i l l i i l t l l rPAlGl: FOUR THE GIIARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Naming Uallv tFnunded In I887) President: Lleul. (Jul W Chester S. McLun Vic vkresitlcnl: J It. Burnett, F..I.l. Secretary: Lleut. Col D A. MacKinnnn- 0.5.0. Eiflur arm ilanzlging Dlret-lur- J R. Burnett, FJL A"fluclul€ Etlltllls Flank “zllker and lan A. Burnett Sl BSCIHFPIUN RATES BY Mall In l’. t. l.. $4.00 pel your; $2.50 for 8 mouth $1.25 fl-r 3 lllulitns; 50c fur uue muutn (guy ul-llwn 5.3.00 per year; $3.00 for b month! 5M5 for .t mouths I}; Mail in oillluuu and t..s..\ :$5.00 per your Bali-inlay ital-luv. Qw-Alu per lean"; $1.00 for 6 month; 5uc lur ‘J nlillluis. Tho kliurloltt-llllill sl-lll- Jtgvlls‘), llllll-ll sllullre. New lurk; 0m llllllllllllll may be nllfulncd It llutllllllx bl-llttl \t~» ALLPHI) t -lll-l Jllllt lllla “ulullllgiull, ullntun; All-lnlplltltllll .\l~u- \l,. tint rel-l 51., Montreal; -|. Mlle. .41»! lhl; at“ rIIIHl \lll.~ stllllll (‘llulvull Lll-lrnr. fmllllll. null-w. \A'\\V~ .\l.lllll. l. ‘IIIITY. um; llub fllillll-l-n ullllll, .\|l.lll-lllll. .'\ |l.. l-ltlvll lilllbrflfllll. Alllllllfll. .\ H "The Strangest Ivteirlicirv 1s Weaker than flu Weakest Ink." i Suiwirulf nav 10; 194i. Speeches, Lllllul And Ulherwise The siiillzi; ~ titlflcltfll by the Prime hlinistcr oi .\usl... l ii: tlttuua have received favuralllc- (Iillllll ut zuugllllut thc country. Lail week in lit’ I lli tilunnious .\lr. liansutl asked \\i'.\ " - tl~lclli:ll.-iil had given con- slltr. ' llu 1 : = ; 4 oi these sill-ccllcs lll xzllg of 80o additional \\(“.llt'.\llil'\', .\la_v 7, the .\l.lll~lL‘l' of :\ll>ll‘illl~'l slmgc-t. .\lr. Speaker. l l|l.i l >ll\>lll'l hate tn 'u- |'liuie .\lillistcl' llf that tlizl: i. . scull uu t' . AU.»- l‘ .. tlw bun. tnl-nlber for lira ' . i .\|r. htlvnluud) ." .\lr, ll it» I i. . :.< well titlwu. T11‘: sptlch of ti’ l. ‘iv ll mull-l r from Heati- lllrlillis \\ ..- ' 'l c. ~ub\l~r.~i\c nature that the .\l:n:~ w. .\l:". Lltllttllllfi‘. had to re- ptilliate ' "c French Canadian puoplc be detrimental to the . .ll-ll by lleieusc Min- to have tilts speech distributed at public ex, 'Il~C throughout Canada. The less said about it tic butter. ll comes as a shock. therefr-rt‘. t-l l- "=l'n, on thc ailthority of tlle Speak- er of the ill»: that tho alllitiourll copies of lrlau-arll 0i i‘. time cuntainiil; the Raymond speech are lWillQ prinicrl for public (listribtltion. The proper c-iur-c ivzls to have given instructions for retirinting ll-ln. .\lr. Xlcnzics‘ speech sep- arately. H‘. t is tho policy which has becn fol- lowed. far lc~- _i ' in the ciase of speeches by Prime .'\liili~tcr lip and his cabinet col- leagtlcs. .\ti.'lrt from other consirleratiotis, it would he an insult to the Prime lllinistct‘ of Australia and the loyal people ill‘? represents, to associate him in Illl\‘ shrlpl- r form with the utterances of thc Liberal member from Beauharnois. istcr "Eal More Lamb" One way in WlllCll we can further Canada's war effort, says the Lethbritlge Herald, is t0 “cat more lamb.” Canada, it is pointed out, needs more wool for ivar purposes. The sheep ranch- crs could easily raise the sheep and provide thc wool. But they could not afford to do it for the sale of the wool alone, and we do not eat enough lamb to provide a market for the additional num- ber of sheep. But there is a war on, and, according to thc Herald, we really do not need to change our diet very much to do thc trick and enable the sheep men to produce the required wool. It suggests that “if Canadians would cat 5,000,000 pounds more lamb annually, it would relieve thc situa- tion. .It would mean an increase of 100,000 in the range flocks and nearly 1,000,000 pounds more wool annually." 5,000,000 pounds for 11,000,000 people means less than half a pound annually for each of us, more than we have been using. That looks easy enough. If the wool is badly needed for war equipment and if the sheep ranchers are ready to produce it, there should be no great difficulty in inducing thc Canadian people to consume a little more lamb than they have been accustom- ed to. just to stimulate the demand, the Herald tells us that ln Australia and New Zealand the people eat more than 75 pounds of lamb yearly per capita, and as a restilt, sheep ranching is their leading agricultural industry._ In Canada, the consumption is only about six pounds per capita. Some Scottish Names The people of England are said to be having some trouble pronouncing thc name of thc Prime Minister of Australia. The spelling is Menzies, and the generally accepted English pronounc- ation is as if the middle letter was hard g- Mengecs. Tile .‘\ll.\ll'l’lll;ll'l Premiers parents were Scots. and in their native land thc Scottish pro- nitnciation is exactly as it spelled —-Mcn-zees. The Scots dialect. notes an exchange, contains many tongue twistcrs for other people, particularly that “ch" combination, as in Bitchau. l-Iuglisliuicn are baffled trying to pro- nouncc llncli:ui as the Scots pronounce it, the "ch" sotttlllin: nut like “cha" hut like the Ger- man “ach" in the back of thc throat. The Eng- lish ttstially prluuuincvtl it like Bukc-artn, and StllllClilllvs lu-chzui. Perhaps it was fortunate for ('.'l|i:lll?:li~~ also that they were tnorc correct- ly ltlllf‘ to r1 l1 r tu _lubii lluvliail as ’r\\'f‘L‘tl.~'lllllll‘. Scots \\'ltlllll l\(' stirprised to find llepbttrll pronotltlcl-i ill‘ burn as is so often done in On- tario. hi S-cotlanll. ltl'ttllllllt‘ll'lllllll$ generally fol- low the swelling vvactlv, thus. llcpbtlrtl is llcp- bltrn. 'l'lilrc are no .\llIl'tlIIt‘l\'S in Scotland —- lmly ,\ll1l‘(ltlt‘ll<. There again is thc “l-ll" sound that defies the litiqlhll throat. and it nlzty have been its difficulty for our (nnzltlizlti vocal cords, too, that cattscll it t0 be changed to Murdock. .l ill-l: "instructions hair-i There are a few exceptions to the rule that Scots names are pronounced as spelled, the most notorious being Colquhoun, which is pronounced Cohoon. There are many Cohoons in Canada, but zlivay back their names were probably Colqu- houn. There are numerous trickery English names of people and places. The classic examples zllllolig surnames are Chohnondeley, which is pro- nouucetl Clninlle_v, and ‘Majoribanks, which is pronounced Uarchhauks. Making Too Much Of Him Ollélwil city cotnlcil has asked the Public Li- brary board to remove from circulation its copies of books ivritterl by Charles A. Lingbergh. One can understand the motives behind this action. says th: Ottawa Journal. Lindbergh is actively pro-German and anti-British, By doing everything ill his power to prevent the United States from helping Britain he is working for a Nazi triumph. To all this he adds a singularly mczlll iugratitudc, because it was to Britain he fled when life in his owli country became un- bearable. Few Canadians, while war passions ride high, ivould want to read the books of such 1 man. But officially to exclude them from a pub- lic lilirzlry’ is another matter. If Lindbergh were to write a boolt about the war, or bearing on the war. it should be excluded from this "coun- try as enemy propaganda. His present works, however, were written some years ago and so far as is known dealt entirely with his experi- ciiccs in aviation. 'I‘lle_v can do no conceivable harm to our country and cause, and we shall lK‘ accused of petty intolerance if we throw them OLll. ‘ f —. ICDIIURIAL NUIES _ Oil lilla date 1879 we had “hail and snow," according to the newspapers of the day. U F Q i If you were told that Faith, Hope and Char- ity spent their birthday knitting socks for the troops, it luigllt not lueau lunch unless you notice the “their? It's rather different when you know that they are Britain's oldest triplets —it was their eighty-third brithtlay. 1F 1K * ‘I The Rumanirln decree announced recently for two hrcadlcss days a week has had to be rescind- ed as a result of public protests. Bakers tried to sell their customers a Rumanian specialty called tiiamaligzv The public refused it, however, and there was rioting both in the capital and in the Provinces. Political agitators made the most of the situation and the government finally with- drew the decree to prevent further trouble. s * s ll It is expected that the third class of fotlr- lnonth trainees, which will be callcd up today May 20, will serve for the duration of the war and will not be dismissed at the end 0f the four- lnonth course. If this system is maintained, it will nlcan that 55.000 unularricd men 2l years of age will be undergtiing training this year, in addition to the regular volunteer army at home and abroad. n- s: la n- Thomas Edward Shaw, "Lawrence of Arabia" scientist, explorer, spy and littcratetlr, died this date 1935. Research Fellow of A11 Souls, Ox- ford! assistant in British museum exploration de- partment; attachcd to staff of General F. Win- gate, Hejaz Expeditionary Force, I917; trans- ferred to Gen. Allenby's staff, I918; British Delegation to Peace Conference 1919; Adviser on Arab Affairs, Colonial Office 1921-22; pub- lications “The Seven Pillars of Wisdom," “Rc- volt in the Desert,” etc. u- s n- u . Britain's Minister of Food has formed thc Na- tlorial Vegetable Marketing Company and ap- pointed as its managing director Major Edgar Monro, one of the largest fruit and vegetable merchants inlLondon's Covent Garden. As such the Major will buy and sell among other things all the onions and carrots grown in Britain on holdings pf more than one acre. His especial function is to keep down the prices of all vege- tables. s- o n- m From Income Tax returns ln U.S.A., Mr. Louis B. Mayer is credited with having the biggest annual income, viz., $697,048, But mos; of this Wlll go for Government Income Tax. Omittmg exemptions and possible deductions, and assuming that $697,048 was Mayer's tax. able _net income, he would pay $504l453 l" 95d‘ eral income tax this year. Under the new income tax schedules proposed by the Treasury, the tax would be $539,346. u a An envelope mailed from Hawaii in 1855 bean"! both United States and Hawaiian stumps was bought by a Michigan private col- l°fl°f f0!’ $509, It thc auction of the Edward S. Knapp collection of Philatelic Americana. The same collector paid $550 for an envelope with United States and Hawaiian stamps with ad- joining rcd and black postmarks. A New York private collector paid $400 for an envelope with three Hawaiian provisional stamps and various United States stamps. A California private col- lector gave $275 for an envelope mailed from Hawaii with three Hawaiian and two United States stamps. n: m iv n- Frcnch newspapers in the unoccupied zone will double their price next Friday from 50 cen- times to f franc. This increase, caused by the cost of newsprint, will certainly hit them hard, since the reading matter is restricted to a single sheet 0f four pages twice a week. In view of thc circumstance that censorship, dearth of news and other factors tend to make all papers uniform in appearance as well as in contents, it is pro- liable that papers with a national circulation —- zonal would be a more correct term —-will suffer nlorc than provincial sheets that give local news. Of Parisian papers still appearing, the Temps and the Figaro are printed in Lyon, thc journal debates in Clt-rmnnt-Fcrrand and the jour in hlllrscille. Willi rrrlticerl railroad schedules, dis- tribution is another problem. ln the circum- stances. advertising has dwindled t0 nothing ex- cept for local announcements. _T".E CHAEESZTTETQWATJZILAEEAN | Cftlzens who take a realistic view‘ ollc gesttue of me Toronto w.clow Kitchener Record. speculc plan. in our coastwlse trade- until l: hurts, the impounded ships of other nations, the slnps we are building. Give to lier destrsyers, and, lf necessary, see that those shllps, loaded with the ever-tn- creaslng production of American factories and farms, dcllver their cargoes safely to the parts of western and northern England. Thus England will SLLYVlVE. — Wendell Wlllk.e ln Colliers. It. has been stated aulhorllatlvely that there ls an annual loss of al- most. $100,000 ln Ontario alone through attacks made by doys on flocks of sheep. Perhaps the cure for that situation has been found in Osgoode Tawnshzp where the assessor, armed with a gun, was ln- structed to shoot all dogs not: en- tered on his rolls and lacking the acknowledged owners. Fifty dogs were shot. tn the first year and sheep losses ln the township have dropped from $1.250 to less than $200 a. year. - Brockvllle Recorder and Times. The heroism of the Battle of Greece wlll stand s.dc by slce with that. of the Battle of Brltaln ln glvlng new llfe and lnsplratlon to the Soul of Democracy throughout the world, and in establishing a rallying point of moral forces that. ln the end must prevail against the evll genius of Nazi-ism that has threatened to stretch out its four claws over the entire surface ol the world. The fight ln Greece will encourage not only the em- battled forces of the British Em- pire and the United States. 110W Joined ln an fndlssoluble bond for the defeat of Nazi-ism, but alio the latent. powers of freedom 1n 01056 countries that lie prostrate under the bruyl heel of the conqueror. And, w.tll the strengthening pf the moral forces of the people w..o have faith in freedom, will home. gradually, the bultulnt; ‘in of that physical might that. ls so sorely needed to scze and to hurl Hit-IE!‘ and his outlaw crew dotwn to the bottomless pit of defeat and in- fam . - Financial Counsel, Mon- trea . It. ls perhaps true mat outside Germany no one knows _ exactly what present and IJTOSgCCblVE sup- plies of oll that country can obtain to keep the wheels of tier great. military machine turning. There are those who malntula that this problem ls cne or the greatest faced by Berlin in her campaign of ag- gression, but the cplmons express- ed about it are varied and illustrate a good deal of guesswork. For tn- stance. Sir Percy Alden says Ger- many can only get small suPl-‘llvs from Russia because it ls so diffi- cult; to bring it overland and he docs not. believe that more than 2.000.000 tons are belngrecewcd _an- nually frcm Rumallla, l-Ie 588$ ber- muny makes normally 3,500,000 tons (synthetic oll) annually, but that; British airmen have been bombing the German oil tanks and depots and plants all the time and that. Germanys prodh’: I18 POW“ for oil is now only fi-llf of_what it was. This does not takc into ac- count the possibility lust Germany may have established new synthetic oll plants beyond me reach of bombing attacks. The Yorkshire Post believes the debate on Ger- many's oll supply ls wholly lnccn- elusive. No one knows precisely what were the oll reserves accum- ulated ln times of peace; no one knows how much oil Gennany has seized from occupied ocuntrles; no one knows exactly how much she ls getting from Russia. and Rumanla. admits, aovncver, that to Germany she cannot obtain a sufficient supply to keep up with tier war requirements. This means that. her oil future depends largely on her own synthetic production. Referring to attempts to dlsruPfi tilts. Ttle Post says: "We may know that we have damaged some of these plants severely, but we can- not feel sin-e bow far, or for how long, our bombs have crippled them." - Victoria Colonist. ‘India's khaki Industry is about» to be taken over wholly for ser- vice requirements, and an exten- 5N5 program to construct armored bodies for vehicles 1s now in pro- gress. These are among trle latest items tn India's stealdllv expanding wru- effort. Her posltzon as a centre ln the Eastern Supply scheme ls daily provm lts unpwtance 1n ready man acture and the savlng of slhlprplng, As s. minor illustration she u mllktna 36.000 sI-lmlp Dumps for herself, which otherwise would have had to be brought from this country, as a major illustration she ls supplying ftpbrlcated steel bulld- lngs and their components for the Mlddlo East, wlllcll otherwise would have had to be transported from this country, and sddulg swiftly to our munitions production power thousands of miles nearer the spots where the munitions are wanted than w¢ are. 7t. ls an ln- ctdent. of the war that, India's very many beautiful timbers are being more sought aft-er than ever. Motor body building is becoming a. sub- stantial, instead of a small, ln- dustry, one workshop rllone beat; asked to consider blllltlllig 500 bod- les per month from Jule onwards. - Ottawa Journal. l-lt- 1r painfully apparent Chm!- enemy superiority ln men and equipment ls the cause of wlth- drawals by the Brltlsn urmles in Greece and Libya. Blunt-ly stated there ls a shortage of men. guns and tanks on our side All thmgs considered lt, ls not sill rising. The Brltldrl. must first of s. man their island fortress, then provide armies lfor the Balkans, North Afrlca, 'Egy\pt. East Africa and points east. to Singapore. This ls s terrlflc drain on the military manpower of s. nation of 43,000,000 people who are also engaged ln a [auntie aims pgoductlon program. Questions are lng asked on the whrveabouts of the Canadian army. According to the latest. official which comes. rather. strangely from Hon. Ilelghtcn McCarthy's press conference at the Lsgatton ln Wash- the active force ls stltl cn th‘; side of the Atlantic. "flihe (P-nadtan ac- tlve army now cons'st= of 180,000 officers ard men. of whrm about 66,000 are ln Great Brllmn" to quote _ of tbs war will applaud me pa.r.-, fantastic adventure o; Rudo] Hes; who sacrificed ll new spring bat w‘ g1 m; glve to the war servlces fund. ‘mat. 321,3? yhg conmssed ‘peeing on is the type of sacrifice which wllll o; Great Bmalm whue some mn- assure v.ctory for QGIXIOCTBC)’ -;d°n papers Stu] portray He“ u a l give w America a practical, 01m mumsh w Brfia-ni brutal bloody record as the Fue- today and tomorrow and the next, bran‘ chm, henchmuh day, for her desperate need, snaps- __me ships m our docks‘ the smps fg/Isnchcster Guardian brands hlm from the foreign oll fields now open ‘ lnforme tlon" lngton on Aprll 4th, two-t-hlrds of ' "on; By ‘m; w“ lTheol-iesibout Hess" (Sydney Post Record) The mystery surroundln the grows deeper and thicker ln the set loose in the PR5! remorseful, rependant Nazi. bent on savtn the world from the horrors Tier‘; war, others polnt to his and inc uldly as a skulklng Trojan Horse. [OH the whole. Boss's flying vlslt to tthe United Kingdom has evoked |more vltuperatlon than sympsthY or welcome from the British ress. The statement Mr. Churchll is scheduled to make tn the House o! Commons todav may cast conslder- able llglzt of an unexpected char- acter on the whole incident. Of peculiar interest ls the opin- lon of Dr. Otto Stresser, noted antl- Nazl refugee now llvlng ln Mon- treal, that Hess fled Germany to escape death at the hands of Alr Marshal Goerlng. Dr. Strassers theory ls that Goerln and the army leaders are un er mutual covenant to oust and destroy Hitler, then to make the best: peace with Brltaln that they can, and there- after to rule Germany as a military ollgsrchy, The execution of this conspiracy, Dr. Strasser explains, only awaits one of two developments, namely, an abortive invasion of England for which Hitler will be held respons- ible, or failure on his part to make good his promise to bring victory to Germany by next Qctober. ‘That Ls. the Reich's Fuehrer to be sac. rltlced as the authentic Nazi goat for the appeasement of an lnfurl: “ted Gcrmfi" DODuIat-e, when the deadline for national dLslllilslon arrives. When Goerlng gets tn the Saddle. ln conformlfy with this pl-g. 20115 D1811. Hillel‘. Himmler and oebbels will be lncontlnently exe- flllfld by a firing squad. Because be foresaw all this, Hess left the mun- YFY. This ls a tidy theory 3nd m“ turn out to be con-egg ‘to up, mg‘; detail. Where Nazl Germany 1s concerned, Dr. knéawt his stuff. strasser should _ u whatever Rudolf Hess, mo. “"55 mil’ have been ln getting out; °f Germany, One thug l5 fo‘er1blv (‘9TlHln.—he did not flv to s-otland for the purpose of disclosing Nazi secrets to Prime Minister Churcl» 111 or of helping Britain to win the‘ W" The Event may show him Sim- Ply 8s a terrified refngeg, ready and W131i"! f0 improve h‘s time. iwlle lmerned by trying to end the “m. he helped Hitler lnfllcr. on Europe, This Is The Price (Winnipeg Free Press) All over the world the" l; horror over the bombs that have fallen upon Westminster Abbey and we“- min-st" Hall. lhe one the fane built by Edward the Confessor, the 0m- " the P1808 Where gathered Slmon de Montfortfls Parliament lrl the 13th CGPWTY; both stand side by side with the present Houses of Parlla_ merit. which were also struck and wrecked, More of these losses will follow. ‘ the seal of approval 0n Darlarvs deal with Adfllf Details of that: deal have been withheld but. lt. ls descrlbcd as’ a step towards greater collinorutlon between France and Germany In vtclly u. l5 described also as a check to U, s, belllgerencv. a move to offset U. s. nld to Britain. melancholy story of France since her collapse. misnomer. serve to place France more securely than ever ln the Nazl group. More than ever will France's future de- pend on the liberation that only the defeat of Nazl Germany can accomplish. The Men, of Vichy have been under _ Berlln. By this latest deal they will surrender still more of their d g and authority. Nor will the deal check the plo- gmm of U. s. acton. French colonial resources and stmtegm areas can benefit Nszl Germany, but: not enough to outwelgli the potential strength of the Alnez. ‘flle United States has set out along a path from which there is no till-n- lng back. Admiral Dllrlan and his associates only do their country an lll service by making new terms with Herr Hitler. ly dfisproven, And France could look for no special favors lf Nazi Ger- many were victorious. France would be a German province-and perver- less to resist any policies which the Nazi leaders decided to impose. Ad- mlral Darlan and his associates lose stlll more honor by their lat- est, actions. erybody eats a. little mercury every day. Nearly all common foods con- taln ft scientists at the University of Tennessee have teamed, although as a. rule the quantity ls far too small to cause trouble. Its source probably ls the soll where plants the tissues of newborn babies. members of a Royal Air spending three days in a rubber on the target but during tile llt- Old London was built along the banks of the ‘Thames, “rich was the great highway of the city, and the Thames today ls the landmark guiding the Nazi bomber-ll to "ugly marks. It may be taken for granmn that. bfifflre this war ls over. almost R11 the famous pilgrim haunts will have become piles of broken stnne: and after the war, when visit; are once more paid to London. many historic monuments will exist no longer. But, while this ls sad eunuch. there is no member of the English- lspealrng world who would not pre- ‘fer to vlslt a London free, even it physically ruined, than to vlsit tt intact undel- the llldflnce 0g s N“; tzulde and with t e knowledge ulllt lthe swastika was flouting Westminster Hall. Rather. far rath- er. accept the destruction than ‘l0 accept defeat or surrender for the sake of maintaining the tokens of an age when the Anglo-Saxon world was made up of free men, ___*___ ch11? Shipped over 250.000 uflons of wine to other countries lust, yegr, from Mr. McCarthy's n-m rgleggg, The remainder are eltller 1n Can- ada. Iceland. the welt Indies or Newfoundland - tn but" wgfdg two-thirds are still engaged ln training or routlrle duties, outsfde the theatre of war. — ‘Toronto Tele- gram. FARMERS We have just received a chlp- mcnt of FORMALIN R IMUT ON GRAB A cheap but thoroughly q. fectlve remedy. Gnln growers would be wise to act promptly In order to have seed properly treated before sowing. 0 I t to 40 Beulah every pllonl of w: Full dlrectfom given with every order. PRICE l0 CENTS LB. l We also curry the lmv and Improved cnnsslllv l A dull dlslnfochnt for wheat, outs, Barley. 0n; pounfl an" lg gusbels. Get. your pound - cy. I Lb. Tin $1.10. 5 Lb. Tin “.10 MACI CONDITION POWDER FOB HORSES AND OATTLE Tones up the system. cures all skin troubles and gives n lossv cost of lulr. For swelled HI. Purifying the Blood and u an Eradicator of Illfllll It ll an unfailing remedy, Price 50 cents per pun", . TIIE TWO MAGS DRUGSTOBE 149 Brut George Street Mall Orders Given Prompt Attention. nel and later forced down 1mg the sea. The crew baled out the dinghy NOTICE "_'———_s'”“%=% WORDS OF CHALLENGE q-i- A THOUGHT A DAY FOB A PEOPLE AT WAR 1- g England are ruriilviizigpeghpglgwearana: never have e . mum euxacpllent lrglgmm‘ r e . Overgeas Commissioner of the Canadian Red Cross. “Collaboration” (Halifax Chronicle) The Men of Vichy have placed Alnvral Hitler. It is another sad cPlWd’ l" the “Collaborat‘on' ls a. such g deal will only the dominance of nlty Appeasement has- been thorough- MERCURY IN FOOD CHICAGO, May 18 -(CP) —EV- grow. Mercury was found even ln RESCUE!) AFTER. WETTISH TRIP LONDON. May l6--(CP) _Five Force bomber have been rescued alter dinghy following a raid over Ger- mflfly- The}! dropped their bombs tack the aircraft, was hlt by Shfflp. MONARCH AUTOMOBILE BATTERlEs PRESTIGE-because ulcn have learned that the terms oll most generous Monucll Guarantee are carried out illlmdi. ntely, and without question, at all times. PQWER—becaus¢ Monarch Batteries are noted lol giving quick shits under the most adverse conditions and tllq abilitv lo about; all oviu at top efficiency. The Rogers Hardware Co. Ltd. CHARLOTTETOWN PHONES 105- 130$ f Say to Your Grocer I Want BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKUE Till l You will enjoy its superior l quality QOOO-QO-QO-OOOO-O-OOOOOOQQOO O-OQOOQOOOO 000000 06000004 with caps and gloves and at one time passed safe y through a mine- Navigahle Waters ‘Kidney Acids Bob Your Best Many people novcr seem to got a poll night '1 vuL They turn and tour-lie nah Ind count sheep. Often they bllma if oll "nerves" when it may he their kidneys. llulthy ‘idneya filler poison: from tho blood. If they are faulty and fail, poisonl thy in the system and lleeplaunou, hud- sclls, backache often follow. ll ou don’! sleep wall, try Doddfi Kidney ll-ftlf lull a century tho favorite remedy. I03 Budd's Kidney Pills ~‘\.v~v~- __.._;v_~; y. EXAMINATION Fitting and Supplying Glasses Etc. ll. ll. MABON OPTOMETRIST Montague, P. E. l. Office Hours: l0 tn l2 A. M. 2 to 5 P. llolldnyc etc" by appointment Office Connected with Important I l Our Most l Department The preparations of medl- clnes and the cornpoundln of prescrlptlons hu always had our special nttcntlon. flelcl. They were finally slgl ted by a reconnaissance plane which dl- I rtegltled a naval cutter to their posl- n -—-—— n. s. c. cl " llf 11o Glrls of New Zealslnd are taking MARITD"; 75L 111(- ('0 the places of men who left beach lMrrl-i l -I." slits life-saving crews to 10in the army PAN“ L n w‘ n ' tice that it. has. under Sel-tlunl ~ the Said so. lil-n-iaiti-il ill" Minister of l‘"l>l"' “Mk5 . Ottawa. and in thc tittirv vl i" Registrar of Deeds ltir Q" County at. (lharloltt-tntrli, l‘. E- n description of the sllfilflllll plan of a pump limlsv. crib W and ecessury plpnil: uWmF posed tn he huilt on the lllllk and extending llltn. lllllstlnro River at (‘liarlottetllu-u. "f" foot of Sidney street. And fake nollrr- that all" expiration of fllll‘ flllllllll ftnm date of the first Pllllllmlh" this nnllce lllarllipil- lilcrtrir g‘ pany, Limited. \‘.‘l]l lliillvr 5' '7 of the snlll Act. apply "ll Minister of‘ Public Wot tspfllrh‘ u" In "t0 city n! t1t"“"-,°' Ilroval of the stud site anhtll‘ and for leave to roustrilcl l I- pump house, (‘fill unrk and PF system. E Dated at (‘l\nrl'\ttt~tni\ll. l‘. - lhls 3rd day of‘ Mai‘. .!‘ll- Tlow Are Your Eyes’? If you are havlng 11mins"!!! 0f strain — headaches, sflffl B!!! or dlzzlnesg - consult I iprclnllst. Al your service with YQIB of experience and a thoroulh retracting service. Cull tn Ind dllcllsl 7W! dlfflcnltlu. G. F. llutcheson F. G. HUTUHESUN 0- F. HUTUHESUN l i ARE YOU A GOO JUDGE OF HORSES Then you are probably a good judge of tobacco. That's the reason so many horse lovers, race track followers and ulll. Our experience nnd training slung ulenflflo llneg bu been such as to make fhll a mut- Tobacco year in and H“ It fills the bill always use nil/r I l g horsemen in general l I l fer of special Interest to us. The result l: that we pro- vldo the people of this vfcln~ lty with every Item of equip- ment and vrltll the system and methods that the moat modern service requlres. You cannot. over-estimate the value of lllfll lcrvfcc when you require medicines t llfllllfflll. and the security afforded coats you notllln, extra. JAMIESOWS DRUG STORE Hickey’s Black Twist Chewing 10c Per Fig . , Everywhere in P. E. Jsland Manufactured By i IIIBKEY 8l NICHOLS“ Tobacco Co. Ltd" Charlottetown