Maxims“ OIL MERE MAN alr-ruld shelte but God u not n. be thourht of u on? ll our home, Initial-DUN. our hsbltml en- ll Charlottetown Guardian, Two Cents, [grgill Gum-dill. Ioundsd llll 7m’ The People's aper Covers Prince Edward cnaawrrsrowu, CANADA ‘TUHEUSDAY, JULY 1s, 19401“ Read by Everybody Island Like the Dew gs PAGES“ MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Whatever our circumstances. let us rejoice ln the work, gust. and . Us Dude small, of n God "who everything beautiful in its lemon." Alluuul Subscription Dsllvonl. "-00 B! lull: P l. L. $0.00: Cunuds uud U. S. l-‘l-OO BIJSSIANS REPORT WAVES 0F NAZIS CU FIVE SHIPS, NINE PLANES FALL T0 R. Churchill Declares Two children Drowned in II. B. Y%VGB COVE. N3, July 16- tcPi-Harold Maston, 7, only child o; Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Maston, “n5 drowned In a stream at this Queens County village today when a rowboat capsized. A companion, Jimmy Rged, 11, swam to safety. The other boy was unable to swim. Jimmy tried to save his chum but had u» let so o! him- SAINT JOHN. N. 8., July 14- rCP)—Morton Green. 9. drowned In ‘ the St. John River at Brown's flat today when he fell from s row- boat near a wharf. No one saw the accident. His body was recovered soon after the boy was missed by fricnds on shore. He had sailed with his fatner, Coleman Green, from Grand Marian, N. B. Coming Events _Q_ Notices in this column Rafe for 3 cents per worj. "Show-Murray River Thursday. L408 7-15-21 ' ‘Show-Eldon Friday. L-408-7-15-2i. "Sllow-Avfurray River Thursday, L-205-7-15-21. "Show-Eldon Friday. L-205-7-l5-2i. "Reserve Julv 15th for picnic at Kelly's Cross 1.. 76-7-4-111. "Come to Rollo Bay Tea Party, Wednesday. July 16th L-ITI-T-B-‘Il. "Long Creek Baptist Picnic Wed- nesday. July 16th. L-399-7-1a-1i. "Warned to buy Strawberries Chicken. Fowl. Island Cold Storage L-2l9-T-9-ti "Your last. chance to see ‘O11 Promise Me.‘ To-nlaht at Hampton L-l53—7—15-ll. "Dance. Ice Cream, Millview Hall. Thursdalv. July lull. yuan-n. r Institute. T L-390-7'l5-*l-= .__.___ i "Ice Cream, Dance. Orwell Helhi Tue-vial‘. July 15th. Good music. L-391-7-I5-1I. "Lyndale Dance postponed till, further notice. lcmdale W. I - L-395-T-15-ti. "See St. Andrews play, St- Charles Hall. Thursday‘. Julv 17th. L-4l2-7-1a-1i. "Wanted to buy-Bologna Cattle Sheep and Veal Calves. all grades Phone. write for price. Island Cold Storage Co.. td. '4 "Come to the dance in Stanley Bridge rink Wednesday night, July 16th, aid of Red Cross. L-429-7-l5-2i. "Lawn Party and Dance at Bert Warren's. Cornwall, Wednesday Julv 16th. in aid 0f Red Cress. L-340-7-l2-3l "Mnrshfiefd - Dunstuffnuge Un- ited Tea this evening on church grounds. Supper 1.‘. 4.30. If not flnc following flight. L427. "Scotch Gathering. Mt. Stewart. Julv 16th. Bus leaves Kellv 6t lJc-I lllllls. 1.30 P. M. D. S. T. Refill"! fare 65 cents. L-Llfiil-l-l-l-zl 1 "Cherry Valley Y. P. U. Ice Cream Social at Cherry Valley H-lll Wednesday. Julv 16th. L-403-7-15-J “Reserve Wednesday. July 16th; for North 'I‘ry0n Presbyterian PICIIZC‘ on Church grounds. L-315-7-l2-15. "Chicken Supper. United Church. St. Peter's Bay. Wednesday. July 16th. Weather unfavourable. 17th. L-264-7-12-ln. "Entertain your visitors at after- hcnn tcs on St. James Kirk lawn io- dav and meet other friends. L-39T-T-16-1l. "D ll htf I urroundlmzs and fiend: it S‘: James Kirk lawn tea i rt r sl . s a emoon our wlljglgmmlkn "Hazelbrook-Mlss More. cunt. missionary will speak in weaniibulb kls1t3a?1I-:'t16tgh ' . ‘ll, . “y “m L-4l8-7-ib-ll. "Notice-The annual meetint! 01 the Borden Line shipping Club will be held in the Albany Village Bohool on Tuesday, July l5 at. 8 9m. L-CBB-‘l-ll-fll. " to Bummer-field Hall Tuesday evening July 15th. Y. P. L]. $53..“ N.“ I!’ °"§‘,E."°8E~T..I u '. Ibstivaiv m L-sos-v-ls-il "Load h t Alb ever! ‘lhursdaylmeftggflotlan. all!» l‘ Emerald until 11.30 A. M. A. 0. Green, Albany. G O. Green. hirer-aid. “Annual meeting Co-Opernililfl Livestock Marketing Board will b! Bld on ‘Thursday evenln . July 17th at. a o'clock in Agr cultural '°°m. Prince of Wales College. Charlottetown. Delegates repre- “mlll! shippi lg clubs that are sc- "Wlv supporting the or anlzallon ll well as patrons thereof an urti- g to attend and take pm In the inaction of business. L-4l9-‘7-i5-2im French overseas possessions from Bullitt says Tri-oolor will Fly over Berlin Former Ambassador To France Says People Pr ay For British Victory. By D'Arcy O'Donnell Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL, July n _(CP; _ William C. Bullitt, former United States ambassador to France, told the French people m a "Bastille D111” mCSSBBe today that in the end the tri-color ‘will fly over Ber- Iin." “If YOu today know flow to 11s- ten." Mr. Bullitt said in addressing the French people, "you know that the Nazis will not win. This war will be won by all the civilized na- tions of the earth. In the end tne swastika. will not fly over Paris. Your flag will fly over Berlin." Mr, Bullitt spoke after receiving an honorary degree of doctor of laws from the University of Mon- treal. His address in French was broadcast over the facilities of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, the British Broadcasting Corporat- ion and was sent to France and Boston. A translation was carried over United States networks. “I know that today. the 14th ol July, 90 per cent of the French pen- ple are praying GM for the victcnv of the British Empire and the I21 oration of France." said Mr. Bull itt as he spoke after receiving the degree from Msgr. Olivier Maur- ault, rector of the university. "I know of my ovm knowledge. he said, "that the defeat of Ffrance did not come from any lack of (Continued on page 6. Col 8) Less gasoline Consumption- To he request OTTAWA. July 1~l—-(CP)—Cre— atluu ol u new nunislry to_see that. a proper war-tune equlhurlulu lg maintained between essential and non-essential consumption: u: Uarmua 1S expected to be announ- Tables Are Germans turn to suffer terror from skies heaped on helpless victims. (By Drew Middleton, Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON. July 14—(AP)—In two speeches breathing confidence and defiance, Winston Churchill Qubllantly declnlned today to cheering s elvlllan defenders that the tables are turned and the time has come for Germany to suffer the terror from the skies she thousands of Lon’ has dealt on Brltslu. The Prime Minister spake first to 6,000 uniformed members of Lun- don's clvlllan defence services at a again, In even more dynamic tones, fzatlons In London county hall. Five points stood out in the Prime Minister's messages:- 1. "It is time _ the Germans should be made to suffer in their own homeland and cities something of the torments they have twice in our lifetime let. loose upon their neighbors and upon the wcr1d.... "We have intensified for the past month s, systematic, scientific and methodical bombing on s. large scale of German cities and indus- tries .. "We believe it to be in our pow- er to keep this process going on s steadily rising tide month after month, year after year, until the Nazi regime is either extirpated by us or, better still, torn to pieces (Continued on page 6, C01 3) 14,CCOIIichysoItIiers Elect to go home ALEXANDREYITA, Turkey, July 14- (APl ~ Fourteen thousand Vichy soldiers will cross the border from Syria info ‘Iilrkcy within 48 hours, informed sources said to- night, Ther will enter this country at Antioch. these informants an- trounced. (This development came within a few hours after the British oom- mand at Cairo announced formal- slgning of the armistice ending the five-vrcek campaign of British and Free French allied forces agaitmt Vichy troo": in Syria and Leban- on. mandates handed over to France by the League of Nations following the first great war. (British armistice terms. not vet made public, were said to have given officers and men cf the Vichy rorces In the Ievaat the option o‘ IIazi Dfflrtials returning to Fbance 0r Iofning the Free French forces. under when" they would retain ranks, salarie- and pensions. The troops scheduled ced momentarily. 1t rs understood here the var- lous comrnls over conzmudlties, now exercrseu by Munitions 011K1- lster llowe, have attained an rm- portunco which places too great a responsibility un u minister whose primary task is to keep the lighting forces supplied mm the bignly complex materials oi war Restriction of civilian consunlp- tlon of commodities bearing on the war effort has been compar- atively light su tar but current reports are that the civilian lop- ulatlon will have i0 begin sacri- fices on a more general scale. Onc of the first demands in lcls direction is expected to be con- talncd l.n an announcement to- morrow calling for less private consumption of gasoline It is understood the govern- ment is considering the creation of a new department of economic warfare whose minister would have jurisdiction over the various control and priorities agencies set x up under the Munitions und Sup- . ply Department, the Foreign Ex- change Control Board operated under the Finance Department. and the Wartime Prices and Trade Board under the Labor Department. Mystery ‘at Sea reported LISBON. July 14 —lAP)— Th! Portuguese lugger Islandis which had been chartered by the Interna- tional Rad Cross to carry gifts and mail for British prisoners of war from Lisbon to Genoa arrived from Genoa. today with a. mystery of the sea recalling the famous Marie 0e1- este story, Captain Amsdlo Mathias sold that while in the Mediterranean um the Gulf of won the Illmdln Saw the Punch cutter Belle Isle with sails set yswlng 1n a light wind. The Islandia hailed tho out- ter but got no l , whmtlpvfl a boat was lowered and the ‘cutter boarded. There was no one on boan! and there were no signs of a ffBht hav~ ing taken place. (The Marie Celeste was a schoon- er found drifting In the lllustern Atlantic on a warm sunshiny day In 1872 with sails set and every- thing on board intact.) i to enter Turkey apparently are those who elected to _gc home.) Wheeler tells 0f former Nazi tPeaoe proposal ‘WASHINGTON, July 14—(AP)—- senator Burton Wheeler (Dem.- Mcnt.) said late today that Will- lam R. Davis, an 011 opeartor, had advised the Roosevelt administra- tion after a trip to Germany 1n 1940 that Field Marital Goerlng of Germany and Premier Mussolini of Italv were willing to visit Wash- ington to ‘make s peace" In the war. Wheeler told tiers that. an one occasion, Ds s had written him "that Qserlng and Mussolini were willing to call on Resident Roosevelt and try to work out I ace." "That was shcrtl after Poland had been taken," ecler “France and Belgium and other countries might have been saved If the President had followed w that. proposal." Commenting on s Btntenlenl made by Mayor 1A. Gull-dis in New York today that German ace propmals had been laid bl- oro representatives of a. peace movement in this country, Wheel- er amerted he had heard of no p als beyond those which he sai had been presented by Davis Wheeler identified Davis as an oil man with varied interests in Taxes, New York and other states who "always has had close con- tacts with the White House." Dr. Robert C. Jackson dies TORONTO. June 1t-(CP)—Dr Robert. G Jackson. who for . 83 rnnn . d 1 extensively thlotvrmmr? Ctnatfiuaurfg the United States on the philosophy of natural health. died at his home at nearby Rouse Hills. rested-d Y. Tamed great rally In Hyde Park and then at u ‘uncheon of the service organ- F... mu will Ring each day, Council decides The fire bell at City Hail Will ring six times this momma. and every morning until the duration '0! millfeeds will be made avail- of the war, at. eleven o'clock to re- mind citizens that this ccuntry is’ at war and to give them an op-_ portunity to pray for s successful. conclusion to the confhct, lt was decided at, the regular meeting of! the City Council last. night. ‘Plus, was done eacn day at noon during the Great War. I A number of minor matters were discussed during the rather lengthy session and reports were submit:- ted by the chairmen Oil the var- ious committees. His Worship. Mayor B. Roy Holman presided and all the councillors were pre- sent but. coon. C. F. Dcugan. Councillor B. Earle bfdcDunald severely criticized the traffic by- lsw regarding the parking cf cans in the city. These regulations "may be carried tzo far sometimes" and “it is an ideal holdup" when mo- torists were "tagged" by the police for being "a few inches over the line." He added “I do not believe this practice is carried on in any; other city in Canada." Continuing he declared that it was liable tot give the city a bad‘ impression with , tourists. I-n some cases “police, have to get down on their knees" to see if the car is over the line. (Continued on page 6. Col i) Forced to admit Damage by R.A.F., LONDON. July 14-fCP)--Tn- creased weight of bombing by the Royal Air Force has compelled the Nazis to change their poflcy of at- tempting to conceal air raid dam- age from the German people. says the air ministry news service. German commulliques now fre- quently assert “damage was done to buildings in residential quar- ters" but also still contend "no military damage was caused." After an exceptionally heavy at- tack, like the raid On the Ruhr June 11. they are even fvanker and admit ‘In Cologne, Duisburg and Bochum great destruction was caused in residential quarters." The communique also admits "indus- trial plants and railway lines suf- fered only slight damage." This says the news service. is the well-worn German trick of a lie which is a distorted half-truth. Heavy destruction certainly was caused in Cologne. Duisburg and Bochum the night of June 11. some of it may well have been in residential quarters for the thickly populated industrial areas of the Ruhr and the Rllineland houses and munitlon factories are packed closely together. Industrial plants and railway lines suffered damage-Anal: was true. What was false was that the damage to them was slight. Ln recent attacks on Hamburg more than 5.000 hotlseg are reliably reported to have been destroyed or seriously damaged. Devastation on such a scale is quite impossible to conceal and the German pr s- gandlsts have had to face the act and make the best use of it they A [use CANADA A» c” BL Millfeeds reduced $3.00 per ton Throughout Canada OTTAWA, July 1-l—(CP)——The Wartime Prices and Trade Board announced tonight the: effective immediately and for a limited per- iod the wholesale prices of bran, shorts and middlings will be re- 22.11060 by s3 a ton throughout Can- a The reduction will apply on both mixed and straight carlcls, the board said. The reduction announcement followed a meeting rainy of rep- resexztames of the Canadian Mill- ing Inciustry with time Board and lite Agrirtlltural Supplies Board, § The reduction in price was de- scribed by the board as "defznlt- ely an emergency Ill§<'.\<ll2'€ to meet prevailing circumstarc -. "This attitude of the miiling in- dustry in attempting to meet the situation resulting from the drought in certsn parts the country obviates the neces ' of any price fixing crder by the ‘v ' r- . time Prism and 'I‘rade Board," a‘ statement said. 'I'he statement addedz- l "It is understood that the Lo-I partment of Agriculture in the ex-l ercise of its control over exports! will ensure that adequate supppesj able to Canadian users at these; prices but that all supplies cf millfeeds not purchased at these new prizes will bc allmvcd export Dfllnits.” Ousted Consuls —WiII r = Sail From U.S. Today‘ Nszw YORK. Julv il-talu-i More than 450 ousted German and. Italian consuls, their families, and j consular employees converged herel today to sail on the naval trans- port West Point. formerly the liner America. but now a. drab-colored ship equipped mainly with bunks and devoid of the comforts and furnishings tlsilnlly" foundA_\__sl1Ip.§ used bv government officials. The liner will sail for Lisbon at 5 p.m. (A.D.T.1 tomorrow. Petain announces \ Defeat in Syria j VICHY. Ju‘,v bh-IAIW-Chicf of State Marshal Petain formally an- nounced Frailccs defeat today in two notes. one to the civilians and the other to the soldiers In Syria. I In both. he expressed gratitude for conduct of the campdzn and promised that France will remain closely attached to her mandates. ‘ To the soldiers the lfsrshal said, I t tried ‘FY10? down into the sea. A. F. Mighty aerial Drive still In full swing 10th German Plane Downed By Ack-Ack Battery On Scottish Coast. LONDON, July 1-i—(CP> -_ The Royal Air Force went hunting to- day for German shipping and Ger- man planes. and found both, scor- ing hits on five silips totalling 22.- 500 tons and shooting down nine aircraft. A 10th German plane. the second bomber of the day, was credited to anti-aircraft defences along the Scottish . The other, ' d by fighters [ off the coast 0f IVaIcs. i The R. A. F. tirade morning raids -‘ on the Gcrznall-Zield French porisi cf Cherbotlvn and Le Havre, rallf vuirtis at Hazebrouck. near St, Onlcr, and in the afternoon big Blenhcims of the bomber com-i mand. searching for North sea- shipping. attacked a small convoy off the Dutch Frisian islands, the zur ministry said. Tllrce direct hits were scored on one vessel of 6.000 tons, another of 3,000 tons was hit astem and an escort vessel of 1.500 tons was Struck aft and alnidships. the colnnluniqtte said. A fighter which ro break up the attack was The morning attack on Cher- bourg was costly. for the R, A, p announced loss of twp bombgrg and full‘ Yliilliers. However, seven Ger. man fighters were downed and at Le Hatrc. there Take hayseed From lung of Pictou child HALIFAX. July 14-(CPI-While n special surgical instrument was some 3.000 men. units. The communique added that not a single Soviet plane was lost in this encounter. Russians declared that Red smug; held every. mica] position without important change and that another T DOWN Germans Drive 0n Leningrad, Moscow, Kiev Great battle rages along long front; Enemy destroyer, 13 transport ships sunk. (By Henry Calssidy, Associated Press Staff Writer) MOSCOW, July 15—Tuesday)—(AP)—Russlan forces battling Hitler's legions by land and sea inflicted heavy losses on Nazi units on the eastern battlefront and sank two German destroyers and l3 transports out of a big Bal- tic convoy, the Soviet information bureau announced today. The war bulletin said wave upon wave of German troops were cut down Monday in the fourth day of a. mighty Nazi assault in the northwest, west and southwest —gate\va_vs t0 Leningrad, Moscow and Kiev. One hundred tanks and countless automobiles were declared destroyed alone In the western fighting, which has been centred around Yitebsk, some 300 miles from Mos- cow. On the southwestern front, in the vicinity of Xovograd Volynski, 120 miles east 0f Kiev, the Russians said their defenders of the Ukraine captured a number of cannon, machine gull-b‘. automobiles and other munitions from Ger- man mechanized units. In this clash the Russians said ' their forces defeated a Nazi unti of I British naval the main fighting has I ‘ The pounce on the Nazi convoy‘ tr. the Baltic. the war bulletin said, , occurred Sunday after the troop, __. and llllll11il0l15 laden vessels were l-QNDON- JW-Y 14—‘CP‘—fi19 spoticd by play-leg of the Red an . Admiralty announced today that force. ‘the 1,200 ton British lnzvitl sloop Besides the 15 ships and a barge Auckland had been suns. ha: grtve load of tanks sunk, it said 13 mum no details. The Auckland normally ports were damaged by the com_ carried 188 men. The communique bined m“. of the attacking Md indicated there were some castlal- fleet. air force and coastal batterv H95- For the first time in recent days the official account did not men- Z1011 by name any of the towns or ship the SHANGHAI. July l-i _ 1A.?‘- Closing of the Jatpanese port of‘ Kobe to foreigners r 10 days from tomorrow was reported today and word ran through the Far East In last nights communique an its tray frmn Philadelphia, doc- lull had fail ' t _ ' . » ~ - . tors at a I-Ia hospital went line. en m” the m“ battle géfliiiflgfm§§obfli,?’1f§§;,,§?°‘§~,e§§§ through an 0pc .. n with instru- This temporary, repeated hub 1nd°_cj,1nu_ ‘ tnents cf then own today and re- tlon was used bv Russian my”- Japnnqge mnmu... and hm.“ tnoveci from her lung a havseed mants to suggest that the Nazis (lllflfiffs ‘in Shflllllhfll l tired to that was threatening the life 0f had been forced to abandon in be ‘deliberatelv lcttinrgpe rep0"1 4 . v . . . ~ . .. l Old Pllioll- 7M 5- fflwl 0f a far more cautious tech- spread that Japan intended to at- .lcn was described as "successfu. . The doctors decided today they could not afford to uiait- for the in- strument being flown from Phil- adelphia after an emergency up- uea! Sunday‘. The child is the riauuhtcz‘ of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Gray. had made clamoro " ft 1 bit b - esuaelr CEOTIAIIAZIQLWCOAIZIVGt laeden “fttargeldj tr- lay down our arms." To the civilians. he wrote. "as a M result of unjustifiable aggresszon and as a victim of an unequal ‘fight, France ls going to stiffer an eclipse in the Levant as sad for her as for you." Interpreting The War News (By Klflte L. Simpson, Assoc- lnted Press Staff \Vrltcr) Whatever the truth of Ber- lin's undocumented claims of sweeping victories In Russia, there can be no doubt as to the hélilfy price the Nazis are pay- ing. especially in war materials. Of course. R1l$l\\l1 statements that. a million or more Germans have been kfled. wounded or captured 1n the first three weeks of fighting are just as untrustworthy than almost. identical Nazi claims. Both were issued by proparzandists. Normally the casualties of at- tacking forces are double or triple those of’ the defenders. The circumstances of the Nazi- Soviet conflict, including the undenied entrapment of Red armies in the Minsk-Bialystok sector. tended to reverse that rule. A prodigious Red retreat. on a 2,000 mile front has cost more than 250000 personnel oases. according to Moscow's -n. German casualties _Frenoh sign In Canada is 0n upgrade OTTAWA, Jilly i~i—(CP)—Can- adirtn beef consumption is increas- ing with a re < ult in t. decl .ne in _ of Domlnzcn cattle ln St ' ‘(I Dopartancnt s id tonight, _ This is in contrast ‘to no: market. lugs and time prices cf bacon has been increased three times in re. cent months to keep park supplies tn Canaan to lncci. the IIQQQS 0f the British market. During the second quarter of 19-11 cattle exports to tile United States were less than half as lalge as the low-duty quota of 51.720 head for heavy rattle. Estimates are that exports in this category will bc nearly 100,000 head less than t-he annual quota of 193.350 head. Shipments of Can. axllrtn calves to the United states have also been on a reduced rate. "One cf the main rcatcm for the reduced exports to me United States Is that the home market for cattle is attract-Ive. with an in- creased demand for beef because of larger comings in many Canad- ian homes and the rcquircznents of military camps and other establish- ments." said an official. Allies, Vichy officials today ly signed the armistice cnd- Ing the fiyc-week-old Svrisn cam- paign in which Frcnchman fought Frenchman and former ally bat- tlcd former ally. (Ion. Sir Claude Auclllnlcek, British czmmandcr in the Middle East, announced here. l The document. was signed at l Acre Psleuine, two days after ac- 1 tual cessation of Ilostllities. l Negotiations leading to the final ’ signature were caltlvd on at Acre , by Gen. Sil- Maillnnd Wilson. ccm- I mander of Allied forces in Pfllrs- | tine and ‘Trans-Jordan. and Gen Henri Dents. the Vichy ccmnlnrtiel in S_vr’.a. The armistice had been lnltislled ttaere Saturday. CableL-Afines federation of Great Britain miners wzll be responsible in large measure for the national morale i hlqllr. the reckless patterns of z4_ “MIFEPQRY frontal assaults which us the first phase tack Russia in Siberia-either m; the day Moscow falls or on Aug. l5 of the invasion. Some or cow. Mooean Porafs ARE Luna Bannis- You (‘m-Pf UNDER- Sfano New 4HEY SAY- Responsible for Morale next winter AYR. Scotland. July 14 __ (qpj Secretary DQVIQ Grcnfell {Otllly warned the snnugl conference of the mine workers that. next winter. "A W111‘ deadly blow to national morale would be no mes 1n m, grates this winter and n dengue;- blow would be dealt if the thou- sands of men and women who will be PmDTQYPd in our new fgctorigg found there was no power to work the machines," he said, TORONTO, Jilly‘ l4—-(C imum and maxlmurtl :ein,> Dawson Victoria Edmonton Regina Winnipeg Toronto Ot-t-asva Montreal Synopsh: The weather has been militia. Times coming ATLANTIC CITY, N. J-. July 14- (AFu-The Umled SlfllPS P110110 fair and warm over the greater was warned today by price adminis- part of Ontario. but scattered Irator Icon Henderson to brace lt- showers have occurred m the nortllvvard of Lake superior. It has been fair in the Prairie Pr willces; qtute warm in Alberta and western 5°15 lfll‘ a tomorrow: of industrial dislocation and harsh sacrifice. "It is a dark picture I paint." Saskatchewan and mstleratr“ Henderson told 1,200 attending the wan“ m Mannvba‘ New York Ilousewares manufactur- ing association convention as he BOSTON, July li~fAP\—Fore- cast for northern New England: Fair and slightly Wanner Tuesday; Wednesday’ Increasing clcudines! follcmed by showers 1n north r- tlon: little change in tempera um predicted an end shortly of the le- Ccnt boom in sales of automobiles, refrigerators, vacuum cleaners. ra- dios. electric stoves, fumiture and other hard goods. "It becomes my disagreeable du- Wednesday‘ tr." seld Henderson. "to tell you use“. tldc this afternoon at 3.10 "It" UK‘ Pa"? is overuubefnle lens nmv. there will be more pur- chasing power running around Iluntlng something to buy than their are goods available... "I wish I could tell you that we had an easy solution, that. every- thing 1s some to be all right. r can't promise You any such hope. All I can tell you is that Only by ! and tcnmrrow morning at 350. Sun sols this evening at 7.44 and rises tomorrow morning at 4.27 Last quarter moon July 16, 4.07 am Summcrsldc tide i8 minutes lat- er than Charlottetown. SUNDAY SERVICE June 15th to Sept. 28th Inclusive Wrhilhs blood and tears can thr ‘ Leave Borden, 9.00 a. M. 12.00 dislocations be held to a minimum, ar-Irwn. 4.4g P. n}. 7.00 113M100‘ AM ~N a g1 1 g1 . _ .csvr- ‘a e ormcn no .. . ° e‘ ° y 5m "r mmdm‘ “m 2.30 r. M. .50 r. M. 0.10 r. M. rolllwflivd American business. CIIS- tnmers eager and able to buy will be crowding the market places and stores, but manufacturers will be unable to get enough raw materIaLs to satisfy demands.“ WOOD ISLANDS FERRY Leases Wood Islands 7.00 A. M. . 11.00 A. M. 3.0 l’ 0 . . L C lbo 9.00 AM. 1.00 I..»'l=Y'f|."-~'-