of 615. There. were’ fourteen women in ill? ‘if i Sflvlfisl. “Enigma Parliament, and out of the 1,500 candidates _______ ' BIIAILQTTETQWI GUARDIAN ' offering themselves for election 68 will be wo- “*- (37 J- Ill Affairs afyst ‘ Merlin; Dally (Pounded in Ill?) men. . In normal times, elections are held, as in g R President um. ca. w. cheater]. steam u“ w“ “d m“ “Wu” Vloo-Prealdeut: J. B. Burnett, IJJ. Canada, after a Parliament‘ has been‘ in exist- court characters Wlbllhgllklfl ence five Wars. or bfliause it has been dis- 1""°“' " 15mm‘ PM! grouse“: the win‘ I '5!!! Iooretlry: ueut. COL u. assume-a, o.i|.o. ‘°l."'.d by m‘ Cm“ °“ ‘_h°."d‘"°° 9f if" Pd" a“ refine iier position is iikfwti-y- l . - ll a, Editor ‘lid Managing oireeibr; .i. u. bur-hm, r41, Minister, or because the latter desires to have hum mflwhen we m h, wnml“; l" i" P!" d" "We drool of mer- . g < g,“ mm‘"'°~ fluirie . Associate Editors: Frank Walker and Lleut. Ian proof of public confidence. A candidate must the ddstinies of the world we base m ‘hi: lblbirpeer mo“ o’ m. 0M- ’ ' j l ullai- toy gm“ m‘ 1 4- Bllmm- R-C-N-V-R- lo" Md" 5°"'|"l deposit £150 ($644.50), which he forfeits if he 50% E0 llfllflf how to ioiiglye our Ni: gifiziiitry ls s55 outspoken about I u ‘flu , —" ' _' .nem” llltfliii-hllflrsfdllh .-Hl!'dl- an” strange“ new,” u Wmk“. Th,“ does not receive one eighth of the total votes e l. Manwflmth" Ema?“ h". mg. u" Wake“ Ink» polled. Members of the fighting services may FRIDAY, JUNE st, fell 11D ,.eon- —atsoanetlmah Jp and Hun at s, that g: ttriaeuabtgbui: the hardest ab!!! about- affairs which ones were tar- not b. nominated uhsi they have retired; many News. m‘ " “m” this“ 15$ liilfs‘. ‘if-miffed “mhlfgi such have been reléased to stand in the forth- s“ “an”??? iwiénnua jntiemgflflnal épucnriltynrj coming elections. he maximum expenditure a at‘ uses ec neo amen 5 candidate may incur varies from 194d. to 6d. magician” o‘ Denlcuun-hftlzb -°-l‘g‘,§l°,i,,fl‘i‘él'°',li“fhifi”t§l",‘§“g,‘lfi 2‘, for each elector, according to the type of con- m filigernltlonallrelatlofllgnlllld wishxiis "Went-v. Pl"! i100 ($443) for the candidate's 1y maftte! rs "rim w uifmaih? penong] gxpqqggg nnd elqginn . nggntg’ fee, g: tenazice "of interns onal peace and Under ordinary conditions, the votes are count- "lillflwinnr phrase admittedly is ed and the result announced late on election night or early the next day. But, 0n account of the postal and proxy votes in this election, from service voters, it will take about three weeks to get in all the returns, the result of the elec- driiggists will even 1-, d _ reiiiciiiin lipstick on iii-rm. v§§“i§’ii.'§‘ii.§h'l»°r°i§'§"§§f§§i.i“i'h°i tion, it is expected, being made known on the 26th of July. Veterans And Rehabilitation the ills- A publication of timely interest and value is the report of the second annual conference on industrial healih, held some months ago at Toronto, and iiow presented iii booklet form by the Health League of Canada. The report deals with the problem of rehabilitating war veterans, and coiiuiiiis articles by Capt. F. E. Qnlyuyip ;ll'11l_\' piiycliizilrisi, R. C. r\, .\l. C., Lt.- (jol. T. ll. l). Storms, medical clinical director, Work-mews Compensation Board of Ontario, Dr, C, D. Selby, medical director, General Mot- ors Corporatioii, Detroit, Dr. Clarence M- Hincks, general director oi ilie National Coni- mitteg fur Klciiial Hygiene, Major General C. i; g1,;_.l,.,l,,,_ llcjiiiiy Minister of National Health. riiiil ollicrs. One point iiizidc by General Chisholm is that the iiicii who have (lone the real fighting over- sczis are iiicii who have ileveloped treiiiendous- their vim’ only they could have done with a ly along certain lilies within the frame-ivork of “me more sunshine and a lime less min. the army, but have not necessarily acquired n n n n skills and kiiowledgcs that are of civilianjusc. “flier-o is no iireil in civilizui life for a good‘ llreu uuiiiicr iii" Ziil excellent mail with an anti- tziiik guii, or a iiuin who can be depended 0n absolutely to ilrop a mortar bomb in the right place at the right moment. But those are the things tlizu the best men overseas have special- jzcrl in rlriillg. Zlllll the prolilcm of the reabsorp- fjOli or nliuirption for the first time of those meii iiito ClYlllZlll life is probably the greatest problem that Canada will have to face for some time. It is a great problem because the neces- sity for adjustment is so great, because these men have changed so extensively their ivay of living and thcir orientation toward life. A ivilliiigiiess to sacrifice ones life for a cause may not be of great value in Canada in peace- timc—no mim- than to be able to drop a mor- tar bomb in the right place at the right time. “And so these men have much to do to be- come civilians. We should remind ourselves that many of them will become adult civilians for the first time, that very large numbers oi then-i came not from grown-up life but from schools and they came directly from schools where they were well under control in the services. They are coming back to be civil- iaris, in an adult sense, for the first time, and what happens to them, how successful that pro- cess, is of the very greatest importance, not only to them, hot only to industry, but to Can- ada arid Canada's future. It is of the greatest importance that everything they had originally, everything that they have developed, every- thing that has come out of the trials and the fires through which they have passed, should _ Almfm 5°°_ W°§l1§l1 dOCIOIS have been serv- be preserved and used for the development 0P1"! 5°!’ will “m6 Wfdl tjRRWal Arm)! M°dl' Canada. lt is of the greatest importance that Cf“ Cm?‘ l" ti“ Ulfltfd Kmgdmn- °" ihd ¢°"' thev should feel themselves needed." “mm °f El-mdlx- l" ImlY- d" Middle East. This goes to the root of one 0f the biggestl E?“ Africa’ and Indla- dial"? cdmmlfiloned. problems of veterans’ rehabilitation, as those ‘nth the Lmk» Pa)’ anfbPrlvlleges of thelf "lale experienced h. the aftermath Of the First fellow “fist-Wi- thsy have bee-ii Performing all \Vorld \\'ar can testify. The whole machinery “KM” ‘WY Lnddldil duties With the exception of our post-ivar planning will have failed, if it of fromjllm mmbdi “"1" and field ambd‘ is not equipped to accommodate cases of the lance d“f'°5' kind cited by General Chisholm. " LUMIAGQ .015 sons mo: i »' ltsoweiiaveeqq remedies te bu" - .~ BACK-RITE __ f _ g ‘TABLETS " i ’£t::':"'....=l:'.':"'i....'~- is. ... Penicillin la the ideal antiseptic, be tor in the latter, it l; n t e19 ,- wd. because it. ii non-poisonous anyone in a sincere andodetefmgildfl “d will” l‘ ll lmliossl-ble to search for peace should object. loyer-doee a Pflllflli with ll- — ‘Those who see every Russian move Wwwn ‘Ilmw- Fr somtzthttilris slnllsfilr prphbstbiyfiwilii '___ “HID 8 CODC On B 9 I '1‘ ko this fro l Me bllah d . m ‘l r on aelpzculgltzlom at seeking to prevent assembly dis u cussion of the cssea of Yugoslavia, $1,! 111111101“ He!!!“ 1| a city Romania, Poland, Caechoslovakla, m h no 1°" 01' imdershndins or and others which certainly involve p real needs of service Defwll- the international sphere but which. 11°“- smll H181}! B8 N0 dogs and since none of these countries are f: a‘! $332!?! soprgzfgrlthl-gkntzglti}: in any position to declare war, do Yesterday morning's thunder storm was the it might be pas-seyd over as not wmauy’ at me moment’ 1mm!‘ . . . . . vs Peace- severest felt in the city and vicinity for many H But. otihers sliay ghussla tiltlbf! 116M111? Years. old naval lty. It h - new‘ snare y’ ey w many dersmndjngc of the nemnggzileralcle put this new contention down as personnel. and no effort has been arioiiher lnexplicgllale mo e on Mos- spared by the citizens Of this city m“ m‘ m w “h? “mm m :0 minister to these needs. - Hali- s rind t e answer ‘la 3* Herfld- This also applies to the moves regarding Poland where Russia chooses the very time of con- sultations rcgmdlng the Polish gov- ernment to bring to trial 16 Poles " ,, whose mere arrest caused ii. break- down in negotiations only a few weeks ago. muscular treatme t f , reach. Prlee 50s 2e. hl: " TIIE 2 MAGS i. . u! Great. George 51mg YMail Order! Given Prompt latest l - _, _ Mamba , Ti The Canadian Pram) LONDON — (GP) — War Seq. "etary Sir James Grigg informed .lie Commons that as far as Eng. A close observer of the San Ifi-an- land la concerned the ban on u." clsoo conference recently reported ' o! telescopes and binocular; in that the leading delegates liked . coastal areas has been removed, 31c Rgsslans. fivcge rtiotmmifljat t _ em, ut just a a err ee ng __ m or Imstrguion when it cam: w um; Treat the heat coolly put on your a ar derstanmng the" menwds °r “h” new straw hat and laugh at the torrid sum- Throw~ away that old they really wanted. Language has ii very reiil part in hat‘ you've been wearing for the past summers and treat yourself to a new warm the difficulty. Personal conferences with Premier Stalin, where intona- weather topper that ivill make you feel giddy-Jib that light! tlon and facial expression enhance the words of the interpreter. a1- s2_2s m $5. PICK ‘YOUR STRAW Til-DAY HENDERSON & CUDMORE note than negotiations in writing. “Where Quality Is Sure" Joiroiuai. NOTES- ‘Iii The hospital delegates are delighted with Many children have not known their Unless the unexpected happens’ the new service fathers. Much of that great’ Parliament will open in August with both the Prime Minister and the hliiiister of Defence in abrentia. joy bhat young children of their own flesh and blood bring to parents has been lost to men in combat. Despite the difficulties of re-ac- qualntance when those fathers come home, their return in most cases. will be the introduction w new happiness for them and for those who call them "daddy? But when civilians are weighing the contribution servicemen make, they cannot overlook the “lost" years when those of the forces were separated from growing children at a. time when association with their little ones could be most dear. - Victorla Times. Although age has very little to do with it—for a hobby is good at any age—the lack of some second- ary interest or pursuit becomes marked among men who are at orl near the retiring age. A man who works hard during his whole busi- ill! Mr. W. Chester S. McLurc. M. P., our lone Progressive Conservative representative. is be- ing inundated ivith congratulatory messages oii his popularity both at home and in the armed forces. __.__.. F. Ilutclieson & SUN OPTOMETRISTS “Specialists in the fli- tlng of glasses for the correction of ocular de- feels.” 53 Grafton r , , t _ mer temperatures. Mr. Humphrey Mitchell, Minister of Lab- our, is being reminded of his election promise that if he was re-electcd National Selective Service would "go down the drain so fast it will make your head swim." He was re-clected. I Q I l There also may be something to the contention that Russia has not yet “grown up" in international out- look, is actually not very well a- ware o! the reaction some of her actions are bound to get abroad. However, she shows signs of in- creasing attention to criticism. II this means she is becoming aware of the necessity of understanding the outside world. as it is becoming aware of the necessity of under- being ness career, and who suddenly stops working, suffers a reaction that is often damflslns to himself physi- cally as well as mentally. A that point in life u man should have a hobby horse ready to mount and to ride with the enthusiasm of a professional. But_ it goes deeper than that. Hobbies are necessary all of the way through life. - Vic- toria Colonist. This should relieve the orange situation here. The British food control authorities and the Palestinian citrus growers are negotiating for the dispatch to Britain during the 1945-46 ex- port season of about five million ,cases of Jaffa oranges. Street stardidlng her, progress is e iii Sympathy goes out from a host of friends here to Mr. Joe Harris, M.P., on the tragic death of his daughter in an automobile accident between Toronto and Ottawa. The tragedy is all the greater, from the fact that the late Mrs. Tremeer was on ‘her’ way ‘with her husband to attend that day the second marriage of her father. On receipt of the sad news the cere- moriy was postponed. . I I Aston: TABLETS ,5" vblective analyst’: of urban life would probably show that city folk eat too much, sit too much, talk too much and laugh too sel- dom for their own ood. After years of doing that ey develop ailments for wihloh they are at, u loss to account. The tum their cars in once a year or an over- haul, but_thelr bodies never. They brush their teeth twice a day, but neglect their eyesight for life. They wear too much clothes in summe and too little in winter, and complain endlessly of "the weather." They are hardly civil gefoge llidarlgfit an?! selttllom betel . e o e m _ri . ow ey ve o IVINGHOE, Bucklngliamshlro, fffd’ if}? {Zfl-‘imfladd “f,” {"1" P?!‘ . i - _ England - (or) _ Three boys. _ ry p _ e p ysc an or White our-.. mid necks. advance aged 5 to 11, 10st limbs when n gilleiebiiilithii: pllililosopheg hlaitie an h“ arid pClSc mid stir trench mortar exploded after they s r. s s eer con are .— the ne, while 0' o Victoria Colonist. y “steel aiisdebronze h“ I found n on a road’ ——— hem the far dying sun touched Dur the wai- China has lost the dead reeds. most o her railroads. However, she plans to build a railroad sys- tem with 100,000 miles of rails, 20,- ‘000 of which is to be built within ten years after the war. The Chinese railroad engineers and personnel have been the last to re- treat from places taken by the en- emy and they are now the first to enter regained areas. They have mov- ed rails by hand over long distances. They have built bridges where it was thought bridges could not be built. They have improvised with equipment never before thought of in railroad building. But, in spite . » s: A PROSPECT 0F SWANS Walking the river way to change Le our no From the hmil season and from harder care, Marvelllng we round the swans. ‘the Slvfiiis‘ oii sullen swollen dykea afloat Sufferers from Asthma.‘ » Bronchitis, and chronic coughs should take ASTONE TABLETS l Regularly — Daily is mush better than to l BIISTON, Stafiordshire, Eng- land — (GP) —— A Bllston man who has been iri the navy two ears received s card from Wolver- ampton sea cadets saying he was absent. from parade without leave. l i l for the symptoms other attack. Bé taking ASTONE TAB- L T8 you can avoid the ~socks, a full ooim- of ‘m , , esanesa and heart strain caused b! N‘ ated spasms. We flnd the! i: some eases the adult sui- '_fgfgf ‘oh hotter relief with a smaller dose. We will?!‘ that you experiment a little and ma: but hut. the rirhi does to suit your own case- ‘Ilhe ASTONE TABLETS at bedtime and set rest"! nightly sleep. Many suffer- Is are doing so, and solo!- - llll this WIBIOHw-wh!’ Mi you? MONCTON SUHMERSIDE SAINT IIN FREDl-ZRICTON NEW GLASGOW MAGDALEN ISLANDS use it... arrrii 40.11:. Areiusil 40 at: energy lessens. But, es- parienealiaslasqlluslodooslworkwithlesa The years ahead should yield the lhe most enioymcnt They can, loo, if we avoid the - a, such as Back- , Rhsuallalie Pains, i Hear” which so o ten alla i... hilt "r.."“l.r~""""’ we n ping men to hoop kidneys and bladder in If an nearing 40, or paaljl, sale m health and a bin"! lsaa Dodd’! Kidney Pills lodayl lZS So easy was the manner of each one. Sosureandwlsethooouraeofall their needs, So tree their unity, in that level sun Anti floodilarid tipped with sedse and osiei , It might have been where man was iret to iii! France accepted Germany's terms of sur- render this date i940, which included occupa- tion by Nazis of the whole of the northern half of France, and all the Western Coast, all forces to be demobilized and disarmed, arid all material to be put in store or handed over; the armistice was signed in the same railway car- riage in which the Germans signed their surrend- er in I918. On this same date a year later, Hitler invaded U. S. S. R., an event which fore- doomed Naziism. I U I I Prime Minister King has hitherto fought shy of Press conferences, but evidently he has For Reservations - Tickets PHONE Rogers Agency 540 Airport 2061 - 2062 Still Stands Condemned g: i .5 Commenting on the double humiliation in- flicted on Defense Minister General A. G. L. McNaughton by being defeated in the Federal election by both the civilian and service votes, ——and by the only ivoman member in the new Parliamciit—the blvduey Post-Record well says: \Vhile there was not the same amount of interest in the QlfAppellc result as there was in Grey North six months ago, the defeat of the Minister of Defence a scoond time is sig- Bome mere u-iiere none but swans were over kings, Where gulls might hunt, a wide flight Ln from sea, And page-like small birds come: all of all this. China is left with less innocent wings. than a tenth of the railroad lines she had before the war, which was,O plotarrne" of some first. divine ln- upproxlrriately 13,000 miles of raii-, . road. Lack of railroad equipment O young world bNKlI-lfih perhaps was mfldflll "i. Where even hard winter meant f F‘ Q]. it is Tablets .. We 2s Tablets - 8W’ 7r.l.r0snm Central one W" 5* ‘butor for P.E.I. i- I JWARITIME gczurnau "AIRWAYS gr E rag I i l nificant. The personal fate of the general was not taken into consideration in the nation-wide vote, but the fact that the constituency rejected him is an indication of what might have hap- pened to him in any riding in the country other than one that: consistently votes Liberal. His action in relation to reinforcements was direct- ly before the electors of Qu’Appelle, so they did what the electors of Grey North did, and at what most other constituencies would prob- ably liave done. The people of two widely separated rid-ings of the Dominion have thus expressed their views oii the blackenzie King anti-conscription policy. Iii the other constituencies the subject was not so active among the general issues, and the public seemed willing to let bygoncs be by- goiics iiow that the main war is over. But the (ioveriiiiieiil still stands condemned by the only consiitucuciestliat had opportunities of direct expression. The British Election turned over a new leaf, according to the an- nouncement from Ottawa Wednesday. judging Now you w» "Y °" N°'”" Alfilnu all the W)‘ - to New York qr; - m. shorted ~11" between the Mflfm" 7"" , h“; qnd Mediation! Con- methg night lam/OI CW“ IotMov/n at 11:30 A-M- has been the biggest of China's problems since the war began. - No disproportion, hopeless hunger: —-—- none, lard Wigruri. formerly private And set n0 task which 001M 110i secretiiry to King George V., plans well be d by past experience _of the Hon. gentleman's ‘,2,,,',°,‘,,§‘i."§‘.'.‘.i“ifh§’;§“°° o’ deputy eriat us. speeches in Parliament, an interpreter of Windsor Castle, a or tion he Right near the town's bhoksmoka- has held since 1030. 21s will be towers and the 1'0"‘ . ,, r2 this year. He is also relln- or trains bebflfll! the wns o! mm merits. really mean. as. for example his con- allllshlhg the office or keeper or to scriiltion “iflncciissafi. but noihnecessiarily con- Egesuon. however o‘ the m“? be_ _mnud B?!“ n’? wane,“ by scriotion. n te same way is recrence to deprived of the services o one ‘l w“ ,. the other two defeated cabinet ministers was ‘éngl-‘mlilmwwmenidfi m“ u I '= =2 . . . _ ......- -—i.-t. nnt necessari‘ the same Ministers. We! a permanent one. Altihoils . '5' ~ " his first appointment st Buoklng- - . 4;! /fi a a is e ham Palace was in 1010 an asslst- Y A To such beneficient uses are sharks now m‘ pm,“ “rah” w!‘ Put in Australia. Established as a war-time gzYdlgl-lnli"? film from 1006. when . i i‘ p led th 9h Prl f _ _ wuss... is... .: .......'" wit. 5 Yen i" 7° r955 oil factory will almost certainly expand after the 5""- "' Th9 VIMWVQY Di"? m“; m w“ _ G waf- Last year about 60,000 schiiapper-sharks _____ tacked Russia along a 2.000-mile __ iwere caught, yielding 180,000 lbs, of liver, and Public gralltude to war heroes from ‘$1 FAN‘? ‘Flmmd i° m" for their STRENGTH. An outstanding example is the Maritime the equivalent of 6o,ooo lbs. of cod liver oii. giguftfii Qmmofgmmr, ,;’,f,,,‘“,‘,’,°;§E tlal law ‘throughout her liifwlilch. diirino its Manly-one ywri of brinelno laourilY “cal and ‘m9 Whlch Nil-INNS’ "P" wuwm bow” “m” and ho inns to thousands ofMoritime homes, has won on _ _ PP southern Victorian coast around as far as South the m,“ o, nmtud, m“, o,“ enviable reputation for both its STRENGIH and iii PROGRESS. Australia. There are 30 ships in the shark-oil QllllbbllhgiOullllhbléldly ‘tlmt or" mem- fleet-most of them 40 to 50 ft. cutters. Many 2;’: zopflmmflg. m, m, _ sumoo $5,634,404 :esses the oil. The vessels go out 60 or 70g "um, n,” 4,235,475 miles to sea and cut long lines with as many n’ [mglggfggngummfi sbjn. 917,513 as 2000 hooks and buoy and flag attached. The our lmoullldiggd "zlndlf M" ' sharks-usually about 45-pounders—are hauled beg I o: Political interest now centres on the general election which takes place in Great Britain on July 5. When the Parliament was dissolved on June 15 it had the longest life of any Brit- Ghinese News Service, one. Now this primeval pattern whim- nant- overnor may be necessary to discover what his announce- WEI‘. e King's archives. There ls no cryptic-all Ministers would be on the job, but [prd-in-waitlng to bhs present Lord grams first direct servloe with the industry, Victoria's shark fisheries and shark- p, The cumin“ pm; Pmvmc" Maritime financial institutions hove o wide reputation The hi h'h thth t ffth “EM”- s p5 w ‘c a c em operae o e rles with it no less of honour and a‘: xdnl-‘enldgnd- 1m? dwlamd As evidence note the following ompdrativo record: of ‘hem are financed by the firm which pro- which will oommuriity....One thi IUSINESS IN roncL. i,ios,soo 26,142,940 ore th ish Parliament in the past two hundred years; to be exact nine years, six months and nineteen into the boats with winches. After their livers have been extracted the bodies are put down al lfldiflmfn Maritime low Cort Insurance made this splendid record possible See the Maritime llfs Mun TODAY. 021M067 60540 the carrying out _ _ _ mic work, as though fliey were days. , The Composition of the House of Com- n a liediment. on the mons, just prior to dissolution, was as follows: Conservative and Unionist, 356; Labour, I62; Libcrnl National, 26; Liberal. I8; Independent, 20; National Labour. 5; National, 4; Independ- ent Labour, 3; l. L. l’., 3; Common Wealth, 4: well, where sea water washes them and keeps m! 15"’! gum“ t I them fresh for the mayket, where their flesh ,,,,,,‘{,,,§,,, o,- fifuefi‘ 01%‘; Gaul’: is sold as flake. Thehvers have a vitamin A parish DWPOH- Fllriflhfllflflflf; 110111- content which fulfils many functions. They efufifvfijg‘, ‘fifmgfif m“, ex, provide a substitute for cod liver oil. The pioltauin elentreshof fldllflaifltzh“f‘)f - - - - recreaonnsuc wa a.e (_ _t q I‘ I S m] v r I ‘ldiatlllllm: 2° ldiotillllaftfllrld‘: a": till“??? fl“ thousands of children ‘and adults _ommums. i; .pe.1-cr_ _; co si A aiona. o e roops in e ropics an e ci e ais , 7 T w “ENTLEY C, _ nhnagcn i; chairman, 2; lrish National (abseiitees), 2; essential in the cooking of delydrated foods‘ iii 31m: i‘), 20%;?‘ fiullfolliwg‘! m‘ BLACK FUESJAOSQUITOES ' 9mm, Ed;,,,,,,', Nam; n"... ._ rwyqyinttntnwn, v.51. which, Will’! pending by-eleciions makes a total the forward areas are also fortified. u Prunes de Hull. ~ - , , JIax/hu/m Prom-lion , ' HEAD OFFICE = dull-fa‘; who fr uent them may learn