|| __..-- answi-ei-eenvr-Ive uinnnnonmg ___.fi._.\_-_ -_ -.-.-t.I.n.-. _-_-_n.»_-uu...----_________ Jquhnggv-gr-J,F."..‘i."n".."vs'a'..‘a‘o'n'-'~'i'n'i"n'u'u{f}? " " not: “norm ‘I'll GIAILOTTITIIII GIAIIIAII Inrllll DIR! (blinded h ll?) . Ieflllel: lCQLTMOlIiCIIIII-IU VIM‘- u.‘ tbl-IIIIMQIJ-I. 80min,- Llenl. 00L D. A. Innflnnln, 0.8.0. mnem- I. limo“, IJJ. ‘Adairelinrdfidlto g and Heal. Inn A : W Burnett. 20.81.! t0n Anllvo Benton ‘The Strange» Memory in Wanker, Tlill the Wnkul Ink.’ wmnsmr, JUNE’, iou Cutting Fertilizer Costs 1,; my be a pre-election gesture,_ but there in no doubt that Quebec farmers will appreci- ate the announcement by Premier Godbout that in a “very short time" the price 0f artificial fenilizgf5 in Quebec pr0vince_w0u1d undergo a radical cut. At the present time these fertil- it“; afg selling s: $35 a ton, whereas it is claimed that farmers should not have to pay more than $20. g _ _ _ "The nationalization of electricity is a first step," Premier Godbout stated. “\\'e have not in the province of Quebec any real industry of artificial fertilizers. The Canadian lndus- [in Liflcd buys the ingredients and prepares them. Now the most costly ingredient is nitro- gen. 1t is obtained h_v isolating it from the air by 11163115 of electricity, “TC shall SEC l0 it that farmers get fertilizers at the lowest price.‘ This will be done either by supplying €lCCfflClly at iioiniiml cost to a private ‘industry wishing t0 engage h producing fertilizers, or by encour- aging the creation of production cooperatives. And if it cannot be managed either by private initiative or by cooperative means, the Covern- mcnt itself will take over the enterprise.’ Aviation Development The growth of aviation in Canada has been phenomenal in the past few years, as is shown by the report of the president of the Trans- Canada .-\ir Lines. Last year the number of passengers carried, apart from the Atlantic ser- vice, was 140,276, an increase of 34 per cent over the previous year. The increase in the volume of mail was still more marked, no less than 3,713,607 pounds being carried, or 61 per cent reater than in the year i942. During last year 963,786 miles were flown, 1,274,884 more than in the previous year. The trans-Altantic service, designed by the Government to facilit- ate mail deliveries to and from Canadian forces overseas, to move important cargo and carry official passengers, began last July with a single Lancaster aircraft modified for transport duty. The traffic is continually increasing, the dis- tance across the ocean being approximately 3.090 miles, accomplished in a little over eleven hours in non-stop west-east flights. Mail weights some- times exceed seven thousand pounds on these trips. .\Iost of the business done at present is. of cotnaw. of a military character, but the facilities are available for civil use when the time comes. .-\ huge traffic may be confidently anticipated i’ added in Yarmouth and Sydney Mines. The Minister of Public Works in the Alberta tioii of the $500,000 tuberculosis hospital on the campus of the University of Alberta may be undertaken this spring. British Columbia also hopes to be able to undertake the construction of a new 30o-bcd unit. Base Of Attack mans four years ago, is now the perfect base for the western attack on Hitler's Europe. The tremendous operations now being launched. Here, close to the Continent and within easy flying distance of llmerous German airfields, there were accumulated millions of fighting men and immense supplies of the machines of war in preparation for the attack across the Channel. The tight little isle has been tighter than it ever was before, overcrowded Wllll troops and jammed with armored cars, tanks, guns of all sizes, and other equipment. What the civilian population must have been thinking, as this the greatest military base that was ever created. went through its amazing development! Men in training over every countryside. Realistic manoeuvres of powerful motorized military forces. The towns and villages filled with men in the uniforms of Britain, Canada, the United States and other allied countries. From this island, the attack was begun months ago, of course, by the heavy bombers. The squadrons of Allied airmen went out every night or every day and returned to this base—-most of them, but not all. The intensity of the b0inb- ing of enemy objectives increased almost un- believably as the day for the land invasion ap- proached. There were airdromes everywhere throughout the country and hundreds of thou- sands of airmen quartered near them. When the Allied forces become established on the French coast and gain control of har- bors like Le Havre and Clierbourg, troops and supplies from this side of the Atlantic can be landed on the continent direct. Meantime. Bri- tain has served marvellouslv as the base where complete preparations could be made for the invasion, into which Britain herself is putting all that she has. EDITORIAL NOTES .- It was from the port of St. Malo, where Ber- lin reports an Allied landing, that Jacques Car- tier sailed in the 16th ccnttiry on the voyage that led to the discovery of Canada. ll 10K l It‘ 1f further progress in scientific discoveries were stopped and known results properly ap- plied to humanity, a very nice zipproximation of the inillcniuiii might be obtained, according to Mr. A. O. Ponder, of Uontreal. it‘ i ll‘ l‘ No one wanted the darn thing before the war in passenger and freight service when the world again settles down to peace-time travel and coin- merce. This is s reminder of the fact that we have apparently reached a deadlock in negotiating with the Dominion Government for exitension of the Charlottetown airport runways. Who is responsible for this state of affairs, and what have our federal representatives being doing in _ the matter? Sa natoria Problems The number 0f beds in use in Canadian san- iitoria increased 10.7 per cent while staff de- creased 5.1 per cent in the first four years of the war. This and many other interesting facts are set out in a review supplied by Mi‘. _I. C. Brady, chief of the institutional Statistics branch of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics, and bas- ed on four animal reports of Tuberculosis 1n- stitutioiis. When the sanatorittm doctors and nurses look back on the war years they will not remember the percentages. They may even forget lioiv many nurses and doctors they were short, but they will not iforget the strain and stress of trying to "spread thin" so as to keep up the standard of work with 86 per cent of staff, by PFC-Will‘ standards. Nor do the figures tell the whole story since the quota of graduate nurses is much lower, having been replaced in many instances by ward aids and nurses‘ assistants. Another fact which stands out in thc report is that despite xi 10.7 per cent incrczis: in Séllllt- toriuiii beds this country is still far short of whzil it should have since there are still nearly twice no inony deaths from tuberculosis outside the sanatoria as in them. Between 3.5000 and 4,000 people arc still dying yearly at home. \Vhcn one considers that dying patients are only a fraction of those with tuberculosis, and that in addition to the many who died at home there arc thousands ill in their home. it brings one face to fart with the major need in the fight against tnberculosis~8.000 more beds. An encouraging sign of the times is the ef- forts which are being made to meet this short- age. The addition to the Provincial Sana- toriiim in Charlottetown is a case in point. In Ontario, the Provincial Government has agreed to contribute $125,000 towards the building of a new sanatorium at Kingston and a similar sum towards an addition to the Royal Ottawa Sanatorium. The remainder of these costs of loo-bed units in each of these centres is to be made up by the local areas to be served. i In Saskatchewan the sum of $252,000 is be- l ing set aside to provide for extensions to the Prince Albert Sanatorium and the Sanatorium at Fort (._)ll'.'\])]‘|Cll(‘. The additional accoinniod- _ uion at Fort Qnndppelle is being provided to l receive a number of returner] men for tuber- :ul0sis treatment after the war. This new sol- a. bilingual weekly published at Tecumseh, Ont., has got hold of the history textbooks for each province, and he proposes to make a full study mm of them. him, for example. that in Nova Scotia, where a textbook “The Story of Britain and Canada" is in use, only three pages out of 228 deal sole- l_v with the French regime; in Alberta, the French regime occupies only three pages out of 235 pages of "Our (Tountry and Its People"; in Quebec, ljHistoire du (Ianada, published liy the Brothers of the Christian Schools, out 0f 103 pages of questions and answers, 88 pages deal ivith the French regime and 32 with the English regime; in Manitoba and on Prince Edward Island, “The Story of Canada" has r20 allotted to French history and 250 for the English regime. for more fairness and more uniformity in more than one respect. After all, what is history if it is not an honest record of [vast events for the irrespective of the personal whims and fancies of the historian himself, and unaffected by but when a 30-year-old landau——once the pro- perty of a pqcr—cziinc up for auction in London an offer of $180 was refused. An old-fashioned broughaiii, destined for cab work, realized $81. A high-wheeled, open-fronted, three-seater Ralli car, which might have had a prc-ivar value of $14 went under the hammer at $99. 1i ti‘ l It! Canadian universities’ graduating classes in technical personnel, which total 1,350 men each year, send 1,200 into the armed forces, Mr. R. D, Whitmore, ofiOttawa, superintendent of la- l)Ol‘£tiOl‘lC5. Department of Pensions and Nat- ional Health, declares. Mr. \\'hitmorc also re- veals that ziboiit 50 Canadian corporations cin- ploy 50 per cent of the technical personnel and the Canadian (iovermnent employs another 3o per cent. Universities have graduated about 35o ivomcn annually in technical studies since 1939- :- 1- 1k i- The battle of Naseby fought this date i645, when the Royralists were defeated by the Roundheatls under Fairfax and Cromwell, the beginning of the “purge" which made the lll- dcpendents supreme in both army and parlia- ment, and ultimately led to Cromwell becoming Protector; the Church was reformed; would- he ministers were examined by "triers"——Pres- byterians. Baptists and Independents alone bc- ing eligible; oaths and other vices were pro- hibited, the Court of Chancery was reformed. and the condition of Scotland improved. I it tlr ll‘ erculosia Hospital and 50-bed annexes are being Government recently announced that construc- l,“ Britain, so perilously threatened by the Ger- 1 whole island has become one vast base for the mJnils mm sy The w... to ulna- “Whnt time do you 1o to work 1n the morn! Ontario Illlhwnyu Itllnhtei- Don- hls d ipent is studs‘- billtv o ting fllt-‘rht strips adjacent to highways. for the convenience otf on ' . craft Ln t.h ntlon to mristruotln d m! walks at the side of thgse T5131. LTI: move would reduce the death rate. Bmnttord Iixoosltor. German “ ‘cl {and 11;) d bv Home wiilianfui-itheiririrz rffie ruthless d this ls gellble blot on the nnine or the ‘ntiafiter race.’ — Hamilton S1010- a o . The urn to coniracg niid dense things leads \ eis to write CNR instead 0t C. usage in such cases is viirlccl .-.i.d confusion. But Us for U. s. cut. n shade too tar for clarity. And iicw someone has coined AFctL for A. F. or L. Pretty soon it inuv be- come AFOFL. which will be rather t-hlck, even ior alphabet soup. - Brantford Expositor. Chancellor Capen, of the Univer- sltv of Buiiralo, wiiriis that peace llwv_ bring its own dangers from within. as he fears that the dema- goizue with a panacea Wlll have tin enthusiastic following. The best tray to met that menace ls for Govern- ments to otter real substance to their people: tho shadows c-f dem- agomiery should no: then he able to deceive many persons-A-lamil- ton Spectator. Ollr war "privalions" ln Canada are utterly trivial when compared to what. the people of Britain have had to bear. and what manv of them are now Iacuuz in the evacu- ation of their homes‘. rightly said that what we in Cun- ada. Goarecl from the cuucl and dc- ysstntlng mvalzes or ivulr. owe to , those stturdv Islanders who Cullltl not: be cowcct or (lrlvcirinto panic," beyond oll computation. They have won and richly ileservc our deepest gratitude and affection. — Halifax Herald. Commercial fishermen who are getting 30 cents oer pound nritt um- wnrds for their fish may be expect. 9d 50ml? d8)’ to establish private fish farms. To build them 11D rijong some oi the water courses might. l;e more profitable than dependence on the uncertainties of the open lake. I! they could include brook trout for commercial sale. as in some Dari-s of the United States. it would be more popular stllL-Porl, Arthur News-Chronicle. All that (he able-bodied clt\:n has a right to expect and all ne does expat-As on assured, omxar- tuuitv to m e i: livinu bv honest work. That inst be the main ob- pective. Onlv 1t‘ and when the sys- tem fails to DTOVKlO tnrutotviticiit should anyone capable of working expect to eniov a llvclgiood for which he has not worked - and in this event maintenance becomes o mutter of right. 0111' ltlghcs; rim must be trccaam to work. not tic doni from work-Owen Soiuid Sun- Times. While enxroesed in the conduct o! a terrlblirwtir, and on the eve of its most serious phase, tho British House of Commons llllds tune tor careful consideration of the British householders‘ proqlem concerning dfllnesfiio helm, It is amazing that even 1n the I?l"‘L1m5iLfll1C9S the ner- sonaJ needs of tiltlzens receive por- llamentmy attention. -— Toronto Globe and Mall. Since the outbreak of war and up to Inst. Fbbniurv 539.000 IJCODlO have been killcn or injured on the roads. United I{ll1§d0ll1 casualties of killed. wounded, missing and prisoners 01 war on the fighting {mute total 383,000. ’I‘l1.l.s 5l1OW5 at a lZlH-nce the seriousness of the road problem which still confronts us. — Sussex Daily News. Dlllgcully searclilnz its field for war news. Science Service emerged with a new United Stat/as . i‘: THE CI-IARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN $ IIIIIIIIJ! quoted Jungle-veteran Sat. Delmar Golden: "You 0:111 smell a battal- ion of Jabs a good 5500 yards away!" The enemy's special nromaitlc qual- ity. in the sergeant/s opinion. is ac- counted tor bv the prominence of fish heads tn the Jab soldier's diet. —Ttme Magazine. Australia's zoo nt Sydney has risked the Department ct Game and Fisheries at North Bay io-i- two deer. twelve wooachuck, to-ui- por- Cttipdne. six chipmunk and two bear clubs. That. will be quite a fotmld- able Ontario invasion into South Wales. 1t is to be ho: none of the woonchuck ui: t e chip- bcnattn‘ Gustave Lacassv. (llv ix) editor of His first observations have shown 3'7 pages of which '0 are on the French regime m 11:5; “ionderml mbmhT-Mon- / I / 8 HT. and 307 on the English; in British Columbia. The o“ a’ “Wuhan” The Romance of Canada” has out of 372 pages “These figures." says Sena- or Lacasse, “lead inevitably to the conclusion hat the teaching of history in Canada today calls nforniation of the generations of tomorrow, licrs‘ ward will provide 12o additional beds. the lloiiiiiiiun (ioveriiiiient will refund to the f province $85,000 of the total cost of $|_';6.000. wllirlrshriiilil he tolerateihhi a historian —— _iii- h, the Province of Now, 5mm a 754m] m]. ileed it l: indispensable in history——a passion iiiiion is being constructed at the Halifax _Tub- f0!’ Kfltllh- - transitorv passions ivhirh might influence read- rs as ivcll as authors. 'l'here is just one passion .0! the rabbits introduced into Ars- nhle broadening of 131st" ls not the first in whim an alleged atromtion what lawyers know as "Old Bootyb case." tried before Lord Chin‘ Jus- tice Wi-lughg bmtnht. by the widowed Mrs. Booty against. a Captain Barnaby for say- tniz he had seen her husband. or his irhost. chased bv the Devil and dis- appear mo. t sti-omboll. Barnaby produced thirty wlhieeses. contains tell-LI time dotted. . Booty or hi; apparition into the the (not that. he was known to have died in his bunk aboard shin iii. the mu.rik eswp: to iollow the example aha where they became an un- There l; stlll too much tendency in some directions to regard Russo with mtsgivms. but we teei that this is largely due to the tact that Intmv oeoole do not realize how fietlv chanced the Ralssla or to- ts from the miss/la o! twenty- flve veers alto. Mr. Churchill ro- mtnded us ot‘ this whcn he said: "Profound completely wiped out. The victor- les o! the Russian armies have becin attended bv_ ii street rise tn strength of the Russian Slate and ii remark. its views. The relliizlous side of Russian lilo has has fllriired. ere was a notable precedent tn and a jury t. Kim's Gill The iuilzlon wnl he bum crater o! and sailors. to v that they also had at the ln Mav. 1W7. seen disappear crater, notwithstanding very time lie was sold to have been seen on Stromboli. The Lord Chief Justice summed up verv slronizlv in] hv Oflltalu r SKY BORN!) Grim is the nlowinz [or this early‘ f1. sowm u.o\vsiiu'res_ thiunder. steel and re. The The horses ntnacct and tireless in their going. A drelz-iiln 0t iioertv the Dlowmonvs i re. Deep lie the furrows t/hrough the kins: st ubble Where Erub anti nelled beetle house. Blow is the izrindiniz or t-he dusty rubble. Over and over more the searching s. w And then at dawn. as mrist lies in the vvs Arid slow warmth lather; on the narrowed around The seed is fltmsz and lllilhl. as this- tle follow s On mornlnn WLLITTS throng-h all the c cs tiroun . _ Where c-zirthward settle onrncliutm i men , . And ffcedfllin meets its native #011 n 11MB “lord have merrv on me and 111ml that. I mav nc/vcz- sci‘ what you have Bootv lost her case-Manchester Guardian seen!" and Mrs. weed and tun- -Cliarles Malam ln_ the New York _ Herold Tribune. __ _ u \ 1111111111111 rIIlIIIIawIJmwIIIflI/III VIII Paint with over WALLPAPER, WALLBGARD- PLASTER or other SOLID SURFACES_ 01in‘ WHY PAY MORE! ALABASTINB dries quickly without odour. Wide choice of beautiful tints. fltvilntl consuls Orthopedic l.. J. MIBOII OPTGIIBTIIST Humane P I. I. 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Ollleo flours: 10 to ll n- ll- ltollht Ilollilnya em. ov nnbolmaneni you: n thonllli to mix Sold at all Edgy H d a: d to app/y Piini] Siojfs, A 5m’ pmkage It“ Water Pqinit off lflalls and Cei ings i. .1’ g 'JUNE_I4,V IH”””A Illllllrvrxllivra: 11/7101 All YOU ‘H0113 wrrn m’ LUMBAGO 0R son; sack If l0 we have m, belt ' nnmely remain” h innit-lint TABLETS B lnlly g s.i.§iiii.m'i§...‘.{,°,f 0 f o 0g: o. tnt ninmih '—'-_'-i~—__ We Have the Props; TRUSS For your nai-tlculn than of vou who grgatzfgo tnnntc eniiuxh to have i, Welr n Truss we ask u], dilution. Are vou Stlllsflgfl ment of new vle ‘Truxseg, gvlirtlylfisaytlmd at Drlces to m]; TIIE 2 MAGS llfl Great George Street Mal) Orders Given m-mn," Attention. ..__._._- __.>.—i -_ _~,-—___ —~ -€| ‘l1 “COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVIC ” W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Phone 540-541 i .Pl’Il8SSi0ll8l Barns McLeod CW Bentley W. l. BENTLEY. K. C- l. A. BENTLEY K t. Blrrlllorn and Attorneys-lt- LII l“ Prince Street M. ALBAN FARMER It L. LLB. BAI-BIBTEN. SOLIUITDIL ETC. Canadian Benn n! Cominem Bllll- MONIY T0 LOAN --i----i-i-——-~i Al tX W. MAI HItSUN Money lg Lap Collection! Olllce: 90 Grant George 81ml BAIIIIISTBB. SOLICITOR. ETO- .Tv'm;.m§.ev.e.. FERTILIZERS For sale limited quantity Superphospliate, pot- 1 ash. and ammonia. i n‘n‘lu‘n'n‘n'n‘ Associated Shippers Inc. ‘YIIIHQWQQIIIIIIIIIIQ‘ 1' 1w ltittltffififllllflIl Sliortliorn Breeders ' ATTENTION l! Parties wishing to secure Shot-thorn Breeding fe- males should forward the following information to the undersigned: L-Class of animal-Dual Purpose or straight beef type. ' Z-Age of animal. 3.—Number required. 7"“ L-Price range. - This information should be forwarded before June 30th. - S. C. WRIGHT, Secretary, l Prince Edward Island Shorthorn Breeders‘ Association . Department of Agriculture, Charlottetown. Morrelland Oompanyi ll. F. ARGIIIBALD Chartered Aeeountiinu Inllorn Trnnt llnlltllll Ollrloildown (n"I‘h'l' IKQH “T FiKs LAM "iifdiilfilli "' Tit." " Bank nl New: Sou In Climb"? Charlottetown I. E- I MONEY. TO LOAN Bu” Ilene ll 7- L; out a MAmiEKUN noun T0 iuoAN Cameron Block Chnilflfllff“? PTF MlphPP HA» Ktc: NOTARY n. IAIBIBTEI! UOIJUTOB Blley Illlltllhl bhlrlfimw“ sres c AMIIIEII | fiLA$$t§ rlTlEfl| lJ. S. TAYLOR OPTOMETRIST , . Stu c?" I T-l-"lif-ideiii-i-"iiiiii Ivelnn. hv Allttltltllmn“ I Pill. l.“