Nleamvhilc the Commitcrn, with its submerg- ed cells in every country in Europe. looked for- ward to the day when all would become constit- uent P3115 of a communist whole, dominated by Moscow. ed with the problem of venereal diseases that more general knowledge of the subject is not only desirable but necessary if a public apprecia- tion of this menace is to be obtained. generally believed by doctors and public health authorities that it is desirable to treat thc ven- ereal diseases in the same way as regards in- formation and publicity that other communicable diseases. such as scarlet fever and tuberculoss are treated." It is ‘Iii .\ll these grandiose hopes——those 0f Berlin, It i5 now possible to rum-d thg facg _ to of .\I0sco\v, and Of U19 fictive Pfollmwrs 0f a 5°‘ which an allusion was made by Mr. Eden in his cialist world to follow the war —- have bccll Ottawa speech-that since the destruction of the wrecked in the fact, no longer to be igrwrfid, former debating chamber of the House of Com- thaf the resistance of Iiuroiae to Hitler which is now-becoming a factor of great moment in the war is national and not ideological. The pa- triots are conspiring together, in almost com- plcte furgctfttlncss of their pre-vrar ideological differences which thcii secmcd so profound. t0 recover their lost liberties and to re-cstablisli the indcpendcttcc of the conquered countries. They had ncvci- realized the value of these pos- sessions until thcy lost thcm; now their recovery transccmls all other issues. In the underground movement in liuropc and in the exiled govern- ments. mcn of the most diverse views work t0- 1 gr-ther risking their lives for the rc-establishmctit of their crniiiti"ic.<. Once this is done they can. mons by enemy action in May, 194i, the House of Commons has been sitting in the House of Lords. The Times Parliamentary Correspondent writes z-For a short time the Cohmtons met elsewhere; but the House of Lords generously offered the use of their chamber, and the Com- mons were pleased to accept. adaptatipns were quickly carried out, and the Commons soon settled comfortably in the more ornate and spacious chamber than their own, from which the 'l'hr0ne and Woolsack had been removed. The necessary The Speaker's Chair is situated at hc end of the Chamber opposite to that former- ly occupied by the Throne. In their ncw cham- ber the Commons have benches upholstered in in the l»l<~.~iwl frcctlutti which they have rcgaincd. red leather and the interior is in every way more dc-rtl villi tltt‘ l<‘.\.\ important matter about which they ll2l\'(' iliffz-rcncr-s of opinion. Empire Casaulties The figures on castialtics in the British Em- a pirc. given in the British House 0f Commons by Dcptity‘ Prime hlinistcr Clement Attlce, are a stifficicnt zmswcr to those who still play the Axis game by szrviug that Britain is asking oth- ers tn (lo hcr fighting. d Thcrc- arc many ways of counting the con- tribution to ihc contmon cause. The casualty lists in the final analysis are the measure 0f a nation's sacrifice. Alone-y, equipment, food are 3 important. ant than the life and limb of youth. The figures given by Mr. Attlee are for the first three years of the war. The United King- dom casualties ivcrc 275,844. Those of India q ivere 101,970. Australia, which is a. country of a 7.137.000, had 53.959 casualties. New Zealand, p that small Dominion with a. population of 1,600; 8 00o, had losses of 10,345. Colonies had 30,829. South Africa. with its mixed races and despite si the strong group of people sympathetic t0 Gcr- Cl many, with a total population of 9,600,000, had casualties of 22,615. Canada for the first three years of the war had 10,422 castialties. In total, the British Empift had 514.993 W" i095“. 0f WhiCh 92,089 had been killed, 226.719 missing. 107,891 prisoners of war, and 88.294 wounded. pleasing than that of the old Commons chamber with its green leather benches and drab pariet- ling. King's Robing Room. the peers with the intimate atmosphere more he House of Lords has moved to the This chamber provides ppropriate to the small number usually attend- ing their debates and their new meeting place appears to have given general satisfaction. U Q I I A Canadian newspaper correspondent in Lon- on. Sholto Watt, broadcast in the BBC over- seas service after seeing manoeuvres in which the Canadians have been taking part in prepara- tion for the days ahead. Evidently humorous spects were not lacking when this great body But there is nothing more import- of troops landed in a part of the English coun- tryside which waa already pretty occupied with its own affairs. Canadian headquarters :— A sergeant had to As witness an incident at one uestion a driver about his “failure to conceal vehicle." “I did hide it, Sarge,” the driver retested, "right under a bunch of fir trees. But bunch of dames came along and took the trees away." To the obviously sceptical sergeant, the mple truth of the statement was later made ear. The "bunch of damcs" were a detachment of the Women's Timber Corps (a branch of the Women's Land Army). Watt described the scene thus: “Almost as fast as the headquarters deployed its motor vehicles under this fine na- tural camouflage, the lady lumberjacks chopped down the camouflage and hauled it away by Up-io-datc figures are not available. But in tractor." However, they obligingly transferred the cane of Canada there have been since war’s their activities a few hundred yard: farther plf. If, through the misfortune of war, one per- son out of every five in Canada, died" from starvation all of us would have reason t0 com- plain of the terrible toll of war. But, Greece has paid that penalty. But, perhaps because we are several thousand miles away from that coun- try we catmot visualize just what a ghastly price has been paid by the gallant Greeks. Yet, it is a fact. And thousands more are doomed .0 death, simply because there is not sufficient food to feed the Greeks unless the people of Can- ada support the Greek War Relief Fund cam- paign for $500,000 generously. This Fund, re- cognized by the government, has been sending food, medicines and supplies for two years. Over half a million dollars has been spent on this hu- manitarian work. The treasury is now exhaust- ed and the Fund is asking the people of Canada to provide more funds for this worthy work. Greek men, women and children are begging . they burst forth into prayers of fortunate position, and the high state of employ- c llotos By The Way If all (h; word: on the fuel iihort lire were s0 many sticks of firewood or lumps o! coal. -varicouver uatly Province Ivory now and Lheu P: yearn; a hit for an end of the sugar shortage and a return to the olcl days when a man could set his just desserts.- The Bbston Herald. Mlor reading some of the many crftlafmu of this. that and the other thing. the onlv conclusion to be arrived at is that we have tn this country a lot. of people "who are convinced that everybocv. ex- cept themselves, are square pegs in round holes. —Fnyettevlll N. (7.. rver. lull to prove to rookies that they 100k as bad as the sergeant rays they do. they've installed several large mirrors at Jefferson Barracks. Mo. Army newcomers go through their paces 1n front. of the mirror. and the sergeant just smiles and says: ‘Now you can see for your- selves. you apes. " --Parade. The housewife who thinks that ration books are a. worry might spare a thought for the retailer. The only thing that. we have to do ls to remember to take our books with us when we go shopnlng. but his troubles begin when he takes the coupons out of our books allttl‘ has to balance them against the supplies he has issued. Mistakes in favor of the consumer do not actually bring any benefit. for cun- stant loss 0f coupons means a gradual reduction of supplies of rationed goods which the retailer can secure. Coupons are in eff-act more valuable to the merchant than money. and without his full quota cannot replace his stocks to meet the demand of his customers. -C0nsumers' News. The badhelo glrl approaching age twenty-five and still puttinc. oft‘ marriage had best. get busy along matrimonial litres unless she wishes to become as 01d mutd, ft seems clear from statistics presented by one of the large insurance companies. to think much of hearkening tn the voice of Cupid. After acre IJVPHIX" five, the statisticians sny. urcbabil- fty of marriage is greater fcr a man than for a woman imc. beyond that age women's chances to ived decline much more rapidly than menu. The peak of the mart-lace rate among women. the exports find. ls reached in the izroup twenty to twenty-four years old. ixhile the peak for men ls lWFItly fire to twenty-nine vears. _ Boston Post. The thrill of getting a letter from ficme i5 alivavs present with the lnds who are 0n active service or out in the vrorld making their way in civilian occupations. We Many girls are too busv in war iobs " IIAUNTINGB In the grey tumult of these 11hr on giiilrlisoe mu. in» incessant anglers Dirt: And p’..- ‘Zn-echoes of remem- ere an. Hush all flue loud confuslmi of thO ear f And a shade. throulh the towd nks f lrth d CfYl-XIK Hungerrg. and giinsdogiid eiwh dull passionate m .—- Quita 10st. and all but all IOIIOt. undying, Comes back the ecstasy of your qutetude. so a poor ghost. beside hi; misty s r earns, 1s haunted by strange doubts. ev- uslve dreams. Hints of a pre-Lethean life of men, Stars, rocks, and flesh, things un- lntelll lbl 8 B. And light on waving grass, he knows not when, And feet that ran, but when, he cannot tell. -Rupert Brooke} Surprice (Globe and Mall) Defense Munster Ralston was surprised that l1 member of Parlia- uges of volunteers and drafted men in the three army divisions still in Canada. Hts surprise can be no great- cr than the general surprise at his refusal to answer. The policy of a voluntary system and a. compuls- crv system is the direct responsibil- ity of the Government. It has clung to this policy in preference to the more equitable one of calling up all tt1£li1_l)0\V€l‘ and assigning it. to tcrvttes on the farms. in the fact- oizcs 0r with the forces. according to irdtvicual ability to serve. T . e of a. known shortage of ements for the overseas that the army could b: l. . mintd on the voluntary prin- c p12. It has attempted to preserve L111; fiction because of the numbers of mzn who freely or by persuasion 2a active once they have been callid in the draft. This C01. Ral- sion lws persistently refused to ad- mit. Ant; this must be whv the CitlfllPl refused to give Mr. John Dicfenbakcr the information he sought. Wfiat other logical mason could there be? Whv shouldn't this information be public? If the Government's policy i5 the fair and honorable one. why should its workings be concealed? The answer, of course. would be: “National public morale". It wouldn't. be good fcr unity to admit what the public heard the other cay of a sf. Thom- as family of toys who are parti- cularly favored in this respect. Their father. a retired man. ad- mitted with pardonable bride that one of the ways he filled in his spare time was to write every one of his seven sons. several of thorn in the armed forces. every any "But what on earth can yo bell them emry day?" we enq ircd. already knows; that. a high per- centage of the draftms go active either on receipt of their medical notice or after induction. It has been common talk around Ottawa that from 50 to 70 per cent of the “\'0lunt'€et‘5" are got in this way. which ts the figure Col, Ralston refuses to confirm? Wtwt he seems n vcr to consider ls the probable v2 ue t0 moral: of the Minister of "Oh, I Just jot down the things that h’ the boys were home they would hear tn our ordinary dim-fcr- tabte conversation, - St. Thomas Times-Journal To all lyro agrlculturists, patience l5 recommended Vegetable sceds will germinate and grow under any but. the most unfavorable conditions. Growth, which scents L": a month or more late this season — but actuallv ls not - will nstonlsh by its rapidity with the coming 0f a few days 0f hot sunshine. Then the restles energy of the hzmc gardener, which now seeks . t- let, will have plenty to o 2:. A month from now. opbortuunyt for activity will not be lacking; work in abundance wlll be required For even a comparatively small vegc~ table gnrccn needs a deal of weed- ing and cultivating if it is to be at its best tn appearance and yield. Todayks restlessness will soon be re~ placed by the soreness of sunburned necks and aching muscles. -Fort Erie Times-Review. Japanese leaders are under no illusion as w what the loss of Attu means. Admiral Taktvhashf .‘={l_VS, "The aim undoubtedly Ls . . . to at- tack us by way of the Kurile Is- lands and the northern route." It undoubtedly is. Such an attack, however, will take time to orgarczz. A year's preparation was required to reverse the strategic situation in the Aleutlans and Klska ls still to be recuced. Judging from the hoards of food captured on Attu 1t wtll be hard to starve out the strong Ktska garrison. They "will face annihilation in the same spirit of falallan shown by the defend- ers of Attu. Yet their position seems equally difficult When we take Kfska it will be time enough to think of Pnramushiru. the next on. But. the aporach has begun rmd our planes will carry ft on. Japan has lost the initiative in the North- west Pacific on her most vulnerable flank. -New York Times. A potato fn days o! yore - and not so very yore at. that - was just a "spun." Calorie-conscious females gave them to Wide berth. People have adapted them to many uses- whittled them down for stoptprrs. used them to plug leaks tn kettles and drain pipes. In fact, spud; 111w; always taken a lot of just. plain kicking HTOUIIQ. Whoever ltcard of anyone treasurmg a potato? Other vfiseta/bles made their seasonal de- buLs in a. flurry of popularity. But Wver potatoes. No one ever rush- ed to the market to nee if potatoes were tn. They always were. No one gave them a thought. The housewife listed them at the end of her grocery order, as an after- thouizht —"0h. yes. and send me peck of potatoes Everyone ate them. but they were no treat. Even new potatoes failed to evoke the en- thusiasm IIISDITQC by other fresh vegetables in season. They were still just. potatoes — the pennies of the vegetable currency. Today people stand in line for those pennies," eagerly hoarding the few they mav get, tenderly carrying them home a; if they were orc ids. parimt them with bated breath lest the knife slip, No longer are they referred to as spurts. They're Potatoes, if vou glfiase. spelt; with a capital. at‘; the way it. is on the home front atiywnv. In the Army - wivelt. that; another story, If you want. to hear ft Just ask the solcler on k. great enemy base 650 miles farther ‘ Defrnce facing realities and ad- mitting facts. ;Yuu caiilqu§ All-llllE i}, lfyiiu feel Thug day: moat worrymg more, I eefi Inn. This stub lo an withing harder, on body and lmin u phyaical time“ euier to lone-linden‘ ll repiil. Today’: lama living lowers mixtures-immune: body and menial hiimo. Ovenvori; hasty meals: irregular hour; worry-any ofihou ""1 "life! probe: kidney action. kidneys [at out of onlu, ueul acid! andpoiroiurunuininllnnyaion. Then huh ‘ , headache, rheumatic pail, dia- iurlied rut or tlui “iind-ull-iln-iiaa" £951.11: follow. To lnlp hop your l jun orderdo physical letdown-use in] Pills, for nvu lulf a century: fuuiaiiaruaody for faulty kidneys. All for Dodd’: Kidney Pilh at any drug eoiuiiu. lack for lb blue box will! Ilia lad bind. Doddb Kidney Pill: "~11: ivlatnpnoi . . .Il|l not mii off wklluaranioid lambs: ihslly imovol viiili my lllll vmir ‘ i Are You Troubled With LUMBAGO or BOB! BACK T ll so we have one 0f the belt remedies u. otter. namely. BACKRITE TABLETS Eapeclall eflootlvo or Lan~ ban, 8o lion, Near til. Join Muscular and other forma of Rheumatism which ordinary lroatmelm fall to reach. Price Mo per I08. TIIE TWO HMS 149 Great Gonna Strut. D- ‘Ilieyzeinstlllulsnuads llrzlhlo lpigu- age. — m e irs an 5c once lfinltar. meut should ask for the percent-i government has insisted, in] M ll O d . GI Pf I * ' acme m» ‘ A nnnirni; nciiiii’ \ \ \ \ \ Q “Today in Greece little children hardly moi-o than gkglg. ~ tons fight over garbage cans in search of a mouthful of food. ~ Entire families beg together. Skeleton mothers with infants ~ and two or three phantom children stalk the streets crying and \ shivering for want of food. Everywhere can be seen abandoned ~ babies and young children. Mothers carry their dead children g ‘ to the cemetery where they leave them without tears and bury ~ them surreptitiously so they can retain the food cards of than; g dead." \ \ i. l \ \ \ _ This is not something out of Dante's "Inferno" or Poe's "Tales of Horror and Imagination." IT IS THE LITERAL, AWFUL TRUTH about conditions in Greece today under Nazy tyranny, v0uched for by Mr. Jackson Dodds, O. B. E-, national chairman of the Greek War Relief Fund in aletter to the Mayors of all cities and towns in Canada. The City of Charlottetown i.‘ i i a warmly indorses this appeal, sponsored locally by thy! \ Charlottetown Rotary Club, believing it to be \ one of the most urgent and necessitous a that has arisein in the whole course i \ \ \ of the present‘ War. B. ROY HOLMAN \ MAYOR. The British Smoker (Manchester Guardian) The recent budget gave ers. something to think about: Lord Klndersley now gives them more. of 311 are asked to consider whether their habit does not. mean unessential ~~ ti... _.,,,., spending. at least to consider smok. whether they could not reduce met;- self-indulgence. Tobacco. or such of lt. as Ls con- sumed by civilians, ts no longer coming in under lend-lease temts; we have now to find foreign ex- change to pay for it, which means that smoking 118.5 become a war- lme self-indulgence. As president of the National savings Conmnttee, 10rd Kin- dersley was ready with the moral. It is not Just. a question of afford- ing the price of one‘: smoke; 1n- volved with it are such things as ifllwtwrl. rubber. paper. and carc- About two-thirds of the 250,000 l§§3.§“'..l§€3‘ fislvhifhulé ‘Zilfikfil §fi§€$§f§ii‘.‘l..““"“. m "m" b’ AlTENTl; w. i... til 0nce is essential that all unusable Iron. steel and metal scrap be put. to war work now! Quantities of this material which our trucks will haul from any point on Prince Edward Island. Full market price: will be paid. A. BLOCK (Authorized Dealers) Warehouse and yard — 102 Elm Avenue - Charlottetown Phone ‘I68 or 1m peacetime, smoking fs perhaps the hardest to break. M W111 88y that. they could break off if they wished. but experience 113,5 shown that so many who thus boasted either did not wish or could not. But; the incentive either to cease or to smoke less now comes in new form and with new ftgceé and should not be win-rout; e ec. Al you urvlco with - _ of expel-luau and a iiioro SANTA clhgusjgiiws rah-acting service. Call in and dlmm dllfloaltler. Write or nhoin appointments. 6. F. llutcheso i l’. G. HUTCIIISON G- I. IUTCHESON > “'1” Professional Gar McLeod Bentle W. I. BENTLEY. K. C. I. A. BENTLEY. K. O- Barrllten and Attornim-i Law NONI! T0 L0“ 1M Prince Street in. r. Anciiisn Chartered Aowllllllill luster; rnui Bnfldlu Charlottetown M. ALBAN FARM 1a.. um. aaaallrafiksguclflifl OGIIIIIOTCI is}! , ALEX w. MATHIE5 ulauna. louorrol- oinm n Grant doom 9 loin; h Ian 9° ' _in your chores. Good work deserves a reward. Reward yourself with a comforting‘ chew of i-iicksv a. uicnotsorrs “B ACK TWIST” t l-IEWING raiaimriuflmiw" - ' Iltiln; cal lzlflfll ' ' ll. J. llllllll- ononrrlll’! "up"; P. I. l -. u OM00 an“ "' Islam m. In numb“ . u‘ qlfll mmD.I(U.ag'e|'.bII i