PAGE FOUR ‘ “ THE CHARLOI IETOWN GUARDIAN Ti t nAAsAk —-———-§___ "JUNE 1; 1942 fitted direct from Canadian munition factories. ' t A A = - . . akin No s A financial arrangement that would be accePP Spa nginister WQRDS OF s c G able to Canada has been difficult to worklout. Vie CHALLENGE i "fly , must bu hu e uantities of raw matcria s in t e (G1 “F d Mam ‘V . Aqipiu» ““”““”“““’ twohébnnnwwmwmomflnmhaawwmaaamnhiann5 __. S idem“ Pfltslllfilllt Lltlrgl. i: 21:21:‘ Kiri-L“ American dollars. If Canadg put}: all herhmilgu- Xwelfilyliggelfiéldmmhgxpenglixonl $2; fimeizgiteld than sad sh 0:311:10: "The hopes q: freeupieiaol-iid _ _ TO VICE Pres C11; _ . . ti ' t l i m ence ist e o- _' , s r M wee an ec women everyw ere. 6 ‘ Sttffrltll"); Llttlll Col l) A MICKIIIHIIII. no.0. °“‘ "‘ ° a °°mm°“ P°°' ‘° w ligggiglgwgpyllhpfgfggftg 31:5‘ simple etc-soldier. Just- for In hour- of those who IN iiwiiitirig lb- ‘ C): gm... .ii.ii .“Jl1LlI|“l Ulmiwl J li- 5""""~ F44- A§;|N"|isl€ Etlllurs: trunk Hillier and Ian A Bllrll!“ SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Rlilil in 1'.1~.‘.1., $4.00 pet year; $2.50 for l months $1.25 for 3 months; 50o for one month Um Delivery $5.00 per V0111‘; $3M! "I 5 mun“ $1.75 iur 3 months; 60o for one Mouth. By 31.111 to oihi-r Provinces and U. S. A. $5.00 9Q!‘ Y!" Shun“, “puny, 51,00 per year; $1.00 for s montlli 50c for 3 months Oblllllld l! uuiiriilan may he New Iorii 01d ‘Pinion Sq uilrn. ‘Ibo Ctiiirliiiictoiiu uiiiiiiiiiiri- .\l‘\\ll Ani-ni-y, siiiiiii xi-iii- Agviitty, (romér 1111M and Wnhlnnel- Bllhltlll; .\ii-iriipii|i|nii News Annoy. I248 Peel l5, Mhlllftall; J lllls‘, mi iii-y so, Toronto; News Stud, clllllrilh i....iii.-r, Ullllflll; iiriiiiv- si-w- sued. fllllbvrv. out; iiiiii iwiiruw-i» hhuu, sliiiirlon N. 5.; ‘ “The Sirongcsl Memory is Weaker lhan Ike weakest Ink.” i .‘lll\'l)".k\iht. Jcxi: i, tie. The Curse of the Day . - ‘lI-lfil‘ Thorsnn put his finger b. ;ill our present trouble when lie - of Cnnitiiotisliis belief that himself) were isolationists 5nd,}. 1.1g; ;i:id lit-fore it became evident that ilt" xiii: - l hzive to stand together. l! \\'l- ~ it ~ '1' iliicct confession of lack of _ ir pro-cut lczidcrs ziccoiitits i;. .i . l ‘ l' "fir ilircziiciicd doom to the ' r- lltiiiiiiiioii as a confederation. \Ve zii Ottawa an aggregation of ‘i i"\'i'i'§ llZlYt‘ bccn and Still fir! ' lllil \\llU iridziy arc acting as . r n L‘lltlt'il\'4)1ll' to have an "all oiz: "i..'. :»_§.i'_i'. lhr-e isolzitioiiists tnust be got flil iii’ lii-i fl- w» inn enter heart and soul into the ‘r for :ir \(‘l"\‘ t-xisicncc as a free nation. ‘ -> lll'_\‘ \\'lll'l'€ those “contrary i- Yil iifiice iii Bfllélill. iti U. 'i, lll South Africa, in Australia, S \ ‘rt a; <-v l. Mexico they had to be got rid m‘ Ill-fore ;i~_r IlTlMIIXK-S could be achieved. In l’ ‘ 1t» i‘; w l‘('llli'lill(‘(l in power, they have i" r innit-y" i.» prcscnt ruin and ever- \\ i- \lll not wzint a similar experi- Qilllllcr the Kings, the Tliorsons, the others of that category i this ihc better for all con- aiiliiiini-trzition must all be of ilic country to victory; so long l counsels ,each expressing his iiioii, nothing but Chaos and wl of us. i W ‘Tliei New League China, Dr. killitil-‘Yillg Shih, Chinese consul-gen- erril, has llPPil tolling a Vancouver audience, looks ' l l.<'.'1f_'_tl€ of Nations to assume hcr ill pcncc, when the war is '1 lllf‘llll)t'f of the old League and lcrzililc benefits from the Lea- plllil eiiiiriivtl r. _ _ _ giwfs liiiii- ‘iillIllulll rind technical activities. But ("liiiwri l~ ilicd to the League for the pro- “lilfifll integrity, she did not get iprwl fill‘. _ ids misfortune rather than its rriirction China asked for was not w l l - -.~. i‘. l :1 of fault {lllll ihpflllwl! ‘ kliikdcn incident was the Lea- gue's ff. ic-"i and it provedto Japan and m ax... hlllwiilini mid l-litler that the LCIIQIR‘ ~l llir‘ ClillC-‘iilll, the courage and the power to czifririse its orders. Japan, after Aliikileii, defied the League, re- nounced her mrimhcrship and set about strength- ening lIClEUlf for nggrcssioti. Had the League had the pliwcr Illltl ilic will to lake “bad boy Japan’ by the scruff of the ncck, pull him back to his seat in the council ztlld the Assembly and bid him b¢l1,-,\~<i_ lire long train of events which led through .\l-j ' ‘n and the Rliineland, Austria, spin, mid i‘ cliii-Slovziltia to the present war tniglit ii/ 5C1‘ lizire stiirlcd. If China is to get the benefits she expects from s new League that new League must have a good dml mrirg pair-er zliciii its prototype. CUTOHlILIVIiIIiIVI-Q War Production Although the obstacles are numerous the Bi! Three in the Anglo-American line up-Canadai the lliizv-l States ntid Great Britain-are yVQTldQE out a C-ilililillflltltl war program which \Vlll tie in ever)‘ iilni-t- r-f their effort, reports the _Mone- tarv 'l'iiii.-~. "flit-re is now a. united Chiefs of Staff board and there is a board charged with the all»: iivn of fZlW tuiitcrials to war industry. lfnr- l'4'i ili< in‘ lllf’ llll'('i",t‘0llllIi”l(3S have bot-ii Ii:i‘< zi plziti for a United Nations mum- tioiis ZhV -iit borird and a supreme production board \\ ...i authority to say what munitions shall be prriiliiri-rl and where. When production and ss- sign-n ll’. iii" iiiiiiiiiiiiiw is plziccrl in the control of -. < :i rcrilly unified war effort i. .'lll"'illl Qciiiiti will l1fl\'!‘ li.<-ii nrliicvcd. _ In rcrciit works tlie establishment of I united mu:i":'i»:i< Il\"-"Qlllll(‘l1l board to allocate all arms prriiliiccrl in North American factories to the figliiini: ‘iiiil.'\ '.‘.ll!‘l'l‘ ilirv are most needed, has been iii: wf-i-c examination in \Vashington, with (Eiiuidn inking a considerable part in the negotiations through her Munitions and Finance Ylliuidvrs. Yiiilri- {fir Iniiirvivrl plan lllf’ London board miild riiiiiiziiii- lo allocate British munitions out- ut in i-iiipirr: troops and fulfill its obligations f0 Qiissia. 'l'lii- iiiiiiiiiiriii< assignment board in \Vash- nglon would consist of iii-p representatives apiece Iffllfl lli-iiniii flllll tlw Viiitcrl State and one from Irina-la. 'l'li~r<~ \\ mild br- poolcrl under its control ill lllf‘ Itllll- priiiliict-il by lhiilcd States and Can- irlinii l'{l(‘l'>l'l' .- riiiil it “Tllllfl allocate supplies from his, pool tn fl?!‘ ziruiics of lllf’ two countries 0'1 ilii: voiiiirriil, lllf‘ l'. S. armies abroad and if \\1illlili~i““'i‘i‘ in :irni lll(‘ (‘liincse nriuics. 'l'l.i- lil irili lNlJllTl in London would indent on llio \\ ili-lilll ‘litll liiiriril for silpplics and would nl- llll‘ :irittics in the Mother- l'iiil<-r [his arrangement the iii».»|i~- ill llril.'iiii Wttlllfl receive llicir ' "l".'l lllt‘ llriii-li bnaril via thr- __'lllllt'llf hoard at Washington. Can- l\l*‘.llll no longer continue to be out- liiiwili- lill iii .'ii|ii-|i:;~»! Ziiiil illlli .'iliii~.:il. .l.ili.iil.ilii ‘l|ll">""f" iniiiiiliii.=i\ {l atllim :iini"'tz-. O-a. minion to secure payment and the U. S. dollars which will continue to permit her to buy in the American market? This is a phase on which there has been great caution. Plans for a united production board have not reached an advanced stage. Involved in such a move would be the allocation to each country of the production of war articles for which there are existing facilities. i: EDITORIAL NOTES q \ \ 6 The wedding month. i: n- : iii Councillor Earl Macdonald has returned from Amherst, Mass, enthused with the tremendous progress made in war efforts in the United Stat- es. He fccls we here have not begun to realize fully the seriousness of the situation, or we would not continue in the hum drum way we are doing. In the States after only six months at war, the)’ are away ahead of us after our nearly three years war experience. \Ve must wake tip and see that nothing i5 left undone that can be done to bring war’: realization home to ourselves, and defeat to our enemies. in iii in in Sympathy from- his brother ncwspapermen as well as the communit_v generally goes out to Mr. A. R. Brennan of the Summerside journal, and to Mrs. Brennan on the announcement that one of their three sons in the Air Force, John R- 15 among the missing after an invasion flight on \\’ednesda_v. Not tnzitiy parents have the record of the Brcntians in liavitig three sons oti active air service, and the bad news about one must make the parents doubly anxious about the oth- ers. Parental pride in their son's achievements may mitigate the pangs of sorrow for John's fflle. but all the same from now on part of them will be for ever “over there." in iii e The Isle of Man was bought by the British Government frotn the Duke of Atholl this date, I765; a much favoured holiday resort in the Irish Sea, i6 miles off the Scottish coast at \Vigtonshire, originally inhabited by Celts it was seized by the Scandinavians in the 9th century, conquered by Norway in i098, rccoiiquercd by Scotland in 1266, seized by England in i285, and regained by Scotland in i313, ultimately landing in the possession of English in i346; became the possession of the Earls of Derby, until i735 when it came by inheritance to James, Duke 0i Atholl, from whose heirs the British Cioverninent acquired it by purchase; made p0pula1‘. largely through Hardy's series of novels dealing with Manx characters and romance. x at iii iii As a supplement to the normal egg ration, I2,- ooopoo tins of new egg powder developediintlcr a special process in the United States-equivalent to 144,000,000 eggs —will be distributed to flit! British public shortly. Lord Woolton announces- The issue to the public, which will_ be "Ofbffl" tion," will be at the rate of one shilling and nine- pence for a five-otnice tin equal to 12 Bggs- The new process enables eggs to be sent in dried form instead of in shells, with consequent reduction on the demand on shipping space to one-sixth of that required by ordinary eggs. Ministry of Food ex- perts who have tested the new powder report _it is impossible to tell it from ordinary egg. It wiil be a valuable contribution to Britain's protein foods and will have the highest nutrition value per ton of shipping space of all lease-lend food- stuffs, is the official verdict of the new product. ie ioi iv- ie Our neighbours to the south have been under ceilings for sometime, the new order having gone into effect at midnight Sunday- MaY 3- A! lhal hour federal control over retail prices became ef- fective, backed by a guarantee that the cost of liv- ing will remain at or below the Iilarch level for the duration of the war through a licensing system under which those who fail to keep their prices under the ceiling may lose their right to do busi- ness. Canada's price ceiling —-8ppli€d generally speaking to retail prices —went into effect Dec- ember I last. Prices were frozen at the level pre- vailing in the period September 15-October II. Government spokesmen have emphasized on a number of occasions the ceiling will not be broken as it is considered essential to keep prices at fixed levels to guard against inflation. Subsidies will be paid in special circumstances, it has been en- nounced, to enable the price ceiling to be main- tained. ii- io- iv e Mr. Jean Harvey, editor of "Le Jour" has been telling the Canadian Progress Club Montreal some of the reasons why the “No" vote predominated in Quebec. "Our leaders are still reluctant to dis- please our interior enemies. They have not learn- ed that some people cannot be appeased. We must be aggressive and fight against these enem- ies within our gates, or sooner or later we shall have trouble," said Mr. Harvey. Infra-nationalists and agents of the fifth column are really weak, a tiny minority. he contended. They had never won an election. After 3o years their chief journalistic organ had a circulation of only i3,- 000. Yet it was "the weakness of the Government that all agents of the fifth column, and those who aid the enemy, without knowing it, were let free." He ivarticd that this represented a serious complacency. “We can lose our freedom if we oppose only l passive resistance to our enemies ivithin. It is the duty of a living democracy to be aggressive, to be vigorous, and to impose its principles upon the people." The mass of French- Canailians were tieitlier anti-British nor separat- ist, yet "our unity will be seriously compromised if we dn not act. prompty and vigoronsy." "The French-Canadians are as brave and as good fight- crcas any other race, Wllfll they sec clearly that llIPIl‘ country is in dnligcr, tlicy will not ltc-sitrite f0 i'\(‘t‘(‘lif"lllf‘ rtiqioiisiliililios zinil dangers of its dc- fciicc. ‘int nn effective- ntfi-itipt liiid been tiindc ll) ilr-iiion-irrilr- ll|i\_ "(‘¢iii<vri|itiii|i i: n dirt-rt and iiii-vilnblc consequence iil the‘ ilcclnrnlion (if wary‘ .\lr. lliirvrv nlfirnicil. “lint this ii-ns nvvcr lllllllP “h” i‘? m" llmlll" 1\l\\'i'l_\'< the (jovcrnitient fol- lowed its policy of appeasement.” 4 I in defence of that. religion. Qu s- ling can hang the bishops He might, even massacre tine clergy- men. But what would he gain by It? Only the frenzied demos-fatten of the faithful. Quislln fleeing something altogether be- yoind his control, because his pow- er extends no further than men's fears. Where fear of death ends, mere the power of tyranny fails. and 1t. Ls only the stupid tyrants who permit. themselves to pm that limit, -- Baltimore sun Sir: May I suggest that No Sur- render squads, platoons and even battalions be foimed in the Home Guard-pledged under the most solemn undertaking to die rather than give themse ves up to sn invader in any circumstances? suoh troops wou.d wear a very prcminent N . S badge, so promi- nent. that. people would be CD21- tlnually asking what. 1t tneant. On the basis of doing what ycu exipzct others to do. I should be quite milling to join such a imlt 1n any capac ty, or If necessary to form it, and I'm no ‘blinkin’ ‘ere.’ -- Yours, etc, Gordon Laws, cap- tiiin-(Old c MR.) Nottingghem Jouznal office. -Leeds (Yorkshirei Pos . An agricultural laborer who turns his hand with intelligence to many jobs, perhaps even poaching, dug up a iiesl. of very youztg rabbits. Having some difficulty in finding enough food for his cat. which had recently produced 3, litter, he d2- clded to give her one of the rab- bits by way of extra sustenance Whe-n he vsiietl her the nixt morning he found ticr in yet great- 91‘_n€€Cl of food t-iian before, since she was suckling the young rabbit along with her own kittens. She continued to ntother it with prop- er affection till it was more or less grqivn up. I have DfIETI Ricard of anmals suckling’ H161" natural enemies. including rats; but it. has alivays been when they had been deprived of u- ir O\'..’1 babies. This cat s'm~ply took in an evaciiee. — London Spectator. The sudden proposal of Henry Mcigcnuiau, United States Sece- iary of the Treasury, to reduce per- sonal exemptions under the r‘ed.ral income Lax to $600 for single p.r- sons and $1,200 for m; marred evldeziitiy stems out of a T1306 to overt the enactment by Congress for a general sales tax. Barey more man i-wo months ago Mr. Morgenttiau opposed any lawctniig of exemptions below the present $750 and $1,520 levels, pointing our, they had been reduced 1n each or the last two years. H-e said Treasury studies indicate that "the very lO-WESI» income earners have all they can do b0 feed and clzttie themselves and their families and that p. further lowering of the ex- emipliqris would yield a relative. insignificant amount of revenue" from them. The estimates whizh aoctmpany the Sscie.ai‘y's letter of Thursday to the House Ways and Means Ccnimtce lndrt: that. only one-eleventh of the $l.000.009,000 iii revenue t-o be ad- ded by this process will come frcm the new taxpayers. or other ten- elevenths coming from the added levy it wlll make on taxpayers al- ready above the exempt-cu lcizells. -—Chrl_=.tian Science M-cnitor. Sightseeing motor buses may be banned in the interest - and gasoline conservation. but. vis. tors to Montreal will be able to sre the sights, ancient. and nio.e.n, frcm the l.O;) of a tally ho coach. carrying 20 or so passsngezs and drawn by spanking horses The driver will be apprcpixatc-ly clad 1n elaborate frock coat, high hat with cockade, shiny Wellington hosts and will have wlrp and other ac- cessories. And, of course, thzre will have to be a bugler or trump- eter to sound tJ-riin-ta ta-raii- ta-ta at. strategic mtmetits. Tnat was the practice w.lh the fast coach of the kind wnich rim from the Place Viger Hotel tn the days Just beiore me first World War, to the high pleasure of the tcurist plfiieilkers and Lo the joy of the snail boys, who from the sidewalk cheered the mmesttc 00a an a..d footman and trumpeter, "these tally no tours will include Mount RcyaJ and practically cover the Is- land, stopping at. the numerous hlsbfiflf) spurts, o-f which this three- oentury-old community has plenty. They should be highly popular with visitors, especially those from New York. who have recently, been die- prived of their i/wo-decker buses. A11 the Passenzers will be on Wp 1n Montreal's clue. Tally hol The coach was born 1n the Hungarian villi-Be of 1400s and at first. wss re- served for royalty and other pers- ons of quality. In 1550 there were only three Ln France, owned by the Queen Diana of Poftlers l: ht-of- love of Henry II, and a nc leman of such Daniel Lambert-like ropor- tlons that. he was too muc of a weight for even g Percheron gr Clydesdale. Flve years later the Earl of Rldimond had a coach built the first 1n lkiglsrid. Soon c: in; was general in the British Isles and by 1830 the going was fast _ the Wonder csacti, beiiwsen shreiwsbury and London, covered the 158 miles at. a daily average of 12 miles an hour. - Montreal Gazette. -.__ 81r,—It was with much fnuregt that I reed your editorial of last Saturday, entitled, "The Safety’ Bicycle." About five years ago t/wo oung Montreaiers went. on a bfcy e tour through New England. M’ nlfihf lhey stayed st fann- hW-se-s. equl d expressly for cyclists and ikers. Ttiey paid twenty-five cents nightly for this. They cooked their own meals at the farm house, where they also bought most. of their supplies at ltrw pest. lr only other expense was dollars for membership in the American Youth Hostel Association without which they c:u'd not. have had these prlvllegrs 0n their re- turn to Mcntreal they and their friends crnnliwd the Canadian Youth Hostel Association. Pcr four years they have carried on with almost no financial support. building hostels iirid organfzing sponsored tours for inexipefencw‘! Cyclists. The rules of the associa- tlon leaves no leeway for CBPCFQe cyvlllik Anyone mldulng the rules forfeits his membrrsliil) 1a., W!" llicre WIN‘ o'er three hiin- drcd members in Montreal, iI\'ll1('- Ink English, PNIHOI and Jewish hC\'i(‘ll€1‘S Each vrar a [Plheflnu ls held with Hie Dppiw rf In.’ c- n diiclniz hostcllliiq n hPls Th ~ l?!" ll was 7I"fl at rfib o'c'c-k on Prldw. Mav ftf ct-"ih iii Tnd'r Hall. It. is hoped that. the lather- I iSDOWh Y in the horse, Veteran Mackenzie has views about how things should be run that the Minister of Pensions and National Health either does not subscribe to or is unwiiif to insist u n in his official capac t . or so e would ave his former comrades believe. “If I had my way," said Mackenzie the Leglonnalre, "the first con- script in Canada would be money." But he was careful to emphaalu that he was speaking as a. member of the Legion and not. as a mem- ber of Parliament. far less ss I. wnlster of the Crown. To what s pltiable state has representative government 1n this country fallen! Any member of Parliament holding Ca lnet rank who advocates a course out of the House which he is not prepared to insist u n as a public servant of great lnf uence is mocking Parliament. and with his own conscience. The cruelest. besides being the most dangerous, of the political arts is demagogy. That ls the art of say- ing what the people want to hear. whether it ts practicable or not. misleading the uninformed and romlslng to satisfy the needy whe- er you are willing and. able to do so or not. The C. C. F. has made some progress with the public by demanding the conscription of wealth, and Mr. Mackenzie would like to share some of the approba- tion which this opposition party has been able to evoke through the use of this entirely ambiguous phrase. Driving Kmorse (Peterborough Examiner) Two newspapers, the Fort W111- lam Times-Journal and the Van- couver Sun, have recently publish- ed iMormat-lon which should be iiscfiit to budding horsemen. These great family journals expect the horse to return in his thousands any day now, and they want their readers to be prepared. We shall pass on what. they have to say. To make a. horse turn to the right, shout “Gee” at it 1n a good loud voice: this appears to be horse-language for “right"; “Haw" on tlie contrary means "left" and should be shouted loud enough for the horse to hear you the first time, as otherwise 1t may merely think that you are laughing and treat you as a frivolous fellow. From where you sit: the left-hand b01150 l5 the “nigh” horse and the right-hand one is the “off” horse. If you want. the horses to stop shout “Whoa” at them and if they feel like it they will stop: to make thenugo into reverse you shout "back’ curiously enough, as horges and humans use the same word for this process. Neither paper gives directions for starting a horse but from our own knowledge we may tell you that this may be done either by shouting “Giddap", or by Sl-Cklng a hollow tooth several times as loudly as you can. Department wtien driving is of rst importance, Never show fear, whatever may happen. Of cour;\ the horse knows perfectly well that you are afraid. but if you show it he will run home at top speed in oideifto hide his shame at being out with such a ncvlce as yourself. If you wlsli to pose as a classy and nonchalaitt fellow, hang one foot over the side of the buggy and never use the steppln dismountlng. Ladies, when entering a democrat, should always cl mb up the wheel, CIYlIIS Dfelllly. "Don't start yet, Im on the wheel?’ this gives your escort a sense of power as he holds 4 whether they have shown any inclination to run or 9°? A Cfifflflke robe_may be used in e biissi. but. B. stylish driver will but this over one knee only; the 198 Wfllvli hangs out should not he covered. It ls well to carry a small compass when out driving; if you want to drive fast and scare your girl into respectful admiration o; your horsemanship, turn the ant. nial ln_tI.1e direction of its stable; that will make it run beautifully But if you feed the horse plenty of sugar hem"? you set out. its mouth ‘tlgélaymam nreitllv. That. ls all for LINCOLN CATHEDRAL This massive towered thing, how Q1168. to see 1t lifts the mlnd to God: A "illegal; very truth. a timed P A sacrament-O enter 1t unshod. The grrlound ggltiereon you tread is Y Retired. on a, hill. emphatic u a Clenchéd ln the certainty that God ye The Kin f Kl -- hell l .. a..r -" ii" That winds the city cannot touch these lowers Drawing the eye and heart above mans doubt. 'I‘hnl. solemn bell reverberates the ours, Above the roof-tops rinks the Gospel o . Take, in this mlllw house. the wine and brie From Him who had not where to lay His head. —-James D. Maclure 1n the London Observer. lng was well attended by c list-s ln Montreal, and that. the Ages‘:- tion wil receive the sucport tt. de- serves frcm the mctcflsts cf this city. Anyone desiring further ln- lg formation may write to the seq-e. my. no Box m. Plece irAi-inee. —Iet.ter in Montreal Star. Kidney iiéii; pol: Your Best (I uiyhfswflrxlmurl less-lisp. ‘owns: setleoumnheop. Oflonllie blsmolel ;leel hymkmsnfiln, risen In. l l 500d. alheysrslflysnlllelm, n int t m n eoplou ldlyi, becizusfl-en fellow. Ir“, Isl’! sleep well, by Budd's Kidney s—fl' lull s century Ills favorite remedy. I03 Budd's Kidney Pills ml“ oration 1n the countries the savage invaders have darken- ed and dos oiled, are with the United Na ions." — Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States. nnoeocpepenolrbibesdksenesd Lnbesfiffifm >- nurse..."- Thoughts For The Rationed (Ottawa. Journal) If any of us want to get. into the right mood to take rationlnx 0! W! and sugar and gasoline and fuel oil or rubber tires, all we have t0 do ls to take o. look at Britain. Over there, they know about m» onfng. Over in Britain after July 1, the car owner wlll have no gasoline at all; noneimless he can show that he needs 1t. for public health, war production, civilian defence work. or for other vital service. Here 1n Canada. we still have s goodly amount of sugar for our 6 0f yovA scanty Charlottetown Montague BRANCHES m PRINCE sow ' ' ‘ ' ‘nun’ ARD ISLAND SECURITY, i Re y is v1 _ _,,, _ .. —to the of Canada an iiérkiiiii. Saving Money is Saving 6e04,, Any of our branches will welcome opportunliiei o; ....(IIOYIAI$)... Kenslngtu. 0'Lury Mm! Vkforll tea and coffee and our pastries. l and there are chocolates and other candles for those who want. w buy them. Over 1n Britain they ._.~ have been getting along with half “ a lump of sugar for their tea or coffee at. each meal, and icing; for cakes are all but forgotten, and one would walk all over London before coming upon a shop with a single box of chocolates. Here in Canada we still have butter and cheese and cream. Over in England you may get. a. bit of butter at, each meal that one could put into an eye. and cream has lung since been illegal. Over here our shop windows and market stalls are still filled with fresh fruits-oranges, lemons. pears. grapefruit, In Eingland oranges. lemons and grapefruit are all but. unknown, with millions of child- gen who have never tasted orange UZCG. And so ll; goes all down the line; down the line of ' not. merely lux- plrles but. of life's actual necessi- es. some of us these days are wor- ried about, fuel 011; worried be- l. i?” The fuel controller is secure their coal requirements early in order to avoid - any possible shortage later in the season. We handle all the high d N S ‘ '- as well as Dominion Househillg e ova com coals’ Anthracite etc. Kindly let us have your order at convience. W. D. GILLIS & CO. YOUR OOAL SUPPLY ‘ advising the public i... Coke. genuine Walsh l. your earliest PHONE 176 cause we know that changing back from oil to ccal will mean cost and trouble for us, and less comfort. Perhaps a good antidote for what we feel wlll be 1n the thought that. reduced consumption of oil will not merely save the lives of brave men who sail on tankers, but wlll help send more bombers to Berlin. Thieves At Odds (W1nni g Free Press) Those dellg tful little playmates, Hitler and Hirohito, are having a blt. of a spat which the rest of the world will thoroughly enjoy. The origin of the dispute goes back to the Nazi invasion of Holland One of the first, things the Germans d was to swindle the Dutch out of their shares in the Netherlands companies which owned the great oil and rubber industries 1n Sumat- 3?, Java, and the Dutch East In- 9S. In exchange for bales of worth- less occupation marks. the Nazi bankers gained enough stock 1n n number of these corporations to give them control. When the Jabs over- ran the Ind.es, Nazi agents emerged from the woodwork to claim the Dutch properties. But the Jabs. wl-o had ta. en the properties by force of arms and at great expense, trlcd to shoo_the Nazis out. Right. now the Nazis and Japs are embroiled grgnpliés-argument over legal techni- JUNE L 191Z__B,.%15h aim? Manhunt i. E’ L Accord," to the NB _ m _ attacked Osten . ruses an _ tured thesis: DIODETHCSZISWIIGITY fiigv zfibmgge- Germ“ has“, °°' om" "gfifi y) a n A M captured Rotterdam. and the Jar‘! cu led Belgium. Workmens and i ‘ as good Am Daftnefs ought to “m, Sodlers Council took over Kron- Holidays etc. by appolnlmen Lhem eve); The yam on the on," stadt fortress near Petrcgred and Office Connected wllh hand. arizue that the resident. oper- "imdlflled Russla“ Pmvl-‘lmml DRUGSTORE ators of uie industries became their sflvqmmerl-t- real owners when Holland fell. These operators refused to recognize the German titles and hence the Japs had to take them by force and. having taken them by force. were entitled to keep them under Axis international law. The ar ument 1s engender-lug consfderabe heat. but no enough, unfortunately. to explode either of the participants. Urges Complete Elimination 0f Peacetime Frills MONTREAL, May )9 _ p195. elm: life insurance to maximum service for all-out war effort, G.W, Bourke, Presfldent of the Canadian Life Assurance Company, appealed at yesterday's annual meeting of the Asszcfatlon for maximum econ- omy 1n selling practices, complete elimination 0f peacetime (rill; and simplification of Policy Plans and servkzes, While twenty per cent of 1m insurance men are now 1n active national service and the business lf has been critically examined to conserve man-power and mat. erfals Mr. Biurke declared that life insurance will face cheerfitllv whatever futher wartime testrlgt- ions may be necvsai-y, Although not a war fndust. , it 1s an essential service. one whfc cannot be pro- vl ed 1n snv other way, cne that. has aroused mmv s man and woman to a renhzatffin of their duty to net. today and not, m. morrow. "We 1n the insurance business." he sgid. "must not only meet f-he pro‘ o the present. we must. anticipate the future. The poet- war reconetructfrn period will bring with 1i: broad changes 1n national and international law and The world must am one lesson, above all othe": from th'e wsr — that nations can. not survive and yet live 1mm elves alone, The poet-war nerfod must ere s vset expansion 1n the free exchange o: good; me He» vices between nations ‘f rur elvii. izotlon is to neriilet. That hm bee». wusrsnteed bv the Atlantic Oher- ter, and the erchan e of lnirurerci- eervfcee will nlnv ‘e nirt in the ‘ulfllment of that Charter, REMEMBER WHEN (Bty The (lmsdlsn Press) Henri Ccdiet left no doubt o! lila racquet wlvrdrv when he smashed through Bill Thd-en’; d-- ienc- to win the FIFTY" lyr‘ courts tennis title at Autavl‘. “f_"_ri~e_. i2 yurs as» today. B‘; H... paved brlWantly but. went. down 3-0, 8-0, 8-1. i A\ (A TE. R. Brow & Sand F i re, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Class Insurance l Agent 144 Richmond St. ‘illar-ZS Years Ago Today (my The Canadian Press) gr i\‘" \ l§ t gala Stomach Mixture II ll f b- fidlf’. °..ii°.i'°i.?i’i"li'i-3iii'1i- of the digestive . wiiieti CMIIO"="'“'“ ore men ed by us. hudlehe- ._.,_ heerthum, an and ll sense - of pressure elow the heert. Recommended for Sour Stom- ii N sch and all stomach troubles. ALEX w, MATHESO Price 85c s bottle. _ 1m g t BARBISTER. SOLlLHcou-"mlu MACS HAIR RESTOBIR MoflfI;'Q,"wMlsg].r:.‘ Gw|1ew A dellosfel perfumed pre- °"j’”“‘% -1 nsrstlon w lch restores. M_ ALBAN FARM»- efrengthens snrl ha . It wlll restore lls orlglnsl color, Promotes n new and oil r- for growth where the h r h felling snd ls remarkably use- ful In preventing dandruff slid destroying snaffle hslr klll- ers. Pi-lee 80 cents s bottle. ______i_____. Are You Troubled With LUMIIAGO 0f BORE BACK 1 _ heldlflm" If so. we have one of the beet gegflziilliiilnineu - consul! ' remedies to offer namely, “mum; "l" mcitm-rs TABLETS At yogi-flaring flflntiiin - o new.“ “tattle; ira- ~. rllfl.‘ Joint, Muscular and cl" ||| on! 5M“ ' other forms of Ilhelllnsllsfn dnflcnnlee which ordlnsry freslmenu fsll to reseh. Price 50o s Box. TIIE TWO IMOS Orders Given Prompt on. Mall Allen WHY HAVE at Lowest Rate at Summerside. Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown EXAMINA I IUN Flttlng and Supplying Glam: ii. .|. lillllBflll OPTOMETIIIST Professional Bards McLEOD 8i BENTLEY w. a nunuzv, it. G l. A. BENTLEY K. c Barristers and Attomeyrll- Law son: FEET? MONEY 1'0 LOAN lM Prince Street ‘ 'o'll'li'll" Morrellandllflllllllllll O. F. AROIIIBALO Chartered Accnnnlanll Intern Tn“; llulldlnl beantlflee the B.A., LL-B- . no asalusmn. souuron m cllllllllll seriii of Cemmfl“ MONEY ‘r0 LOAN Hgw Aft? Your Eye“ n] SYWPW _ Grey Hslr to u you on h!" O. F. lllllclwfoll" I a "imriinso-‘l u, I nnToIIFFO"