...~ Mum ma» ma‘ run-a i-vrr rrrr II!‘ B» 5H8 15r- Inv- nun-v‘ nan-n -.ui.nu ..-.-i /I4'(//, . a PAGE FOUR THE CIIAIILIITTETOWN GUARDIAN Iornlnn Dnlly (Innnlol In Ill!) Iruldnnn Llonl, GIL W. Olinnm n, lulu! Ho: Pnnldlllu l. l. Unrllf I J. _ lonntnryi l-loul. 00L l). , ldlmr Ind Innnll Q IJIIIGIOI, J. l. ll ll“, IJJ. Annoclntn Edliorlu lrrnnn Wnlnu, nnd Llano, Inn l. llurnott, IS.O.N.V,B_ 10a Anflvn fluvial] SUBSCRIPTION IATZ I; lnll tn P. l. l. H-ul on your: II-M In: I nonlln ‘LI for I nmnlnn; Q00 for fin Ionll 0h; Uulvu-y I100 pa: your; “.00 for I Iunlln 01.7! [or I nrnnthli O00 for nno ntnnlI P HAM to ofhnr lfruvlnmn nllll U.I.A. ILI) p“ yq| Mord»: walnut 82.00 iwr nun 01.00 for 0 noun, Mn lo: l Inn I, OLD 4 Ibo Charlottetown “m”; n Iatinllufn new: Agency, Timon lqunu, luv Iorh Old lonth how: Agency, Corner Allin nnd Wnnhlngton Benton Ilntrupolltnn haw: Anncy, 1.2M Poul Ill. llontrenli J. I‘|nc I54 On; M, Torontni New: Stnnd Cllauln lanrlnn Octnwn; Wolfirn Nawn BllI-Id ludbnry, 0M4 lint Iohncvu Shop, Hadrian, N. l8. "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” ‘ruvnsnav, {out is,_i94s._ _ Hands Off The B. N. A. Act flunrdlnn any be \\llt‘It ihc Lliiift-ilcratioii Fathers framed the British North .\nicric;i :\ct tlicy provided, as a SZIf-Cgilllfil, that lltl change Cuttlfl be made with- 01H tt-{i-i-t-t t- iii Ill: liritisii Parliament. This iiisurcil Illc ri-iiwnt of all thc Provinces. as ivcll n, of thc UUIIIIIIIOII Parliament, to any proposed azncnihiicnt. FIWIII time to time SCIICIIIBS have burn si-t on i-iiit to scuttle this wise provision. 'l'ht- l.'i~t ziitvinpt was iiizidc in W30. \\'l\‘~‘" ti"? b“? JIhIiCL‘ Xlinisici" Latioimc called a full meeting 0t the IJ-aiiiinion-Provincial committee on con- stitutiiiiizil rciiirin to consider either (I) adding tii the III-(‘FVIII .\ct a clause to take the power of amciiiling it :i\v.'i_v from the Ilritish Parliament and lodging it in the DUIIIIIIIOII Parliament, or (2; fCpCitlittg ih-s It .\l..\. .\ct altogether and rc- (‘Ititttittg it at Lluziwa. This scheme icll through chiefly because oi the Yfgiirltufl opposition put up by Ilon. B. .\Ic.\';ni", .\IIUI'IIJ4\' Licncral of .\'cw Brunswick. Suhicttiic-irtly" a number of the Provinces joined. New Iiruizsiviclc iii tipposing, and the idea ivas (lroppcrl. Iiviilently", however, i! Still i185 iii ailviicatis. In Ifiirlizimcnt last wcck represent-- tivi: of diffcrcnt txiriies spoke as if desirous If reviving this dangerous issue. justice .\Iinist:r St. lxinr-cnt is ituotcil as saying he hoped a Sylv tcm w-iuld be found and made operative whereby‘ anipiiilntcnts tn the l‘.,.\'..\. .-\ct "will not rcqitirc evcit tn be I'L'*_‘l~t€I‘C(l, for that is what it rcally BIIIiitItIts to. as the statute of another Parliament." Mr, .\I. _l. Uilihvctl, CLTF, trader, criticized the reference tn the British Parliament as being “outmoded and cniii"cl_v out of ‘late-i’ Oiltefi slylh? altitlt: similar liiics,—indicating, in the op- ini-in of the Czinxitlian Press correspondent, thu priihiibility" that steps will be taken soon after the war ends to launch another constitution- tinkering campaign. It is amazing to find the “blister of 1115M?- spciilting as he did on this stibjcct. He seems to bc iui.'i\v.'irc that the British NOYih IVIICFICFI .\ct is a solciiin treaty between the Provinccs and the Dominion. Its provisions may not be rcgzirdcil as though they" were a matter 0f mcrc a: ~iicnt or convcnicnce. To rflliifie ill? B..\'..\. .~\ct to the catcgory of a Dominion statute, would strip the smaller provinces of all their rights and privileges, in a Federal Union in which they" tnust always remain a helpless minority". \\'hen the change was suggested in I936, th: Toronto .\Iail and Empire had this to say: — “Many of those who wish the P°wer 0f the amendment to be centred at Ottawa instead of “cstminstcr are llClilKTllfCly and craftily work- ing t0 weaken the remaining ties that bind us to the .\Iother Country and to the WEI Of the Em- pire ...\\'hen we say this we know that not all of those who favor the new and objectionable proposals are cognizant of whither they are (lrifting. They have not stopped to consider the implication of the suggested departure." The Montreal Star was also firmly opposed. “What we gain by the necessity of appealing to \\'<stinin<tcr," it said, “is the cooling effects of di-IZIIICL’, disintercstctliicss and delay. How can anyone be surc—cspccially" the leaders and guar- dians of our various tninorities—that in some day of heat and passion we may not most sorc- lv ncc/l this piece of ‘cold storage’? We are in the Iinipirc and \ve arc gtiilifl i0 513)‘ ihcm- “TY not kvcp Ztll the incidental advantages of tliiS rclzition." Attorney fiencral .\fc.\'air of New Brunswiclt Ihtt- .\llil'.lll(‘(l up the situation: "'I'lic division of i'fQi~lllii\i' and cxvcniiw I)(I\\'(‘l'$, which is the pith and .\lll)\iItllL'f‘ of a fcdcrzil system of gov- erniiicnt, nitist ilcpend for its maintenance and stability upon a paramount law; in our case upon thc "supremacy of the Imperial legislation. This I.l_'f\'i~i;t‘III'L' ipf New Brunswick) holds its pre- ~ nt lill\\('l'.s lit‘t‘ltll>(* .\'cw Brunswick is an auto- mation-, si-li-giivi-riiiiig province of Great Bri- niiii, duct-mun within ihc stihere defined for [HT hv ihc li..\',.\, .i\ct and independent of the tanadian l'Itt‘liJItII<'l1f. Cndcr the new proposals ~ht~ uiiuhl bvci-int- a more territorial (livision of the Dtttltilliiilt and hold her tioivcrs by way of gifts frnin the Parliament of Canada. To ac- Ittiiiuli-rlgc the snprcmacyt of the latter would be In (‘iillft'<\' fllll‘ Ft\\'ll stibservicncy and subordina- flllll," The i><llC i~' still more clearly’ sci forth in a book by the lzitc Sir ("icorge Ross, a fnrmcr Pre- niicr i-f t Int.'u"ii», rntitletl “The Senate 0f Canada", riniitrid appivivingly" by the Montreal Gazette. Ilhcrvin the author lays down the principle that t"'II~"Ill ‘If :ill the contracting parties to the Confvili-iwitiiiii trcaty "stands at the very thresh- Itltlfl" and cwnsiitntrs the "fundamental character" of illt‘ lt.\'..\. .\ct. "The iliictrinc of consent, in fa lit‘ writrs, “is the flaming sword nf the f1 n-iitiitiiin that Iuriir every way and forbids pr» w» till mitt-viii is clearly established." lt is hm bad that this dangerous idea 0f tin- l, rug with our Constitution should be revived in ivartimc. even momentarily. Ottawa should l*\'ll1I\'.'|I by this time that the Provinces simply will not stand for it. ~ Potato Bug's March Those who may suppose that the Colorado Beetle, otherwise known as the “potato bug", is a pest of comparatively" recent appearance, may be interested in the following brief article which appeared, according to an exchange, in the “Col- onial Standard" of Pictou, N.S., in the year i883: “The Colorado Potato Bcctle i5 likclv to be n serious pest this ycar. Iiariiiers find their pota- to plants just above thc ground literally covered with the bugs. Nearly sixty years ago, in I824, the insect was first oliservrd by TIIOIIIZIS Say, the first great American entomologist, who nam- ed it Doryphora Deceinliiiczitzi-the ‘tcnlined spear bearer.’ It was never heard of further for 35 years, until 10o miles west of Oiriaha, Ne- braska, in I859, it first tastcd the Itixuriotis foli- age of the cultivated potato. The zibtintlaiice of this delicious food, tircparccl by the hzind of man, enabled it to ‘increase and iiuiltiply".’ Each bcctlc in one month bccaitie fivc hundred. In 186i it invaded Iowa; in I362, \\'isconsin. In I864 it crossed the Klississippi in Illinois. ln I367 it reaclictl .\Iiclii,'.{aii and Indiana, and iii I870 the advance guard crossed the Canadian frontier. In I874 the bcctle rcziclictl the .-\tl:tntic States, and in I875 occupied IIICIII from .\Iainc to Vir- ginia. In I377 they" ut-rc rcpnrtctl in New Brunswick. 'I‘hrcc yczir- ago (IRSO) they" wcrc found in onc farm in .\'iiv:i .\‘cnii:i. but were coni- plctely eradicated thrrc, I.1I>[_\'l‘1tI‘ the Colorado Beetle was reported nczirly Sillltlliitlllultbl)‘ in Prince lidward Island, (‘unibri"l:iiiil tluinty and Pictou tiouniy", and niiw they thrczitcn to be a serious pest." THE cmutnmwiafrown GTIARDIAN ' llotos By Tho Way .____. Devonnhlre womnn bu found n, can of coffee, hermetically sealed, I§é°i‘.‘.$i‘ii’“?.?.°“ it; e. . . —Windmr Btu. e If some of than follow: who strike over trlfles had to spend a clay 0r two on a raft. tn the North At- lantic they would not. consider their present. lot, even under its d bit- ittes. such an unhwrry 0ne.—( an- couver Province). London henn vtn the nn- er- ground from Italy, that Mussoltnra health has deteriorated visibly, In the last few mouths, forcing hlm n- i0 11111105?’ -‘ seclusion. e march to destiny wan too much for the old boy yho once led the march on Rome "This side up-wlth care". So rehd the Instructions on the cover o; a soggy and broken parcel handed otter to the Repair Section at, the B Post Office for reconditioning. m told Its own story. Someone had examination of the pulpy packs XIIflllPd_ a glass jar of 1am. seal only with a thin disc of baraffm wax. but thoughtfully labelled show which end was 0o be held up.—- Post Office Bulletin. By a. happy inversion of the no] cepied wartime practice, wives an mothtrs of Fritish soldiers servLn In North Africa can now enjoy the experience of receiving food parcels as gifts from their mienfolk over- seas. The first 3.000 of these par- cels have reached this country In tht- last feiv days. Each contains 2 lbs, of sugar, together with COfIBE. (‘lI'lf‘(l fruits, cheese, or 2 lbs. of choc- olates, alI Empire produce.—f.ondon Times. — EDITORIAL NOTES — St. Swiihin} Day. i- 1r iv v Many tourists are here but not so many "for- eign” cars as tisual. y- ii 1k at The rtisiunzttiitn iif two lllt'llllt\‘l'i from a clim- niittee of the City CitltllCll lICCZIIhl‘ their recom- incdatituis had not bP-cu adiiptutl by the Council as a whole, is hardly in accordance with ilcnio- cratic Iirinciplcs. =0- : 1k w Alfrctl “iilliam IlZlrIII.~\\'iil'ill_ |>i Yi-ciitult Northcliifc, uni-of the ftt1'\'ll1il\'f liritish urn-pap- er men 0f the Ninctccnth t'iiiiiiti'_\', born lllls tllllt’. 13135; foundcil ".\ns\vvi'.-"'_ and IlfiI‘l'\\I\l'4l~ ‘The Daily" .\lail", an up-tii-ilnn- iuiiriiiiig llt‘\\'~l!II]>t'l' with rcgitinal issucs in illk’ ni-rth iii Hllgllllltl and Scotland as wcll; took ovci" th-s control iii "The ’.Tlll1i‘S" from thc \\‘:iht-r.< 1'.'uiiily" ZlIltl CltlhitlPl“ ably brightened that \'cii<'r:il~li~ jltllldlill, giving it new lift‘ and influruci‘ 1 did nutrh for tht- iniprovc- incnt of zivizuiiiii liy illt‘ iiiii-i- of qt. itil tiriiivsl was chairman oi the IIriti-h \\‘."ii' .\li~~~inii tn th-s CS. in Ii)I;‘, which lcd to that country" jiiiniir; the Allies. i 1i i i According to .\lr. Ito» .\lnm"<>. ivzir Ct'I‘I'\"~[>HI‘i- (lent, Lord 'I‘\\"ecilsiiiuir, sou of the hiic giiixwiiiir- gUIICflIl of Czinntlu, jnincd his ri-jgiiuviit shortly" be» fore the Canadians ivcrc duc to .~Z\ll from lirituin. Before fhc expedition $1lll\'(lIIITCIIIIIIHIIS wcrc- tzik- cii to protect Ihc hcahh iii ihi- lniip. iigziiiisi irii- piczil tiiscziscs, particularly" niularizi. lllt'_\‘ were armed against iniisquitiis with every" titih iiiziti carrying a fiv-swattci- and every‘ eighth inzin a spray gun for use against insects. Other officers iticlutle Capt. Bud liftllIlCYIIlItlI, (if S_vdn<-_v, X \‘., and Capt. Tinnuny" Czinilcy, New (ilzisgou; X S. The medical officCr of our outfit is Cnpi. Kcn- neth UacDonald, son of .\lr. i’. l. .\l.'icl)onaltl. of Charlottetown. in io- iu iv “Jittcrbugs may bcciiiiii‘ a >IilC>lli)\\' fnr modern Catholic youth, if we tire ziblc to prcscnt to all fun-loving boys and girls a better and more coin- prehensive menu of recreational activity, than in the past," Father Nell, adircctor of the Sum- mer School of Catholic .\ction, kloittrcal. declar- ed, after having demonstrated to hundreds of students that real fun can become a most cs- sential part of spiritual and social activity. Play- ing like a boy with his students in the large sta- dium of the Loyola, College, Father .\'<'ll and his secretary Miss Iidith Iicltlhziltc, the lzittcr direct- ing tlic games over a microphone, filled the rc- creational hours of the Summer School with games and music conducive to the spiritual and physical make-tip of modern youth. They show- ed a cheering crowd how a good time can be had "even under the eyes of priests and nuns" when they walked arm in arm with the students in a form of folkdancing, to the rhythm of snappy music. m at i: a- There is division in Liberal ranks in Cartier, Montreal over the selection of a party candidate for the forthcoming by-election, and Prime Min- ister King has allowed himself to become involv- ed in the tiistiute. The officers of one of the Cartier associations met to consider a letter rc- ceived from the secretary of Prime Ministnr Mackenzie King in which it was stated on his behalf that, its leader of the Liberal party, if was not Iifr. King's policy tn intervene in the political affairs of local organizations. A tele- gram had also been received from Hon. Louis St. Laurent, Minister of Justice, acknowledging the receipt of the request for a Liberal convention in Cartier to select a candidate. This request ivris sent to the Rlinistcr of justice after a meet- ing called by the Pctcr Bercovitch Association and the Active Libcral Hebrew Association of Montreal, which unanimously tiassed a resolu- tion in favor of a convention. ln his telegram, Mr. 5t. Laurent priiiniserl immediate considera- tion, with his colleagues in the cabinct of the matter of a convention. (In the previous Sat- urday Hon. lirnest licrtrand, llinistcr of Fish- eries, sent a telegram i-ntlorsing, on behalf (if the Liberal party and in the IIIIIIII‘ of the llriinc .\fin- ister, the candidacy of .\lr. Lazarus Phillips, ICC. In view of this confusion, .\lr. Lynn \V. 151G155. K.C., ilcclarctl that l‘<‘tcr licrcnvitch Aa- ‘Otititifin wntiltl still insist on the holding of a convention, in order to \l'lt'tf .'l [iiipnlzir candi- date to contest the election instead of one thrust to Atitu Island at the end of the land bridge, trees are unknown, and even the willow and alder shrubs are dwarfed clumps reaching no higher Inncly and melancholy, but hardly iibnve a man's shoulders along their benches, Most brecda of dogs are born with running and digging in their nature. 'I'Ii=,~ do; IOVCI‘ who Insists on having his canine friend along with him tn city must Curtail these activities. a No plea of sentiment. can justify propcriy damage, and n0 frteeroam- tug dog has a sense of property-or tiroprzety. The purchase of a dog licence only permits mssession of a. <iog»the purchaser must tlnen keen his pcsscsson uiidcr control at all tiincs-tlitngston Whig Standard). Dlussotini did not make Italy grriit. I-Ic made it. a gangster, side d: with a bigger gangster which .. tilaccd tthi a slavefis shad s. B .i there :5 an Italy of greatness- thc Italy of Cavour and Garibaldi. LKUIIZIFLIO and Michelangelo, Dante and St. Francis-the Italy that has insninwi lovers of truth and liberty through centuries. Italy will not lose greatness, but iegain her soul, and OJIIOYIUIIIN‘ to advance In freedom \'i'l‘I('II the doom of Fascism is sealed- —Ch:ca2o Sun. A musical instrument believed f0 be unique has been mcsented to Glasgow Ccrporattonls Kelvingiove Art Galleries and Museums bv Mrs. Jaro Allison. of 34 G" "nlcsa road, Cambuslaizg. It is a uulkinz stick! But when the trundle is uiiscrcwed a fultsizc chanter and drone is re- vcal d. Those can be asscmbled and cor rtcd into a miniature but per- fect sot of bagpipes. Dr. I-Ienrv Farmer Kclvirigrovws musical tn- strumcnt exncr about 125 years 01d. Tito stick ivri nztlly the propci-ty cf Lfrs. Allison's father, the late Dr. Jaizics Douglas of Carluke.-Glas~ goiv sundav Post. The largest and perhaps the old- est of our megalithic monuments IS sow the property of the National Trust. In the words of John Aubrcv tlie antiquary who first. realized Its character and showed It to the 4d- mIrIng King Charles II, the great; stone circle of Ave-bury" as much ex- ceeds Stonehenge in grandeur “as a cuthcdral does a parish church". Nearly three quarters of a mile In circumference, it. encloses two sepa- rate double circles and is Itself en- circled by rm embankment rising nearly 50 feet above the original floor of a ditch dug some four thous- zind vcars ago by ncolithtc “backer folk" with picks and move-Is made a from the antlcrs and shoulder-blades of the red deer. In Aubreys time 3t out of a. probable hundred outer stones were still standing; now there are only nine. No attempt was made to preserve them until 1907.- Manchester Guardian. It ls wronx to talk of the failure of colonization during the quart- er century. Far from that: we owe it a number of new parishes. What is more and more apparent, how- ever, Is that, new methods must be adopted, especially to get. around the first painful yea-rs. Even though 1t Ls dlslasikfflll. It must: be xccoznlzed that the race of sturdy settlers of yesterday, the “makers of the new land,” has disappeared. Formerly one could leave an old pariah where there was nothing luxurious about the IIfe. as today. for a colonization area. The passage from one life to aiicmer was not foo brusque. That is not. the case today. It Ls o. long Jump from the old parish Info which modern progress has penetrated. to the colonization township where there must. be clearing done and the land made productive. It. needs nearly heroism for that. tour rte force. Under such conditions you can preach 1n vain tihnlt on lies In colonization Try n little of that heavy job yoiirrelf and you wIII be quickly dlslrusioncd. — iThrce Rivers be Nouv. ‘irtci Each Inland o! the Aleutlnnl In n peak or plateau of a, submerged mountain range that Ia still bulld- lnz on the floor of the sea. Ben East, writes In Natural III-story Mau- aztne. Sxxne are sheer, snow-capped cones rising white and beautiful out of the foggy ocean. Others are made up of rued hilt; 0n which streaks and patches or snow Ite throughout the brief Alaskan S . Still Others are live volcanoes, rumbling and smoking and steaming with the heat of their subterranean fires. It. would be hard w find anywhere a lovelter chain of land dots than the Aleuitana. 1n all their 1,100 miles therde Is no timber. A few scatter- ed clumps of stunted spruce were transplanted more than a century M20 as far west u Unaliukn, but ontv a few. Westward for 800 miles, than a man's knees. ‘Pi-eetesa and barren or bleak are those bright green Islands. For wlId grasses izrnw Viirtcolored moss covers their rocky meadow; with a mft, drct) Garnet, Wild flowers of count.- less kinds and shades brlirhten their WilId-stvent moors. And their slicer son clzffs harbor the greatest. bird 9n titer; by Ottawa, cttics on the North Am tic . L C m QQXI _r th'ii" planted Sicflian coasts. city Carthage turned factories into colonies and took over the burden of empire. rivals rather than with the natives that the Greeks, it less of merchants, were even more of colonists. Bur until the torch passed to Athens, Greek Sicily was \ HOT and BOTI-IERED? Then you need ENO to cool you through and through. A glass of pure refreshing, sparkling ENO restores your enterprise and energy : 2 : and removes the very cause of heat-distress by assisting nature to free your system of poisonous wastes and excess gastric acid. Why sit home wheezing, puffing, doing nothing. Take ENO ; ; . it will drive away that washed-out feeling; leaving you FIT AND FRESH l Take ENO regulnrlyxuand enioy an active Summer! I mSficify In History iMancIicstcr Guardian) If strategy brings British soldiers to Sicily It \\'Ill nct be for the first time, Bchinrt the shit-til of the navv they, ' ' kept Scily free of the Infection of revoltiiionnrv" polconic tyranny In Egypt, in Cyre~ nriica, in Libya, and in Tunis!) our men havc bsrn in Intimate contact. ivith antiquity but none lands is richer than Sicily In hist- oric rnrmnrcs. has been destiny. An island and an island in the ci-iitrc of the mother- sca of our ancient world, n bridge- head between Europe and Africa, the raccs, the faiths. and the eivtI~ izattons of three continents foustht to possess tier. The Phce-‘wtth the Hellenic Roman Empire nician merchant. like our own of a tater ngt.“ feeling tcucirzls their as Mr, W 7.1 V tural beauty. and the long roll of Sicilian sages bears trious even to our day: Embedocles. a precursor of Darwin-his name lingers know: Pythagoras, the founder of inn school of physicists: Archimedes, the type of the absorbed scientist. Even Plat/O came m Sicily to learn that it, is ease!‘ for a king to be a tyrant. than a philosopher. Nor was SicIIy's political Influence on the life of Old Greece less than her intzllectual influence. It was at. conflict ht say, Syracuse that Athens sust tirint-iplcs and Na- of Sicily democracy. helped tnans. They of these island the prey of Geozrziohv for her slaves, her fields a granary fc conquerors. brought in Gothic and venge from Carthage, the se haveitheir power; but the adventurers iso of Byzantium was restored the Atlantic factories on the Their daughter tlhe new dispensation for ma century until the Saracens, thezr fltful rule But the last. It was with Greek came. for ‘he and made world history there subtle policy of their king In the forefront of sense the first Reich bit the names illus- These Norman rulers were m port our bombers Eastern and Western, mathematicians and soul of Sicily. was not to be with the East. Normans drove out: the Saracens ained tier m-crtal wound, and the tyrants Lo ruin Greek After the Greeks cat-m the Ro- blottcd out. Oarttia- gtntan power and they made the plundering proconsuls, her icoDIe a horde of r the The decay of Rome ‘Jandial iulers. these latter a kind of re- at. of connection when Belisaritts won Sicily for Justinian. and Sicily remained Greek under 11v a with u brief Interlude, put an end to word Th e . The made Q1011‘ Shiite t1 fie! of the papacy, a n-cvtee bodcful to mankind 1nd ultimately fatal to his dynasty C-reek achicvemcnt In art, in uhll- Decisive battles in the struggle osnphy. tn science. Sicily is stud- between Pope and Emperor wém ded with monuments of architec- fought. over Sicily and there in a dust. en of receptive genius and they tried to assimilate the various civilizations. Greek and Latin, which had fought {or the It. was fitting that that final effort should be mggg I however fteetfiilieffdrc Sfiivard and Bourbon established a tyranny whiclp It needed a. Garibaldi to bma , Is The Limit Reached? i (Sydney Post-Record) A despatch from Ottawa carries the hint. that. the designers of the six pages of asintntty called T-l- General Income tax form have pushed the human worm too 1B1‘. and as soon as it recovers from Its niaultng it: will turn with tentacles out an act. What. other reason for the suggestion that the form Will be modified for I944? asks the Tor- I onto Globe and Mall. No one tn I tax-designer’ sofftce has ever ex- hibited sympathy for the taxed, but i To gygs fear of having the Iitde torn oft 1n revenge is a potent influence t0- ward safety first. After the en- durance test required by this fax- form uzzte, to say nothing of the manta anguish suffered and the certainty the most des rate of ef- forts wIII not get the r ght. answers, the worm must: be about. ready to risk gibbet and staike to set 9V6" with some one. Every change In these forms since they were Invented has been to Increase the torture of the vtc- ttms- It, has been cold-blooded and deliberate» The extremity W85 cer- tain to be reached even ually, and perhaps the time has come. Never- theless. It ts Ible this ts not the limit: of bureaucratic cruelty, con- sldertng how the skill of wartime st up the means of destruction, an It. might. be well to learn, for curtosttyc sake. If something worse cannot be devised; also to get a further lesson In the screwtness of a Government's ways. No business firm which values tune and con- strucitve use of ener would him N y s x y s s s y \ \ s y s s s I N s s \ s y y s \ s \ x ii y s x \ \ s ii t ANOTHER CALL TO NATIONAL SERVICE To Business Men, Professional Men, Storekeepersi- Store Clerks, Citizens of Towns and Cities r’ Prince Edward Island This province will face an emergency during the hat-venting season. of agricultural labour, and many farmers will require help during gathering of the harvest this year will be work of NA'l‘- the truest sense of the word, the IONAL IMPORTANCE. Will you, as a patriotic citizen, rect contribution to final victory. If you wish to help, and Summerslde. pressed farmer. As these offices cannot, provide transportation, er concerned. volunteer to help some farmer for one, two or three days at. harvest time? The urgency of the situation can not. be exaggerated, and your help will be a dt- please file your name at the Selective Service Offices at Charlottetown When your services are re qulred, you will be put tn touch with some hard- thls must be arranged by yourself or the farm- FOOD IS VITAL-Therefore YOUR ASSISTA NCE IS VITAL. The Island has answered every call, military and mongtary: DO NOT FAIL IN THIS NEW CALL TO PATRIOTIC DUT . The periods when help will be most needed extend from July 20 to Aug. 6 and throughout Sep- tember and October. File your Intentions of rendering this voluntary service without delay. Merchants and Business Men can assist b essential work. Employment 8i National Selective Service Offices" Charlottetown and Summer-side, P.E.I. 'zzlzzzlaimzallzlzzamunirexalllllll - - i 7 y per mlttlng employees to volunteer for this most JUL-LE 194s TIE’??? BESTORER A dollutol i1 Pita... ‘W ‘m’ "" n nu lllll- 5mm" i Benton! Gray or faded lim- h Ill fllinll lh d tum. olfllIil, ab? Jhfififif nrn. Prevents Dlndrufl ; m fllllfll hnfr. Pflcg 35° Somnlhlnn nv and lhrllllnfl - A fvngrdnq lo bring you dainty and cuvofrlo llopdnum 701i 7k I ‘Q40. uni‘ nqi-n n40. In‘ Iflbbl [LIL m. Panda m m mu. Outing Pwdfl It.» VIE “t. SUNBUBN A; u, profoctlon against sunburn use: S Kol — — — — —- — 50c , Derny’! "3 Secrets" Sun Tan Oll —~ - -— 50c and 30o Petal Tone Sun Tan Oll _ _ _ _ _ - 50c and 30c Tnngel — — — — — - 50c Tl-IE TWO MACS 119 Great George Street Mnll Order: Given Prompt ' Attention ' THE BOMBER White moon setting and red sun t‘ 8i White as a searchllght, red as E flame, Through the dawn wind her hard t way making, RhylhmIcSS, i-iciuied, the bomber Men who had thought their ha! tght over . iAII hoping gone, came lfmtiifl! ac lMarvelling, looked on bomb-icflrffld ver, 'Butteiicup fields and white Down track. Cottage and ploughland, green I lanes weav ng, ‘Working-folk stopping to SW8 overhead - Lorvety. most. lovely, past all b0- | ltevtng of men new-raised from dead. i the _-B. R. Gibbs, In the London Sunday Times. _J/ Z experts, or novices, to devise mean: of wasting tens of millions of nian- hours and drive the DODI-ilfliivfl w the bu -house. Only a Govcm- merit. w ose chief stock tn imdt‘ l! red tape and which knows iinililnz about practical short, curs to’ ri- sults, except tn election campiilriiii runs business this way. If the worm is a unit. 0n "it! policy of turning then ti: may i” discretion to modify the ION“. Otherwise let them B0 0n, "Om worst to more of it-lf ossiblc —- selecttng whichever evl 1s thB greater. subtracting It from C999. and, referring to section XYttt-tt, add the hypotenuse to the WWI‘ gent and place the result undvr 111° metathesis, allowing for the rofiiiid one-half of which ever Is the Im- er. In time the worm may Krt ti" Inere is a grave shortage haying and harvesting. In point; and do something 011°"! m“ crack t. business.