imcnloyg ‘I'll! GIIIIJTTETOWII GIIIIDIIII Inning Dolly (Founded in ilfll was: Llcut. Col. W. Chute: S. ileLIn smurf u t. chi‘: iunluiiiiinz-JJDB- I GI , r Ilia: and D Alociah n. o. sf.';%...i“tlfll.i' .2. “l‘.i';‘.°£"i.';'l Iurueti. B-QNJZE (On Active llcrvicol ‘I'M Strongest Memory is Wanker Tim 8M Weakest Ink.‘ runspav auovsr 1. 1m Faulty Comparisons i lots of amateur strategists are contrdsting he speed of the Russian offensive in the east with the slow progress of ours in the west. Any such comparison, says‘ a London corresponde t, betrays complete ignorance of vital facts. Whbn it comes to hustle, nothing in this war yet c0 - pares with the 8th Army-‘s long and astonisi- ingly rapid desert campaign. But the circurh- stances both in Italy and Normandy are entire- ly different. The Russians. by the very extent of theii‘ front, have ample llllilltlL‘\l\‘l'C room, and can compel the (icruuius to thin out their defencrl lines, so that weal," spots are bound to occur. Sd far in Normandy we have had neither elbow) room, nor, until quite recently, adequate troops to exploit it if we had. The fighting front is still narrow enough to enable the forces available to Itommcl in hold it in strength. Until we have built up superior strength, both in men ind equipment, and obtained room to deploy them Q1 make the enemy thin otit, our oppor- tunity for a quick- offensive advance will not Iccur. The terrain over which the Red Armies ue now stream/lug is ideal for such operations. Neither in Noruitintly nor Italy have we an easy country to fight through. But the arm- chair critics had bcttt-r reserve judgment until "I\Iont_\"' gives the signal for zero hour. He likes to make sure before acting, but, when he in ready, he wastes no time. Clergymen In Politics Discussing the retirement of an Anglican clergyman from the New Brunswick provin- cial election contest at the behest of his Bishop, who has taken the stand the clergymen of his diocese cannot become candidates for political office while continuing to serve as priests of the church, the Windsor Star says: "A grave principle ls involved here. Tho Bishop appears to be taking the attitude that. there ls something shameful or degrading about politics. There should not. be. In fact, lt is the business oi Government, and thus should be n most honorable calling. But. when organ- -lud religion officially takes the stand that such activity is incompatible with Christianity, there is little wonder that politics falls into un- deserved disrepute. Many izwd and respect- able men will hesitate to offer themselves as candidates, when they know the church has labeled such action unworthy." The Moncton Transcript, in a more in- formed judgment, suggests that the Qritario paper has misinterpretctl the Bishop entirely. There was nothing in his statement to indicate n belief that political activity is incompatible with Christianity. But there is 1 great differ- ence between the position of a layman and that of n clergyman whose life has been dedicated to the spiritual guidance of those entrusted to his care. It is unbecoming to say the least for n clergyman to use the place which he holds in the confidence of the peoplfi. f0 560k to influence them in their choice between poli- tiesl parties. Accidents On The Farm According to an exchange, the ratio of preventable accidents in agriculture is higher than in any other industry. Many hundreds of farmers, members of their families and work- ers on farms are killed and many thousands in- jured every year in Canada as the result 0f ac- cidents, most of which could have been prevent- t ed With the farm labor shortage just now so ncute and when all our production of food is so essential to the ivar effort. the accident toll is particularly serious. _ ' A survey has disclosed that machinery is the chief source of farm work accidents; that live stock rims a close second and that falls lre in third place. The wise farmer is ‘he who learning the cause of accidents on his farm takes steps t0 eliminate such causes and all pos- sible hazards. Iior example, the fact that 10050 clothing causes one-third of all farm accidents Evolving machinery should make anyone avoid Australian Referendum Australia, a Federal union like Canada, is grappling now with the same conflict betweflfl Federal and State authority which has long been under way in Canada. Where Canada has sought to end this conflict by some such‘ formula ns the Rowell-Sirois Report. Australia is in the process of asking the electors to vote directly on changes in its constitution. The referendum is to bc held on August it). The Labour Gov- ernment led by Prime Minister John Ciirtin is “king the people to m-apt the Comiiitmivealth, for n probationary period of five years after the war, fourtccn additional constitutional pow- ers, which it declares essential to enable the Government to reorganize Australia for peace. These powers are supplemented by three con- ltitutional guarantees, and are submitted in one question, with the result that the electors must accept or reject the lot. _ _ Power is sought tn effect the repatriation of servicemen and to deal with employment and unemployment; organized marketing of com- modities: companies. through a uniform com- pany law, trusts, combines and monopolies; profiteering and prices; production and distri- bminn of goods; nvt-rst-zis exchange; invest- meat and borrowing: air transport, uniform- ity of railway gauges. family allmvanccs and the welfare of the Australian aborigines, C The Commonwealth Government by’ this referendum is appealing to the people for pow- ers which a majority of the states have ready refused to surrender. Its case is that to avoid widespread unemployment, inflation and profiteering after the war — in short the com- plete collapse of the national economy -—- nat- ional planning is essential and that this involves a continuance of wartime controls. The Government has appended three consti- tutional guarantees: abridging freedom of speech and expression; second, guaranteeing freedom of religion und- er state laws as presently wealth law; third, ensuring that regulations pro- mulgated under Commonwealth law shall be submitted to the scrutiny of parliament. The beginning of Week. Still no.definite word of who is to be the new Senator and the new Lieutenant-Governor. I It looks like an early election all right, with all these "hand-outs" in prospect for the ex- pectant electorate. m Hope the repaired Car Ferry will be ready for the middle of the month, and that subsidiary first, forbidding under EDITORIAL NOTES _ iiifi 1 iii provision has also been arranged ‘for. Patriarchal Incitmbent Alexei has presented his summer residence with all its furnishings for the use of orphaned children of Red Army The large two-story house stands in a fine park in a piiturfsqiie Ixningrad suburb. men. The Battle of the Nile this date I798; bc- tween the British and the French fleets in the Bay of Aboukir; hearing of the Iirench ap- pearance at Malta, to be their secret Alexandria before That Prime Minister Churchill easily forget or forgive is illustrated in his relations with the City of Dundee represented in Parliament from I908 to 1922. In that year it turned him down for a Prohibi- tionist Independent, and he was elected years later by the Epping Division of Essex. Recently Dundee sought to confer Prime Minister the freedom of their city, an honour he graciously declined to accept.- Il III i 1U The Pontiff in Rome is kept busy these days with Allied visitors. livery day there have been between 2,000 and 5,000 in his audience. He greets them either in the Hall of the Throne or in the Hall of Benediction which is the larg- The supply of rosaries long since gave out and so did medals with the Pope's profile. Now the Papal chamberlain distributes small leaflets with Pius’ picture. Many soldiers take their own rosarics to be blessed. favorable comment has been aroused by generosity of the troops in giving alms. Dur- ing last Sunday's services at St. Peter's for instance, about 100,000 lire was collected which is something never known before. s- w u n est in the Vatican. Four years ago, when~Britain was faced with the might of the Luftwaffe, and the most urgent measures to meet it seemed prudent, Britain's leaders calmly sat down and planned a scheme for building a massive air armada which could not begin to produce results under Thus began the Empire Air Training , Scheme, which has poured out many thousands ' of highly skilled pilots, observers, wireless sir- gunners, and airgunners, and which has so far cost Australia $515,000,000. To mark the fourth anniversary of the beginning of the scheme, Mr. Drakeford, Air Minister, gave a striking sur- vey of the achievements of the Australian air- He revealed that more a year. men it has produced. lian Excitement is rising in the Quebec election. putting the contests in Alberta and New Bruns- wick in the shade. To us here it is difficult to identify or understand the points of view of the various elements in the ferment, but one thing all are agreed upon with one exception-Premier King is another man, and Premier Godboiit is his prophet. point is the charge that the Prime Minister is an imperialist. Saurive, Bloc Populaire candidate for Maison- neuve who had little to say of his opponents ex- cept that the Communist standard bearer "fig- ures Quebec, after the past 4o years, is ripe for the policies he advocates," and the C. C. F. can- didate whose leader, Mr. Coldwell, "is more of a bloke than King, more imperialist than Bor- (leu, Meighen and,‘ Biackcn." Alberta politicians are living up to their reputations of four-flushers, offering an earthly Paradise for nothing but n vote. It will be re- called the Social Creditors put the bulge on the Liberals by offering $35 per month for life to all citizens to be realized from the institution of~ their new economic theories of making bushels of wheat grow where none grew before or some such miracle. Now the C. C. F.‘s in competition with the Social Creditors, go better. A large advertisement carries the pic- ture of a healthy-looking baby boy. "It's s. Boy," reads the caption. Canada's maternal death rate highest of 22 leading countries. the C. C. F. Social Medicine means free medi- No hospital bill No medicine bill to pay. No surgery bill to payz No dental bill In pay. The C. C. F. program calls for training young doctors and dentists at public expense - - - building rural hospitals - - - specialists available for everyone. regardless at income - - r RI ' ' I inc. to pay. i l I! I Nelson rightly judged 18,000 trained Australian aircrew sonnel were serving in the United Kingdom, Italy, the Middle East, India and Burma. Others were in training in Canada. ‘l w a n- Most amusing from our It is only exceeded by l! III "What chance has he Give him a chance No doctor's bill to pay. Common- the month of Old Home destination but, arriving at the French fleet, supposed he had made an error, and sailed away; he re- turned u» find the French in possession, but surrounded them in Aboukir Bay at the mouth of the Nile and destroyed the whole fleet. a- n- n- x does not ivhich he upon sl- laws Egypt (W O the Mtich the ner- stand- Mr. IOO 0H6 now? under THE QUAKE-lb‘- lists: lily Tlio Way __._._ The Advance ins ‘ "y. ugh that the names of pupils in 5 °°I Iicta should not g: with the surnnma first hristiab mime ollowing. oi’ this Chinese hown by three follow- ing lines from one school report, 032?. l§‘..°.iil.§“°3‘.l‘iill‘"% "hi." mins Advance.’ W’ T‘ - CPIIM in London, dice the be. Bimini! of the invasion, ha; reach- ed a new low level. Not one major crllfle- Ind Only a few small cases have been reported ln the Metro- polltan Police District during the "I" when dm mei- Juno s. n 3-! lnwrfltifllt to note that. impor- t-Int Wnr news his been nsisiant- lgnltfgwgm 51y l a!!! drpap in ciiime. I] ‘.3 Area-Amherst Nevis. tmpomm The non-nun: um u}. Itrntesy of the “m” "inv l r y," might be revealed CIIICIIEOII‘ therogrp- DBNMIY lnpocent confessions of a ‘Pllslfflwd ‘pen cal" has been clr- “umvemed IJY a new pre-lnvrtslon security rulin in Great Britain. {American sold ers the“ can no 90891‘ l-‘QTTFSDOIIII with Lonely Hearts clubs back home. Chain letters, those pestlferous products of immature minds, are taboo mo. Thflc has been some criticism of goo-strict censorship out, Q1 Eur-om ut iie are all for this type or edict. I" "ci- ll might find a place in the peace conference agenda as n Permanent policy. -—Vlct0ria Times. The A Int d P Dr- Dfluislii: cairefizlbtiiiveiiif university of California Medical School I185 established the interest- iniz fact. that many headaches are mi Win-i in the head at all, but Pfllns in the neck. Even such old familiar misery as that, aching Rrmlnd the eyes is often a Dnin at the base of the skull carried by nfirvtlis to eyes. Ii, therefore, we s Z11 d treat the neck to cure head- “ E5?- whali ‘W011i Doins ln .the §°°d D0 they originate in the deli 5'! SOme of them undoubtedly 9- Next time the Cleveland In- ‘U905 MOW U!) We shall close our eyes. and when Frank Sinatra sings life‘; ‘$231.3? illialidll wfi“, "Y Cleveland Plain Dealer. “pm:- iNow that sixty years m" ghpjed ance Memorial Hospital was esta- bllshed What can We do about can- oer? Al. least 500,000 are mw a Prey to malignant tumour; and or these it is estimated 164.001.: w," die in the course of the your. Up l0 Jflnuflfy. after two years of flkhting, 33,162 soldiers gave up their lives. In that some period three times as many civilians sue. fumbed to cane/er. Because we Jive onger than did our parent; and Zfllndllarent-s, because cancer l; a disease of middle and old age, we mll-‘lt be Prepared for more tragic figures. Memorial‘; celebration Sexes to remind us both of great 8C evements and of the crying need 0f more and more competent re. search-New York Times Like n fresh of stifling heat issued by the breeze in a period is the first report Reklna citizens re- fllht after the Wnr is a perfect “l9 KIrLs and women of the 18th century were smaller in build than the mfldems- They did not develop the!‘ "915 b? “k111i! Dart in active ‘W - R 81ml! Rim‘: of croquet be! z the limit of their athletic ef- fo . Victorian women vrere ago Pm e to wear tight shoes so as to ma e their feet. look small. just in B“ they miZht be revealed by ac idem-or design. There ls n on record of an lmgllshmnn b9 I hanged for murdering his wie because he discovered after m Triage that she had lnrize feet an thick ankles. The all-male fury dl not think he was justified in 80112 that for on the ground, "are- !" Ebb’. that he had taken her for be ter or for worse. Happily, there is no dancer of that; hnpperiing to thtn modern bride. - St. Thomas Ti es-Journnl. but of nothing but water, carbon d xlde and sunlight. plants make B B81‘. Fbr more than ‘l0 years chemists have been trying to 5gp“- te the process. not ln the hope dispensing with cane and beets, bit in the hope of flooding with ll ht one of the more mysterious D cusses of life. It is probable t at no one has yet. succeeded in d pllcisting the plant's sugar-mak- 0 18ers, and all are combinations i carbon, hydrogen and oxygen, E atoms of which can click to- l s c ether in many ways. Which is na- re's way? No chemist can be taln that he has discovered the ight key to the right lock. even beige“ the door seem; to open. there is the matter of he energy required to make sugar n "19 Blunt-energy in the form of unlight. The physicist maintains hat s. plant. cannot absorb nouah nerzl’ from sunlight to mu a su- ar. The plant answers by turn- iz the trick and refusing to re- veal its technique. Bo we are left n our old state of wonden-New York Times. L Until Thursday's sudden burst of lrens, what. had surprised the av- eragp individual most, and perhaps lllig tly disappointed him. was that the everyday routine of life had been so little changed by the In- vasion. Transportation, I I I I ly snarled up. turned out to be affected far loss than I worried traveller; had feared. The Bouthern Railway has been bring- inR Ila mob of hurrying business people into llondon every morning u blandly as if it. didn't also have months before. There's a lot more room on Itgh pavements. for one thin . now t at the uniforms. both Brit. h and American, have thin- ned out. and the effect of their de- parture upon the average citizen's ability to at about town is stag- gerlng. Cvillnns lifting s timid inner for a taxi ore overwhelm- ed when two or three attentive cobbles race up, and they are un- settled by the novelty of being able 1 to bu)’ c meal or c seat in s cinema t B l ‘with use-Fr th Lo don Let- ». of.» rims-at... “ of liiv-mllwn Bliectotor) The continent of‘ Europe. through the -' of mum 1 - ‘ 13 being laid waste, and there are , many who profess to believe that . it will never again flourish in its former splendour. ope". writes the eloquent editor of News From Belgium, “it has been solemn! that so olarly German gravedigpcr Oswald him by cans who wrote on the and implicitly by all the lm grants from lmrope who their backs on the Asiatic penin- l Slllllfl and renounced her once for; 8 - I men think and my that Europe is | done for, Europe is dying." He. however, is far from harbouring that pessimistic opinion. Admitting that. Europe is now ugly looking- "she is no beauty the mythical bull Jupiter carried away"—-he nevertheless con- fidently predicts that "Europe will never die, for Europe is n house and a melting pot. of spirit- ual values the like of which exists nowhere else.” F gian observer of the tragic scene is induced to meditate on the so- called "lost civilizations" and "ful- len empires" which have marked the course of the worlds eventful history. significance in these has not died. nor can it over die. However viol- ent their vicissitudes, their influ- ence is enduring; the “good they once did lives long after their mo- merit. of material past." The countries of Europe may deteriorate from the political and economic standpoint, but they will never be reduced to a secrnd-i position morally or spiritually. every country in Europe ha ts word to say. in its own way." The millions who have been slriurrlitcr- ed have a message for the -. the universe. he says. “It would he unbearable to think that out of the monstrous crimes the Nazis there ivould bc no flovr- ering of mercy." task to tell the world that “there comes an end to the sunnlest day, that this lovely earth is a vale of tears, that the beauty and the bcasf both have to die nn ugly death, that. lifn ls an interlude, nu intro- shoirld be said. Europe alone has duction and a trial. Those things pondered over them for centuries." If all this sounds like the funeral oration oi a disconsolnte mourner. one must. turn for comfort to his prophetic peroration: "Europe has been destroyed and maltreated dozen times at. toast. ways survived; birth to a now world which is now guiding and leading the peoples It is diversified and rich; of surprises Dealing with the British Empire and those glib commentators who seem to delight in the prospect of its passing, these words of praise and warning are given: British Empire has to fall, it will do so for the good reason when something has outlived its usefulness it ivithcrs away and de- composes, but. a living body is able to adopt and transform itself, to survive prophesying on should be able to estimate to what vicious attack, but by its vigorous Because your han v And the nffrlzhled steed ran on alone. Hours;- booming drums of the regi- men . Little souls who thirst. for fl ht. Those men were born to d e. The rnexoluined izlorv flies above them Great is nu o - A flellp \i'here n thousand corpses e. Mother. svhgseflheart. living humble 8 s a u on - On the brirrln. ..plendid shroud of your son, Do not wrap. War is kind. -—Stebhcn Grazia '.‘.Ti‘.-_1_9_00. g process. There nre scores of j~ The followinghdeclnrntion II pllb- . bled Orld- - the 30th of May 104i‘, an invasion on its hands. London _. In itself, since D-Day. has seemed h d more normal than it. had for " "eiiiif III Qu ' m een eons uenc IT theorfrovincs of In ncc EJwai-y slnnd in the forthcoming Federal Election. IN WITNESS WHl-flll-JOF I have , llllldclthlll declaration thln 17th tiny - u y. IGNIII) IN Till] PRESENCE OI‘ l. M0 - Ja-iti-im tlairn l-l-H- NORTHEAST ‘AUGUSIQ 1, 19_44 Ulldying Europe "As for Eur- cnsketed and buried by Spengler, but long before quite n numb of Ameri- subject. ‘ ml- , turned ‘ - - - Now, more than ever.‘ longer the luscious r THERE'S NO OTHER rosAcco JUST LIKE- OLD I CHUM Th; Tobacco of Quality (UI (OARSE FOR PIPE-CUT FINE FOR ROIHNG YOUR OWN -i WI ILVI THE Plgpn TRUSS POI IOU! Pang-mu“. CA8! T than unfzrtunnto zbtiyiilnh Izmir: to was: u truss question. A" w,“ ‘Irma We have jun incnt of new everybody. ‘f "l", h "3 can! aroma" uneven Demon who h In (he stem}; POWGI‘ rom these reflections this Bel- Whatever there was of supremacy ls st. of committed by It ls Eu ropes ii It has n1- lt has even given It. is full and potentialities." "If the that evolution. that point by Before 0H9 KING'S COUNTY Progressive-Conservative Association Annual Meeting and Nominating Convention AT TOWN HALL. GEORGETOWN Illh At. TWO O’CLOCK P. M. At this Meeting a candidate will be nomin- ated for the forthcoming Federal Election. Poll Chairmen are requested to call Poll Meetings immediately for the election of delegates to the Each Poll is entitled to send five FRIDAY. AUGUST Convention. delegates. (Sgd.) LEITII TOWNSEND, President. (Sgd.) HENRY MALLARD, Secretory. Dr. Inns Blomgch token It Inoll hours, um“? prevents nil bad effects from Ill but it promotes the fum. tlonnl uct vity of the atom. nob. Insists digestion and gm. prowl the nppeum "Wt Del-y. Order y... i Bottle Todny. Prlcq 55¢, TIIE 2 M08 149 Grht Georg; Street ‘all Order! Given Pro.” Attention. \ G. F. Ilutclieson & SIIII OPTOMETRISTS “Specialists ln the lit- ting of glasses for the correction of ocular de- Naiional Efficiency In the battle against Fear and Want, ade- quate Life, Accident and Health Insurance is a major factor. Thrift ls vital to the war effort. Premium savingsiadd tolthe mighty army of fighting dollars that is helping lo win the war. It is a privilege of the Life Underwriter to help make peoples future more secure. Consult construction and rehabili _ extent that Empire lives in the the Great-West Life man for a suitable plan to ———— mittee. following their ,§§‘,t§‘§,‘,‘,°§$_ heart of tlie members of the Com-‘ meet your special requiremenm ron PIQUANT FLAVOR vey of potential postwar gpendjng monivealth.‘ He pays grateful trl- r . -.—-—— In the Regina area, 11151,- estimabe btite to the British race. which has 5111111119!‘ PNRYVBS or marma- or’ a 519900990 expenditure by so Vallanfly baited the glggmy iades have n delightful blquiiii privéate citizens for purchase o; foiiebrédlggs hnf ‘its giraducers, not H & G L: It d gig): rpirlisdminfiresfin dctéllfliléllfi! 0O 0 . , B DC L‘ I g s and service; in me period nv y s croc en urance under o‘, e I u n to antidote to current pgllticgl mm. assault upon the attackers. The —-—--———- derlnk about the need for Rovem. most unfriendly critic would bc pun-inch] Managers shTO bleep your“ patentbleiigier merit to th h . hard put to ‘t to find ny ._ m ~ "-5 Wm "'86 n8. H! 9m hnblllstationaslsllililtltleen vital: Si: cffi. toms of decay] either in fire iiitlmiir 0mm. Ch,,,,,,,,c,,,,,.,, _ summmd, _ Mann", ‘yelp; vlsclllriic before Jluking at. lens it bo k it Cou ty th En i _ ' o vase no on un you m hands‘ to seceii: htheoutgiglitciiffig XX r tlriTiieifP-nit 52m“ m we“ the ‘shoe! “am sweet reward; o; paternalism “on? rub off with cloth. mad-Regina Leader-Post. :_ '" " ‘ ' — '-—= fects.” 53 Grafton Street For Foot Ailments cousum . H. J. A. BRUW. D.l’ Orthopedic 0IIIll0P0flll3T Ill Crest George Street CIIABLOTTETOWN. P.E.l ingredients. IF ‘VAR BE KIND Do not uieetxTn-dldeu. for war is kind. lover threw wild toward the sk Dc not weep. War is kind. Mount Allisonuschool For Girls i A RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL FOR GIRLS Junior and Senior Schools Courses arc given loading to High School Leaving Certificate and to University Matriculation. Education- on modern lines with special attention to Physical Iklu- cation, Music and Drama. ivork in the Conservatory and in, the College of Art. The School opens on September 12, 1944 For Calendar write to Constance l. Young,iM.A.. Principal. Sackvlllc, New Brunswick Students in the School may take land the battle-god. and his I l 71/4 HRS. NEWhYllllli_ l. EAVE GIIIILOTTEIOWN 1:00 LII. 0:00 HI. AIR g E S N01] unnt to the provision of Council P. (l. 4015, tinted klntura for MonLenn, John Angus of '1 Mills. Prince Edward n- , Air Force Pilot, do hereby urn r intend t» i» l m. l , I ITON. FLT. HGT. A. F. Stat on. .e_ J1 snobs MnoLIAN, w/c. ‘ W. W. 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