Tilt ~ ivp-tlbfilftl- ' PAGE FOUR TIIE BHARLOTTETOWII lillARlliAll Morning Daily tFonnded In i881) Antho ' as second Clan Mlii. PM! 011100 Department. Ottaw; The Guardian may b6 tlblllllfld l" Hub Tobacco Shop, Moncton, N. It The News Shop. Moncton, N. ls George McLean Pletou, N. B. Walker's white Spot. l1 Salter Si». Halifax, N.$ Metropolitan News Agency, i248 Peel Si». Montreal United Cigar Stores, Chateau Laurie: Ottawa, Ont B. Aitken, Lord l-Jlgln’: liotel. Ottawa. Ont. J. Fine, 354 Bay St.. Toronto Ont. Wolfe's News Stand, Sudbnry. Ont. Old South News. Cor. Milk and Washington Sh. Boston Hotallng’: News Agency Times Building, New York. "The Strongest Memory is Weaker’ Than the Weakest Ink.‘ "rnifitiav, AUGUST 2s. 1m Provincial Liquor Sales ;\u iuttlrtxiug uttestiolt as to tlte per cap- ita salvs of lituuu‘ by Provinces for the last fis- cal vear WH> l'.'ll~‘.'\l tlle other (lily in the Home 0t Lilllllllfillm The llllswpl- given is s0 fledged with ifs untl buts that it is of little practical vnluu. Thu liQl11'L'~, based on sales by the llY"'\-1 ltulllll‘ lllvglrtls or comltlissirllls “and tXilll -. . ' lll- "ll ~ltlC$ tic, by breweries. mo) uhrrr !lt“I1llt'-lu. are stated to be "not com- lwl .. lzgllrv. of liquor (unsumptiun by res]. tlrut. of pl,- ltlrinlts provinces," nor do they itt- chltlc the 111lt~t intcrt-stitlg figures of all, those 0t llrllllfl‘ l‘_~l\\'1ll'(l I<l.'tud under our new Pro- hllut-‘t-u \r: zlluvellnlcllt. llowever, here they tlrc tot" uhitt tlztlv xlrc worth: Soles per Head of _ Population Nova St-otla 530430 New Brllttwvick 2334 Qtn b» 2127 Ontario 2510 Manitoba . 2g 79 Saskatchewan 15,13 Alberta ,, “so British Columbia 3034 _ 1t 1S curious to note that for Quebec, where ltqtlor‘ sales are and have always been freer Fh3"__"1 all)’ Other part of Canada, the per cap- lmv Ilflllre is well below the average. It is Pfilntctl out, however. that: ‘ 1. fills cunsutnption of liquor by tourists 1s Cfill-Klrlilllll‘ and is heavier in some prQy. inccs thzln (tllltfs. 2- The figures for certain provinces, e.g., Nova Scrltizt and British Columbia are inflated bccztttsc of thc accumulation 0f service person- nel m thtt~t~ provinces in i945, 3. The methods of accounting are not uttiiorlu as bctwcett the various provincial liq- 1101' l)O2l['(l.<. 4. 'l‘hcre is considerable variation in meth- ods of stile iu the different provinces. In some DTOYUICCS I110 iilzurcs represent sales to final consumers uulv; in others they represent sales to intcrttlediaries as well. 3- The provincial fiscal years vary, hence the iigttres do not refer to identical periods of tlllll‘. Nov !l1?lt thc lones- Gpvernluctlt is in the liuutlr business ilt a bigger way, should they not revert to the ronlltlissiolt method- of handling szllcs. as is done in other Provinces? Then we lvmlld have a more detailed report for the in- fortltution of the public, and for comparison with other Provinces. I That scents to have been in the mind 0f Mr. .~\_ .\l. Nicholson. .\l. P. for Mackenzie, when he czlllctl the 'l‘rarlc Minister's attention to tlle omission of Prince Edward Island frQm the figures ttlhlctl, and asked why the file had been thus druudcd. “l rtttl sorryg" the hlinister replied, “if there i< 11o figure for Prince Edward Island. I shall chcclt it." .\ll'. Xicllolsoll: “Docs it tueatt that they .do not (“011-‘111116 liquor there?" Ilou. Mr. ilzlckiituott: “I do not think fhrlt is" corrvct. 1m," \\'h.ich iutliczltcs that I\lr. MacKinnott (Wit-ow uifc is an l>lflllflCl') has at least a l1(‘Zl1'>'.'l_\' kuoulctlgc of what is going on down ltcrc. Briiiaii“ Forges Ah—ead 'lilu' s]. ~11 Illlil‘ snlnothlless with which Britzliu has ~uitchc<l over from war to peace production Zll'(.' ltudcrltuctl by the official man- pttuzr -I;lti>tic~ :1 lt*\\' dzlvs ago. 'l'hll~t~ ~t:ui~lit\ slum‘ that within twelve lllltfhlls 11' \'-|-I ltzlv a vcnr in which more pt-tlplt- rllillhj-‘ll lll('il' "iobs than ever before in tlu- cluuu-vk- history-uteri: mctt and women vvcrt- working in industries manufacturing for home tllld t-rtpltrt thnu before the wztr. It". luirI-lojo tht- figure was 5,670,000,’ in June, 1045, _;.<l4l,ooo_ and in June, 1946, 5,941,- 000. Tlllls during those twelve months more than tllrt-c ntillinu people have taken up work in thr-"c lll(lll§ll'l(’$ JllOllt‘. The te-nhsorptiolt of melt and women front the Forces and wnr factories into civilian em- ployment ll-‘IS been carefully linked with the tiatinnal export tlrive-z factories tnauufactur- irlg for overseas lunrkets are now entploying no less than 13,26,000 workers coluparcrl with only 417,000 twelve htonths ago and 990,000 in mirl-t939. In all some 6 1-4 million men and women have, during these past twelve months, been released from the Forces and war factories. The hcrculean task of transferring this vast number to civilian work as well at of re-adiust- ing tnillions of other workers to normal peace- time economy might, with justice, be expect- ed to entail considerable unemployment. Yet during the first. year. the number of register- ed unemployed-including those temporarily out of work while changing their occupations — Md by June risen by only 273.000. The ela- tiitieo for Iune to July are still more favour- ? ‘fy show a decline in unemployment ' , time": lppticiable ml since ‘an mm’: m: vat... mum. dill welt we» the arid-mg fleoro, has fallen by 1,337,000 since June, 1945. This decline is due to a considerable extent to the exodus of married women frolu factory work and to the retirement of large numbers of old- er men who would normally have left industry during the course of the years 1939 to i045. There is a large reserve, however. which will help appreciably to bridge the gap: The 760,- 000 ex-merubers 0f the Forces who are still on paid leave. The man-power shortage during the first months 0f peace has hccu one of the main handicaps to British industrial rccouversiou. Today this problem is well on the way to a final solution. Moreover the method by which it has been handled, the skilful adiustmeut of new labour resources to prior industrial ll(‘(‘(lt-'. has ensured that Ilritzlin. in its ticzlce-tilllc pro- dtictiotl d-rivvs, is rvrlpiltg the greatest bent-fit front its grczttcst asset, its maul zltld wuulzlu power. _ EDITORIAL NOTES —. . The draft dodgers go free, but 8,749 per- sons were convicted during the 1945-46 fiscal year of failing to purchase a radio license. l! It! * I! The United States Congressional Conl- missiorl visited here this tlzlte INNS to iuv<‘~ti- gate and report 0n the relzlliolts existing be- tween us. lltlltlk! In prc-lvrlr day's, \'L‘.~"l(‘l'(lii\' mtultl havc been the last shopkeepers‘ lullf-llt-litlzly for the year. Now the stores can close practically one (lav all the year round, and sometimes two, which was the case this week and will be again next when lflltfillt‘ llzw is (‘t’l(‘ltl'Ill(‘(l. t- v lit It Saskatchewan is slipping in its butter pro- dtlction. For the first seven ntontlts of 1946 a total of 23,530,847 [wounds of butter were utztnufztctttrcrl as coulparcd with JfJ,O(),l_()_’l for the saute period of I945, a decrease of 2,- 528,074 pounds, 0r 9.6 per cent for the cur- rent year. !!!! Veterans llfinistcr Ian MacKettzie. is off on a jaunt to Europe. Soon every portfolio holder will have visited IXJHdOn and the voti- tinent at the taxpayers‘ expense, and to what good? Evidently they expect it will be the last chance they will have of gallivaltting abroad as Government representatives, and are making the most of it. \\'ho will be their successors, Progressive Conservatives or’ C. C, Ffs? l‘ ll‘ In Saskatchewan the Public Health De- partment has assumed a diametrically opposite policy on polio to that being followed by Pre- mier Jones, who never even consulted the Board of Health. We direct attention to Director Henry S. Doyle's supposedly atlthoritativc pro- nouncement printed on this page. 1k l? l! * The following are the causes 0f death here in the last quarter of 1945: Diphtheria 2. tuberculosis 9. influenza 7, cancer 29, intra- crzlnial 19, heart disease 56. diseases of the arteries 4. pneumonia S. diarrhoea 8. nephritis 18, puerperal I, suicide 2, motor zlccitlctits 3, other accidents 1t, other specified cruises 52, ill-defined 4. It!!! Tax agitation ntay scctn to have dicd down for the moment, but it is otllv sleeping. It will continue, and become more violent, until the next Budget, which will l1li(|ll85llOll3.l)lY protu- ise drastic tax reductions in I948, says a Tor- onto contemporaryz >i< it‘ It! \Ve are having a succession 0f impottztut visitors. Field ilarsltal Lord Montgontcryt is to he followed next month by Field Marshal Lord Alexander, (ioveruor-Ceuernl. and I.:tdv .\lex- andcr; while in October \\'orld Chief Scout. Lord Rowallatl and .\lr. .\. \\’. Iluril, General Secretary of the Boy Scotus .‘\S.<()Cl.'1llt'l1l, Lon- don, will honour us with a visit. The more the merrier. 41 i! i it United Kiugdonfs luost fzullolls pcrfllult’. lavender-As now bring gathered ill the chief growing centre, Norfolk East liuultlurl. The hrlr- vest is exceptionally good and the illdustrv ex- pects to produce a vcrv good tpulutitv of its high quality fragrant oil. The hulk of theiscasotfs perfume is scheduled for export to trrriloritx- where "Old English Lavender" still holds all unrivalled reputation. Perfumery exports from the United Kingdom have shown Ill! cxrcctl- iugly rapid rise ill the l.'l.~t vczlr. Tllfll‘ Vltlllt‘ for the first six nlouihs of wit» \\','l\' {llgnorl comparctl with only £4,000 for thc corrcspontl- ing period of r945. ll‘ ! 1i! Of Edmund Hoyle. celebrated writer of treatises on games of chance, iucltlrliilg zlmoug nthcrs whist, piquet, rplntlrillt‘. and llztckgtttll- mon, and whose natue is so fnutilirlr ns to bc immortalized in the well-known provcrl) “Ac- cording to Hoyle", little ltlorc is kilown than that he appears to have been horn in 167:. and (lied in Cavendish Square, Loudmi, this date I769, at the advanced age of uincty-sevcti. lll the Gctlllcltfanlr Illagrtsiltc of December 1742, is found among the list of prO-tltntious “Ed- mund Hoyle" Ifisq" nladc hy the I’rilii:\te.-'of Ireland, register of the Prerogative Court, there worth £600 per annunt. From attotlter source, it is learned that hewas a barrister by profession. His treatise otl Whist, for which he received from the publisher the sum of £1,000, was first published in 1743, and at- tained such a popularity that it ran throttgh five editions in a year, besides being extens- ively pirated. He has even been called the in- ventor of the game of Whist, but this is cer- tainly a mistake, though there can be no doubt that it was indebted to him for being first treated of, and introduced to the public in a scientific manner. It first began to be popu- lar in England about 1730, when it was par- ticularly studied by a party of gentlemen. who used to assentble in the Crown Coffee House, in Redford Row. Hoyle is said to have given inltmctlons in the game, for which his charge was a guinea s lesson. Now Bridge has to a augment magma .. . THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Notes By The Wu.) That new ‘foolproof’ voting ntachine just brought out tr. tut: States is promblv unconstitutional. After all, fools have a right ‘o vote as well as anyone else. —Edrrlonto1i Journal, , Probably no mechanical device, says Colliers, operates on as little energy as a lady's small wris watch which requires, [or example only about 1-35,000.000'.h as much power as n 25-watt e1 ' 1c light bulb. “About 2,000 years ago in a Ro- man market olre on. a piluir which is still ‘n existence, the fol- lowing advertisement was writ- ten: ‘The Glurlintols will lttxht at. troun; thCIT- wit! m? awnings "tgalnst the slut‘. Advertising is a "ftry old craft" comments J. R. M. Brunt- well. talking ‘n the BBC Overseas Service on Art and Advertising. "Remember that you are an actor in a dranln t»! 5'16‘; sort as the Author chooses. l. short, tilt-n ln a short one; if zol-r. then 1n a long one. If it be His otasure that you act a pbor man, see that you act. it well; or 'a cripple or a ruler. or a privute citizen. For this s your IMFlIICSS to no‘. well the given part; but to choose it, belongs to tn- othcr." -Epictell:< It is absurd to picture Mr Bevin as the enemy of Moscow. He de- fended the Russian ffVOlllilt/‘l when it had few friends tn Engitn-l. He liar. offered to extend l".lltttln’s trcnty of friendship will: Russia from its present term of t,\\'el\t_\' years to fifty yours. Co-pperation he welcomes; out. domination he vrill stubbornly resist. —Wlnnlpt=g Free Press. Baltimore fans, rspceially- those with u pCllCllllfll. for umpire lteclcl- lng. will be interested. The Balti: more Sun believes in the repor. that there ls not. otiy no booing of umpires tn Japan tlhe napln- use word for umpire menus ‘divine being" or "supreme authority ‘t but that. teach player. as he entcrs the batters box, lif's his cap aria qbows politely tn the umpires direct- ion. The prnmptltude of Yugoslavirfs compllnme with the demands of the American ultimatum is prulfllllttlly slgfiilficnltt. It indie-ates pretty clearly that when the civilized de- mocracies show they mean‘ bus- lness, Eltrolpefis SuVlCt blaclrmailers stand ready to throw in ll‘l(‘lt‘ hands. The point is ntnrth noting for fut- ure reference. Buglades conceiv- lon of diplomtzcya likc Mnscrwvis. ls th-at. it ls a gime 01 intertiatlonsl poker. The idea is not l-ew. It originated in the late Adolf Hitler's reptilian corsclottsness. — Sydney Post-Record. . Chubby girls are preferred as hostesses at veterans‘ ttrspilals because. as has been detérmined sclntifically, their friendly person- allties and even-tempered dis- positions do the most gooc to ‘J1 GIs. It should be added tlnt they do not do any actual harm to an;- bcdy: Slenclvl- Pris can be svelc. They can be sinuous. Tllcy can be slinky. A number wru tan- talizes the scales at 100 to 11D pounds ls all rlght lo look at In fashion shows or pass the time of clay with. But, they can never bc as cute. as curvcftll or as cuddly as chubby girls. There at around 140 to 150 on 1.19 scales will be found the sort of fe-tnlnint: com- panion to sit down and drunk beer wllih, and discuss the 11115127191“? affairs of life. Gentcmen sorttetlmcr. (s11 for‘ the slenrlcr type, tt 1:. lt-tc. But can anyone (tervv that it is thc chubby beauty alw-y re-lllv plump for? L-St, Louis Post-Dispatch. To the ehitld. minor disappoint- ments, injuries and fears assume proportions far greater trlrm tllr same disturbing factors l1 lax-r life. Rain on the day of a plat- rled picnic, which ls shruztlcd r11 philosophically ll" t1 man tn \vt-- man, brings ho-rtbreak to the young The fem‘ uf punishment {or n petty tnlsdentcanor wnl acute slaierlrng. fzct, seldom a .1lns mot than When \\'f‘ (l0 not il-SRUHIL‘ flit-rent t‘ll: is. ll‘ Childhood happy time. It N.‘ lts share of 7'1‘1cl -u:l PM“ W8 grow ill}. heavier t: \'-l1“l\-<. 0111.1’ ones. and we are, througl- expcricltcr of vcnrs. both»? to b:ar th/sm. 1f we are c ollsly truthful ‘\".'ll ctltijiflwfi of us would ;;': oaclr to tunrr vents, pvt-n if w‘ (Willi. Wtxusnr Stwr. At the 1m 7G»... that .-r tall. there were .l\‘f\i" _ million Cantil- mm gggagm wt ngrlculttzrl: wot». or 31.7 per csit t1 1h." 1011.1 cattl- ruuy occupied lx-mlplr c1 lhc Don:- tnicv. lviantlftt-mullntl "n" ~"" second llifilvw". lzrrul) Will) 95mm or 16.7 per cont, this group ncltrl- irg bakcrs. tallox. ‘- m- "hltll-‘S _ m a Wll."lllfl"- .-‘, Plum ctvW-r S, gtzfctlsictil‘ fwd Tprgonnl with about it) pc- c2111.: construction. ""1 ' rat "b? ""1 transportation felon-ed. .vl.h llsll u“; ty-Mypinll, drtlylng and tuning having about six pct cent. rnmbzst- or‘. Altltouqh we ttrnd h» hm‘- cltyward. the. dZFiCUlflNJBl llflfiiilji- ton is still the blgrzcst slnqltt ITOUIT I,( they are fro often left out the political picllire ll ls well to look back to the t"_4_\'S after . se flzst world war. ~Hnmlll0n Spfihwl‘ The House J‘"1;.;}s. dates from the rclzn of nztvrlrri III. 6W YER" “gm and from mat day to this 1t has been entirely wmposed of Cou- servatlves, or ionlnatcd by them. says The St. Thomas Times-Joni‘; ml. n has sigma-n reforms ot s1- klnds. especlaby in regard to land tenure, defeatlnw or destrovmz the effectiveness at any letliSifltl-tft that proposd to curtail the privil- eges o1 propel-fled or moneyed l1.- terests. 1n modern times thl- Emil" est clash came Ln 1910. lvrfir» "It Liberal Government was llflttllfif; for Land and other social reforms Mr, Asquith u believed to rave re- ceived the assent of King George V to create hundreds of Liberal peers to outvote the ollno-t eon. phalanx of Tories. However. .t com- promise was arrived at b)‘ which the gm,“ o1 mists had nothing to do with money bills, and .f any other but w“ rejected twice rty the lords in two years, the bill auto- mntloally became law whet; DIMH‘ by the Commons a third Am!» We were Interested to read n letter written w an 1411mm" "$1!- or to The Ottawa Journal tween-Y. l“ on l matter cl table nnip m: manners. We nova always hlm Ilwqt aim-wk n» which the writer took lane with 11; The Bells Of St. Mary's (Cflmihi Events) The film, The Bell: of Bf, Mary's, 1n which Bing Crosby and Ingrid Bersmfln B99981‘. and which lS now being shown ln Great Britain. has brought back to popularity the sp-ng whlch has given title to the film. The Rev. Cancel R. P. Jolly, Rec- tor of Klddermlnster, England re- calls that when he was Rector or St‘. Mary's Church, Southampton, the composer visited hlm and stated that when he wrote the song he had St. Mary's, South- ampton, in mind, the reason being that they were the last. bells he heard when he left England for America. and they seemed to him to be typical of all bells. He also felt something interesting in the very name of St. Mary's, It. ls believed that in A, D. 495, the Saxons made their first land- ing in Britain and established their first settlement l-n the neigh- borhood of the site of 5t. Mary's Church. The first church was bully during the 11th century. In the 16th century the complete edifice was pullcti down because l; formed a target for the French boats still- ing up the ri-ver. The Church. mother Church of Southampton, was rebuilt ln 1711 and this struc- ture was pulled down 160 years later to make way for a modern edifice in Early Ingllsh style with notably fine windows and as. al- abaster rcredos. which was dedi- cated to the memory of Bishop Samuel Wilberforce, and complet- ed in 1884. The peat of ten bells was added by the generosity of Mary Win- grc-ve nnd Baron Bell. During the Nazi air raids on Southampton, n shower of incen- diary bombs was scattered on the Church. Owing to the large ox- tont of the roof, it was impossible to prevent fires establishing a hold, and the Church was com- pletely gutted. Tho tower in which the bells were fixed did not collapse but the fire damaged the bells. These were removed and are now being recast ready to be fitted in the new Church of St. Mary which is plan- ned for the reconstructed South- umpton. Polio Alarm- Unwa rranted By Henry S. Doyle Director c-f Communicable Diseases, Publlr Health, Saskatchewan ,There ls probably no disease which so alarms the parents as pollomyelltls. I should like to Pn- fr-rm these parents that polio need not he feared as much as we think. There ls no immediate cause for alarm. In 1937, our worst infantile par- alysi-s year on record, there were actually more cases and deaths from whooping cough than from polio. This outbreak causedgreat alarm because parents feared their children would be attacker! by this disease and left. crippled. They dld not stop to calculate what the chances were of their children hei-ng infected and de- veloping paralysis. I Five hundred and twelve cases occurring in a population of 939,- 000 leaves a very slim chance for any one person to be involved. Then one must think in this way: of 512 crises, how many had por- manent disabilities? Approximately 50 pot" cent of accurately diagnos- ed crises will have some residual weakness. temporary or perman- ent, Of the 50 per cent that stiffer Weakness, there will be ccily a few who suffer serious crippling. If we take this rational view- point of the disease. I am sure that r-ztrcnfswill realize that polit- is not nearly as fearsome a disease as they think. The nublic’s fear of polio and lts relative unconcern about whoclping cough are inccmsislt-m. In that same year, 1937, when fear and panic were in the hearts of parents. when there was much ltewspaper‘ publicity and we hntl 22 (lentils frompollo,whonplng cottnh caused 4'7 deaths out 01' 904 report- r-d cases. New. I am sure that tiarcnts do not fear whonpw-iq cnugh as much as they fear in- fantiln paralysis. Let's tnlr» rational viewpoint. Tho chant-cs of your child developing polio c-r httv- ing any paralysis are sli-m. Th» l'lll\l‘ll'f‘5 of your child lltlvlllfl whooping cottrzll are much gzetltcr. We rnn prevrrtt whoa-ping coltgh. So lllt us tnkt- advantage of this ])l"‘\’t‘illtlllVI‘ nnd have our hahics Inviunlzcrl ngni-nst ll. Polio causes n grunt disltlrbltvicc in tho community. lult lts hark is worse than its lute. N01 so with whoop-nit rough. Whooping couch is always with us. working slflillllt- ilv "ltd s‘"'-.tlily 1n carry off our vhildrrrl. This wt~ t-nn Pl‘(‘\’l‘I‘ll ‘w ‘lavlus: our children inocnlmqd_ Parents who have‘ not tlnnv: ~11) """l htlvrfllwu- Ithj-lrlrcn prutet-i- crl at once. The dunner ‘lmn is \v'"‘n chllrlrrn are under two ymrs I129. an elaborate till Wllh thcf knives and forks which left them. 1v 1_ -, (“M118 H mess of ennppcd ‘(rill with n fork u: <1 'n tho l‘l'f"‘ l,-_gy_l_ 'l“ncrc zs nothing \‘.'l‘0l‘.’_{ w. l this: meted. particularly. it just seems awkward and rather chlldilz, om Expects to see rt "pusher" zlsed to shove the food on the folk In 0 ' innocent way, we hflvg - 1110118111 "m! 891T! table ‘ftllf-‘l s wt r-e those which were unmtrltstvc nnd Bflve no offence to others. Blowing on food. or gobbling fond 110L511)’. or chasing it. about the plate, or eating with the fingers what could. well be eaten tlom a fork. are obvious soleclsnlz, and polite people ovoid them. 3w, otherwise. what difference aces it make how a mat-l eats. so rmg n: he gets his food into his moutt and down his throat without. tnaldng a mess. or spoiling Qomeou» 9184-5; lmItit-Q? To perform small-arms drill, or slnglesllclr mar-oeuvres. with the knife and foe-k, is wasted effort. We think that the man who contradicts llnllv Post. ls nght, ._ Peter-borough Examiner. It wfl meld of Wllilnn Worde- worlh that ne not the best or n‘; critics simply by outlivlng them. At the age of 90, George Bernard Show seem: to be well ln tine for the some Achievement. l-it- finds that people are softening up to- ward hlm, even to the extent of war-ting to semi-ate his birthdays with a lot of Hullabaloo. wlrcn is hard on llr. Shaw he admits. It does sewn that when e num has reached l0 the celebrations should be eased w, although they m be portly the work of tanner c till- u- ho I law, Mr. slaw '3. Q" l h! that Conditions In The brilisn Zone in Germany The review of conditions in t!!! British Zone of Germany stvenlg London recently by MP- HY" - Cllttttcclltlt‘ of the DUChY 0i P1113?!‘ ter and the Minister r€5P°n5lb e, Q‘ the administration of the Brltleh Zone illuminates the ltrvgrwlve nleasiires helm; taken bi’ ‘the Brit’ ish authorities. Mr.‘ Hinds 5mm‘ “mu glVCS ground for the hope unit the tide of economic distnss which rcacticd n 10W 95b m5‘ Spring has at last definitely turned. Altglo-Amcrlcun cooperation talc- 111g prlittlflil shape in the economic fusion of the British and American Zoncs ls the key which Opens "it door to intproved conditions of llv- m" nnd production. Joint planning ital already reaohcd an advanced stage. full use being made of expert ' r advice. Girlnilenrtlrend of British nnd U- 5- A- policy is more and. more to entrust. um management of economic mat- ters to the Germans. A German administratiotl for food and agri- culture is being set up. and this will be followed by German fldnlln- istrattolts for trade. iflduilfv and communications. The German ad- mlltistrttttons will of course 0119"“? under Allied supervision. Tvro crucial problems remain, food and coal. VHllCh react 0n 0H8 another in an interminable circle oi cause and effect. As regards food, the March low level sulndnrd of 1060 calories dolly was raised last month to 11.57 cal- orlzs, and since 19th Augl-lfil- i185 bctn further increased by another 200 cttlories daily for town dwell- c-s. 'l'.‘.louglt stocks are nearetj ex- haustion than ever, the British authorities are resolved’ that the food position must continue to be improved at whatever risk stocks. ln collaboration with the 1L3. A . it ls hoped _t0 raise the standard lo 1.550 calories, and it l5 proposed to institute joint levcls of rutiotis in the BrttLslh and Ameri- can Zones, The question of the level of pro- duction of coal and lts distribution between export. twtably to France, nnd home consumption is at pres- ent under discussion by the ltour Power Commission in Berlin. 1t. ls essential to increase production and to that end miners rations have been lncr 3060 calories. Whatever the Four Power Commie- sion rircides, the present export. level of cnal of just under 1.000.000 tons tnonthly will be maintained ln September. Additional manpower for the mines is betni; recruited at a rate of 1500 month y, but this ls offset by losses due to sickness and desertlons. More food and better living conditions hold the real clue to Increased production in the mines. Mr. l-Ivnd also emphasised the United Kingdom Government's de- cision to exonerate from responsi- bllity fnr Nazi crimes all Gcmtana under 30 years of age unless they are shown to be guilty of specific offenses. This generous gesture. Mr. Ilynd said, had been approved un- arumously’ by nll anti-Nazi Ger- mans whose opinion had been con- salted. It was outside tthe scope of Mr. Hyncfs statement yesterday b0 deal with the United Kingdom Govern- ment's ideas rottcernittg the future political structure of Germany. 'l‘hcse ideas have been officially ln- dicntcd in their main lines. They are based on the Potsdam principle of laolltlcrtl decentralization and the U S A Government's proposal for Four Power supervision of Ger- man disarmament for 40 years. The United Kingdom Government envisages Germany as divided into a number of autonomous states bound together for certain common economic functions on the federal principle. In such n German fed- eration Prussia would disappear rts a statt. but the Rhlnglllnd would be included. The United Kingdom Government is opposed to the Frettch plan of political separation of the lthineland and the Ruhr from the Reich as likely to create the most ill-tense German irred- Pnllsnl- l0 SKY nothing of tlhe dif- fcrcnccs which would almost. cer. tainlv arise between the Allies re- sponlble for the government of those areas. On the other hand. the United Kingdom Government stands firm by its opinion that the lPdUSiflPS of the Rhlnelrind and the Ruhr should be placed under International control. A? f... i PRAYER 611w: FOR HEROIMS Greet these our sons, 0 Gm wuh gracious act W710 ml-‘lilltfl from our homes this lonely cvp will "f Th)’ Elite. ask not rm earthy pa . W110 serves ‘HS fellow-men, let Heaven :-~tr!eve_ Theirs ls a solemn pledge to Christ- endom , Given unheard, unseen, in crimson stain. Hottl rvel-y tolvr. and lonuu. 5p“ they oomc, ' 'I'hls martrrflrl czvalcade, tot frec- dom slain. Th@1trh1dltti' done. their al-z-‘nv 1s s. To guard eternally. triumphant D0860 With hero fathers nfthc last abyss Who had died aimlessly, that war should cease. They are so young to die, and Hlzht 1s long‘; Gtlve them new vistas; dawns aware. it? BEW Give them Fiollan harps, bird-eons in spring And fragrance o! nloes ln the summer nlr. ——Wl!llam D. DeCoste. Cam-p Borden. Ontario (formerly of Charlottetown) DriVC oul ACH ES i llnelmoll 1 We carry a complete line of Trusses. All sizes. H's the Most Exriting Make-up In Years . . . 'k...tl1e screen star secret that beautifies instantly. " Originated by /%x ac/or HOLLYWOOD Mail Orders Given Prompt Tel. 589 PUBI IC STENUGRAPHER ml-IWKPKPNBI curds and clrculg bkovvO-OQ-O-O-OQ-vo-vvoovqqq, Attention Chartered Accountants z l8 Grafton Strut. Charlottetown Phone 2000 Bo: Ill L ’ ' ‘ W. ll ' c-L AUGUST 29. 1946 maul 3m ll. J. MABUN‘ orrone-rnts-r "flint m! 5élalllyilll Giana Mont-rue. r. n. t. 1mm llonrl l0 u, l: A 2 to o r. M_ " “i "lllllllll em. hv appoingmu" Office Connected “tub ‘ DRUGSTORE m Profess NEIL w. uteri? Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond SL Charlottetown P.(). Box u; correspondence. typing m‘ bookkeeping. MISS HELEN GIDDEN ‘telephone 1020 Evenings lB90-J. P. 0. Bo: 452. I08 Queen Streq lllorrell and liompaltyl Chartered Accountants a Charlottetown i '90 Li" H. R. DOANE & CO. Bantu-n Trust Bniidln, British Austerity Pays Dividends 1n these weeks before the gath- mng or ms new harvest. Britain‘: food situation reach” I h . strdilrcaalfo? lnfsig end of Auillsl Y)?‘ b? mm; 2 million tnns below e 5.4 million tons of July ‘m: Yaffii At the same time. 3f "n, t only have about 8 weeks "av-DD Y l}, wheat and flour in the Plimme - l5 the direct result of the fact that up to last June Brita; had sent. from stockror tlmlglmz ies n from ‘nmmhbli ifdloifipstuffs to Con- l mllllotréltins pe tlnen “T0 ~ simultaneously Brltnltn ‘h’: taken drastic steps durln! worm year to reduce démflflds °“ food stocks. The wheat flour ‘ex: traction rate was raised Pmill" slvely from 80 per cent t0 Bodpeg “m, the weight of the standar- loef was cut. l-S. blscnlt P"? "c tlon and the allocation of lug" and fats for cake-making were both cut by r4. heer- vrvdwrhv" was reduced by 15 P" “em Pnd finally on July 21st. bread Talia"; lng was introduced for the rs time in Britain. At the same time n nation-wide publicity camp!!!“ has been run to encournie H"; maximum economy hi the “$9 0 bread and flour. Flour Consumption Cut it)! o!" Thifd O The result of bread rationing and other measures has been un- expectedly good. Mr. Strachey. "13 Food Minister, recently anrl that In three weeks Britain has saved 100,000 tons of flour-slight- ly more than the nverale will consumption for one week in fig first half of fhlsyear. This. sa Mr. Strschey. revrewflfl ll" enormous effort and HHCTPTW" whlch the people of this country have made at. a crltlcnl PM!" l" the interest o! fighting world famine." But Mr. Strachey warned that though Britain's bread ttuPPlY h" thus been assured for the ofltlcal period lo come, saving on a sim- liar scale cannot he expected to 110 on. There are, ln fBCi. 59V???" mo‘ tors that mlnde the savltttl 1n "l! three weeks from July 21st excel!" tlonally large. For one thin! 3'1‘ tom's housewives had bean fare- wnrned of bread rationing and s0 "stocked up" from the flour sir:- plies available 1n the shops. In the first three weeks of July the weekly flour consumption WAS actually 9,000 tons above the liver- age of 104.000 for the first. half of the year. When domestic stocks are exhausted consumption will nat- urally rise again. Furthermore, impressed by the Government's anti-waste enm- palgn, housewives have been un- duly sparing in the use of bread and flour. Hence there has been e small surplus of bread coupons- estlrnnted at unnverafle 0! 1 l‘. per person out of the 38 available i flour and cakes. Again it mun be remembered that the tendency ls to eat less during the hotter mid- summer Welt-Mt- Thus the flgurer announced by Mr. Btrechey represent the nic- eels of the temporary measure! to meet the immediate food crisll but not the permanent possibility of any further reduction the United Kingdom‘: cereal lmportl. __------- MIDDLIBBOROUGH. Ireland — (OP) — Work hll ltarted on inv- lal Chemical industrtez‘ 810.- .000 ($40,000,000) ohelnleal fec- tqry gchqm et nearby Wilflm. For Foot Aliment: cannon B. J. A. nnowlv. 0.? Orthopedic would Pmtllblt my bit-tn- .o o m the no d I. It» , OQ-O-O§O-O-O-O'O-Q+O-O-§+Q+§-§Q'§§Q B. D. L MATIIIESON. LLJL. K-Us’ Ihlllipo Building. Phone 1048 emmsren. sonrcrrotz. Hm Money to Loan ‘lnnldlan ltank nf Commem- Bldl GA UDFII‘ ('3 HASZARD Bnrrtlten. Solicitors. Notarlt! m‘ ulLBEIlT A. 141101151‘. B.A.. 1.1.3 A. WALTIIEN GAUDET n Unlallo in (our weeks. Although the suv- M 1 on can be exchanged -‘ r..."“{.'.ft.¥..§l "- W- l- "ll-ll" foo atu s rang g r0 ‘ to canned meet. there lx no ex- Chllliiiflum’ lra supply b! point!’ sol-d! Ivlll- Palmer anal-m l.“ l: ‘l.."."li.°"z.“tf.° vl-lttm" t ous wvea » in: all their coupon: for bread: N! Prince 8t. PM" W‘ n. r. MePHEE. on. K-C e-oooooooooooi McLeod & Bentley 3 W. l. BENTLEY. K-O. I. A. BENTLEY. K-Q Barfnten nnd Attornoynl [Aw l“ Prince Street 1 Charles R. McQuald BA Barrister. Soiioltw. Notary. Etc. lantern Trust Bnlidinl. Charlottetown Phone i711 O-OQ-O-O-QQ-OQ-OO-O-GOQQ-Ofi-O-OOOO BELL & MATHIESON Barristers, Solioltorn, Ao- R. BELL, M.L.A-. Attorneys-nt-Law CITY AND FARM 150 Richmond Si‘ Charlottetown. P.E.I. EREDERIC A. LARGE BARBJSTBB. BTU. ll! Grafton it. P. 0 Bo! MI CHARIDTTETOWN. EL DR. A. R. SMlTl-l DENTIST I'll Grafton Street orrtunomrsmtz-aul. Teldphono 22M. ALEX W. .MATHIESON Street Office: 90 Great Georlannewm .1. A McGUIGAN. B-A NOTARY. ETC. BABRIBTER, sontcrroB CURRIE BUILDING M. Al.t'AN FARMER ILA» LLB. MONEY TO LOAN BARRISTEIL SULIOITOR ET“ CHARLOTTETOWN MONEY 1'0 LOAN n Blnlt of Commerce tilde Chnriottotown. P IL I . PALMER 8: l-lASLAM A. J. BASLAM. BA. LLJ meats-rm IT"- Bank t»: Nova swu- cit-mm, Clurtottetflflll. P. E- l- MONCI 'l‘0 LOAN v.0. Bo! it Noun. e10- QAnnIs-rln. aoucnol . Building ctmlozuwfl EYES EXAMINED J tum _ GLASSES FITTED ‘. Jo l. T8119’ ‘amount-ulst- °""‘°.'.'.9.“..'?.' "ms-lts... ’ , amnion. en (A ”"" ‘L