v’___- HE M/ESTERN GUARDIAN ‘GENT-Mr; John Pond. ll Water Street Int-Phone 20a SUMMEBSIDI and PBINCI COUNT! Ne“ subsorlpflfltll, Advertllln; should be left with M11 Pa“ Th, Gui-clan mu be IWIIIM GI"! It lily of the following ltoreg tn rsldm- “fit Bookstore, Water 8 Gourlles Drugstore, Water Se. i. Toronto Bakery. wit" 5t- Mnrls uauuei. in Granville st. n, Guardian will be delivered to III! home In Sununereldo l, , “'8” ll 2o net an er 10v oer week. Phone m for mu lervloo o: ‘t m" order to the boy responsible Ior deliveries on your 109w, i | Iumn Is reserved for new: S] Iucflrl interest but advertising l, neu-sv tiatllre may be Insert- z“, 2 cent; a word strictly pay- lille l" Id"*'"°" urant S i-n ' _. ; person to M: u merslde‘ dio battery bill, BUY L-B71 Kenslng s. George Bishop. -o-28-2i 4LT tlie i _ o, . 'OlI‘tII‘QII new rad.o stoi- -——— Siitioizt} at Braces _ -—FROM s'r. JOHN —Mr. and L-428-5-27-2i Mrs. Lawrence Gerevsen of St. j John are visiting relatives of Mrs, July, CURED. pickled park-Is Gerlevsen at Darnley and Linklct. ibe. Buy m0IlI&ES 213mg fer Road. tatfiravs- L‘ ' ' ' ' ._____ SPEAKER — Rev KEnSmg_ Dr. John Coburn of Toronto was Llaabrhzsd’! m8 BPWIBI Speaker on Sunday even- Gln! at the Presbyterian Church, ‘till-liar; FAX - Mrs. fiIfQQfSIdC- H15 Sublect Was Tem- of Summerslde left - ' so . , » . _t '*-——- n, toi Halifax, __Fox R A N C H E R s_sungln vixen arid Puppy Starter started _ , the bulk of 1939 Silo ‘ATENDED " I ""5 0f! to victory. starwt ill-iii); mls i —SPECIAL _ 11v in is extended to Mr. a excellent meal mix (; 9 Ccmpton of St. t» .:ath of their little of s months, who passed l‘ t oiidrty morning. The g, . d to rest on Mozi- 110., l, itcv. G. R. Harrison the service. S. |R insure maximum fur results and breeding results next spring, . val]. able at all Sunglo Dealers. L-l20-5-4-8i. y“ g ilL - ," horse _ ' ' 17. Qwlilg to , t t0 visit Mr. Brennnifs ‘l . _ “ m, y,“ 1;; and with the pel- b all; has decided to hold ,,,‘“r,~.»oi~gt: n. Brookins, Sec- AECTURE AT INDIAN RIVER hige audience was lrflflwd t0 most itiieresting discourse on My by Capt, A.E.B. Murphy, M. on the evtning of May 18th. The TIgnIs/i Nelxhbors end friends of Leo J. lCril-ayllln lore sympat-hizinfi wiltn him ,.,., hm hi}. eossoamaretat epur- wIlo rgfgriad ,. “ed m“ SPPIIFB- Hmveiwr- he h“ his!“ mo“! m,“ the 8m siege oeen fortunate Ill securing another “All fiance 191448’ also h“ horse from James J. Gallant and 0501mm edLlCatlOIl. The speaker will be able to continue his farm- 0N0 the divergent interests and uvielloustes existing in dziiereilt tiof Cattada before the present and stressed the necessity for / 1 - oedheiiidstleillretlfeoosltfliflhbgtize eof .‘pendln3 me Joan Conway. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Percy Conroy formerly of Tig- h, and now of Boston, Mass, is summer with her ‘H herd“. and improve the“. aunt Mrs. Frank Fhee of Norway.‘ I l ii. TI CB IBI LS ewollatnictinbtiaslig in liais yiews o“ the 94m M M“? me B03’ ' I 4V remarks and some of the weak- °gxTjfifiiizogefifitgflgkgeuggY “m " "cs “lam exposed‘ the first game of the sea o a Tin u speaker nveirecl that the Ah- More w” 18 to 6 Amon $1“- ,1‘? crush Co-Operative movement, up“ phwers “jere Pngul “Kl-gr”; carried out according to its catcher bewe D0 1e as [£106- l and principles will banish and chines Mating m b b P L!‘ ryand wnnt, Capt. Murphy is ' 5 9591mm- ‘ m‘ 5mm “m1 the power to Mr. Robert Weeks of Charlotte- u and the avid attention of his town h“ returned w Ti . l ante. A hearty \'0fe of thanks ke over work at the 1mm‘! l° "W0 b-"~’°“" T- Murphy- 5"‘ tory. Mr Justin Gavin clswrtigseistilis- degytiwb" Cgggwé‘; a?’ “:5 Mr. Weeks in the factory The facg " m 5p“ - ‘ ' tory is expected to open June 1 onald (pastorl andh Mnbellif. ders supplemented t c v0 o . ' nfu with appreciative remarks halgflrsgtgggé“ %“:1:';t ‘L! g8“ P?“ regard to the address. Mr. Saun- completing her studies 8pc! “ 9' » spoke in a ltopeful and patem- wales cone e a r m“ °I mlgiencr of the trials and exiigenl-X g ' » setting the Empire an a l ' _" oracles. "God Save the Kinfl mtTfiw Dlfrifile: aIYI-iaiizd tftailliey’ hand lglittoe elcse a most interesting ,1" mi“. new car to spend tfiérwgxf “ man-m e address‘ ' end with their parents Mr and Mrs John Dorgan of Sea Cow Pond. ' SILL if. fiiacFarlat-le vuror to Halifax. —T'lfl nitmv fiends of Mr, Henry . "s kensmcton, are pleased - 1m l'f“ill'll tn his home u. tcr h:s serious illness in ' cc llV Hrwnital, He s-rrunitirixilcri by his nurse» i Paynter. R N, a Mr. Henry Hogan of North Cape g lpurchased a fine mare from Qulg- ' ' -ley Dawson, Kildare Cape. Mr. Nicholas W8! suffered a stroke about a week ago. His condition is considered serious. Mrs. James Riley of Norway is seriously ill. _‘ J01, _ Many people o! Tignlsh attended H“, ml, znbfil. the play “Mother Mine" which was -, (-,_ A Bvrch and |hed in Palmer Road on Tilesdny p~-,1.~,,_ fPtvrnpd to ,nlght, and reported the play a huge in l‘"l't liaivkesbtlrv, N. success‘ 11s: ur-ck. Flic was uc-‘nm ndi- ————— r- lflf as ckvfllt- p The Tignish All-Girl Orchestra, _ ,-._ ‘on 31,-,“- ‘fhe first of its kind on the Island, in h». 11-4 n \- w guy-ass. played at the opening dance in j. pt \Ifll|“,' Alp-Q», gmvo-rqFreeland Lodge on May 24. This f" in .'='-- no N‘ g__ “q-mre lndics orchestra. directed by Miss \ n tit-n \',"‘(\,k: lr-tntnq Frances Morrissey is receiving ntuch - ‘i _'|~~ "Milli. Allison praise and many csmplinlenfs for »- Clflffifli Training corps. lthcthsplendldnw-glk they are doing n s new e. . The citizen of ‘rignish regret very much the departure of Mr. Cyrus B Morris who for the pm-t tninetrirn _ve:irs has curried on a. re- markable businces lure. The clerks 0f his store presented him with a ,lovely club bag in appreciation in" a'l he did for them. ! y, gFrance To Communists 51111103. my; .. a. , For Trgason arising-ton 2 o :3 n. D -_-,. O. B.’ lcor icuous t is um l . . . hm grit Jux g.n.iy iiu.te pIJCG each rome f- rzlrihv v s has nllcwcd local ten- gnfiuLs-cf-‘nl tn gct tiietfiotlrt in "ltllntior. f,‘ m‘ ~ °y m rams. Ma 2'7—(AP>—A mill- wm’ Ifimefug y enjoflns the“ ftlrv trlbunwl ‘was ordered tcdcv to open c. treason trial M nine nom- n mtmisf. est-members of the Chem. b" of Denutles. The nice who have not been lmrehended. were condcvnccd at s‘ _____ a previous trial on Anrll 3 and ‘lfltny sumen“ who rnrepentenced to five weary In nrlsnn hétzan n“ Universities ‘mdlfordsoreadinn Communist prepa- uri ga" n. '03s eliiétépmgts yitarmncl: l! Among‘ them ‘age Jacinta; Duclos. ref r a r- t mo - h ("Lula summer hmldlyl ihfltmg! bin-Brig: III-titles eThfrT". ‘Wilt n lag-glee |G1brlel Peri pr"! lt-"iur Br-meflc. in: -. “w” °'. embers of the c u "Inerllreliitltm and {fiends about? Nesflvrrl hv a GoQ-‘gtlriiiiigdt decree Sent. 9, 1030. In another move iwnlnst "fifth r-Olllmrltlilf!" Govetrnyrnent ord- _ r" straw» ee r f - "ldwaglhecwfsrtgemv were i-A" automobiles 221d flail-owls " ' II 3'0?“ w‘*‘ch are subfsct in requisition by French euthorltleq. Four Plirla factory workers were mrecuom aengnceel tot deathnbv ll dmlIl-‘R"" - ecu and wr- o crs revv 20 o; “um-"mml 0f VP- ‘veers at hard labor on sabotage ‘ 3- charges. '0 limes ‘f; 4 _ a ‘inch professor i QXQQZ Cvrileae. Cftzrlillge- | ~ a easrin o ay M9005 In Kenslngton. -navr:,- ~n o- l. .. mesh Dalfiiglgiér ‘qdfigglojtaxcldgvcgl. bBu scenes. BIILI there a1‘? 2.017 words -onu.s wmrnn st Bfihopflgtlsu 5,, u, n m Rests Apply ifliactign 65$?‘ glilintgrrulbntedlylcfrm —VISITING IN S'SIDE - Mr, w. . Brennan and lzls fiance, Miss ' nstance Eleanor Homer of Kim. races ‘alas Cltv arrived in Silmmerslde last Dill‘- ~‘2 h‘ . Bus,“ _ ,ents. Mr, and Mrs. W, R. Brennan. b‘ “c mid m‘ K g r. Brennan and his f once are to e married on the first dav of Jure the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bren- A'Harn of Norway‘ Gone With The Wind At Capitol GROWING OPENED LAST NIGHT AT THE CAPITOL THEATER, TSIDI __t9=tntflw¢d_lrom_ven 1) 1'11! oiaborac "n"; y anion of Margaret M..tchell'| not; "Gone ‘m! h! u" 5m - WiththWi " c. GR-AF, disorgaldrood, itol ‘Ihebtrefig ‘sgigerhfft axIighI of”. rail and river traffic ovexr] i: wide area from the Rhineland to the ca it h . , m v 0"" any‘?! 5.010s throughout last night im chi - lenceathe oiitoriv°tfi§iirfiioififi- tion. Its l th n10 . lent whicherilg 1s unlfreeiye: gIrggege 3010b Nell Airnorh 5 'I'i.is was due to the ed. Ides re of the directors to follow the text of the novel as faithfully as possible, Altogether, the incendiflrv bombs were rained ch Blrlwrts at Brussels and Charleroi. the latter a German-iield Frenth toga? Lljegtaggiliinnbijrdtiir‘ ir a! s g n e a - ter attacks on the Antwerp airport, and on Flushing. Netherlands sea- Dort. and Venlo, an the Nether- lands-German border. In other attacks, mid, a bridge on Belgium's A galaxy of film stars was re- rail line was destroyed, a direct hit Cruited to olav the monitor roles. but sacred on railroad track south or W10 Outstanding pert. at of Scar- Aachen in Gennony an 1m rta t let (JtiI-Ialra, wigs reserved for a com- m1} Jugtugfloan 1n Belzglum wfickeg para ve v un nown youn Erlglish ' Leigfi lomconvoy of 24 vehicles blasted movie has Ofluialcxue. Th; handling of such V0 llmlIlOlLS .31 - tuan task. ling i: tribIlI: a) "an first to last and maintains its unity - amid all the diversity of scenes and characters, actress, Miss Vivian Clark Gable is superb as the prin- [CIIJHI male character Rhett Butler. The plot combines romance with Continue Reorganization istark realism to an unusual degree, land IS derived from the history of Alt home the Government ‘the American civil war. The cos- tinned reorganizatxon of the army fumes arid scenerv which were not- command with the appomtment of (ed ivitlr special appreciation were menu-General R H Hfllflillw as Antode w th the assistance cf a Eton-p vice Ohio: of the Impenal Gqener- ,of listorians and antiquarians to gjusmfl; under Genres], Sr John ensure that the vtgv leastlgetail we; ll EXEC CUTESDOII GIICE WIII. the authoress had described. mltafioenml B- C- T- Paget. commander of the lath Division who commanded British troops soutth of ‘Prondhezm in the Nor- wegian campaign, ~41 d Chief of the CoenerIIl SSIaIIJDKIHtEe Messrs Elbert Hill and Melville Stevenson, New Glasgow. were re- Home Forces with the tsmporary cent visitors to Aiberton, the guests rank of Lieutenant of Mr. imd Mrs. Thomas Gass. Rev. W. D. Gerard. who has been pastor oi the Nazarene Church here for the past year left recently for Sydney, N. 8., where he will remain till the first of June, when he will proceed to Imperial, Sask- atchewan, where he has accepted the call of the Nazarene Church Mrs. Lloyd O'Brien was a recent vlsiwr to Elierslie. Miss Lucille McQuaid. has re- turned from o. very pleasant visit in Sydney, N. 5., the guest of her aunt, Mrs, A. A. MacDonald. Mr. and Ml\ Howard Clark, were recent visitors to Charlotte- town. C011 " General Sir Edmund Iron-‘dde who took over ccmmund of the home force: Sunday. General Sir Henry E, Jgckggn was called from retirement to take charge of the western Slwoeedmg General Haining orary cancellation of telegraphic service and a. ban on alii m l weghtng more than two ounces to the B, E. F‘. because of heavy mil- itary traffic. _ ‘Pvvo more class year-olds. were summoned compulsory service, the former class June l5 and the 29-_vear-clds on June 22. Tlhey are expected to number 600.000 men and m0 M1110’ strength to the mark. France Names New Envoys ___ In Shake - up cent visitor to Charlottetown. PARIS, May 27__(CP Ha,.a5)_ I "iw- Prcmier Patti Reynaud. continuing _____ Mr. Gordon Kerr, teacher at O'I_..eary school, was a week end -vlsitor to his home here. Mr. Heber Matthews of the Com- missioner's High School, Quebec City, has returned to his home for the summer vacation. Rev. Father Trainer, Tignlsh. _ was rl rrcmt visitor to Aiberton. the shaken“ °f the Pltlflss in xtth ‘lick, sltltldegt at . .C. 1.... re urflcd t0 er ome Switzerland d A. L- _ [for the summer vacation. The shumémwas ma“ 1Rrge_ X -—*—— scale reorganization which has week. tonight named new envoys to the Holy see, Rumattln, Spain. Mr. Milford Profit. who has been ,, emvlorvld taboo guns-ig- a; £§.'.‘.'3.‘.‘i’§5"ff.°‘o thssvzszilutiir. some tme. as re umed . ‘ - home in Alberton. fifn§§f°“°° powers m the Premier 5 Mr. Gerald McQuaid, student at St. Dunstarrs University, has re- turned to his home for the suin- mer vocation. Mr. Gordon Purdy of the Dental Corps, Halifax, N. 5., ls home on furlough. the guest of his father, Dr. A. L. Purdy, Robert Coulondre. Ambassador to Berlin in the fateful days preced- ing the outbreak of wor lust sep- was named to represent France at Berne, succeeding Am- bassador Charles Alpharid. Robert Renom de la Baume was appointed Ambassador to Madrid replacing Marshal Henri Pctain. xegentlv mlade yice-Prcmier. Friends of Mr. Perley Hardy, will QgQmQIfHQI. 523%: £31? exslsfipgg, m; pleased to know that he is u mo’ w“ named Ambasador Frflm-l’ WPIQV" an" m4 r°°°nt to the Vatican. He replaces fian- ‘umss- . '- cots Charles-Roux, who became "i- secretary-general of the A very interesting and exciting 1 “am? of softball was played on the Fore gn Officer last week in place ,n.ftcrnoon of the 24th when the| ‘Tiaiish Egiy Scouts tgeffatgdhlthe: Al rton oy Scouts 1 o a l H ifiefglyi cvntgifr} Itgglligllgédflsérelg gitxbteedofmAlfldgleerzi qtfiitrrlia-ylfhvsirigstwi: e e an ny r ,which clicked in every de artment. mndermd to Peyrouton‘ Old 90st‘ ‘Lack of practice told on t e Alber- ton boys as overthroivs and costlyl errors sent. several runs over theiworld’s plate. With more practice and some . change]: itidtllc lineup LII!!! Allliteirtlgilnl boys slou present a Orm a e Itcnm when the western section of I ltlio softball league opens. Linn i - Bernard-Marcel Peyrotiton. Am- bassador to Buenos Aires, was i Innis; 2nd base, C, Bernard; 3rd base, O. Bernard; Short stop, P. Bernard; fielders. n Hemphll, 0.] Diirigchf ‘ '1' 0G IZIXL .1 n n: a light» and tr on: a ier . 0c or ;, _ pitcher, G. Kerr; ist base. Fh-ankélgg v of u“ Bank Nummd: 2M 1mm J’ Matthews: for ititernatonal tlements met m 3rd base, E. Millman; short stop. Basel ma yo,“ we usual 51X pa. D- CWTYZ ‘Ielders- - RamuYv c- cent annual dividend today. Wflllew- Alfred MeQuvld- ‘Ihe assembly then out on his ltot. Umpire: Rev- 8- J- Davies-A stepped into hs limousine, told the ROLLO BAY W. I. chaffeur, "Chateaux Doex." and left Basel for the Bank's new mountain The May meeting of the Rollo Bay East Women's Institute was headquarters. There the entire staff of the or- lranimtion which. in the last dec- lield at the home of Mrs. Edwin Peters with sev-en members resent. Meeting opened by‘ repea ng A e, has had a hand in manv of Europe's huge financial problems club Woman's Creed in_ unison and the response to roll cal was Jok-s now operates in a resort inn called "Hotel of the Shorts.’ sgtiécmas imckéttricltfhthea lUnltéd s res en e . , . and riddles. Minutes of last meet- which t? called tiff; "world's Bankr‘ ing ivcrc read. Members decided w Bank." coiled the annual meettn cf scrub the school. Papers entitled the general assembly for this atc Origin of Mothefs Day by Mrs. Jo- seplt evcnu. The Evolution ofi several months Mary, by Minnie Chaisson, lIid BASEL. Switzerland, May 27 - -Witn the stuns of the French uermatl Sicgfrlcd his ears, the I Prevmisly theatfigst famous names Eumpean banklng-— including radio selections comprised the pro- ggfig tniflmliglft°f 5mm m“ °r ‘he meetmg‘ Meeting Rothschild, and nlanv another res- adjourncd. A dainty lunch was ‘den, o‘ banks o! mutsqlave a ways served and a social hour spent. Next attended the flsgem.;,1qge_ meeting to be held at the home of m“ the they "11 “n; Meg“. MFS- JOSPDII DEVH“! When III-SW?!‘ trick their proiites. the war Laying to roll call will be a nickel. imede gravel filffiilfllggt arid Basel be- .,_____.____._' -mg a nosy no . LACES Ayn Nms For; SUMMER This afternoon, at the schedircd "WWW! ‘rtiitltii’ Hewitt” h?“"‘o’i."ii: A quite new and distinctly ef- agitmflxggé‘ géewjffégagryéowg festive wands-yo treatment is We mud wk “w, me rumble o; the use of twin sets oi’ lace net cur- m, "my", wlne- A 01171019 oven mesh is Md After due end gswper time. the for the imder curtains, which cover bank president ued g, routine the entire window and are Just mil statement announcing that the as;- length. Mesh or the same lhade fiilnblve hggetwnmy Mat-the 31111215» with a bold all-over desgri is hung lvoégcm muaffflgldend gm r had! I" d“? Md‘ “I “m ‘we M me earmarked certain aumli in United wlnmw "I'd mm" m“ m m‘ flow’ ‘States dollars to go into the dlvl- 7 Using net fcr drapes and curtains and reserve mnm is mirt-‘cttlarftv suits-hie frr mmmw, “new w“ not g 3|“ since the 0pm meshes do not ob- in: ' stuuct free pangs of ctr. commented. dissent- General. In] this 310st General Paget will assst‘ lomatlc corps he inaugurated last‘- . ‘ I Matti-tilt. s:;1."2,"...“::;..‘slrflllgfl flailing I The s ERSIDE AND PRINCE COUNTY C GU R HRONICLE 'Be|giall Army (Continued from Dill I) The Premier said th More than 150 high explosive and out P'°°?d°"‘ in history‘ Belgian capitulation, a word for British and ing side by side with their Allies and to whose WITHOUT PRECEDENT had gone May 10. Reynaud prefaced his ann tion with th the ministry the nation.” HIE-III e Belgian King's action was “with- he said, came suddenly “without French soldiers" who were help they fight" ouncement of the capitula- e words: “I must announce a grave event to “This event occurred last night,” said the Premier. “France can no longer count on help from the Belgian army. army filter south. broken into two groups, on ‘ed between our “Since 4 A. M. Tuesday (11 p. m. French army and the British army h alone in the north against the enemy." Reynaud continued: “You know what the situation was. After the rupture of our fron EDT Monday) the ave been fighting t on May 14 the German armies which found themselves e to the north, the other to the “On the south it is the French divisions which are hold- ing the new front following the Somme and Aisne and then rejoining intact the Maginot Line. “In the north is a group of three armies: The Belgian 5mm‘, “m, a decision being made army, the British Expeditionary Force and several French |to layover the resolution until to- iing up in arms against it," divisions in which many of us have loved ones. “This group of three armies was under command of General Blanchard. It was bein The French and British armies were defending this port to the south and west, the Belgian army on the north. “It was this Belgian army which has just brusquely “Fmmflnd- capltulzlted unconditionally on the field of battle on orders g supplied via Dunkerque. ms w... Qmce annmmcsd'temp_ of its King and without warning their French and British comrades in combat, opening the way to Dunkerque to the German divisions. “Eighteen days ago this same King sent us a call for staffs. “But, in the midst of the battle, Leopold III. w r0 rags Belgium who, up until May, had alw 3000-000 to the words of Germany rather than ithout. warning General Blanchard, without m. me 28 and 29_ help. To this appeal we replied, following a plan which had m. been established since last December by the Allied general ' Conscription s Legion Meeting Resolution On Matter Is Returned For Re - draft- ing After Discussion. ed to declare a war policy in ‘.24: with this section of the resolution‘ and the other that members of the Legion "regret that the govern- ment, having failed to take heed of our suggestions at. pas: conven- tions. is now waging a half-hemmed war." Brig-General Alex Ross of York- ton, Sask, immediate past prwi- dent of the Legion. said he snxv ..n reason f0 admit the amendmrrit with regard to the covernmcn' as it was “a matter o’ record" . the resolution rcmrdltrg tm‘ conscription had not bcen sitkn t. ed to the government. "As a matter of fact. due ‘.0 a. state of Pacifism in the coutrrv, the government could not e been elven bought a single machitic- gun in i936 yvitliout the yiubhc hc- said MONTREAL. May 2'1 —(CP) — A resolution dealing with Canada's war effort was turned back to the resolutions committee for revamp- ing by the Canadian Legion to- day, after the eighth Dominion convention heard a half-dozen dele- gates declare themselves in favor of conscription as the only means to fight a “total war." A section of the resolution, at presented to the meeting, called upon the Government "to take ini- medlate steps to conscrlpt the man power, wealth, national resurces, business, industrial and other in- stitutions so that we may wage war with the full vigor of the na- tion.‘ During the 2 1-2 hour discus- sion various amendments were sub- T u morrow during deliberation overlGcnrral Ross, an amendment suggesting that "at Delegates heard Joseph Foreman National Government be formed t0 iof Lindsay. Ont, say tlmt "we ‘Allllb bring this about." MEQIISCTIDIIOII and we want i: now" Previously. legion delegates hfldiForemah said that the "onfv \'.:lv defeated two amendments, one of.to ivaoe war against fotalitrtrim which SUQf-ZPSIPKI K118i» “the Kov-Brh- countries is to use totaiitrtriail me- ment of Canada should be request- mods," greater than ever. “Our faith in victory is intact. MISFORTUNE BOLSTERS FRANCE “The strength of every French soldier, of every Frenchman and of every Frenchwoman are increased 10 King Leopold III Ofliimes, Misfortune has always bolstered France. She has to those of the Allies, regard, without a word for the French and British sol- diers who, to his anguished appeal, had come to the as- sistance of his country, King Leopold III laid down his IITIIIS. “It is a fact without precedent in history. “The Belgian Government has told me that the de- cision of the King‘ was taken against the unanimous senti- ment nf the responsible ministers. “The Government added it had decided itself to put at the service of the cause all the forces of its country which MAGNIFICENT EFFORT RECRUITING (Continued from plge l) may arise." A chorus of applause from Lib- eral and nplmsltlcn bill-Che; greet- ed t-he Prime men-t and its two ministers Ministers annmince- COIICHTIEG. Action "At Lost" Hon. R. B. Hanson, (Douiservative leadcr, congratulated the Govern- ment on takzn He added: ' g action "at last." ‘May I my to the Prime Minister the whole country will be lxlhind him ln his effort. The young men of this ccuntiy who Mr. King sa posI-lble to eqt: for anmy service immediately but‘ ave been anxious to serve will k to the colors in this time of Canndaks porll. 1d it mtgiht not be 1p every man called industry under the direction of the Department of ply was going orders and Munlt/otis and Stup- iull sperd on war eqtnpuncnt needed would be available soon. As far as lh eafnnen milled up were concernrd. Azir Minister Pow- er said the equipment was in hand and aocotmnvcdntfon is now avail- able or we-illd be strortly. Mr. Rrwer said the Government lizid decided it was bet/tor to put t-he young men who had volunteer- ed for the air force into service thinned-lately even though they were not yct required for the places they will eventually fill in the Brtiim Commonvtmlth Air Training Plan. Tits. he said on»: the Government's detwrlcn ratthet- than leave young men "oi CIVIIlilfI life. They may general diliifefi- these letting their heels" in be required to do M i0 80b B! Qllflfdd OI‘ take the ordinary training provided for a nmcihlne tallon. gun or a rifle bat- Those rrrvpcyed as skilled traciss- men in war work will be left. at thccr Jobs but given a badge to i11- dicnte they have vdunteervd but those who are and imetnp-Iov in order of the date lied tiers LONDO States an trfee excel) move to unskilled or skilled ed will be called up of their ep- N. us. 21 —(CP) 4m- bonrd of trade tonight import of cotton from the ~ibl Unlu-d other non-Allied coun- k. nugdver iicerise thus anew; o s e ore rr nc President McKlt-trlck and tsatllppfng s m - men Dace for war require- Fmnch dip, are still available, and, particularly, it wishes to raise a new army and collaborate in the work of arming France. “It is about our soldiers that we are thinking. “They can say their honor is intact. They are making a magnificent effort along the whole front. Every rlay dur- ing the l8 days of the battle they have given thousands of examples 0f heroism. "Young French Generals who have hardly had time to replace their elders have already covered themselves with glory. Our leaders and our soldiers form a block in which the country has entire confidence and which tomorrow, will draw the admiration of the world. “France has been invaded a hundred times and never beaten. How much our courageous populations in the north must remember. If. is from tests which we are awaiting that the new spirit of France will be forged wiiicirwilllic lcuulclllui (Continued from pin I) goefiltlrlcel Inspector, Mr. Walter P. omplifioatzon by the conference of the Federation of Mayors and Municipalities at Ot- h to l3th of June and that Moved bv 'r a. Butler. nd J. t c-Kee. Resolved that the Mayor ielr expenses be provided. Moved ~ Limited. amended . stead of ed. Moved ye lr l9 Wov Cit d Y M Kent to Queen S I SUTVQVOI” I which Three , dollars | Mavo which h MOVHI Seconded ed A. McDonald and William Moran be 110F911 e-Dmmted to constitute with the tgpendarv Magistrate the 811d RSSCSCIIICIIH IOI‘ 40 King west , r of au or execue n .e twill 9'35 If,“ t i t ted and under the corporate seal of thei deflslon rtlo the emnt -ltl tl ’ nxn ee wife by Henry to F. C. as previously appro to make term 10 we 7. and executed as amend- bvbJ. dikTBllalnclhard. uiatmassrcsi. e" Appeal from Civic ea ‘lay .1. m. Stems. t! conde by J. E. Blanchard. ‘taolved that Mr. E_ A, Foster be fe-fl-Vliizlglted as aénemuébgr of the ru of Charlottetown? a M Lh . by R. C. ‘Chggtlller. School filat tenders be Grafton. West side and treet from Dorchest 011 tn be seen at 5 Dougan. McKee. annual curr and thcv are La l nded b)’ F. C. Dopillgtilllln the current . paving of space be- tween sidewalk and min) o; swine w ggeland Queen St ham‘ v rc ies e E, , mm“ r on ‘N S e office. Tenders to av 31st git l2 gclock Seconded by J. T. Resolved that for t."_ dcfraylng the uenditurc of the municipal corpora- _tton of the city of IIOOH- ved be ars in- I 1'8 I05 called Queen. er to Citv close age was available but I- $30,000 Seine boat near completion in 0M iof the shipyards was burned. dignity of the country. mans were in on improved position of the‘ Spence“ tonight to move toward Ostend and ory that the defence would tighten ays seemed to listen (never been as united as today. “On a new line which has just been established by our great chieftain General Weygand in full accord with Mar- shal Petain, on the Somme and Aisne, we will hold, and because we will have held, we will win.” top. BELGIAN COMIHENT a He did not elaborate on the statement immediately but it was OTTAWA, May 28—('I\iesday)— presumed that Belgian reservists (CP)-Baron Robert Stlvercruys, might. seek to enter the Allied Belgian Minister to Canada, in- armies. formed early toda on the ca-pitula- "I suppose the Belgian army was tum of the Be an army, said it cut off and 1n no position to con- did “not. necessarily" mean that tinue the fight," sadi the Belgian the flow overseas of Belgian army Minister. "but I do not know what reservists resident 1n Canada. would happened." ‘Says Canadian Dental Corps One 0f Finest ‘TORONTO, May ‘fl-(CPJ-Thq “molten Dental Corps now reads for service in the Second Great We: is the finest and bet-equipped in ail war history, menu-Col. G. l... Fire Sweeps Vancouver Shipyards VANCOUVER, May 37—(CP)— Two shipyards and two boat ewe plants were destroyed and e d shipyard was slightly demand w- nlght ivhen fire of unknown Or- eron, of Otitauu. second u: igln swept through a section of command of the Corps, said-here Vancouver's coal harbor district lh today. In an interview between sestonl of tlhe Ontario Dental Assoctaticrfn annluai convention, he said the ra- tilo of dentists at the fmnt in re- lation with the number of Can- adian timops w1l1 be about f.ve times greater than in one DTOVIOUI war. and he predicted these dent- ists will nerve much closer to the locnes of wtual battle than ever before. Hello-Col. Cameron, second command to Col. Loot in the Dental Corps, sold Canadian troops 1n the first great war had one denial officer to every 4,000 men. "But in this war the ratio already ts one dentist to every 500 men among the troops still in Qmada, and one to every 800 men anlong the troops overseas." he said. A veteran of the inst war as I fighting soldier in the first. battal- ion of Canadian Infantry. Lieut- Coi. Cameron said 00 dentitsttl, all of vlthovn are trained eoldvs as well, already have gone ovvwus mm the Oanadtan t-rortps an: are waiting for the halt]: call 2s mem- bers of tile F111 Dunstan. Nlilltd th st end. NowImmediate estimate of dam- ALLIES FALL (Continued from haze n broadcast over the French radio that his refugee cabinet decided unanimously today to continue the fight, come what may. He said Belgium's minimum peace conditions were independence and respect for the rights and the With the Lys crowed, the Ger- Zeebruggc on the Channel. Allied hopes rested on the the- like a coiled spring under the 1m- "A dentist working Jlwt Pafxfm“ ti‘? agate?‘ the 6mm," the fighting lines in zit... on v.2: , =11" m rs an armo co um s. - ' " _; The attack widened the wedge-mmelfgttg‘ "SP9 fdailifgfhxsrnq between the northern Allied arm- “f”? c “‘ t‘ ° ~ - “ 3 tcs and the central French armies N3‘- from Bapaume to Arras. , The German push to the sea brought contact with thus“ l tw ma or e ——"_ iarrtlngaiibo-Bglglarf‘ botgloer north of (Ctmtmued ‘mm m3‘ n Lille. ~—"-— s and the government ordered cur- fews on the two naval bases of Gibraltar and Malta. Everyone ex- cept soldiers and sailors in uni- form were ordered indoors between 11:30 P. M. and 5:30 A. M on Gibraltar and between ll P. M. and 5 A M. on Malta In Malta the curfew ivns termed necessary to guard against pcsslbic parachutlsts. Additional prtvectinn on the Island was given by a vol- unteer force of rural sportsmen. Straighten Line Just north of their Salient. the Germans smashed the point of the Allied front held by the French jutting out into the Valenciennes sector. The retreat was ordered to stmlzhtcn out the line. At the base of the northern front, the swam Ieft between the northern Allied armies and the e purpose of,’ ent cx-| Charlottetown by the ffect a Royal Bank of Canada for the sum oi hundred and flftv tl (835000000) and that the Charlottetown and tie iousa nd hercln" | IIRIIIO a in re ation to said loaiii as been crest-med by J. E. Stems. meeting and is hereby nnnroved, bv R. C. Chandler. leoonded f0 IhISI _I u . l n - ~ i . r-mtrnl French armies on the Somme was widened. However. a War Ministry spokesman tonight. said the French had retaken sev- eral villages cn the Somme, south of the Salient. The llfflvi"! of the situation at that point. was not hidden by the Allies. ‘The exact. width of the German wedge was ‘mnosslble to determine because c’ the rapidly shifting lines. but ii was wider. Fr-v-h "PYICYQI ncdevarfers cn- and confident as to Beyond announcing Sir. Sx-tfford Crlpps’ departure from Moscow of- ficial circles declined all comment. It would not siutrlsc duYmtvtI-c observers here, however. if his mis- sion is dlrectcd primarily town-d a war trade agrecmctil. siticc cur- rent negotiations nppronchcd a breakdown stitce in recent weeks. ANTIQYE WATFIIES STOLEN RURUNC-‘PON Vt. Mnv p (AP) —'l‘li~ft of l8 antlmlc ivnfr cs, valued nt thousands of dollars. frcm "w FW-mln" Mnsetnu Univrn=tt-- rf Vermont was revealed tcdwv. The A French mfltary commentator declared that. the Germans hovel weakened tllemstlvcs by tfirocricq qtphp: QtnpWPCYIIIV were stolen 1w a, men and material into the flflhf,pcrson who hid in the buildinr v without regard for loom. closing time last night. DIAN“ .__,...,.‘ Vital Question At