i QTT _ UARDIAN e t PAGE FOUR L _‘_ _TI'IE CI-IARL ETOWW G l 3:23.‘: ti‘ 6352522311? ilitif“‘l":ii..°.i..tiiil"'h;‘f NOTES or TllE win woitos ‘Fimmr Ho... ,, Howe said the voluntary method was the tradit- w CHALLENGE (xmuuT-‘n swam”) oiorning Daily iFoilnlled ll l“?! . , I.. t: L w. Cheese: s. Mel-Ire rulsyligllkrlelhlllllfleulzol. li- Burnett. IJ-l- Searetary- Liens Col. U- ll- Mnlmnlllm" “'3' a “dulun. “new, s g. uni-nest. FJ-L looks upon as a war for Britain and France. Edit»! iui i‘ ‘ ' ' ional method for Canadmand he 5111i’ 11° Slgllslllal A biologist pun io u the m this system had failed. .\Ir. St. Laurent elnPllll‘ "ll °l llllmm‘ lllwulllence’ an mgy be so. only then does the mind sized Quebec's attitude. saying Quebec “'3? “ml run three sentences ahead of the Prepared to accePt conscYlPllDll l°l' “llal ll 8Y1" phone conversation. - Winnipeg 'I Tribune. A.» i u: ELIIIUIS‘ i-ninit iviiiiier end no A 91"" Then ‘iir Thorson cimc along browning against Sand was aitrclll"! lmlmml m“ "soon - . _ . t S U BSUIUFHUN BAT‘! By mu u. r.i.'.i.. fl-llil P" "l"; 5”“ l" ‘ “mum used’ as’ $1.25 rin- a months; we to: one 10'2"“ um ueuvery $54"! l!" ""5 “d” “ll-an: $1.75 tor 3 mouths; 60o Ior fill 5y Mun w other Provinces and U. S. A. $53" l" W" autumn) it coin): sauu per year; SIM! lur I merit-IA 50o fur I rllilllllll buineti e: 1t... Uliuriutteiutru omirdien uie! 5. ° o“ , . , ti I nun hen Iorll zlellrfillll\hubh.\iu\\;g::::llI curls: n“. rum wuunn.‘ 11“ - ‘ is“ reei en ..... Alum-flunkiiiii-ulrlnliiinliiui iihllele News Uleld. ledbury. ilmlillillllliiiiilruiim-l-o envy. llllll°'"“ ll‘ 5" l “The Strongest Memory is Weaker than 8M iveakesf Ink.’ Filifsiriv, JUNE 23. 194?- jmj" ' W T Uiily Ontario . Y u,- mc ,,,-,_~_.q.itig nature of the farm iii \"\\ 4 m in- i .ri»l)'cni it ‘i- *ll'1'llll>lllg to new’ fro _ ‘Rihilll i . I n , m [louse of Commons last ,\il iii . r 4 ,6“ ' ullc‘ province t0 date_has 13h ‘ liicilcrul Government S Oil" ol to “ .' ' r rrtmcnts 21mm‘ to till‘ lllollnclal golel for at‘ students and teac icrs - llil: sllllllllcl‘ school rcccss. ed m , . L. 011i)’ province which has enter t ,.,,,,..tt with Ottawa. to carr)’ °ll infill i: <;t‘.~»u the Government was asked i lia ivcrc ilk?" llY llle olllel plo- g to co-oix-rate in securing h9lP req“,,.,,,_t_ m, ,1 m“ during the summer. The an- swcrc l as talilcil bv labour Minister Mitchel, is pm . t tntclttilicr tliaii Ontario, “have not .1 tl lnirc to eiitcr into ari agreement 5,111,, ,, 1i t i-_v'~'tiiig with the province of On- tar§ti,"---i-.ltir‘ii_ of course, is not an answer at all. 1», ,._.n._,l.l_ ill‘ iuicrcsiiiig to know why, of all our prov-Hit»! l.lil‘l'fll administrations, the HePlllllll (ll=<"\t‘ intuit"; \"l§ the only one to cooperate Wllll Ottawa izi this iiiziiicr. Living Longer ‘According to figures prepared by the lgetrof politziii lite Statistical Bulletin from Y99°1f 5 lot h, ,,,,i_.,,.~tt-?¢tl insurance. the average as" l“ l e UnEted Sta": has reached 63.42. Figures for Cami, .tt..~.~.1.i he about the same- _ _ Thirty ykdl‘; ago expectation of life at birth ‘m; 46,63 years, so that a gain of l6 3'4 Yea-ls has becu llliiilt in three dctad9s- And. SW3d)’ Pm‘ gress, moreover, continues to be made. One_ re’- sult. the llulletin points out, is that “Americas wage-earners and ilicir families have thus enter- ed ‘the war pct-ind in the best state of health and longevity they have yet achieved. The average industrial policyt-liolder 0f 839 35 tllda)’ Sllll ll“ as many rear: before him a! H19 Child l" ll“ ivagc-eariiiiig family of I379 to I839 llfld at ti“ time of its birth." _ Another point made is that in 3° Years a llls‘ advantage of 6.41 years in expectation of life, in the comparison of industrial wage-slllnfls with the general population, has been practical- ty wiped nut hy “the constant effort of official and private medical and public health organiza- tiorts towards a higher standard of life for the American people." Most of this striking increase in the average life term, however, has been accomplished at the infancy end. We have learned, that is how to save babies —-the conquest of diphtheria alone he: been a great factor. For the man or woman of 50 the expectation of life shows no sensational changes, but the trend generally is upward as medical science solves its problems. Today pneu- monia has lost much of its terrors —-t0morrow it may be cancer that has yielded its secrets. Speech - Reading At Ottawa An endeavour is being made to stop the reed- lng of speeches in the House of Commons, The feeling is growing that not a few of the speeches being delivered there are not the composition of the member delivering it, but a. prepared "ora- tion," supplied for the purpose. Speaker James A. Glen made clear that long-sighted members who pretended they were not reading their speeches, bad caught his attention and rose during an address by War Ser- vices Iliuistcr lliorson in the debate on the C0lli€fll>iltill-(‘llflllllllg amendment to the National Resources Mobilization Act, and said objection had been taken to the reading of speeches. “It does happen, as I have noticed, that honorable mcmbcr< will place their papers on the desk, and living giftrd with long eyesight, will read them from tlicrc and assume they are not reading the speech," he said. “But irrespective of whom it may be, if ire arc to conform to the rules they will liarp Io hi» aptilicrl rigorously and impartially I hire. iht -i-»rc. that honorable members will not iutci- .'l‘t' Cllllll‘ to do what is very unpleasant tor lllt" i-lktii- to do, that is call attention to the riilc Zlfifitill." Mr. 'l'hur.=im cxrtiscd himself by saying he ivas ittzilziu: a rai-ciul statement of Government italic)‘ and ho ivas lllll rcarliug his speech but pay- ing clit-c attviititiii to tiotcs. Why‘? ‘Ylltdl liiri limit... pi t‘..ituiii>it< in dcprccatc the idea of con- ed in the fa" of I94, and also because an ab_ three “ma, A new gqi-iptiwii fm- it\'t'l'>t‘.'l"i scrvicc, says the Globe and not-ma] ' tllv, ii lwcnities-tiinre and more of a m," an - ll“ ltlidti-‘Cll? was held. utiless the \iilll~l~f li-d off the series of conscription on principle. hoping it will never be Ll came tip. How many line of argument is t0 he seen. So it is reasonable to ask why the plebiscite proof. In hot climates, where an- ivas held. and why the concerted effort now to minimize its significance. — EDITORIAL NOTES-i Next Monday Army Week opens. 1F ill 101 1i An unique cuter pa, cmment House (irounils lOIIIOTHHV afternoon the and evening ivlicii the Ladies of tlic R. A. F. tent is free to choose his own fam- piit on a tea with side shoivs. competitions an Babv Shoiv iii aid pf the I\lCl'CllI\llf Scrimen's get medical 11-211) elsewhere. —tFi‘Ofn Funk,’ the whnic profited; going for that deser\v_ the Huntsville Forester). ing purpose. The object is most worthy, the en- white air cit-titan hggpflalg in tertainmcnt iiiittstial, and the location delightful. Ollllwa alld “h” lllllle clues M" was it. You buy ilic ivhrtlc am so greately interested that I don't want to see i-tai ex their advocacy tinged with self-interest," Willkie development of many precautionary declares. He made the observation at a banquet that he was “getting old and fat" and added tlizit 9qllli>rnerit carried by the ships because of the causes in which he is interested he “fem” °l l°"lay l5 ‘Yllmplelle l1‘- based on exchange equivalents. they do not show for easy rationing Ls moulded the higher respoiidiiifl Purchasing power of the "$11 Plecell 0f about 80 i0 a POlInd. crown in Czechoslovakia. ' ing sharply lower than last year's corresponding tasty fare, the new “mo _ _ _ _ value of $23,580.01). The decline in the income l" ll"! "Slllflfld awwaize space - afitfr Kllnlsiel’ r1595 l" lll9 from ivheat was duc to the smaller crop harvest- available’ enabled 194i. The most important live stock and live stock 1 I tltt- ltilltllt‘ suggestion that coii- risen in $48,; by; for experiment; on a new pot-table yapOflslnfl machine for ad- “lmlll the Poll" 0f Vlell’ °l m" l°lal ‘Val mintsterin anaesthetics Ltldbafilil- effort, the merits of conscription are outweighed flelll 1'98 Ill“ °n ll“ ° by the demerits." Here were five Kliiiisters all explaining that mass-produced iii one of Britain's field and in air raids. One thous- anu of the machines are to l)! largest motor car factories. The conscription for overseas service is of com- e and ghape of a portable grani- paratively little consequence and _ _ it need not be taken seriously, and giving a gen- eral impression of regret that the subject ever 5m; “at The Libyan 55nd was more will follow the same "-596 l° W5‘ leslslrllllce l° llelle‘ i , in effect, that zphone, each or them weighs only so ibs. and they wlll replace the cumbersome gas cylinders at P1“!- tration in sandstoirns. The mach- ines are also completely vei'm.n- aesthetlcs evaporate very rapidly. one can never be sure, with the usual methods, how much the pat- ient has absorbed. The poriacle machine provides complete control of dosage; moreover, it enables one anaesthetist to take part in several operations. The first 200 of the new machines will o to Britain's R.A.F after which t e fighting services and the civil defence organizations will each have their allocation. Rock). point Fen-y is being largely patronized Facts from British Air Ministry. An innovation in medical science rural conniitiiiities is announced , . t Motor boating for pleasure should be a. thing ,3, me Ontario Division o; m, of the past-—likc aiitaing. 4< >ll Canadian Red Cross. The com- miiiiity doctor has arrived. The plan, worked out by the Red Cross The professional code of ctliics docs not allow in conjunction iviih the Ontario a physician t0 capitalize or market {Of Pelsollal gain any invention, though h_e is allowed to turri give media.) 58mm to people or Over royalties to 1 corporate 50(1). 511C], a5 a uni. isolated communities. The service Medical Association said the De- partment of Health, proposes ti. has been accelerated owing to the versity for the prosecution of research. but as the large Hummer o; physicians who result of a (lccisioii arrived at the other day at have enlisted for war service. The jasper Park convention, doctors who iiivciit or originate medical or surgical _ protect their devises by pbtaiitmg patenti- cnmmunity doctor is assured an income o1 $4,300, which is guar- insiruitients may ariteed by the Ontario Division of the Red Cross. To appiy against this will be dues from subscribers fees, from private pat-tents who are tainmcn, takes place at Gov- non-subscribers, and from mutiicl- grants, The plan (lifters from municipal doctor piaii. A pat- d lly physician, iiiid no one needs tc‘ support the project who prefers to wrestling with a critical shortage so there should be an enormous Crowd t0 lslvalll of nurses, the iestiit of itidlscrimln- the ladies for their self-denying labours. ate raids upon their staffs by tin.- three departments of Canada: fighting services, a. Journal staff writer reveals that around 60 full) \Vlll953 TWO 9X‘ trained registered nurses are em amplcs of changing conditions iii the food market Plflyed an clerks and SWHOZPHOHt-"a in. departments of the Government 151W faligllt mll’ 9y9f<llllrintz Ill: last few days- in Ottawa. While the United States ne is t c nuiti ier o iorscmea ing up everywhere; tlicrc are tivo within a few yards of one another iii a wcllkitown Soho street, grounds appealing for 1.3100 ivomen The horse-moat is “for human consumption only" l” ‘llllel llo-‘lpllals l°l llllllllllg- “"1” shops Spriiig- Government, we learn through American radio broadcasts linked into the CBC chain, is on patriotic Canadian Government does nothing and costs a shilling for the best cuts. The other either to p“, some ordemness “m, example was more picturesque. In a small butch- "19 jaldln! 0f Civilian hospital er's shop facing Smithficlrl Rlarket, I saw a swan O hanging, hcarl down. iii all its plumage. The price or to take steps to train women as hm‘ or not at 31p nurses in military hospitals. Re- * a .s, or to notfy Canadian woman f the national need for nurses gfonal medical officers in uniform unchecked by their august. ntcnuni H, R. H. the Dulce of \Vindsor, eldest son of zllllils l" llnlwflll. 117i acting inde- pendently without regard for the King George V, born this date i804; succeeded serious problem at large, have not... to the throne as King lidwarrl VII lanuaryt 20. Win18 from Civilian hospitals theii i936; abdicated Dccciuhcr ll. (which he did lime 3, i037) .\lrs. \\’allis \\'ar- vrork in mrltary hospitals thii. field, who lllllSlbfiCfliflfi Duchess of \Vindsor but “luld be p°ll°m°d by less"~‘xllell' not H. R. I-I. 1 spent two years on the contin- .__€_ ent where at outhrcak- of the War he ivas made lllllallhs "Wmlllllll ~ have liason officer ivith the French Army; after Diin- kirk, escaped through Switzcrl est nui'ses—supcrvisors 111d hca/ “J36 l0 lllllllYr nurses- in many cases for routintl. enced nurses. —(Otta\vt;. Journal), always had a tough job to perform and they have dune it well Llllflfil‘ and and Spain; on ‘Bush conditions. Wartime. with August 18, 1940 sworn in as Governor and com- Tllals l“ the “M” helm" “d ell‘ mander-in-chief of the Bahama Islands. 9m!’ planes in the skies above, has made those condition; ten time; as touch and perilous. Since the be- ilmllnl 0f m9 W111‘. the Minlstijy Mr. Wilkie “does not choose" to run for of- of War Transport technical staff fice again. “There are some things in which I lla"°-lll°l9l°".\l'lll1ll1e active help I numerous scientific and indLlSi- parts. carried through the and life-saving measures in merch- ant ships, with the result that. the practically every detail. Emergency _ _ Opportunity to de- food rations have undergone a com. clare himself "in favor of their prcserva- l’ liflall-‘ll-Tlllllllwll- Gillie are the tion." These causes included the preservation of m“ ad ships blscuil‘; °l lmdllwm and 80116 are the tins of condens- American rights, whether or not an emergency 9d mull Ill their Place area host, of existed, and the keeping alive in America of " precious ‘American democracy" while "our boys tack, but vrith a much higher food are winning the war "ll-ll"?- U new compact foods, t ~ our varied and tasty tharlilotheollzllld The new ship's biscuits are small. Canadians who complain about the rising cost ‘l “l4 ma“ °l' Wllelll-mea-l. sweet- of living haven't even tasted that medicine yet it med Wm‘ sugar’ Packed l“ “w” e n e e T l is indicated by figures BT00! Vllilllltlizht containers, 4a m a on food costs inside toll}. iln. there is enough in each Czechoslovakia released by Czech news sources a" l° supply every pelsll“ "llll 14 ounces. Then there is pemmlcari, here. On the black market in Prague, eggs are a food which L! named arm- the now worth I2 crowns (36 cents) each —not a “m” “m” °l "film" 1119M eaten by $119 Bquimos and trappers of the dozen. A fair-sized goose for the Sunday table Frozen North. The new pemnflcfln sells for a flat 1,000 crowns ($30.) Fat usable l5 ll °°'"9lll-l'l1l9d mixture of beef for cooking purposes i5 available at a price of ex acts of high calorific value, and each man is supplied with i4 from 250 to 35o crowns per kilogram. The Caria- °l1rwes of it, enough for a fortnight dian equivalents would be $7.50 and $10.50 at ‘l iiorrrial rates of exchange Horse fallow, recently a meal for one m“, an introduced to black market buyers, can be secur- sp°°ll8 file supplied with which the ed for_ crowns ($5.50) a kilogram. Czech authorities here point out that the cost of food in “l” l°llns gart of the rations. As the occupied capital is much higher even than ap- P93" {mm H1959 flftllrfs. They draiv attention to which. ll is claimed. does not create the fact that ivhile the Canadian prices given are a dame ‘or ‘l dunk all" Ball"!- llll Dante. taken with other concentrated foods, wui make d measuring extract is spread on the new bis- cuits. A new non-thirst chflfolam with the or er foods, has 14 ounces of theeamclisdrlltillaa; It has a high CBIOFIIIC value and in P ked 1n hermetically-sealed tins. l‘ llllW-‘l 11D very little space in th lifeboat or on the raft. Malted mills Cash income from tlic sale of farm products ifillffi, 51mm" m m”? ‘lllllllled l° in the Prairie Provinces at $68,867,000 for the War. are first three months of 1942 iviis $5,948,000 higher l°°' “le-l’ Pl°"l‘l° l1 11°l11lsl11ns com- than in the corresponding period of 194i. Income from the sale of wheat stood at $13,758,000, be- fml‘ °l l" "ll-a 1a that. in addit- lllld Sailors. during the last included tn the new rations act food, rid . every 5n ‘ii..i‘°lli.'€.i’€. “iii on to providing more varied and its have, th water ration to be lncileaslgdniallalblililil, lYPe of drink- proporiion of the I040 crop was held m‘ “up “ml ‘l Kllldell "WW1" l5 d marketed (luring the early months of , factor in bringing A ll" ilmlwll" all" for wear ‘ "ill "ll ll‘ l“ ‘l l"l' llllll (‘Xilmlcd 3 ‘llllelelll about a liiglicr total iticoiiic in i042 was the very Irrllgnfeboats or on falls l5 new be" i also supplied. PFOl/lded and over 100.00) have substantial gain in the receipts front the sale of "lrlllildy been suPpiled for crews of products. the total having o" gniolnll "up" ll l“ made “l a briahi yelfoii- lilbberlsed mate:- _ 741W) fl'ol11$.to.toi.rxn in the same lal and is in two parts, combined l“ ‘ll "m." "Mel lls "ccfisilrll- Dcfioil of IOU. Th1‘ iticotiii‘ front lllf‘ sale of lmllsel-‘l llllll °vl‘lsll°°5 "Kl 1100i! ,\|,<_ ¢;i.-,... u,’ t, til litt-rt- was only one coiidi- hogs ilicrcasml in ftigggiyitqoq from $;3_75;_oo0 ggguggllh The "m" Sl9W-‘ll hie 1011i; to cover the hands, nritl lion iitid -- ~- liiill-lllll‘ pnriv gnvcritiiicnt rind (‘IilllP and calvoc m $r_t_gi)¢)_(y~,q {mm $51310, slits in the backs of the trousore in (lit .. ~i‘,.l lIFlllQ iii ciiiprriptioti, "That 000, Dairy prttilttt-te income totalled $7,80i,000 enable the “ml” l° l” wllllllmwll \\'lilll'l ‘w .i ijilillldll-li n-iiicr which. if they did not compared with $5,842,000 for massage. The hood is used as a carrier for the conmlete outfit "we must make sure that our response to H0941 °3 the hour. u individuals end ml a nation. is the atronigat rela- nse that. we can Rive. —-W l- lllim L. Mackenzie Kl-nl. Minister of Canada. PUBLIC FORUM m. mun u eeee l" '" illieeueeien by correspondents L! queetlele 0C |l“"“' cut-remain Guellae eeee I" eeeeeenrlll eldeeee the Ollll." el eel-niche COOPERATIVE SHIPPDIG sin-At a meeting of the Board of Directors of Central Shippln: Club on the 16th inst, it was un- amimuusy agreed that as our Club has not been shipping stock I01‘ sometime past, that the annlllll meeting be a general meeting open to all farmers interested in e marketing cf stock. The chief con- sideration of the meeting will be to briefly ieview the past and plan for the future. The Secretary of the Associated Live stock shippers charges that: farmers will not. o0- operate, and yet the business is carried in the name of co-operation. The last shipment our club made. the club was ignored. ‘The secretary of the co-operative marketing Board said that the Co-M-B- was not shipping hogs now. that all hogs we ship go as Live Stock Shippers 1108B. he said. “we would not accept your (club) hogs into our cars. we have our agent at your station. and n9 Ships the 008s for us. I will not do business with your club.” The agent when spoken to about it salcl "I have nothing to do with your 9111b. I am told that your Club is dead. I am instrctied to take charge of the club building." At the public meeting ln Bradalbane Hall, May 8th the secretary of the AssoclatecLL S- Slnpllers said that they were go- ing to load hugs at this station and use the property that was there for that purpose. He was tolc that the Club blllldlllg Wits loaned to the Sal- vage commlttee. for a place to house scrap rubber, paper, etc, Wll9l1 Shipping day come the boards were forced oft‘ the side wall so the lives could izo in and out of the building and the salvage storage room was turned into a pig sty. Few men- l! Bny. OPDOse real co- operation, lt is what ls needed now- lcut co-operat-lon so-called makes 1i {lflntl-i’ camouflage for those who “£23 A53 ‘it lfiklli.” ilfiiiif“ - a r. I am. Sti etc p De W. J. SEWIAN, Club Sedy. Breadalbane Wlllvh vreiehs a lb. e ounces The pcrblgrlzi: colour makes it easily vlsfblg . fivlle ships and aircraft. All Slllils crews are provided with 11f“ saving Waistcoats suitable for c‘ while working about the chi l?“ waistcoat. gets its exceptlonalpbuoll? ’ cen afford sun. IIPTl In the sea. for i.wo persons lght attachements are pmvideg ct. nu the life-saving waist‘; t to enable men to be picked ugaéom ""3 s" a‘ "m". The llilht ls cllup 0d to the collar strap and m lavtlfillllllllglll ball"? Which lasts fr; at‘ cast ten hours is kept iii a pock- How Are l Your Eyes ‘l If you are having ggmpujgn. M ee. sole ‘ileffiilliu; ‘m’ specialist. n". _ can-u“ l l M your service with n of expert “l refractlngeneces-vin: . moron‘ c ll i iimieumlele m‘ m“ "l" ' G. F. llutoheson ir. o. IIUTCIIESON c. r. Itrrcnggoiq — Evans Stomach Mixture A very effective means e! ob telning relief from dieordere the digestive organs. which are iitten eil h gee, hgpdgghg, heartburn. pen end a sense o! pressure claw the heert. Recommended for Sour Stain- ech and all stomach troubles. Price 85c a bottle. -——-————-_ MACS HAIR REBTOBIII A delicately perfumed pig. narration which Ifllflrgg, ilgfinllhena and beeutlflee the It will restore Grey lhlr to "I llfllinnl color Promotes e new end e r.- lor growth where the halls falling end Iii remarkably use- ful In preventing ihiidrnfl and deairnyivir lllrllllln heir kill- ers- Price 60 cents e bottle. Are You Troubled With LUMBAGO 0f BORE BACK Y If so, we have one o! the beet remeellee to oflei- namely. n n p" ~ - - "mg A remedy for Beokeehe. Lun- be o. Urinary Troubles. Neu- rlt s. Joint. Miieenler end other terms d lheiimellem which ordinary treatments tell to reach. Prise m e Io: TIIE TWO MIOS Mall Orders Given Prompt Attention. Britain's rI-ldl 0n Rmtoek. traordinary timinl and co-ordin- illicit. A thousand planes. teklnl toooooooooooooooocidootflitl- off 1n one niaht f" om many air- field: in Britain. were e0 nicely spaced that they mched their giv- en objective seven seconds apart. This continued for Several hinlrl. the skies black wltfi those outward bound and those returning. their bogb loads released on their ter- ge . 1t wee truly e. mervellotis per- formance, en achievement in strategic movement and audacious planning without parallel in aerial warfare. Terrfying as the results of the bombing plane had been in this conflict. the assault on Cologne added a new dimension to the air arm, ushered in the “super raid" and disclosed the real capacity of ah- power when used in mass vol- ume. It was something that must have staggered even Hitler, whose mind always functions in terms of the colossal. Here was a Colossus that eclipsed the greatest efforts of his Luftwaffe: it is therefore not surprising that the havoc in the Rhine city struck a chill dagger of fear to his heart. One man is responsible for plann- ing these British raids. and Cologne is only an approach to what is com- ing. He is Sir Arthur Travers Har- ris, Chief of the Royal Air Force, Bomber Command, on whom a. de- served knighthood was conferred by the King in the latest birthday hon- ours. He is 50 yeaxs of age, and Drew Middleton, correspondent of the Asociated Press in London. describes hlm as a dynamic man who Ls vigorous and fit. Sir Arthur ls an early and consistent pioneer of the air ..ho lives to accomplish but one thing -bomb Germany into defeat. He was convinced that- a thousand-plane raid was feasible; he is equally convinced that raids in the near future can be enlarged - to many times i at. provided the planes are available. Cologne is the proof. He 1.: credited wii.i saying that if a thousand planes a night could be "ent over Germany. she . uld be ' by autumn: and that, ti’ it were "TSIDIE to send 20.000 planes over Germany in one night, she would be knocked c-ut or the war. Whether aerial r‘tacks on the Reich will ever reach that scale is unknown at this tl.n:, but sir Ar- thur does predict that when British and American air forces combine their attacks- as Mr. Churchill has promised they will -the Germans "will scream for mercy." The same goes for Japan. too. Sir Arthur was a young tobuw “WORN OllT” Mill WOlllllEll Dragging ereuriil each ‘f ‘ ele! unable to do ‘x ** housework — cl , with the children- heling miserable. Blaming if on “nerves” when the kidney: may beouteforiler. When ' g kidneys fail the system clogs with in: itiel. Heedeelies- eckec hequenlly fellow. Dedd’: Kidney Pille h p deer the e item, giving nature e chance to restore eellh end energy. Easy Retake. Safe. ||5 Budd's Kidney Pills Professional Bards Il- Morrellandfioiiipany ll. F. ARGIIIBALII Chartered Accentuate lantern Trust Building Ci-rlottetewu ___________ MclEOD a. srurtsv I w, it. HENLEY, u. c. J. a BENTLEY u. c. Barrier/ere and Afwreeye-ee- Lew MONEY T0 LOAN 154 Prince Street Phone 85 P. 0. Bee Ii __i___ MGZGIQGAN 8. TRAINOR s.“ Qmssr. ctiiedlifilfitih E f.‘ Blnllllerl. Beilellore om?! 51E? Pr? LOAN ee: lllehesonil Itvreeret nldlafliqmenaq, H. F. McPHEE 8A., K.C. O NOTARY a». BABBIBTEB BOLICITOB EEZJELI. cimietmen A IELI. 8. MATHIESON To EYES EXAMIIIEO OLLSSES FITTEO J. S. TAYLOR OPTOMITIIIBT New boeetlen Corner Kent and Queen lie Opposite file's Grocery '""':.'::.."t...2:.t::":r;1"" Britain's Man 0f The - Z . g t, T 2] N42 {flips DIR GllAI-I-IIOI ‘I'D ‘I'll! “u" eon clllClflIlNdflIIlWlIWltllVItNlllygg ecdve shipbuilding industry. To-dey the“ ere 17 major and 58 smaller yards which, with eubeidiery industries, employ 40,000 men. Canada's first 10.000 manner, hunched , in October ha: year, completed its rim Atlantic voyage in February! Since then many other: have been launched end the present programme cells for 172 new cargo ships costing $525,000,000. Keel: for over 50 have already been laid. Before the year is out we will be launching e new ship every few days.- Ove: 500 Canadian industries ere making components for these ships. About 95% of the materiel used in their production is now "made in Canada." Not included in these figures ere some 200 navel ships already launched, the large ina- jority of them corvette: and minesweepem Thle advertisement le published ee a contribution to the general knowledge of our mumrfe we: effort and u an inlDlrai-lon lhmnugtllllvelllm time? ‘lfuwrelver are imureeeive wdeaee e! the [rewind lllllll of Canada's war machine. ‘I'll! RQYAI. BANK OI CANADA Rhodes“. south Africa, the gigantic air raid. but he warn: 3111:3126 lthlen First Great War broke glitter ‘tgieat (goltrtllinejiwashlust a cur- out in 1914. He 10111911 lip as a W!" u‘; ‘Ilofllzw ° 5 l °lll lllll ll ler and a few months later was - transferred to the Rbyhl FlYlllll corps, as it was then known. Aft/er mree years of illln! in FYWW- l" won a permanent commission and the Air Force Cross, The end of the war saw hlm coiiimandin! I Wmll‘ lng squadron. In 1933 he was pro- moted to a staff post in Britain. Rumours were then being heard )I Germany's rearming for another $39M; KIM war, and he ‘ras ails-me with the i- conviction that air power was the Who hath desired the _Sea - the coming weapon and would win the sightd of salt-water un- next European confiig; “for twhag- bill-l" 9d? ever nation was arm e s ron - at win lt- canal-r was w"- Tl“ “$3.”? fit‘ til.” Elli. “S? ll.‘ oentrating on planes; Britain was comb“ Mmphounded; lagglng because the potentialities c! 179mb"! We" ll°l “Pplelilllled b7 The sleek-barrelled swell before military authorities who still clung gtorm - gray, lOflmless, enor- to the oldei and traditional school moiis. and growlng? of strategy. x Sir Arthur and his few zealous Stark calmnpn the lap ti! klgrerxlc-alll‘: associate: met with much dlscour- Eggvmefllzlwlle ageirtisetpeg and ottgiositlopittllauth they g pers never ess. t e re- howl“ the same_ suit that when he left the planning m‘ slifislnselawaid megsame “my, board, the planes which later help- a“ showing_ ed to save Britain during the first Ht; Sea. that hls being fulfils? twod yearsb tllaet war were tsen so d m , A0 and no rea y in lueprns and awai ng an no o erwise i construction. His thorough alrmlnd- otherwise Hill-men desn edness and his strategy have been ‘hell’ lllllsl fully vindicated. He is the father of i CITIZENS ciiiitioiiiziowir The week of June 29th to Jul 5th has been des- ignated by the Government of anode us "ArlllY Week"—a week set aside to enable the people 0f Canada to become better acquainted with, and to POY tribute to Canada's Army. _.Rudyard Kipling At no place in Canada should this opportunity b9 more welcomed than in Charlottetown, the capital _of Prince Edward Island, rho province which has provid- ed more personnel for the Canadian Active Army, In proportion to its population, than any other provilllie of the Dominion. I urgently requeet that during Army Week 0| available flags be flown, patriotic bunting be displflYd and that all merchants with display windows arrange to have tliemoppropriately decorated in honor of the Canadian Army, and of the many hundreds of Char‘ Iettetown citizens serving with it. . _B. BOY IIOLMAII, Mayor Be Confident: . . . “lnttsethenedilreeeeiirlelveeloourleebnelliilllgm underretlng its treimeniloue illilloilltlee end FY"? "l: m. heart and sober eonfldenee. resolved thel. Will 30"," eoet, wherever the suffering, we shell stand b one ‘em u: true and faithful comrades, and ile one defy. W l" l’ m the endf-Jflneion Churchill. ' The Greet-West Life le the Geerdlen of thousands of 9111' eillen hernee. IIYNOIMI 8i OO. LIMITED . PROVINCIAL KANAGIIS Ofrleee: Charlottetown. Bummer-side. Mollie!" ile Allleon l’. Mebeen-Dhtriet Man er et Siimmerll Earle s. Jelly-Re uteflve et-ITMIPY e J. Merlin Cin-rle- presentetlve at Morllllltlzrl. Peter G. Mckee‘ Bearesentetlve l‘ v c tetln rniemu MeAvlnn. o. L Averill "W" lm