.._,____-_aq- <.—; - - ——-—- - ‘i I . e .-_-._.._-_-_- -'-. _._-v _-__- H ..__. v-fi__-_.-_-.--t =~.‘_: i‘ .-,. ‘IiItIil-‘P ' ‘~- llu ' DOOR PRIZES: N0 COFFEE THEN In the Middle Ages, beer was the chief breakfast drink. s_.__ DAILY jcnosswono A0805! ‘P. Chafnbll’, t ii. Fellow 0. Wavy (Heraldry) 0. Learning l. Little - island I2. A holeJ , t boring tool i. Pig pen -- 5. Sanction 7. Mulberry 8. Strike with _ the hand l9. Spread 20. An age 22. Marry l4. A low. mournfu singing ‘IO. Quick ‘l0. Network 82. City t SE. Fr.) It. Donkey It. Receptacle for flowers es. Water god i Babyl.) H10. Liken .41. Sick e2. Group of three persons , _ or things es. Tapestry so. Forearm bone d6. Tawny wild been (Afn) s1. Observed 4a Grit 2. Sole i nzoa about umx 501C001: vVAYFW 1 i DOWN l. Cattle thief 8. Poem s. Molten glass b. Part of s bell ' d. Period of 11. Masculine name 1S. Color 16. Animal's foot grass to dry _18. Minute crystals of ice run are snow .....";"a.... O IIINSMEN SPRING CARNIVAL Follow The Crowd To The FORUM For hours of clean, pure fun. Get in on the valuable prius that are given away nightly and see TOM AUBURN perform his feats of magic that have amazed onlook- ers wherever he has performed. Radios, Watches. Flight over Char- lottetown given away to lucky iloket holders in attend- ance at time of drawing. I .0 Oi t HUGE INDUSTRY I in coal mining. 21. Hawaiian bird l8. Native of Denmark 25. Citisen of ‘ Nevada or" "r". ‘l m" 9° uuuuui UBLlliLi "W"! umuu uuuu ; republic (N. lliiillll DCTHU ; Atlantic) " 20. Apportlona, '"""‘“".“.'!'!i'._ as cards - ' _ S1. Obstacle ‘ 81. Fastens 88. Perform iirrnl s4. A “fruit- 40. Part of a dot" window is ferns e1. Metal t5. Pleased jss. Narrow - expression inlet (GeoL) DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-llereh how to work lti AXYDLBAAXR IsLONOFEI-LOW” ~ One letter simply stands for another. In this-example A is used for the three L's. X for the two 0's. etc. Single lettks. apos- ‘\trophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each ‘day the code letters are different. A Cryptogram Quotation ZTA 0. ‘Disiriiuiee b! HUI Tfllules lyoslsete I SH-H-H! THE BOOTS ARE. IN CASE ‘II-E ‘THING BITES WHEN HE CG/IE‘: our: GNE ME TH’ CLAW l-IAMhER AND WE'LL MAKE IT LOG<A$ "Tl-DUGH HED SQUEEZED OUT- ~ 1 COiJI-DNT SLEEP FORTHIN - - IRX OQUTT ALRO: nsot. nzox: tax oourr can srorzxo-xznr. Yesterday's Oryptoauote: WOE UNTO YOU. LAWYERS! FOR YE HAVE TAKEN AWAY THE KEY OI‘ KNOWLEDGE-I'LL - _ . is - Q ¢<.Q;_¢QQQ\ I 73-7???’ . .'¢{¢:e:e'e‘e e szfe‘ s C o ‘O Q A - - k ‘a . v u‘: “BC. " ny‘uA I 0'" \ {new v‘ b; QTQWILIJAM§ I kitsin has 7U.000 men engaged heavy Flow W II. S. Capital To Canada OTTAWA. June 1 -- (GP) — United States capital is flowing into Canadian industry at unpre- cedented rotes. the Bureau of Sta- tistics reported Monday. Preliminary returns for 101s in- dicate that total U3. investmerrs in Canadian business and industry for that year may exceed $3.700- 000.000 — an increase of more than $156,000,000 over 1047 and s gain of at least $23,000,000 over 104d. It means an increase of more than $800,000,000 over the pro-war 1939 total of $1,88l,000,(x)0. The biggest part of the 1948 total showed in manufacturing - ap- parently a favorite for U8. invest- ors - which in two years jumped from 01.308.000.000 in American capital in 1946 to more than al.- 800,000,000 in 1M8. While the bureau lacks up-to- date figures on other foreign cap- ital in Canada, it noted that in 1947 when US. capital amounted to $$,l87,000.000, total foreign invest- ment came to $7.l'l'5.000.0iltl. U18. investments compared then with 81.642.000.000 held by the Un- ited Kingdom and 8346000900 held by other overseas countries. C. N. R. Claims Before Commission MONTREAL, June 1——(CP)-—The Canadian National Railways, in a submission to he placed before the Royal C mission on transporta- tion this week and made Public Monday, says “the Canadian Na- tional considers that its capital structure is unsatisfactory.” The railway will urge: 1. That consideration be given to determine whether it is esscnllfll ’that all forms of transportation be under a unified control: 2. That notwithstanding the pre- sent division of authority between the Federal and Provincial Govern- menis, it would be beneficial to control competing services from the standpoint of national public convenience and necessity; 3. That the railways should have a scale of rates which would inter alia accomplish the following ob- jectives: obtain for the railways a fair return on prudently invested capitol; apportion transportation charges as equitably as possible be- tween different sections of Canada and as applied to various commodi- ties; enable the railways to per- form that portion of the country's transportation which can be per- formed more economically by rail- way than by other means of trans- port; 4. That the “agreed charge" pro- visions of the transport act should be amended to make the agreed charge more effective in obtaining for the railways traffic which they can carry more --- ‘ "y than competing forms of transportation. "The fixed charges are grossly excessive in relation to the carn- lng power of the railway or when compared with the fixed charges of other major railways," the submis- sion adds. "In 1923 Canadian National was required to assume without miti- gation the debts of its bankrupt predecessor corporations. The as- sumption of these heavy debts by the newly-organized system is the principal underlying cause of the present excessive fixed-charge bur- den." The Royal Commission opens its public hearings at Winnipeg to- morrow. The railway says, "that the fin- ancial difficulties of the company do not arise in their entirety from overcapltoiization but also from operation of railway lines which can bear no fixed charges and as a result place an excessive burden on the remunerstive lines. There is at present an unbalance between the level of ratés and tolls and the level of expenses of operation." The management says it views the C.N.R. as the pioneering rail- way of Canada. bearing a large share of the responsibility for de- velopment of national resources. I "The railway is also o! vital strategic importance," says the sub- lmission." .. .. Lines connecting the ‘ports in the Maritime Provinces with the rest of the country were —By J. R. Williams O;Q;O '1'. -I. >60 ‘res-oz; Q Q. who‘, » Y. I. I16. U. I DIV. $7. s THE GUARDIAN. WONDERFUL NEW SUITS. G CHARLOTTETOWN Gabardine Topcoals $45. now . $39.50 25 Men's Suiis $62. now . . $39.50 50 Worsted Suiis up lo $50. now $35 100 Worsted Suiis .. 20% OFF 25 handsome All Wool Worsied Suiis t $55-whileiheylasi . . . . . . $42.95 Gabardine Suiis $55. now . . . . $49.50 Tropical Worsied Suiis. now . . $37.50 YOU'LL RE IIVIPRESSED WITH T HENDERSON & CUDIVIORE AIM a.....'n l BIG ssvluo FOR MEN! THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY RDINE COATS. SHIRTS. OVERALLS. SLACKS ‘Ag? ENANTY OTHER ITEMS OF MEN'S WEAR OFFERED FOR THIS GREAT SAV- \ Dress Shirts. plain shades. now $265 Spori Shiris $3.50. now . . .. Check Spori Shiris $3.95. now . Dungarees $3.50, now . .. .. . Overalls $3.95. sale ..' . . . Blue Tweed Trousers $9. now . . Work Shiris .. 20% OFF IIE VALUES! PAGE SEVEN $2.15 $2.95 $2.85 $3.25 $4.50 l of outstanding (wartime) strategic value. "There are many instances of thin-trsffirlines which are per- formlng' essential services but which are operated st a loss, even when consideration is given to their feeder value to the rest of the system. Lines of this nature will be found in all parts of Can- ads; the line from Halifax to Yen mouth. the line from Centreville through Fredericton to Saint John. “To be added to this category are the Newfoundland railway and steamship services which were re- cently entrusted to the Canadian National for management and oper- stion. These services were operated at a loss, prior to union. The loss will be aggravated by substantial decreases in freight and passenger tolls, and by increased operating costs and the discontinuance of subsidies." llpsurge In llome Sewing Exiends Also To " tiiilinery NEW YORK, June 1-(OP)- A few years ago most women didn't know how to blanket-stitch. Now they know the difference between a gusset and grommet and talk wisely of dogets and tacked her- ringbones. / The upsurge in home sewing has left sewing-machine and pattern industries panting with huge back- logs of orders to fill. But it isn't only dresses, suits and costs that woman are making. They're also making their own hats. Some stores specialize-one store haw nothing but flowers and feath- I ers: another veiling and ribbons: and still another all shades and sizes of hat forms, which csn be twisted, bent or out into any shape. The biggest rush for forms and trimmings comes just before Easter but even during the summer there is a brisk trade. ‘ "Nowadays women want a dif- fersnt hat for each outfit." explains one salosglrl. “That runs into money and that's why so many of them make their own." The ‘bne hat” girl is warned to consider small Items of her ward- robe when making her hat. "Even things like scarves. handkerchiefs one costume jewelry can add im- measurably to a hat-provided it's right and they're right." said an- other selesglrl. Flowers can be cheap or run in- DOOR IAUNTI IUDGI ssnasaooid. Que. - (or) - lis own book was used against Judge Aline Chases to perauado him to withdraw from charges against here. Union lawyer Oarrier I-‘ortin found his argument against the‘ judge in an old book he had pur- chased years sgo. The judge‘: name was written inside the cover. 28 L. A, A. Regt, R. C. A. Put Winter Training Into Practice ' P "I1 of the 28 L.A.A. RegL. R.C.A. had the opportunity of put- ting into practice one of the many phases of training that has been carried out during the winter months when one hundred Officers and men from Charlottetown, Bouris and Montague spent some ten hours on the Rifle Range at Squaw Point on Sunday, May 29, 1049. Each Officer and man fired the .308 Rifle. Bren, 2-in Mortar and Plat. There was strong competition in the firing of all weapons and some really good scores were registered with RSM Hillier, PG. leading. following closely were BQMS Coop- er, A.W.: Capt. A. M. Gallant and Major C. D. Ives. The Commanding Officer of the Regh, Lt. Col. G. G. K. Peake. DS.O., E.D., in speaking to the Re- giment, expressed his satisfaction in the enthusiom shown by all ranks, and was quite confident that much benefit would be derived from the day's exercise. stating that it. would be repeated at a later date. Speaking of Bummer Comp which will be held at Picion, On- tsrio the latter part of July, Col. Peaks impressed on all ranks the necessity of attending Parades re- gularly, thus ensuring that this year's Camp will meet the high standard that has always been as- sociated with the Prince Edward to a lot of money. Clusters of flow- ers can be bought for 49 cents. Pure-silk hand-rolled flowers cost up to S‘! . ' The broad-brimmcd picture hot is coming into its own once more. Once a "garden party" or summer wedding hat, it now will be worn on the street and to work by fashion-conscious women. The business girl favors a neu- traF-Whlte, beige or toast-shade, trimmed with brown or green rib- bons and bright flowers. Don't wail- until Blends n Island Artillery. Communications were under con- trol of the 5th Div. Signals Re- giment. R..C.C.S. who did excellent work on this phase of the Exercise. Meals were prepared and served by members of the R.C.A.S.C. from Halifax and judging from the look of satisfaction on the many coun- ienances, we can safely say that they. too, did an excellent job tn making the Exercise a successful one. Medical staff in attendance were Lt-Ccl. R. D. MacNeill. Medical Officer of the Regiment. Pte.,Pin. town who hove built, or ore planning to build, and who might - desire water connection to the Charlottetown Water System, that effective Moy 30th., i919, no permission for further water connections will be mode for any person. or persons, outside the City Limits. COMMISSIONERS OF SEWERS 8. WATER SUPPLY ANNOUNCEMENT This is to notify oll persons neor ihe limits of Charlotte- Ciiy of Charlottetown. ZIOIB. Twin or 3 In ‘i I25 lb. Vee-Lols Red, Green, Black and B-P SHINGLES are the most popular Shingles on the market you are ready to go- to wofli on the roof- ORDER THEM NOW The Rogers Hardware Co. Ltd. PHONE I05 eau. J11. and Pte. Walker. GM. of the R.C.A.M.C. Thirty-two personnel of the Regs under the command d! Major 0. D. Ives have been selected to at- tend the Isl-Centenary Celebration at Halifax. next month. MAGIC EYE Scientific "palm-reading" dmid by X-raying the hands will. obtel detect scurVy. rickets, glam rug orders and blood diseases. ‘PROMPT DELIVERY of IIlliII OIIALITY Fertilizers OAN BE MADE BY "I! ISLAND FERTILIZER OD. tw- TIIY US RUCED PUIATO PLANTINGS AND RELATIVE- LY CHEAP SEED SHOULD TENT) ‘l0 MAKE Till} 1949 CROP PBOFITABLE.