I-In\IAIlU\IIII I 2 I l I i PAGE FOUR TIIE BIIAIILIITTETIIWII Ii II AIIII IAII Mo! ' Dally (Founded In I881) Incident, ueuL-Col. W. Chester B. MOI-III! VIce-Presldent. J. B. Burnett. IJJ. Qccreiu-y, UenL-Col. D. A. MscKInnon. 13.8.0. Editor and Mlmnllng Dlrcctor, J. B. Burnett, IJJ. Associate Editors. Prnnk Walker and In: A. Burn!“- SUBSCRIPTION BATES 3, M," in p, n. 1., $4.00 per you‘, $2.50 for us!‘ months. , nths. 50c for one mon _ ca, ‘rifiidiidsdil n" year. saw or i mum- SI!!!» for 3 months. B Mall In Canada and U. S. A. $5.00 I!" "I'- lntu: av IVt-ckly. 52.00 per year. 51-00 for 6 "will 50c for 3 month!- "Ths Strongest Memory is Weaker Hull the Weakest Ink.” sa'rciii>.-n'. JULY 2'1. 1940- Fine Tourist Publicity On niunv occasions the New York Timenone of the \\.,,,.;,i'_,- grtfiillltif llt\\‘>‘p£1l_)fiI‘S., has given moral sirppor: to Great Britain in 1K8 fight a8‘ ainst Nazi itggression and dqmuiation Its strong pro-British zutiiuile has been a powerful factor in infliti-nctng pulvllc opinion in lilo nrlghbPrlfig "public Yt-siwrilty, in an editoriakcaptioricd "Canada llolils Hpeu House", the Times came forwarl wiib a ‘iris: tituely boost in support of Canada's trust t traificy The points whichut “mm. an. I,» iii-we best calculated to in- duce its .\:i ‘in TV-“Jlllrs to spend the" Vac?" lions here this sxizntnet‘. After pointing out that our tourist trade, "P" mally one of tlze largest sources of Cariadlm "venue, has S}. ink dangerously this year be- ‘ame of mg]. fljqq i-qports as to what happens to American liillri-‘li at the border, the Time: says: '4" "T “The truth is that lf the tourist ls an Ameri- can citizen not carrying arms, he is welcomed in Canada as warmly and informally as he ever was. Canada ‘Kfllll-i him to come, and, with the exception of a few areas where military secrets are guarded, the whole Dominion, from coast to coast, i; at- his disposal. He profits by a premium of lo per cent which his American dollars corri- manrl in Canada. lie needs no passport tog!!! in, When he is ready to go home the American customs and immigration officers will want to be sure, as has been the case in the pail. ti"! he is not avoiding payment of duties and that he really is an Atticrican citizen. An American who cannot meet these simple requirements probably ought not to travel, anyhow." And it adds, for good measure: "If he goes to Canada he will find a vast country whose marvels and beauties match those of the United States. He will find a good many picturesque and charming things he can't find at home. If ho happens not to like Adolf Hitler, he can feel pleased to know that the dollars he spends in Canada will go back to the United States to buy airplanes and other facilities that may put Hitler out of business." A good deal has been said in the Dominion Parliament this session about undesirable Am- erican publications entering Canada during war- time, The other side of the picture deserves meri- tlon too. Papers like the .\'cw York Tint-es, which have been consistently friendly in tone to this country and to the Empire in general, are more truly representative of American opinion; and it would not be at all out of place if their scr- vi¢e§ were occasionally recognized on the floor OI the Home. Exploding A Nazi Myth An autlu-ntic and skillfully prepared exposure of Nazi fifth column activities appears as the leading article in the curent issue of The Lag- ionary, official organ of the Canadian Legion, B. E. S. L., which is especially valuable as giving factual fll-PTOUT of the so-callcd "in- Yincibilityi" of the German armed might. The article tells in plain language how the Iazi prnpagztnila machine worked successfully to undermine the morale and fighting spirit of neighboring cotuuri to such an extent that when the Ill(‘L'll-'lIIl'/_<‘(l hoi-ili-g rollcdin, the already brok- en coitrage of lbw iopnlace resulted in but a piti- ful show of i'c<i.~"tai".ce. It tells also how the Nazis are trying to sow the seeds of dissension and dvft-aii-m lll other countries in Europe, as well as in South America, the United States, and Cam-dil- Tlie Pullll brought out clearly in The Leg- ionary article i: that Ilnlcr's fifth column is of vital ‘llllllltfillllktf 1o him bvratise of the vulnera- bility of hi. i htiuq tut-n. They are inferior, not >ll[><'l‘l<>l', in 41min; qualities to the soldiers of the lirili-li litnpitx- and if we do not fall \'lCllllll< to .\fl/.l lrvtclivrgi" {lllll propaganda there is nu l|llrsfiilll u. to our ability to win in battle. part of the article is addres- eitizcns. Our job, it 'I'lit' vonclti/litlg led (lircctly to (' nadian snvs, is to Ytll ‘u from giving voice to appre- hension, rt-putiug rumors and gossip. "Re- IT1(‘Illll('l'lIlL[ i’. t lln- j~b of our sailors, our sol- (licrs illlil our I'lll1'll needs nll their concentra- tion on tlu- rt ll baud, thc very least they have a right b» Mir-vi from you is that, in your turn, you don't It". your fighting tnen down. You don't lit-long l1: ills brvvd which lets itself be pzuiicltril by ilu- lilll~l('I' and the bragging and the ll()gl'_\'—lll(lll durzu- of those Teutonic tin- men, scarccroivs and cowardly lions, by the hysterical >\‘I'(‘l‘l‘lll'$ of liccr-ltall Napoleons. You lmvc 541.1 lot.- of stuff that the Nazis don't have. The tnuin element of that is Liberty. Fight f0 retain it~zuid you will." Placing Responsibility Reliable COIIIIIIPIIIIIIOFS are unanimous tn pre- dicting that coniiiii-iilal liuropc is on the verge of a. fatnitie. tit-rmrnty herself sacrificed more than butter to QIIIIS and tanks long before the war, and since tin-n she has completely dislocated not only the zigricultural but the economic machinery of ‘six Ifnrrvix-an $t:iles, two of them—Holland and Uennuirk --forntcrly huge food-supply coun- tries. Nothing is more sure than that Germany will seize such supplies as exist for her own con- sumption. No doubt she has already looted much of this, without the least attempt to ensure steady ' new cultivation. When the pinch comes, as if ' THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN ment will industriously spread the theory that it is Britain's sea stranglehold that is starving all the unfortunate peoples concerned. The answer to this has been given by Prime Minister, Mac- kenzie King in a statement commenting on Hit- ler's speech of last week. Mr. King said: “As to the threatened disaster to the peoples of Europe, none will regret a calamity to the innocent victims of persecution and aggression more than the people of Canada who Iiave built this nation upon the foundation of tolerance, good will, peace and racial generosity. But if such a calamity docs occur none will identify more clearly its creators and originators. The men who have brought famine to Europe will be the same men who have brought fire and slaughter to Poland, to Norway, to Holland, to Belgium and to France. Against all of Hitler's prophecies there stands another prophecy that throughout the ages has never failed to come to pass. Sooner or later sure retribution will over- take the tyrant who defies the law of God and man. Until that retribution comes to undo the wrong done by the guilty, the Peoples of the British commonwealth will continue to face every ordeal with fearless eyes and unflinching courage." Vacation Advice w. \ __ GI d the quickest ways to spoil the effects of a holiday is to take exercise too strenuously, warns the Health League of Canada, adding em- phasis to a. common-sense vacation note. “If you arc s sedentary worker of middle- agc, don't imagine that the holiday miraculously enables you to plunge into day-long outdoor sports and compete successfully with your jun- iors." Start your exercise gradually, and don't mind resting when you are tired. Rest is quite as important as exercise. Over-exercise of the di- gestive organs is as bad or worse than over- excrcising the muscular system, too. Such advice is worth following, and not only by the middle-aged sedentary worker to whom specific reference is made Rest and relaxation should bulk large in any vacation programme. as EDITORIAL NOTES a: Robcsplcrre guillotined tomorrow's date, 1794. 1k 4- * * The ultimate in chic for day or evening wear, saysthc staid Montreal Gazette, ls a collarless hip-length jacket made of four perfectly matched 24-inch platins. fOlaSklfilS, ‘yalued at $4,ooo_ 1U In days past Sunday was looked forward to with delight as s day of undisturbed peace, quiet- ness and spiritual refreshment; Hitler has made it a day of terror, anguish and blitzkrieg which thc Christian world anticipates with dread and misgivings, n- o a t “This is the day of advertised goods," says Macy's, New York, in an interview. “The goods we sell and find a steady demand for, are those we prominently and persistently bring before the public in our daily advertisements." The pro- spective buyer, of course, reads the ads with his war news. z w a n- Chrlstianity introduced into Russia this date, 988—rejccted I917: “Christianity without the Cross is nothing. The Cross was a fitting close to s. life of rejection, scorn and defeat. But in no true sense have these things ceased or changed. Jesus is still He whom man dcspiseth and the rejected of men." n- u 4- a Mrs. Hugh Brady of Montreal has a. letter she aims to keep for a. long time, for apparently it went through a lot to reach her soldier son in England. Her son returned the letter in its original envelope, marked by salt water, but still legible. It bore an official stamp, “Solved from the sea.” t t 1i m The final steps to eliminate the market for free Stflling has aroused universally favorable com- ment in financial circles in London. There is not the slightest doubt over the success of the move, while, as some commentators remarltetkalthotigh perhaps with some stretch of imagination, some- thing like the traditional gold standard now will govern the exchange rates between sterling and the United States dollar. S0 long as Americans, however, are permitted to scll sterling among themselves, free sterling will not entirely dis- appear, but this business will be so sittzill as to be of no consequence and finally should disappear altogcthcn Nevertheless, there still are important countries, particularly the South American re- publics, outside the sterling-tlollzn‘ arcn, but they probably will all be drawn ultimately into the orbit. “Pegging" of sterling as thus ziccnmplish- ed, must impart confidence io business, more es- pecially the export trndc. Indirectly, too, the "pegging" of the sterling provides some insur- ance against inflation because it keeps down the cost of Great Britain’s imports and at the same time insures stable and better prices for exports than probably otheryvis: would l)e obtainable. 1C 1 “Wake up America!" Such was the theme de- veloped by Miss Dorothy Thompson, noted col- umnist and member of the staff of The New York Herald-Tribune, in an interview with The Gazette that served as a supplement to the tell- ing comparison of Winston Churchill and Adolf Hitler which she has just given in an address over the CBC network. The tall, handsome news- paperwoman, who has had the distinction of lic- ing ejected from Germany for her outspoken criticism of the Hitler regime in the early days of the Third Reich, didn't mince words ovcr the state of mind in her cotmtry_ “It's appalling," she came out flatly. “Here we are, supposed to be a world power playing a leading role in this tre- mendous revolution, and we haven't even begun to appreciate what is involved. We haggle over the exact definition of the Neutrality Act. We fool with party planks. We tie ourselves up in bundles and bundles of red tape. And the world is burning about our ears. ‘Frankly,’ said Miss Thompson, "if we d0n’t ivake up within a year we might as well give up, surrender everything our good, healthy pioneer fathers and mothers fought for, and just sit back as another nation who prefers peace with slavery. l/Ve have got to make our dgcision r' ht now. If we dela it will NOTES BY TIIE WAY We remember on one cufon an old-timer telling us, "I used to be able to catch 60 fish here in l morning 30 years ago. Now I'm lucky if I catch two." We sug- gest that If lie had caught fewer fish 30 years ago he would ca-wliing more today. He rephed lm atlently that he was pain-fully we aware of this, but that in his day no one thought about It. — Kirkland Lake News. An arrangement has been nach- ed to put on end to the hold-up of Irish migratory laborers coming to Britain for harvesting. The men will now be let in for a, period -- probably a three-month stay. After that their stay may be extended by application to the police provided their work Is of "national import-ante." Any sca- sonal ivorker desiring to come must have a definite offer of work on a farm In this country. e sn- ploycrts authorized agent. for his group will then be able to obtain the permits from Sir Jchn Malf- feys Olflog in Dublin. - Manches- ter Guardian. It seems that the Ontarlo HOV" ernment 1s receiving “stron pro- tests" against the housing Ger- man prisoners in “certain Summer resort. areas". If this refers to Al- goma, 1t is to be lie-pod the Gov- Qrllllltffnb will ihicl.’ these protests In the waste paper basket. The Nazi internment camps are the greatest tourist lure ln Canada now, and Algoinn would profit much from having several of them. The S00 and other nulnzcqnalitzes should take an iinmczllate stand In Seeing that private kicks are not endorsed by the pllbilC. Just as well to notify ‘Toronto and Ot-tarwa at once. —-$riult Std Marie Star. Great specches—and there Is no doubt but that this (of Mr. Churchill's) was a very great. speecli—do not win wars, nor Ls the will of one man necessarily trio will of a nation. Neverthe- less, the loyal co-operatlon the Etnpire has given Mr. Churchill in the trcmctidous task of prepa- ration still in progress Indicates a heartening unanimity of resolve. While Britain waits the great storm that ls already breaking on her shores, her people must comforted to hear their deter- mination to fight, ivit-hoilt stint or faltering so worthily expressed: men of lesser faith cannot but take strength from his strength. And those who, om the scour. lty of a land its y t untouched by war, have presumed to cavll, stand gebnktadr-New York Herald Trl- une. The attention of Americans I! centred on Etigland, ivhere their ltearts are, but they are interested In the Balkans because the out- come there mziy vitally affect Germany and England. A Soviet triumph over the Nazis-a triumph which unfortunately, seems ab- 5L1l'clly' remote-would be greeted joyously in this country, even by those to whom Russian doctrine Is almost. as odious as Nazi-ism. ls as a defence against the Nazis. not the Soviets. that the United States has initiated a program wlucli is costing billions and may profoundly affect our economy and our way of life. We have little fear of comtnunlstlc imperialism and Soviet fifth columns. It ls the brute force of an ambitious, merciless, faltliless Germany which alarms us-Bnston Herald. Santa Barbara, Calif, has de- cided lo retire its school teachers ivlien they shall have reached the age of 65. A great many teachers are not only efficient but; down- right brilliant after 65. In fact, ‘n. takes often 65 years to uchlave certain Mdagoglcal attitudes and skills. Our public life ls replete with men and women, well past 65, who are doing the best work of their lives, work well advanced over that of younger persons. There is too much stress laid nowadays on arbitrary age limits —whcthei~ maximum or minimum. The wise and proper course is t0 detcmiiiie the individual case. Mnny a dangerous and difficult course can be steered at 65 that could not, even be charted at. 50. —Milwaukee Sentinel. ‘Our Social Credit friend, Jaqucs of Wetaskiw-ln, told the House of Commons that there were only three men's-papers in all Canada that. were without entangllng IItIIIIIICOS. The merit in mess nuwspulmrs is that they believe in what Jnques thinks Ls right. Any n-csvspaper that. disagrees with Jaqucs and Social Credit con- sequently is a. hireling of some dark and sinister" moienient. The only free press, of course, ls one that. believes as Jaques does, and that is the sort, of freedom of speech and press we \\‘()I.ll(l ltave lf the S0- ciul Credit MP. controlled affairs. Actually, it would be I1 press that would have to obey Jiiques or go out of bilSllliJbS. Hitler has exact-- ly the same idea, and consequentlv the German llflfeS says “ha: Hit.- ler tells IL to say. --Lethbrldge Herald. Sin-ft, seems to me that In the whole crisis between the totalitar- ian states and the democracies there has lxitn in the United States too much talk, too little action. For just this reason, I am organ- izlng a popular demand that all support, short of itotlilng, be given to our ntigltboring democracy, Canada. We cannot, be secure In any world in which there Is not. equal s tirity for Canada. It Ls our pin" 5e to have Canada. ex- empted from till provisions of the present neutrality law. If the Am- erican people svish to contribute to the-defence of Canada-as many of them do-no law should be permitted to stand that would pie- vent them. Also there should be no quibble ovcr cash or credit. Haxl our northern boundaries been occupied by a hostile nation 1n the last century, instead of by friend- ly Canada, the cost to us would have been almost lncsfculsblc. — Letter to the New York Herald Tribune. It Is both Interestlng nu! en- couraging to note that the worth- while and active organization of Ducks Unlimited ls carrying on. desplte the handicaps of the war- time economy existing In Canada. The latest evidence of Its endeavor to kccp at the job of increasing Canada's duck population ls found In an advertisement in local pap- ers asking for tenders for the con- struction of a relnforced concrete dam with radial gates near the town of The Pas. That ares wu once excellent duck habitat. It Ls ""“"lo country. interlaced with lake and streamlet, snd teeming n .1_ 4.....- Childish Thieves (New Glasgow Evening News) Mona Lisa. thickly cased In a woden crate, may soon be on her wa back to Italy. ere Is a childish irrelevance about this performance that freez- es the blood. Are wars and the bloody death o! thousands for no be better purpose than this? More than 400 years ago a man named Iconardo lived In Florence. I-Ie was a great man, one.who was intensely aware of all aspects of life, one whose talents ranged the iwhole gamut of human capability. He was a painter. engineer politic- lan, writer, inventor, builder, poet -the sort of all-round man the world doesn't produce any more. Leonardo painted a picture of n noblemanb wife. It'll; n. small plc- ture, not too impressive tit first glance. But on the lips of Monti Lisa and In her eyes there played the ghost of a strange inscrutable half-smile which fascinated those who looked. King Francis I of Franco bought the painting from Leonardo when the painter came to France to serve hIm. Years passed, and ever the hold of this small painting on Its behold- ers grew and grew. Not only the moiientfncs. not only the Parlslsns, but people of all the world grew to know Leonard's Mona Lisa. , Napoleon, flushed with his mlll- tary triumphs, installed her ln a Purlslan gallery at a time when his legions returned from Italy and Egypt staggering under the weight of stolen works of art. Later in the Louvre Gallery, Mona Lisa smiled down from the wall. Artists copied her. Introspective men wrote her love letters. One stole her and for two years she was In Italy. Then she was recov- ered and returned. Now Mussolini Is being urged to steal her back. and to take with her other works of Leonardo and Titian stolen by that. other conqueror, Na- poleon. It is still pretty childish. What does the world care whether Mona Lisa hangs In a Psi-ls gallery or an Italian palace? Blind In the dark- ness of her crate, Mona Lisa's mocking eyes will smile still at those who steal her RIVBY. And Leonardo? He, too. would laugh at the strange spectacle and say. "Yes, It Is true that I painted be and I am glad that. my work is still found good after 40o years. But. what are the artists painting to- day? Have you plcture-grabbers, managed to produce a climate In which man Is free to create?" at, and not who manages to steal paintings 400 years old, Is what ls important. I the denudlng of a large part of the forest coverage, partly by flre and partly by lumbering, has meant of recent years that the Spring run-off has been quick and 0.0m- prehenslve. The result has been low Summer wafer levels, with consequent loss of duckllngs. - Wlnnlpeg Free Press. Moroizisrs ll/Ve‘vvh<>*ciie‘pro'tec€ fed by c; Complete ulomobile Insur-i lance, Policyfiienioy‘ iiinuncial freedom‘ pgciristllholmuny huzordsofmoforingl, if‘ youfwould! core‘ Jo ioinusfsee this, Qgeniyjodqyb W. K. ROGERS AGENCIES LTD CHARLOTTETOWN Professional Bards II. F. AROIIIBALD Chartered Accountant 140 Richmond Street Phone 4'1 IEO. Box l2 McLECD & BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY. ILC. J. A. BENTLEY. ILC. C. F. BENTLEY. LLB. Barristers and AIIorncys-iit-Lnw MONEY TO LOAN I80 Richmond Street BELL 8r MATHIESON MONEY T0 LOAN Cameron Block. Charlottetown. I’ E Island MucGUIGAN a. raid??- MAIIK It. MacGUIGAN. ILC. C. ST. CLAIR TRAINOR, K. C. Bsrrlsters, , Etc. MONEY T0 LOAN Office: Over Provincial nuns. Richmond Street, LIIIIIIOIIQLOWD H. F. McPHEE B. A. K. C. NOTARY, m. BABRISTEB, SOLICITOR Elle: Bulldlnl Charlottetown PALMER 8| HASLAM ll. J. PALMER, . _ A. J. IIASLAM, B.A.. LLJI. BARBISTEII, ETC. Bunk of Novs Scotln Chambers. Charlottetown, P.E.|. MONEY T0 LOAN l5 IEO. Bu: I2 Phone Morrell 8r Company Chartered Accountants Eastern Trust Building Telephone I447 And if the white cliffs topple In the And fteathe red cliffs hurtle to the And 1i tyne heart of manna fatter.‘ break— l Yet can uie soul of malaria never die. Out of the Cornish sea, Excalibur i rust. England will llve whlle Tnith has need of her! Freedom will march when Free- dom's foes are dust! Jvllda Sauvage Owens, in the New York I-lemlcl Tribune, THE BREAKFAST TRAIL A POPULAR OUTING JASPER LODGE, Ana. Juiyfzs - To “breakfast out." is becoming traditional at Jasper. While break- fast rides are one of the PODUIB-l‘ features among the numerous trail enthusiasts. others have been beat- lng a regular midnight trail to the summit of Signal Mountain, where they breakfast as the sun rises ov- er the serrated Colin Range. Rid- ers of the breakfast trail mount. ENGLAND WILL LIVE l he ngaii';_:;,___ Wm ‘(if again w meet L p stock ranches of the Australian In- lo . Cowgirls of Australia ms remain unsung, but they ride. an irnd shear, and r blocks no less than they were once reported to huve done In America's Wild West. The Argus said. During many a. struggling station man left a. prlmltlve property In the hands lUlsYszzig Oharlottetu Office Give Speedy Servi Illl Mail llrdg Leave your orders st I29 Kant Street for merehlndlse from Simpson: C . Or telephone m, o a capab s wife or sister n, riretiiisomi l” l "or? ""1...- °" and n our - “ allan , straight, rurmtiiioifiiiiiacii“ bullock, shear a. sheep 3,31‘! matter, even keep he’, he“ féillfi ‘L’. ‘t. “£331 l?“ "i proudly. ' ‘e p“ The First Great War. at the cormls shortly lifter break of dawn, ride along the mountain Lake Edith. 'I'l1ere breakfast. is SPYV- ed near fir wood camp fires, the riders later continuing along high trails leading to the lodge. The sunrise climbs. which liter- ally have become popular over night call for four hours hike to tho sunimlt of Signal Moiitaln which yqllfs ago was a lookout signal p ‘it. among the Indians because of its commanding view ovcr three valleys. The parties of hike av- eraging about 115 In I1““‘l\"l' "'-“'" p. m. ln the cure of competent. gaizks. .‘\I'l‘l\".ll at the west alioultl- er of the mountains generally at. 2 a. m., is signal for hot cocoa stud an hour of rest. Breakfast follows at. the summit two hours later as the first red rays of the morning sun colors the slopes. WOMEIVS WORK IN SYDNEY. N. S. W.. Jilly 25 -- (OP) — When an official was re- ported to be shocked (pleasantly of course) by a woman applying for s job as a station hand 1n order to release a man for ivar service The Argus rose to sing the praises of the girl helpers In the great. BUYINGJLILIPROPS All parties in King’s and Queen's County east of Char- lottetown, desiring to con- tract for sale of soft wood pitprops, kindly apply forth- with for price and terms of delivery to -- ALBERT QUIGLEY Si. Pcter’s Bay, IXEJ. L-778-7-25-3i. AUSTRALIA I LADIES’ s. .53 bridle paths until 8.30 a. m. whim t they arrive at the shores of plflCld‘ the , the lodze and Camp Edit-h at 11‘ Offices! Protection For Illotorists "II/bile the motor vehicle hws oft-ho various Prorlnm require that an automobile must have certain Cqlllpmgm. such as lamps, number pill-Les, brakes, horn, 000., before it may be drlven on the streets and highways, there ls other equipment which also Is necessary If the motorist ls to enjoy peace of mind In the operation of his oar. This t, ’ of an ‘ ‘- ‘ 01mm m-abllu insurance, without which motoring may bccumg ‘ vary costly experience, resulting In the loss of the nlulurisl’: home, his cur and his lifetime savlnls. As a. matter of fart, many a home owner has lost hls property In just this vvay_ simply through failure to carry sutomo Ilo Ifablllty Insur. mice." . (from Toronto Slhtrdsy Night) Efficient Claims Service ll the Ill Important factor in Automobile Insurance. IIYNIIMIIN 8t B0. LIMITED Establlshed 167i Charlottetown, Summcrslde, I z Montag E. 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