'1 ri l1 Lzll Aid r7. h. . YSZE/‘d “i” _._.......-..-. -..-..-.-.i.-v~.m arenas-i QWRHRUI IUIPFQFYQ 5323;‘: PAGE FOUR V’ 7 ' f rill: DIIARLDTTETUWN a u Allll IAN ll- uunded ln I887) Morning Dally Ifgslllvlfi. Lil-LII. Col. w. Chcslcr s. McLuro “it: President. J. R. Burnt". FJJ. Si-treiary, Lii-ut. Col. A. blat-Klnnon. 0.5;: L gimm- unil Alan-axing Director. J R- Burnett, . k‘ Associate Lillturs. Hunk “alker and III! A- 5W7" sins: itliiTizikaTas By luiiii lll i-. n. i- si-uv ut-r wear. 82-54’ for 6 '"°“"'* 51"} lnr .1 minnns. 50c for one month- Cilv ||'\Wll\:|\- saa-il l!" )\"-"--53-““ m’ 5 nmmm‘ i i $1.75 for 3 munlxsxsuo p" y“: By Mail Ill (‘anaila and Luis. _ b - _ ' n ialurua» lllrhl.‘ a-W lit-r Yur- >14"! "If ° "m" ‘ JUK‘ lur J month!- H1'IlL,A> bU-QHvyi-s-tMillcnzury, i: ll-‘duker than lllc Weakest Ink." “it iznxizsiliiiifovsr 28.1w Liitisli Agriiilltural Policy In,“ Lnmlan outlines the ‘ zlii- liYlllSll Liovernnleut l"\'i'll iiar agricultural lartn proiltlciiotl. The h“ regartletl ulvch produces the _ ;-» "i-IW finds that for the , t_ - ‘In! farming" is Ill?" anloinlt 0i footl ]'_- - i . iilililllvlk‘ ‘Vlllll -3 acpg, hglpcfg constitute ma‘. population and 4-1 per cent of the fol-d- L - litmirl lfingilirlll. N” y it ~,ui'e all lfiiilbltlf-l-S V‘ \ ,.,-;,-<-<<_ for Britain ‘i . . ll still import what \ ce his percentage zo per cent? Ur fl-F 4 i‘ \‘n ileiinite per- - ti ~:i:Ei-._ lllll it is em- u . :i.i~e releases shipping i - m» ls. . it'll) farms in England and - i me lteiilg inspected l LK-iiiinittee whu f . production efforts, as .-\, H or C. i 1W‘ . a raniig of A may not 1' .'.l nialtiltg motley but ll ~. _ 31¢ {lcyg i: being utilized i’ l -; illlCllOfl. There is great ' al counties to see which .~‘[ percentage of Class A u. e * tarry". _ Ya.- r71 ‘ - o.‘ farms is expected to fall "110 C1355 if, - - y :'~ i: ivliile they are producing ~~v did last year, nevertheless more fw i ' ‘i p...‘- Ca. '-j . .- ll":l"r 'l‘lie_v will receive ex- pi-{i .-.'~, - t",(’fl i iiiie directions which ln".=l b" l‘ '- I“.~_i~ << C farmer who is making m ,5’ ~ , will use compulsion. If hg i; p" “ cti-alfle of getting the best nlif o,‘ ‘ I i e ci- ivirti-g may take over all ti. Ur he may he convicted Q "\_ll ’ »l l"*'l\ll_\‘. lf he is a tenant ~~ wse. the committee can get :~ ' q ‘iis lease and can then ‘ n on the farm. ‘ i; ‘be farmer's biggest problem. .1_",_:.oo0 farms in _ t . feiver than l0 per w‘. ‘this in excess of $1,000. . s a rough allowance for the -~~, :3 r rl-e farmer's own consump- '=r» for the shelter he en- ‘ . i! is niat merely a cash in- ~ iixiifie income and is fully . of the urban worker who . arid pay rent. f' ‘a farltler with a gross income . js pretty heavily in debt. The l \‘i'l'PlillPl', in reply to a ques- ""§ on july 2, declared that the is in mid-February had lent s about $i_=o.ooo,ooo. Dividing that by the ilgirr-o farms gives an average in- debtedness to t‘ "uni-stock banks of about $340 per farm ~—a fairly high percentage of the average farm in“ 1e. A similar calculation last year gave a rural nebtcdness to the banks of nearly $27Y\F)(Yl,I'ifd‘). llut according to reliable farm wr’ , 11¢ farmer owes a far larger sum to merchai cr-niriirsslon men, auctioneers, land- lords and h‘re~ tiichase companies than he does to the bank. 'l h e is. in fact, a growing litera- ture on the p" ins of "rural credit." .cr costs the. farmer has been granted high-r es. A subsidy was collected by the Givveriznv rt from the miller: who, in turn, collected it from ti» consumer: of flour. Now the Ciovcrnniezir is the sole buyer of wheat. In- creases are l‘ lil~f~l for oats. potatoes, milk. sugar beet, s" -i ai/ }'l_.’j<. The new ministry" of agriculture .- ..; ti'('$(‘ will not only cover the farmer's lllFlPhCil iv =2: but enable him to make “substantial ailditiitiiri profits. especially on the better class To rewtffv this, farmers en- joying an i » :il~»- e a limit to be <hortly an- nounced iv ro let-p accurate books and \\":\! of Snooo o Chancellttr r5 tion in the t’? London clca ' to British f." . ,- lfir - s l. my inf/Mlle‘ tax o-i "i: 7r .‘l"lllfll returns instead of -—as at prison; Mano, on the fixed annual rental of tbii-fi‘ far-i s. T-‘AIII illappo-ned .Before_ {Igirold In 1b, nuthr-r of "Fienghis Khan" and many other ltfstorical ivorii-s. savs it all happened 70o year; a; i. History is rripeiiliilg- with Nazis instead of .\l*if‘:i_'"i~. In |g|0 ilii- howl-s rif Genghis Khan were better armi-d and boiler lTlllll"’l than those they yiiiirpieri- l, Thev hail faster horses and more of tlii-ni, 'l'hi"i- |‘1vllll'!'l on =uilil<~nness plus power. 1'1,“- eiaiglit n» fl win-i l'f'\l~l.'lll(‘(‘ before it could arguing”; I funk t“ ilri-liminar_v steps: (I) (‘iiiiioli-ti- Pimlfllli iii‘ the ilooini-d nation. (2) l . Canada and treachery was most effective. They went on the theory that morality has no place in a total war and never kept a promise to a country which surrendered. Lamb says that though propaganda was then unknown the Tartars methodically created dis- sension in countries they wished to attack and at- tacked when it reached its hot point, In I240 they tricked the Hungarians into believing that their allies. the Turks. were secretly planning a separate peace. The allies split and the armies of Genghis. Khan cut them both to pieces. The Chinese Maginot Line could have stopped them but for the treachery of the commander of one small section.‘ The invaders poured through that and attacked the defenders from behind. EDITORIAL NOTES -n So far, the Wednesday half-holiday makers have had perfect weather since Dominion Day. n: - u Schools reopen next week, and parents are getting the necessaries together to send the little ulles all decked-up and spruce for the, to them, great occasion. n- o o Early frost does not of itself indicate summer is ended; it may be, and usually is, a prelude to a long spell of delightful weather, bracing and sun- shiiiy. But all the same sea-bathing is not so alluring as it is when sun baths on the shores are the accompaniment_ Thus it is that numerous sunnncr visitors are now packing-up preliminary to rcttlrning south or west. i U i i The first submarine cable was operated this date, I350. A single copper wire covered with gilttzi-yierrha had been laid from Calais to Dover, and nlinssages were, for the first time, inter- cllatigeil between the two shores on August 2S. but the cable failed the next day. A more sub- stantial cable was mantifactureil and successfully laiil the following year. and worked for over twenty years. The first submarine cable operat- ed on this continent was laid between Prince Ed- ward Island and New Brunswick and inaugurat- ed November 22, 1852. 1i u m n It should be borne in mind that Mr. Mc- Connell. the generous publisher of the Montreal Star who has handed $1,000,000 to the British Government with which t0 buy airplanes, did not make his money out of the newspaper business. He. is. or was, a stock-broker, and successfully floated many profitable undertakings, both in London. When the late Lord Atholstatt was getting up in years he sold out his interests in the Star t0 Illr. McConnell with the proviso thathe would retain control. so long as he lived or desired. The consequence was that .\lr. McConnell did not enter tipon possession of his newspaper until Lord Atllolslan passed away, comparatively recently. Ill i I i Information obtained through the fifty (]ll(‘S' lions the average person answered at rcgistriclion will be tabulated by a force of 600 statisticians assembled in Ottawa by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. It will be some mouths before this itiformzition, (lesignerl to slrengthmt the in- dustrial manpower of the nation. will he avail- able. Nearly one million unmarried men between the ages of 2t and 45 will be shown as available for military training. Ilsing the information com- piled in the registration, 300,000 men are to he called up in the next twelve months for thirty rlays eotnpulsoryt militaryi training Only un- married men are to be called at first. Later mar- ried mcn will be trained also. a w o a Silver fox ranchers who feed their foxes a diet containing 10 per cent or more fish are in- viting serious trouble, it i: shown by a report of investigations conducted by Professor R. G. Green of the University of Minnesota and C. A. Evans of the United States Biological Survey, published in Science. A grave nervous ailment in silver foxes, seriously interfering with power of movement and ending fatally in a large pro- portion of cases, was traced to too much fish in the food pan, in fox ranches located in five Stat- es. Basically, the disease is a Vitamin BI defi- ciency, identical with lhe human malady known a: Wernicke’: hemorrhagic pollocncephalitls. The human disease, however, ls not caused by too much fish, but usually by too much alcohol. a a o a Threatened attacks on merchant lhipplng ply- lng between Britain and Ireland are causing wide- spread anxiety amongst Ireland's fanning com- munily. Since more than 90 per cent of Eire’s ex- port trade is with Britain, anything interfering with the regular flow of trade will have serious economic repercussions The national i-cvgnue would slump heavily as a consequence, while farmers could dispose of their surplus livestock, butter, eggs and bacon only in the home market at low prices. The cutting off of supplies of coal, steel and other raw materials procured from Eng- land, upon which many Irish industries are dc- pctldent, would eventually further aggravate the situation by swelling the ranks of the ilnemplny- ed as there is no conscription in force. The threat to trade is the gravest of the war with which Ireland so far has been confronted. w a at w A silrvey conducted by the British Institute of Public Opinion shows that 88 per cent of those questioned support Prime -l\linister lVinston Churchill. a report issued here recently through the American Institute of Public Opinion re- veals. "At no time during his years as Prime Minister of England did Neville Chamberlain have the support of as many British voters." the rcporti sny=. The survey put this question to British voters: "In oeneral do you anprove or llllltill'i'lllilll l i» (4)‘l)<‘¢<'l>ll""_ as to illsanvirove of Mr. (fhurchill, as Prime Min- hp ii;i.ii.-i- of ~l burprlse as to time of isler?" tf"|t"'t. '|')iii,i- ]H'l‘\l.'l‘ l- iii lllf‘ counlrv lo be at- P" ccm . . . .. ~ , Approve —-—-—————-----—-—--88 ~,-' ml ' l‘ »~ '1' ' "iniwi- lhwv knew \\ll(‘l‘(‘ . .. .. lhsapprove———-----—-- ---- 7 l t» . i_, ll‘. l wi-on-izzv. lllt'Cll('Ill\'\\'1lS . - v _ , _ y r - Lndccitlerk- -- - - ___ ._. _. __ _- __ _. 5 12'1" .1 » ' an! threats before the wot! ’ Jim. \\'l'l'f‘ made in such In similar surveys on the popularity of Mr. ‘nun a. lll‘~ll'flv\' the eucmyYs Chamberlain when he was Prime Minister the pi-"i! - - ' < il-i "l'i“lll_\' \i4‘l1l(‘ll or not lhr- hrqlir-st vote of approval cvcr rcachcd was 71 per ...ima.»iiiii ti a}. pact. llic methodical use of cent, m December, 1939. . ...._.-‘_._-__-._-.-_ IOTES BY THE WAY We have ln mlnd at. the mo- ment. the svlxles and liquors for whose supply this country has been dependent on the natloiis now en- gvlfcd ln the Nazi wave or fight- n: its encroachment. ‘Ibo flow of PiIsener beer to nriesc shores. for instance. stopped a long ivhlle ago. Shipments of champagne, tvc are told, are no longer obtainable. To- morrow we shall hear, very llkely, that no more other wines or lique- urs or vermouth are coming from fiance. And so the story goes. Even good Scotch promises to he- come scarce and much more ex» pensive. —- New York Herald Trl- bune. Ono effect of the German Invas- lon and occupation of the 10w Countries has been to glve Canada a virtual world monopoly o1 the production of radium through the refining at. Port. Hope of the pltch- blende-bearlng ores mined ln the Northwest Territories. Before these ores began lo be refined the world radium Industry was centred u‘. Belgium, where a radium trust operated using ores mined in the Belgian Congo. One result of oom- petltlon from Canada was to bring down the world price of radium very materially through breaking this trust and thus to confer a great boon upon suffering human- ity. With the penetration of Bel- gium by the Germans, however, the operations of the trust have been indefinitely suspended. As a mat- ter 0f fact, the radium refinery in that. country has been clessd since the beginning of the year probably because of the difficulties involving tn shlppln ores from the Como. and there lS thus every probability that llllle radium or even radium- bearing ore fell mto the hands of the enemy. Canada thus becomes. perhaps surprisingly. the centre of the worlds radium trade, and ll ls to be caruestlv hopril that llic virtual niin l_v wlnrll llllS -" ‘l- lry now Cll_]()_\S lu that iepeet will not be reflected in invl'i'.'1sillg lllc price of radium beyorrl reason. — Brockville Recorder and Times. People are wonilerlttg what It cost tie ecunlrv when ii parlv of forty-live members of parliament recently made a week end visit to I-Iallfax to view llie tinusual eon- dlllons now prevailing in our pro- vincial capital. Nfaybe these tour- ists paid their own expenses but. it has been slated that no informa- tion to that (‘flvCl has been given in reply to enqulrlrs ivhlcli have bren made. Surely the funds that were presuniab" extracted frcm the national trcasui". for the put‘- pose might have been more profit- iilly expended in flu tine the war. We wonder ll these pilgrimzzee are to be e inwd l"‘“l rill our representative. have had an ap- portunlty to :£lll‘l,\' lh... curioslkv. It may be near treason to sav s’), but it does appear to the uninitiat- ed that in a time ivlitn nil our rc- sources are llkelv la be require-ti to win the war and izet back to normal more iviivs are fauna‘ io spend itubltc montv than are -i~1- ually necessary. 1n a land '.\'ll(‘l'€ we have for 1on2 disreunrzied <f- ficlency and rerklcssflv lndulzcd in waste. there are ma ' evldrntly must be ie £0 cflnpete on (‘llll tirlns world slruggle for supremacy. — Wolfvlllti Acaciian. A vast and awful rcspnnslblllly devolves upon Canada as the out.- pcss of freetionl fail lll Europe Despite tll‘ bllTllllflllh efiorts of L110 ainhoitlzcs to prepare for full participation in the light against Germain", llie zici-onipllslimriil lacs far behind the requzl ments of a new and tciallv unforeseen situa- tion. In proportion to the inabl" i of the Allies to ivltlistantl the ov whelmiilg ZdrEIIlIlIS oi the one! Canada's duty grows The gaps in the ranks must be lllled. the arm- ament, which has been deslrogvd or yielded must be replaced France, unable to do more, ls done. The utmost that Britain can do will not suffice. Only Canada among the belligerent llilllCliS has enough reserves of material and men to increase the effectiveness of her contribution to l1 decree that. might influence the outcome. The Allies look to Canada for the total effort- whlch nll must make to defeat the total effort of Ger- many. Canada points ixlth pride to her preparations for the war of 1941, but. has b0 admit. that the idea of total war-this year, fhls month-has hltherto hardly been entertained. -—- Labor Review, Ot- lawn. I Insurance people would step a little less gln erly 1n thelr use o1’ the English language. An insurance man was talkln to me about pollcles the other ay. and took elaborate palm to avoid the words "death" and "funeral" I-Ie sald: "If something should hap- pen to you, your wife would have an income of so much for the rest of her llfe." And: "If any- thlng happens. there are lmmedlate expenses which your wlfe would have to pay." It seems to be a curious sign of softness that these short old words should be replaced by such eupliemisms. Another of these fluffy cuphcmisms drags out. It: existence ln the country papers, where people do not clle, but “pass away“ or "are lnkcn." I do not“ lhlnk there ls anything wrong with the word "dcatlu" lt ls a simple and noble word. which has served the uses of lllerature and history for the last thousand years. Men are born; men (lie. No combina- tion of words can conceal the fact. of our own mortality. ‘Illese things. perhaps, are ordered n llltle better ln the war news. The soldier-g or Europe do not. "pass awuyf‘ they dle. Hovering over the fields of Europe ls not the vague circum- stances ol "something happening," but rather the plain fact of death. -Calgary Herald. Mr. Danlel Mclvnr (Fort. William) ....I know that once I took a llt- tle dwll 0f cognac. real brandy. I tor sald: "You should have a good gargle." All the other gargIes fallcd, so I resorted to PDQnac and singled lt. and I near ly chucked. Mr. MacNlcol: Dlcl the hon. member spll. ll out? Mr. McIvor: Tile, doctor snlrl, "You nl- lowed a little drop of l; to trickle down. and that dld the lrlck. — House of Commons I-Innsard. llamllton Gmult, who ralsctl and equipped the Prln. cess Patrlellrs Canadian Llglil. In- fantry, flrst of the Domlnlonts 50L glétstl&ft‘ll(‘h the front in the Bagel! D nr. has Joined the 1st Can- man lvlslon ln Enahand as a staff of cer. Colonel Gault has the stuff ° Whlfh Rood soldiers are made. ln the last war h" was ("ii-leg wounded and lost a leg; also four rna Cl-IARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN had a bad throat. once and the doc_-, " l l the Mr. Churchill’s' l Right Bower (Globe and Mall) It ls seldom that a. British Prime Minister pays s eclal trlbute to the work of a. cab net colleague ln an address to the House of Commons. But there are times when lt lt lm-, possible for a generous man to. wlthhold expressions of praise and admiration for one who has richly earned them. In the case of Ian-d Beaverbrook. to whose work Mr. cliurchlll made euloglstlc refer- ence ln hls Tuesday review 0f the war, lt may well be that: praise. even from so august a person as the Prime Mlnlster of Britain. ls some- thing less than hls due. This brown- crlnkled little gnome of a man. who went. from Canada and developed one of Britain's great newspflbife- may poaslbly have saved the Em- pire. for lt. may well be that what Beaverbrook has done could not have been done without hlm. He has knit together l; a few short weeks the entlre aircraft produc- tlon Industry ln Britain, with all its ancillary unlts of productlon, and set lt splnnlng at a speed un- heard or before. Once ngaln he has done what nobody believed pos- sible. An Empire victory depends upon jolnlng to mastery of the sea an undlsputed mastery of the air. We could have been sure of galnlng that mastery ln tlme. had time been al- lowed us. But it ls part of the Ger- man theory of war to press home an advantage with all speed. spar- ing nothing. At the conclusion of the Battle of France the world trembled for Brltaln. But- "The Beaver." as he ls called. was earn- ing hls nickname bv the tireless diligence which ls characllstlc of the dam-builders. bullying. cajollng and flattering. he spent hls days bringing together and putting to work the men and the machlnery which are to fill the alr with Brlt- lsh fighting planes. Lord Beaverbrook ls the right man lu the right job. I-Ie has been envied. and because he has been envied llP has been mercilessly crillclzr-d in the course of n meteoric career during which he amassed mnnev and won a place of lmwer and Influence at the heart of Empire. His political crusadln! has not alnvrrvs been well received. nor justlv deservlnrr of too much laralse. His early struggle to bring the Dally Express into prominence led hlm to adopt methods which raised many an eyebrow on Heel street. But he was alwavs a true firillsher and a great Tmnerlnllst. The solidarity of the Entplre has alwavs been hls guiding passion. Vvhzitever his f'1llll..< ma" have been. they are forgiven. Whatever hls weakness. they are so fnr over- shadwved bv the fine oualltles hr- has placed with such devotion at the service Of the British Empire that he emerges now as one of the AUGUST A brooding wlstfuluess pervades the The bYULEAfI-AZIH brings hls tubers to Whlle izfilisitstdf dew are jewellna hie BCIOICXfiLC-C’ invigorating freshneas To nouns uupreslvencss and dulllng Fall aupies redden and increase in The Rgiiiecln crop ls harvested and In ZfflllHtsTlE-SI sweet corn ls ripe to ea . If one cud not possess a saplenl eye To see beyond the clustered opu- lerlce Whose purple bunches darken in e sun. One might survey this pageantryi, nor h In contemplating its Imperman- ence. Alas! the passing ls so swiftly done. —Mabel Posegate in the New York Times. times mentioned ln despatches. and won the D.$.O. and other military awards. While in hls late teens he served with the Canadian Mount- ed Rlfles as a. suballern 1n the South African War. Colonel Gault has been prominent in the business llfe_ of Canada, chiefly ln Montreal. Living latterly tn England. he was elected member of the Brltlsh Par- liament. representlng Taunton from 1924 to 1935. Now he returns to scenes of battle. So distinguish- ed and experienced an officer should be of great value to the Can- adlan 1st Dlvlslon. - Montreal Gazette. - l LADIES’ SWIM GAPS Why not vhlt on: More and Inspect our flock of Bathing 0:1»: before malilng your pur- e use. - . . _\~\ 1621i J Bathing Caps In the very ,‘ latest shades and ranflnl In nrlce from 25c to 75c. See also our y. We have a complete stock ot Q MAC! large stock ol Sun Glasses priced from 15o to $1.00. A delicately perfumed pre- paratlon wh ch restores, a fiienglhenl and benutlfles the § I. It. wlll rectors p: hafr to Ill natural color an produce I rlch and abundant growth 0! hnlr. Prlce 60o. Order by Mall Today. DB- IVAN! BTOMACH MIXTURE We highly recommend this preparation for people suffer- n from Stomach Distress at r eating, heartburn, Acid and sour stomach. Mixture that money can buy It: Evans. Price 85o per bottle. ll’ ll ll lhl finest Sklmlch i m: two macs,- War Prisons Unsatisfactory i (Globe and Mall) A trial performance ot_ thetCOlg ed‘, o; Errors has been piesen ed Y the Department of NBUOIIEI luc- tense for the enlertalinnent of the pQQpIQ or ontiirlo. ‘lllc prmflP-l characters were two German DY“- cners and the D-BY was definitely no; alsugcess. EVBIybOGY Kn°“5 In“ risoners of War. who are treubetl 311th some consideration 85 Salami and not as criminals. 81¢ 0995mm‘ allv apt to escape. Brillsh 9115mm‘ 01-May escgpe from Germany. Peo- pe on the whole were not cillirely censorlous of the lxnflllmfl“ "1 National Defense merelv hffausq. l‘ prisoner had escaped. Vvnuc surl)! 15' ed them was the extremely elabcr- ate preparations which llad been made for a mass €X\l—l>1‘9l131'“l'l‘3"5 whlch apparently had taken B 9911- p.e of months to wmlilel-e- Qulml? which time no stsn oi the!" “We t . deélieeclillnlstcr 0f Nalional Defense made a, partial admission of culp- abillLv when he announced that _lll future there would be more P9116‘! Work and less sentry-go in prison camps. glut how can ‘we expiiln. 0X- (jepl, in terms of laxllv and neglig- ence, the tact that sonic hours elap- sed before the Provincial Pirlice were notllletl of llltfl \J1'1b0l1@1'§}5' cape, and that a meticulous (teacup- lion was clrciratctl of n Pflsfilfll” who was safelvbelnnd buzocd “I10! Every person in Ontario, and fur beyond the borders of the Province, had gazed earnestlv at nliotoglaplis of Lieutenant Werner Isocllt‘ 01 U18 German Navy. had committed his features to memory and were on the luokout for hnvl, And whole every one was watching 101‘ Llflliellfllll- Koche. a certain Gilcnllien Lorentz t was maklu: liis wi " unn led to Montreal. \\'ltcrt* s in: dltv to produce a reuisi incn mill when crossing the Victoria lii'i.v.|.:c_ result- ed in his arrest lor questioning. Is it possible lllal Lleutcuunt Koclie could appear a: roll-call rind at meals for two or tlivre (lay. with- out the prison cnnnn auincrltiis realizing that he w: llll lll lll-Jll‘ mid ? Wlirn it \ n urisfilel- huii vs: have llmtlglll that a i r" lnzttlun of i-iivli l'llllllllllllf.! nri. would have been lllll(l\‘ for com son with the records lll Ul'tlL‘l' l the authorities llllfllll be alzsoulwv certain \\'ll0 had iswiila-d. and .~i> that the l)0ll('(‘ and the public ..ill<l have been tuned in their scarf-ll. uni. not. confused. We flunk. tco. that Ministers if the Crown conlronleil with defect.» m the cbcratlon ol unv branch o; their deoarllnent bilOllJl no. all)“ tllclnselvcs to ‘oecclnc le mlssllic whole mllli a thing which lIllLlll any ivell-repnlalad nutainn h: . hold. 'I_l_le nrlumple ot ultimate l s Donslbllllv cf Cabinet a/llnlszeis .0 the people still llo" even in \\lll- time and the lllllCliil responsible must accept ills lTopJllfill-HAILV urac- zouslv. The entire incident of the rrrupe and confusion rt 1ll'l‘l.ll_', tin oner cf waif ind 12s an llllai t- lorv condition 1n the ncllltllilslrli .l of prison camps ivlllcll the AIniisii-l‘ of_Delellse sliculcl be the first to 11d- mlt and correct. - Vermicide Worms are the greatest for the ffrench An 6-0-0 OO-O-Ofi-O 0-0 9-0 O-O-O-O-O-OO-O-O-OQ-OO-OO-OOVOOQO-O “Casey At The Bat” (Ottawa Journal) Dead in Santa Barbara. Califor- nia ls Ernest L. anaver. thenmflfl who wrote “Catsey at. the Bat. T0- davs generation perhaps never heard uie poem. probably Wmlldnt like lt or understand ll. l/el- ll mu-fl cal‘. up nostalgic memories for ml.- H0115 who before and after the tum o: this century knew every line of It .bv heart. "Things looked cutleniell’ rocky For tna Muuvll c nine inai. day; 'I‘lie scufc “as l\\'u Lo one, l with out an iniiiiii; left .0 play.‘ And so slaaaa 'l|l.’l_\c. to... the ulaala and duwltlall ol i.lc at?“ Vabsfliluti "nllnnly has)‘ wno in Lin; llllltll Inning \\lin tile oases lull "Struck out’, plunging liliiinlne AULO gioclll. 1m! lllllll-l uecamc a classic In MS vzuv. kiloun lrcln lllc UUAQQH L-Gl! LJ ini- lircilc, Adl‘\A H) neat" 1.1L‘ ‘NU-4U l‘l' rti-iic- .L ionic-ii no dill lul‘ _ alier lllo e\.r_,- pcriurnianltc; was an llllltlfgCllJUU ttXilUllCllLL’. LJQUKAL-l‘ buck tlvcl‘ Loose y through slanza after 5 urlorc lllt‘ll had ncard ol kllllUlllu- ones illlu Jllclhpb nnil iiiovlcs and radio, ’I‘nev were also the days b.- iolc we nael ileum 0A "dietitians", uelurc we lliLCl neard Ol "lueolcgles . Politics were taken seriously. llll(l m ulnuainrl lacy were lighting iae bat- l Llts of llcnii- ltulc and time lll Can- atiu tiic i-oii.ru.c.s.cs oicr me CAR and LllU national Policy. uui. inc wsrlu ivas at pence, inc rlanco- Llerman war had cunt: and gone, Hill/IOU: (lllu DPULLPS lltlu fBLllHlttU [U work. and humanity seemed to have clll‘.'l'0(l upon a lulu: era ol tran- quillt). Lveil unsn. in .alci' yeals, alert‘ canli the opliiilsll-zilitelucail WJIIillL‘ boei- war and the muss.)- Japancse uar. luere was snlall uls- alruancc to civliiun ine me world 0H1’. Lilc went on smoothly, More and mcre IlLIllJIIS trailed, with lnve lii-aril ol "nilerinillclial balances" great figures of our time. What- ever conirlbillion Canada niuy make to the conimoit cause for which the 131"‘ i nations are figlllillfl. MTix All ‘n. I-‘lrrtt Ilarim Beaverbrook and Ills I\Ill;l‘~I\"*; afinlstei- for flll‘f‘l"ll "nah-vii n Wlal; not be l‘lllll((‘(l among llli- t CULLEGE NOTES College IOODI‘! Sunlombpr 3H1, Special CYIFSPs lll Cl\'ll servici- WOTK. A number o! u (7 r" gfivinsfl- llfiljebeen placed lll Clvl’ h.:\.ee positions during the past mciiili, You are Invited to _ 1 ‘ ,- lht‘ (T011980 rooms. llllllliiflsé the finest ln Eastern cminilm Two Certified teachers of Pit 1 and Great: Shnrtliaiid -a eomililsitxl equipment of new type ‘lters - the latest and most modern courses. Mrs, Melsellnn. ivlin has zradilrved, mam’ PXDert Shortlianrl writers will be on the staff this term, ' Write Prin WT lvfnran for full nartlcul n. Ari __ v, Building. §Ch8.rlOl.i1;lll;:\'nB0yl1 Bank .____________ _ wcoo¢oomooov<~co¢o0c¢ HOW Are Your Eyes’? O lf you are tirlvl - 0f slraIn-headsu-lii-sfgiii-glgyrlg: orndtlnlness — consult a 5p“. ia s A! vnur service It "f QXDf-‘Plfilce nntl snlllioriiretllgl: retracting service. Calll a l i i. flculllcu.“ u“ d 5w” W" d“ (l. F. llutclteson o. F. HUTClIl-JSIYN r. o. nurirnrsim, 404c4~4¢Ao¢ vvQ0404vO o-ooooooooooaoavoo-o x0001 ooooooa ooo4oor+voooooooooovoooaoo 4 0000;4- I0c Per Fig f cone: cur _vollll|:,slcl's and "cartels lll.<‘l ‘cquailzaucn .l.nlls" and ‘lnantilzcd currencies‘ and all inc other llllllfig and Jargan u-lncli have eniorcd into internat- lcnal lntereoulse and niade life so eomullizlleil. Oln‘ zinnlsclttcnls. nle. but u] aunt. . lllll)’. c loo were sim- >i- icas Cuuliilas nation- 11d when lliu great tuatl- (l1 lll(‘ DflSilIlLl lllCl, Sllb]S -o. Kl (l0\\'ll and other business so that the whole pnulace could cheer on lls lllVtJFllfJh. ftxiiav lHCTUSXP Ls are paying kolf or lflllllle. or driving ailtomo- Ilarrllv sall is seen on o.r and l'l\‘f‘l'.~I ant: fCW canoes cr rowbcats. Peru 1s life ls neltei- lodav, with more verve and drama to it, and u oinikenetl tempo. anu more creiituze comforts. Yet we wonder! Wonder wllelllei- in those far-off days when “JOY-s Fem! NI-"k Carter and Frank MP!‘ \\'<‘ll and tooled “Cnsev at the Bat" and people sllll went on pic- lllCS and walked or drove horses Fire, Auto, Life, A 144 Richmond 5t. ._i_____ ___ QQOQQOWO-Q-O O-OXQOO-O-OO-OOOO ffrench’s l‘: o. 1 (Oval) For Foxes From 3 Months Upward; foxtancher has to contend. Capsule is the logical treatment for this ls no other Worm Remedy that can be used with the same degree of safety and that eliminates Romp worms. Hookworms and Tapeworms. , i E. A. Foster, central llfllgstore Sole authorized Distributor ln Prince Edward Islam] OQOOQ-QQ-Q-Q§QOQ O-QO-OQ-QO§HQQ§OQQR““ § MINE SUPERINTENDENT m" (CPJ-John superlntendent or Avian westvllle. N 3,, to, u; superintendent of Marltlmes for 20 hospital here todav. éliliuali‘... ?i‘?'£T‘““°° “t5 W" it federal Capone to United amount. on the former booze 29 income. plus intern-w allies. was John P. Barnes. The United Stilts nounced lonlglil that llie Alum 5- lwiv slllllllc iiitv were, now curc- can RH! Cross liiul ilonilteil 5n. lil-i- unu nanny: Mucii of me wolltl 030 f3!‘ rellrr‘ ol an‘ raid sufferer; ;.llll ilvell bv annpllgiil. tilt-y WCH; in this ClllllPFI‘ liriwntal. Th, inc "llUllst-llllll-Dlllll-g)" mus; tings funds will be usril lu miovltle shel- tor for ivnnsp ham" were destroyed hv i-r r-ioid Jmm nese bombing attack: “m, and never knew cr ’ll'i‘."llllf‘tl llfe ivnsnl happier? wlll answer ln the and Plate Class Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside. Lloyd Lewis laUGUsT 28 1 , ___, Capsules menace with ih" Dr. ffrench’s peSl. Th5" imal Remedies SAINT JOHN, n, B_ A . Knox ug n‘ Blenkltism 3 mines at year dmlkes liisiii, Sears. died m carom: ORDFRI-In 1-0 P“ CHICAGO. court M“. 26 T in,“ V7533‘ ordered i] bay $201,347 i0 it, States (ifll't’l‘llll'lfilll.ml judanieni for the‘. represvvitlne llnpgjd ‘m; barons 192l~ and pen. hi" Judgi ummriry airproveil a ll’); 1?] lxiiis-ry‘ CHUNGKING fflhy _ ‘l6 —l 5p“ lanbauv fill‘ thousards 0i’ odrwls H-"tlwls ‘1!‘llt‘i"!l‘.llilf.‘flllC§§ There's manv a n MOTORISTS 4 We who are protec» fed by O Complete Automobile |nsur-- once Policy enjoy‘ financial freedom- against the monyl hozordsof motoring}, If you would core‘ to loin us, see this» agency today.’ W. K ROGERS AGENCIES LTD CHARLOTTETOWN a. ‘fir... &iSOrifi cciden t, Sickness Charlottetown l l l BUY WAR SAVINGS STAMPS mutt- "';%%III6I w E. +1 nlccs o" c0. _. LIKE THE PAPER‘ ON THE That's the way our Tobacco many Islanders. Manufactured By i That ls why lt keeps its place in the llsl of best selling Island prodllfifi- HICKEY’S __, WALL’ -,l fits the taste 0f mall?‘ HARLOTTETOWN if’) STRAIGHT _ EVERYWHERE BLACK TWIST IN PRIN .' J IIIOKEY a. lncuolson ISLQVL TOBACCO 00.. LTD., C I