. n4 can: nun-n. ma‘ an»: nun- H". "w; a" 5-"- l" i ‘. B“ 1N2’ GNP Ian-n- Hum‘. rm: giiaizcorreroiyii CQARQIAN _P_A_GE FOUR TllE CIIARLUTTETOWN GUARDIAN Homing mil; (rounded In Ill?) Prulilunu Lint, Col. W. Chutn- l, Mil-Inc M“ rruulun: J. B. Burnett IJJ. loonlinryi Lloul. out, u. A. meal-anon. tun. ldnor and Ismail x Director, J. I. llurlotl, IJ-l. Anoeuu Buiiuuii Frank Walker, and Linn, lu A uni-non. lt.C.l\.\.|£, (On Autlu lune!) SUBSCRIPTION llTgm ‘ . ‘l. Inn 1n l’. b2. A. ‘CAO pa: ynari or Ifll B’ 11,2] m a mum; 60v h" v‘!- 11"“ City uoiiiuy id-w w! "In lit-W lav I nvllll ‘L75 h" 3 miiuttui U0: In: one inonll B] llnll lu uiher rrinlncn n11 U.I.A. “Al! l)" IBII out-ma; ivuiuyi $2.1m w run v1.00 Kw I Iwllll- bou (or S month: an. Charlottetown In! h. "will" I‘ until-nag". s". Agency. Ilmnn auuua. N" Ywlu 0N puulh Nun: Agency, Corner Alllk and Washington Bonn-i Alvlrupullluu New: Agency, 1:06 Peel Us. llnntrenli J. Inn I54 Lhly 5t. Toronto; Nun Btnnd Chateau Linden Ottawa; Wolfe‘: New; stud Iludhury. 0am Huh Tobacco 5110p, llonclnn, N. B. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” TUESDAY| JULY is. um. A ssel ()ur Parliamentary 1i is .. ircnicndous thing, in \\'£1r, l0 113W 3 [Igiisg m" Commons before which, day 91191” zlav. .i government, no matter how powerful it “L1,, i,._-_ 1...... (xpllliil and defend its policies, and \\'ilt‘ilCc' it 11Cl“.\'L‘$ full authority io enforce tnii1i1i>tiiig our 311N511 Paljlla‘ with that of our American Llitgnvgi journal remarks: can u.) to the House 0f Coni- ‘"1111 authority‘ for his aims, pro- ".'_\ ihcni out. .\Ir, Roosevelt can't ii. policies. >_\~lL'1l1 . liic EC 1.‘. llli'llllll"\' i» c cccd _ g1: i. Cwngrias, nor can the members of his . .. . . , cgililllCi. 1hr must .\Ir. hooseielt can do is to send a message to Congress; and the most his mp5,,“ Cm, .1.) iihey are really merely depart- mi- . 1ll':lii\| is 1o appear before some coni- niiitcc oi kwiflrcss. T1101? l5 I“) gfwel-"nlm: paiuy- as such in the Congress to support 01' uplydil the VXCCIIUVC s policies; and no organ- ized opposition to SllbjCCt them to examina- iiou and criticism. Congress is on its own; 1135 SClilllYllc‘ powers and responsibilities of its own. T116 dircct consequence is a multiplicity 0f boards and bureaus and commissions, many. of them with overlapping responsibilities and 11"‘ isdictions, and none of them with complete authority. Mostly the creations of the Presi- dent, they are responsible only to him, and t00 often thev begin with the antagonism of Con’ gress. In the case of price control in Canada, the Wartime Prices and Trade Board is direct- 1y responsible to the Minister of Finance, who in turn must act under collective cabinet respon- sibility, and with the cabinet answering to Parlia merit. In the United States pgce control has been under an appointee of the President, ai: appointee who without any responsibility t0 C011‘ gress yet must depend upon Congress to vote hintthc appropriation necessary for his work. And so with all the other vital war agencies. Mr. Bracken and Mr.King Hr. Bnclmn, Progressive Conservative leader, having told a Toronto audience that the Govern- filling in tax forms or working problems in relativity: “Fourth, the excess loin (lumbar) and pelvic (sacral) fat shall be trimmed from the inside of the full loin upon a flat surface, with no other support to change its position, meat side down, and removing all fat which extends above a flat plane parallel with the flat surface supporting the full loin and on a level with the full length of the protruding edge of the lumbar section of the chine-bone. Then, all fat shall be removed which extends above a flat plane, using the following two lines as guides for each side of the plane: an imaginary line parallel with the full length of the protruding edge of the lumbar section of the chine-bone, which line extends one inch directly above such protruding edge; a line on the inside 0f the loin two inches from the flank edge and running parallel with such edge for the full length of the 10in. All fat obstructing the meas- urement of the second line shall be removed. In addition to the foregoing, all rough fat in the pelvic cavity of the heavy end of the loin (sir- 10in) shall be trimmed smooth and trimming by a knife shall be apparent. No fat remaining in the pelvic cavity shall exceed one inch in depth.” — EDITORIAL NOTES — Everybody with friends and relatives at the front will be scanning the newspapers more close- ly and eagerly than ever now. $1 1|! ii >1‘ Mother was in the habit of “scrubbing" iiiiic year old Maurice before going to bed after his da_v’s play—a [Jrocecding be did not £l1\\'Zl_\'S relish One ewning he in>inuziiiiigly' rcmzirkcil -— “.\[um, if you have a headache you iiced not wash me tonight." i U U U Richard Croiinvell, Lord Protector of ling- land from i658 to i659 when he was cumpclli-zl t0 retire; the son 0f Oliver it was hoped :iii'.i ardently desired by ilie 1'€\'(\1L11ii;lli:lS iliai he should continue the policy and administraiioii of his father, but he lacked the czipnciiy for ruling, and having the army and landed gentry violently opposed to him, he considered it lldvisltbli‘ 1-1 quit while the going was good; his judgment in this respect was good, as he remained uimio1cste<l after the restoration, and lived quietly as a coun- try gentleman. =o= w >1< r; Representative \V. R. Harris. (DUlTL-YLI.) has obtained war production board release of ioo livery into Canada by a \Vl‘1i order forbidding export of burlap bags from 1hr linituil Stains. The board order caught 6o carlnails of Virginia potatoes sacked in burlap at the border and 4o more carloads en route. \\'Pll officials, on an- peal from Mr. Harris, ordered the potatoes rc- lcased and assured .\Ir. llarris an illllClltllllflll 1o the order would be 1S>ll(‘(1 to exempt future shipments of potatoes in burlap bags 1o Ciiuziila i 4‘ i $ |\\'hilc residents of Southern Ontario swelter- ed in the heat a week zigo, the cvntral- section of Norfhem Ontario north of Lake Superior shiv- ered in snow and near-freezing tviiipi'i'aiiii"e.<. Censorship regulations prcvciiieil earlier general meat‘: manpower policy is “prompted by politi- cal cowardice," Prime Minister King rose in his seat to say to Parliament: Bracken . . been a member of the House of Common: I should today immediately have ask- ed you Mr. Speaker, to see that Mr. Bracken was obliged immediately to withdraw his charge of political cowardice." \Vhich is the complete justification for Mr. Bracken having said what he did say where he laid it, suggests the Ottawa Journal. For if Mr. King proposes to regard himself and his Govtrnmant as lose majesty in the matter of criticism and to use the power of his majority to stifle it in Parliament, then it is time somebody spoke the truth outside Parliament. And it should be possible to lay in Parliament what Mr. Brackim did say. What Mr. Brackcn’s words implied is that in the nutter of manpower the Government refrained from doing the right thing through fear of its political consequences. If it is not possible to say that in Parliament then our whole system of an opposition party in the Ilousc of Commons has come to a pitiful decay. Lideral Press Comment Prime Bliuisier King may try to brush off Mr. Brackeifs attack on the Government's man power policies as the mere mood of a partisan. What armor has 11c against an almost equally strong attack on ‘.118 same policies from the leading I.l1)Cl'.'1l<)l‘Q{l1l in Canada, the “linnipeg Free" l’re.-~? The brec 1‘rc~< attack, curiously enough, appi-a 1 on the day that .\Ir. Bracken voiced his criticism iii Toronto. The l-‘rec Press, pointing to waste of man- pr-w-er and to critical shortages of workers in key industries. savs: —“This is the basic prob- lcni, and 1111111‘ and more Canadians wonder as they ivaurh ihc (Eovei-iiiiieiu’; attempts to solve it what the reason for the policy is which main- tains in Czinaila more than 200,000 men in the army alone. The iiiiinbcr is more probably 240,- ooo. . . .“ Proceeding 1o say that the Minister of Dc- lence apparently refuses to change any policy “regardless of whether the situation on which that policy ivris based has vanished completely" llic Free Pro-s concludes. “Tlicre is no appar- rnt sanity in \\ hat we all sec around us today. There is instead loo much evidence to support the theory that the basic plan. whatever it is, is a bad one. rigid, 1llt'1.'l>'llC and in all probability out >f flair." iHarid on“ Retailers (liiiilicr-Hiiiii {is our wartime restrictions mav “l-Iad BIr." publication of the snowfall which was repurlel from such railwav centres as Scliriibcr. lbirnv- paync, Oba. llawk junction, Cuppi-ll and Xliclii- pieoten. At Schrciber, in the Port Arthur d1;- trict, the snowfall was light with the tempera- ture down to 34 degrees, two above freczinz. Oba, 265 miles north of Sault Sic. Ilarir, Om. had one to two inches of snow. .\t llnrncpayiiiv, 35 miles west of Oba. on the Canadian National Railways, there was one and a half inches of snow. The area blanketed by the snow extend- ed south to Michipicoten on Lake Superior. v v >1- 4- Dr. Clifford B. Purves. of the hlassachuseiis Institute of Technology, has been appointed E. B. Eddy professor of industrial and cellulose chemistry at McGill University. Dr. Purves will succeed Prof. Harold Hibbert, the first in- cumbent of the chair, whose retirement becomes effective the end of August. Dr. Purves was born in Scotland in I902 and received both his baccalaureate and doctor’: degree from St. An- drew's University, where his career was marked by great distinction. After two years in the Un- ited States u the holder of the Commonwealth Fund Fellowship, he returned to Aberdeen Uni- versity u assistant to the late Prof. j. j. R. Macleod, but was later recalled to a position at the National Institute of Health in the Iliiiteil stalés- In I936 he was appointed associate pro- fessor of organic chemistry at M.I.T, n- u u a The Beveridge and co-related post-ivar plans have raised a. question of medical and legal ethics now being discussed. The question of professional confidence is raised in connection with a State organized medical service. The con- fidencc betw'cen——-say———thc solicitor or the bar- rister and his client doriot give rise to discus- sion and controversy, because the relation of solicitor or barrister to client is recognized in law_as one absolutely confidential. The law of medical confidcnces has never been authoritative- ly defined. As the law stands, a doctor on oc- casion lays. himself open to an action for dam- ages for breach of confidence should lie divulge information harmful to his patient! interests, on the one hand; while, on the other, he is legally obliged ‘to answer in a. Court of law any ques- tion which the Court may put to him. no matter tinder what understanding of confidence the information may have come into hi5 hands, The public ‘and the medical profession must come to I1 d6CIS10n as_to tlielduiy of a iloctor when called upon as a witness m a Court nf Law to divulge something about a patient which he would never have learned bubfor the patients belief that what he Safflplfi his doctor ivnuld never be breathed outside the ivalls of the consulting- room. The sole exception to Iibsrdiile profes- w ilirv rirc perhaps loss so than those of other sinnal secrecy is the pXigu-"U. of Circmnghncc, "'"lll"l‘7‘- llillllf“ Ill" f“ll°“'l"i! Ttlllllflllfifl in which a man—doclor or 1.'i\\‘\'(‘l'-—-1i'is kiivuvl- pit-rd in Nation's lln-iiiiws, from l’. .9. regiila- edge, no matter bow obtained. ilinl biil fur hi. i-ui- gin i-rning l1'1.'|l1 veiling prices for lK-Pf, veal. intcrvciiliiiii. a crime will 1N‘ cmniiiillt-il or is in limb‘ and lllllllllll cuts. Rvlziilvrs who can take process of bi-ing i~i.nimi[1<-(]_ I" 5nd, flue“... hr. his lll thrir stride shouldn't have any difficulty is bound 1o intervene. i i I carloads of Virginia potatoes blocked from 110-. Notes By The Way Donald Gordon In: uld that Can- adians will have an extra. 400 infl- lion w spend this year. In l. pig's eye they will, 1f that. Mr. Lsloy hear: about fL-Ottawa Cltlnen. There are two more good lhtuu about me Chinese victory, nus the Pathfinder. One 1s that the Chin- ese are learning that they can beat the Japs. and the other 1s that. the Jabs are learning the same thing. The British lion-the Amerlun eagle-the Russian bear-the Gallic cock-the Canadian beaver-all fine and noble but what we are worry- ing about are the potato bug, cha bean weevils, the corn borer. the aphid and the termlber-Liondon Flee Press. One of the molt timely davloeo In succor to torpedoed seamen has laeen made 1n the development of a. prac- tical method to make drinking wat- er from sea water by men maroon- ed 1n life-boats or raft-n. Only a small pack of chemicals 1.: required to make a. quart. of when-St Thomas Times-Journal. A woman worker who Ior you: had been assembling links 1n driv- fng chains came to her foreman m- cently and asked for a. change 1n Jobs. “I want to do something", she said. “iliat ivlll help wln this war." "You are", replied the foreman. “You're making chains for ‘jeeps?’ She returned to her bench perfectly satisfied And the management of that company hurriedly began to show‘ ecah svorker where his job fit- ted into the war program-Iron Age. We are wont to libel animals with the wrong attributes, says The Lon- don Specttator. All specialists will agi-ee that the pig, 1f glven the chance, is one or the cleanest o: all animals, especially in the precise care taken not to dirty its straw. The piglets are "housetra1ned“ al- most from the day of birth, as I have lately seen. The alleged dirti- ness of pigs is due wholly to the ill- cquipped slums in which t00 often ll1(‘\‘ are prisoned. At a time when It 1s of utmost lmportnnre for the United Nations io. remain united we cannot un- tlfifSitlllCl what pcssessed the Gal- lup Poll people lo go about, Great Briilain asking; men and women utilcli natfou they thought had made the greatest contribution to- ward whining the war to date. We feel that the Pcll should have some suitable recognition-a glass bottle full of termites might oo—for this contribuiion toward Allied disuri- ii,v.~iPetcrborough Examiner-i. A new start In education will have to be made: a IICW system of Euro- pean cdiicaticn will have to be de- vised says Denis Sauret. of the Ui ;t_v of London, in Britain. Two p. neral ideas must be observed; to tench in even; nation prlncijchs common to all nianklrd; to teach also iii every nation those concep- tions which come from t-he inner- most traditions of that nation. which harmonize with the general good- Thus no nation and no indi- vidual would feel neglected us a unit, and yet all nations and lndl- viduals would be linked together lnlf in Germany the minister of fnod were to resign with a public decla- ration that Hillerfis econcrnlc pull- clcs were unworkable, and 1f Goer- inc vrcrc to denounce Dr. f-Ijalmar Schacht as a millstone around ttie neck of the war effort. the allied world would hail these things joy- fully as a symptom of collapse. "Well, the cracks are showing at the verv top," people would say. “It won't be long now!" But the Axis has provided us with no such "good news“ of disunitv and disorganiza- iion at its administrative centres as Washington has been providing for the Axis this week.--<Mlnneapoliii Star-Journal). Apparently our navy lads crave action, afloat or ashore. Three eld- erly ladies. following a hard dav at. Red Cross. relaxed at a movie. Dur- lug the feature. which lacked Dor- haps some of the speed and rhy- thm demanded by today's youth. One lady dmbiied a. vauable ear- ring. After fumbling around her feet wit-bout success, and fearing 1t. might be stepped on, she notified the others. All three leaned over and began furnblLnB. heads bobbing 1n a variety or eccentric motions. At last one of the ladies llt a match. As its 11 t lcoafed the miss- 1n: trinket an all three dlved for 1t, the sailor, half seas ovenappgnr. ed from somewhere and crouched beside 171mm. "Hey". he saJd, "L! this 1s a wan came I'd Ilka to m 1n on lt.."—'I'h0 Printed Word, M mill! ll 10.000 Ill“ oral! drawn from all parts of the country have been acquired by the Ministry of War Transport for various wgr PIIPWRH thrwsh Nqulaltionlng or Dburchuo. Some 2.000 of the Lon- don rwlm Imam have prom most adaptable cmft for all sorta of ma. They are to be found doing duty on the West African coast, among other parts of the world. The delivery of many of the small craft to new sta- tions overseas has been achieved bv fine feats of scamanahlp. Pom, tugj ferries, and even 5, floating crane‘ n11 designed for service in coastal waters at home, have made vovaze-s of 12,000 miles round the Cape m the Middle East. In order to avoid prowling enemy bombers these tiny vessels have had to cmsr 2.000 miles of the open Atlantic before mowed. lug down the west coast of Africa, Thev have suffered no casualties- London Times. .___. After 80 you: of m tltl Wcstem Union Telegugie coiiiisistgli; 15 10 more with the Postal, pfovid his stockholders and the riedemi Communications Commlggjgn N. Y. State Public service Commis» slon approve. Postal, which h“ 15. ooo employes and 1n 1942 did $22,000,‘. 000 Brass business, will sacrifice its "time. the consolidation to Continue as Western Union. which has 58,000 Omblflves. did biulmas of 3123.000.- OQO 111st veal". and 1a the oldest elec- lilc communications system 1n the USJL-Telegraphlc communlcatlom bvfltm in 1844 with the constmctlon by Samuel F. B. Morse. inventor of 11"‘ leleimnh. of line from Baltl more w Washington. In the follow- lmz venrs many independent com- lmnl"! SPTRHS 11D. but were consoli- (fated in 1881 when Jay could u. qulrcd control of the Western Union Telesmvb Company. In the same vrar the Postal Telegraph Cfimngny was established. but wlthln five Year's i1. hail been foreclosed and W bflllllll 1n foreclosure by John PUBLIC FORUM ggugg III Q0 n“ y; Mada-u 0| likeni- SALMON SEASON EXTENDED Blr,- am enclosing you e. copy of a let r I have received from the Munster of Fisheries and which 1s mt personal. 1 would therefore request that you publish the letter Just as 1t 1a under a suitable prefix in the next issue of the Guardian. I am. Sir, eve. THOS. V. GRANT. M.D.. M.P. for King's, P.E.I. (Enclosure) De ment of Fisherlel 0 flee 0f the Minister June 28th. 1948. Dear Doctor Grant:- Thla will acknowledge your letter of June 22nd and refer again m your letter of May 14th, with which you sent me a. petition you receiv- ed from the salmon fishermen of your constituency, requesting that the salmon-net fishing season. which normally closes on the 1st day of September, extended until the middle of October. The revision of the Special Fish- ery Regulations for Prince Edward Island for this year ls now beln‘ considered. and I am pleased to m- form you that action Ls contemplat- ed t0 exhend the salmon-net. fish- ing season until October tenth in- clusive. The officers of my Depart- ment, who have investigated the request of your petitioners, report that the commercial salmoiinet fishery of the Province Ls pretty well confined t0 the St. Peter's Bay dist-riot where there is f1 late run of salmon, and under the existing season the fishermens nets are re- moved before they have a fair share of fish. 0n the other hand we must safeguard debletlon of tine spawning run of salmon entering Moiiell River. It is, therefore, my opinion that an extension of the season of ten against the undue . days should reasonably meet the ascending the Morcll spawning purposes. Yours very lrulv, River Dr. Thomas V. Grant, M.P., House of Commons, OTTAWA. AFTER READING A SONNET BY WORDSWORTH I, too, am sorrv Milton ls not here Today; but I am sorry for nis sake. He fought corruption, tried to forge a stake To pinion tyrants to a timeless bier. And hhzikrtspeare, living 1n an age of cheer And daring deeds, watched older battles break. Wordsworth himself in Londdii diu not wake The Spirit ivhlrh proud year. 1s hers 1n this Though all men think their bat- tles arc the best. I hold this truth against all who contend: “'I‘hls lswopr finest hour," this 1s 5 a We vrefrleoéne, knowing we not only e n For freedom north and south and eust and west, But walk with God. Him, to the end. —Charles Frederick Boyle, Released by the Writers’ War Committee. and serve (Sad-l rzxxasr BERTRAND, wmmrfsifll get well, see your doctor; 2. To well, watch your habits. Guard against incomplete elimination. Eat Kellogg's Bran Flakes every day. Ask for the golden-yellow package-either the regular or the new Family-package. Begln tomorrow. Made by Kellogg's 1n London, Canada. isuzd of strips of papzr flour sacks attached to the end of a broom- sflgk, Al. regular intervals. round- Ups of flies wculrl be made through- out the home. 'I"he gradually in- creasing swarm would be directed to the screen door which would be quickly opened and the flies swept lnto the open. Turn the dcor would be slammed. The entire cperntlcn required dexterity and agility. Various lethal weapons were em- He Created Fly Swatter (Buffalo News) In Missouri recently a man nam- needs of_ the few ctn-nmercial fisher? ed Benamin F. Duglciss cLed at the men who operate salmon nets, and age of 89. Hepwas described as the at the same time muse m, sgyjgus man who originated the fly-swatter reduction i0 the numbpfg of fish when 1n 1900 he toe-k _:i small piece IQf‘ of wlre screen. bound its edges with ll YOU wcnl lo lioop M for oxllu lhlllfll; take these two steps to health: l. To JIM HAS“ . . In fact, Jim has two Tole-register operatoi Stock Exchange dayt 1n a machine shop tl week and Sundays, li precision tools. “Ta! enemy" says Jlm. “1 ltlck it If I didn't ke~ I'm careful about m; no harsh cathartic; f Instead, I make sure 10f ‘bulk’ in my diet. every momlng with i Kellogg's Bran Flake ' keep me flt . . . taste Kellogg's Bran Flak Parts 0f Wheat ares help supply valuable proteins too . . . hel] for extra things! KEEP FIT WITH KEIJOGIYS . _ el/ 11/ day in ifieyear/ HIP qualities and tn eralb’ of the g all wnn have abalement MAC’ RES cloth and fixed it. to u whittled pployed against flies including the pixaatfligxcate handle. 'I“nc idea was adopted b7." sticky fly par: ' and the old-fasli- suengnwns mziniifiic.i"i~cr.s and toned black l1 ~.on fly pap-er. In me “an” Mjnisteri soon similar wire sivattcrs were be- spite of the battle that went on Restores ( 1 mi: wielded throughout the land. againstdlicrn. each season saw their. 1 i h] The passlut! of this benefactor of return in tzrent numbers. But 1n re- 313;; "hi" ‘mankind will recall the 18113 1111M cent vears they have bcen diminish- um -Pl_evc, ‘made aszalnst the common house I lng, There are stlll enough of them SW65 “mm fly. Besides swatters. fly chascrfito make kncsvn their pestifercus 80am were also d. Thfsc usually con- In the battle against Life, Accident and Health tory. ing dollars that is helping 1t is a privilege of the West Life man. HYNDMAN 8i Provincial Offices: Charlottetown Earle S. Janey-Representative Uyrlu A. R. Shaw-Represents Pet/er G. Moll: * -Repreuen F. L. MacN-"t-Representatlvo iiiuioiini EFFICIENCY . Thrift is vital to the war effort. Premium savings add to the mighty army of fight- make peoplr: future more secure. Thomas McAvlnn. GILL-Special Representative at Ch"l‘owr|. Allison P. McLean, U.L.U.—D|strict Manager at Summerslde Fear and Want, adequate Insurance is a major fac- l0 win the Will‘. Life Underwriter to help Consult the Great- CU. LIMITED . As a D sunburn us! S Kol — Derny‘: ‘ '1‘ 011 — Managers ‘Tints! To: Summerside Montague "TIM-eff. THE T’ M. 0‘Le:iry. IIVQ at Montague. 149 Great tltive M. Vlc torn. Mall Order: at Durnley. A ___i pressed farmer. er concerned. essential work. hfackiv iirrlrr \‘h d1 u I Banded rapidly. use rec on fr, ex- VIIIIIIIIIIIIuIIIIIIIA Merchants and Business Men ca VIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ANOTHER CALL TO NATIONAL SERVIC To Business Men, Professional Men, Storekei Store Clerks, Citizens of Towns and Cities Prince Edward Island This province w!!! face an emergency during the harvesting season. of agricultural labour, and many farmers will the truest sense of’ the word, the gathering of IONAL IMPORTANCE. Will you, as a patriotic citizen, volunteer to help some farmer for one two or th‘ d- harvest time? The urgency of the situation can not b 1 d i i“ ‘ rect contribution to final victory. e exaggem e ’ and your help m" be If you wish to help, please file your name at and Summer-side. ‘As these offices cannot provide transportation, call, military _ ‘Hm l! a grave slit require help during haying and harvestii the harvest this year will be work of the Selective Service Offices at Charlottt When your services are re quired, you will be pul. in mud‘ with some this must be arranged by yourself or the l r001) 1s VITAL-Therefore YOUR ASSISTA NCE 1s vmir, The Island has answered every CALL T0 PATRIOTIC DUTY. The periods when hel tember and October. File your lntentlons of rendering this voluntary service without delay. n "5191 by Per mlttlng employees to volunteer for this and monetary: no NOT ran. IN THIS p wlll be most needed ext end from July 20 to Aug. 6 and throughou Employment & National Selective Service Offici Charlottetown and Summerslde, P.E.