‘wvu- w-""-¢.u-r-.r"'u crna- 1'4. 3 "’;"“i'fl’fl».“e;.*i'r‘ ’1‘-“'LQ-aa:a‘r~.nr~ "urueuirri. ~. t "emsa- " .-°_"~_-'§FL"-"2.I"3EC‘E$S’ ”' “P” i’ “T” “u; .. vex-ass?‘ > w nerves-Year: ~u\_=.:.=.:i. - ..s ‘race FOUR TIIE GIIAIILOTTETOWII GUARDIAN Inning Dally (Inlldol ll lll1) Indians Lion, 00L W. Olinotu l, Inlnlb Vino President: I. l. Innis! IJ-l. Iouohryl Lint. 00L D. A. lulllul, 01.0. Idllar u! Iunll I Director, J. l. lune“. IJ lloidlh Iilllonii Irlll Idler, Baum, I.O.N.V.I, (On Aufln Ionics) Ill Llul, Ill A. IUBIOIIPTIDN IAT§ filislllllfllLlttflporyulnll-Illolllollll IL‘ for I months; [00 for on IIIII (It) Delivery I100 pa: "an ‘IQ for I until ll." for I month; Q0 for on no!!! fi Illl to other srovlnen and U. ll-D lolurhy Woolly: 08.00 par your: LN hr I B00 for I Ilntil n Ill Iolullll ' Ill In; ll, Toronto; News Ottawa; Wolfe's News Utuul Bradbury. 01M Ilb Iain" llop, lloncton, N. B. IOU If —II“I; ‘l, u L . . ‘g News Annoy. Timon lqluo, New Inch 0M Iollb Nun Agency, Oarnr llllk and Wubllgtol Icahn Ioitopollhn Nun Agency, l!“ Pool II». Ioltlld; I. Ills land Gluten! hulls: “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” TUESDAY, JUNE 8, 1948. Provincial Problem In a brief presented to the House of Com- mons Reconstruction Committee, Premier Stuart S. Garson 0f Manitoba has raised a. point that demands serious consideration. He tells Ot- tawa that, if the pr_oviuces are to play their ap- pointed part in the post-war period, adequate taxing powers must be restored to them. The alternative is a system of Federal grants or the transfer to the Dominion of a large share of the provinces’ part of the program. Actually, of course, says the Windsor Star, no such alternative exists. Provincial dependence on Ottawa's bounty’, or the transfer of provincial duties rind privileges, would be utterly unaccept- able. Any such method would strike a direct blow at our constitutional system, which is fer- vidly defended by most of the provinces. At the moment, there has been a tendency on the part of the priu-iiiccs to make sacrifices more or less willingly. Tlhcy have been impressed with the necessity for centralization of authority in a period of national emergency. They have, how- ever, made the concessions 0n the distinct under- standing thar the transfer is t0 be only tempor- arv. When the war is over, they will imiiiedi- ately demand a return 0f their jurisdiction over the-things granted them by the British North America Act. Naturally, the Provinces must play their part in any post-irar reconstruction program. This is a fact 0f which little mention has been made in any of the plans put forward. They have, for the most part, discussed only what the Do- minion will have to do, and how much it will have to spend to finance the schemes. The Jews of Poland Th; Jum 1 issue of The Ghetto Speaks, pub- lished in New York, gives much space to the “up; death of $zmu1 Zygielbojm, who commit- ted suicide on May i2 in Londofl. 3-! 3 “Pelsmflal expression of the unendurable state of affairs. his protest against the tragedy of lli€ Jewlill masses in occupied Poland.’ lYglelbollfl ‘V35 a member of the Polish National Council, who when Hitler's armies were overrunning Poland organized the Jewish population in Warsaw to offer vigorous resistance; he \va.s instrumental also in establishing the underground movement, which has given such a good account of itself and still fights msnfully against the oppressors. In the past three years he has been conducting an incessant campaign. m BelElllmg H°llmd and France, against the 61ml)’. sllPPllll fmm country t0 country till reaching lsondon._\vll¢l'¢ he did his best to acquaint the world with the pitiful condition of his compatriots and awaken a sense of the urgency of the situation. 0n! 0f his last utterances was s. movingappeal tc- the United Nations t0 lose no more time in ‘ex- pressions of sympathy arid vaguqffllk °_l Pumsh‘ ment after the war, but t0 take immediate steps to stop the massacre of the Jews whiiethere was still a remnant to be saved. Sorridlllngfxlntf ordinary must be done to rescue us immediflfflli’. he cried, “otherwise we will ‘all perish. Despair- ing of action, he took hi5 hi6- Speaking of the death 0f Zygielbvjm. the P°' lish llliiiister of Information, Prof. Stanislaw Kot, said: _“He could not bear to be away fro: the heroic fight of the Jfii-Ylill PeoPle agfilnsl t e German oppressnrs and not to share their strug- gle and inartvrtloiu. lle could not Sllfvlve the news of that ‘last battle. If his last call for ‘help will he iiczirrl throughout the world, his sacrifice “ill "(it liavv been iii vain. In that y'all-Bill. but futile fight iii lllt‘ \\ irsuw ghetto it is reported ma. about ,1 lhiitifillllcl Germans were killed 0r wounded and iuziiiy factories and warehouses gun-med, The Nazis seized the occasion _t0 ex- terminate the small remnant 0f JeWS Sllll if!“ in the ghetto. ParIiamenIiTrTTR-Jgm The rule of the llniise nf Commons that mem- bers shall not rend‘ their speeches is obscure in origin and authorities are divided the reason for it, says The Prinled Word. Some say that it was adopted at a time ivheu the members who could read zuid write. were iu the minority. Ifld the majority, who disliked the parade of superior education by the literate, embodied their prejudices in a rule of the House. It is more likely that the rule was intended t0 prevent members from reading into Harisard a mass of irrelevant material. I3 iore. a time limil W35 placed on parliamentary addresses. it iviis possible for members to delay the business 0f the House for hours or even dayS. simply lIV talking. lf a written speech had been allowed. [l1fl'(‘,i\\'<)l|l(l linvc been no limit no a speaker's time except his own endurance._ As it W35. ll)’ reading long quotations, a skilled parliamen- lélflflil muld keep a filibuster going as easily as if the rule had nut existed. _ It may be admitted that a read speech is fre- quently- not well delivered. But Parliament lS l fir»: CHARLOTTETOWN time, an institution for the conduct of the coun- try's business. That business could be expedit- ed, if members were permitted t0 write their speeches and read them in the House. The ten- number 0f speakers. It would perhaps be going too far to require all members to prepare their speeches in ad- vance. In the present parliament, as in parlia- ments of the past, there are some members who can talk fluently and t0 the point without pre- paration, atid there are others who can talk fluently. Reduction of the forty-minute time allowance to ten minutes might be the fairest rule t0 adopt. If a speaker had something to say, lie would work hard t0 condense his remarks. If he had nothing t0 say, there would be a. restric- tion on the amount of time that he could waste. Another suggestion is that the W.P.T.B. should issue a ration book to each M.P. at the begin- ning of the session. Each coupon would entitle the holder t0 ten minutes 0f the H se’s time. Coupons would be non-transferable an would be surrendered to the Clerk of the House as used. Special categories would be necessary for Cabi- net Ministers and the Leader of the Opposition. Some other members would undoubtedly exhaust their coupons early in the session by pressing their claims to a “B" or "C” rating; but that is not necessarily a defect in the plan. - EDITORIAL NOTES- Tlie 52nd anniversary of the death of Sir john A. Macdonald, Prime Minister of Canada, was observed 0n Sunday, June 6, when Hon. john Bracken, Dominion Leader of the Progres- sive Conservative Party, laid a wreath on the grave of the Conservative ehieftain at Cata- raqui Cemetery and delivered a short address. n- : in n The serious farming situation throughout On- tario has made it imperative that farm commando organizations be formed in all urbanientres to aid in agricultural operations, Mr. Alex Mc- Larcn, director of the Ontario Farm Service Force declares. a s s a The standing committee on petitions 0f the House of Commons ruled that the petition pre- sented by Wilfred LaCroix (Lib. Quebec-Mont- morency) for a ban on night employment 0f wo- men and other reforms in Quebec, could not be received because it was addressed not only to the Ilouse but t0 the Prime Minister, members of the Government, _and others. The petition was signed by 122,000 persons. a- s a a Air Marshal Sir Christopher Lloyd Courtney, is in Ottawa t0 confer with officials of the R.C.A.F. Sir Christopher was one of the original members of the Riverdale Mission which came to Canada in i939 in connection with the advanced air training scheme for the Empire, later known as the British Commonvrealth Air T raining Plait. i I l‘ I Madam Helena Petrovna Blavatskey, Russian theophist, died this date I891; claimed t0 have been initiated into esoteric Buddhism, and t0 have the power 0f communicating directly and personally with the unseen world; author of "1sis Unveiled" and the “Key to Theosophy"; she visited UIS.A. and formed The Theosophic Society with Col. Olcott and other converts as active members; in i884 the Psycliical Research Society exposed her trickery, and Theosophy got a set-back from which it has failed to recover. I I U I The first motor church to operate in the West- ern Desert is now with the troops. It was built for the Army and was dedicated by the Deputy Chaplain-General, the Rev. A. I. Wilcox, and enables many t0 worship in peace among diffi- culties and trials. Materials for the motor church come from many parts of the Empire- pine from Canada, rosewood from South Africa, plywood from Australia and New Zealand, beech from England, glue from Scotland. The equipment includes s folding harmonium, which packs neatly into a case on the outside. The sign on the side of the motor church depicts the sol- dier 0f today braced and ready to fight the pow- ers 0f evil as his counter-part of olden times, St. George and the dragon. o a o a M. Gutt, the Belgian Minister 0f Finance, in a broadcast address from London to his com- patriots in occupied Belgium, said that two years ago Belgium placed gold at Great Britain's dis- posal. This had now been paid back. "At the beginning of March, i941", he said, “Great Bri-' min had bled herself white in order to pay for . was a. risk that deliveries of war material might no longer, says_ Mary Moore, prominent Cans- july, i940, many thousand tons of fruit were preserve it. clean jars without cooking the fruit or steriliz- tlie jars sealed. Research proved the fruit keeps indefinitely. on the market in Canada and should solve the preserving problem for homemakers who had her orders for war material in America. The Lend-Lease Bill was being discussed by the Unit- ed States Legislature, but, days might elapse be- fore the Bill was passed, and meanwhile there be stopped if Great Britain did not find gold t0 pay for them. Great Britain asked Belgium to help her by supplying her with 3,000,000 oz. of gold, equal to 3,000,000,000 Belgium francs." They were proud, he added, that they were able t0 help in this way. n- 0 a Women who have been worrying about re- duced sugar allotment for preserving need worry dian dietitian and food research specialist. Ac- cording to Mrs. Moore, thousands of women in both Britain and Canada are now preserving fruit and fruit juices without sugar. The method is one discovered in Britain by the National Fruit Research Station, Long Ashton, Somerset. In on hand in Britain, but there was no sugar to Experiments disclosed that fruit, straight from the tree or shop, could be put in ing the jars; cold water, in which are dissolved the preserving tablets, is then poured over, and The preserving tablets are now dency would be towards shorter speeches, more carefully prepared, and might even reduce the on "to the end " What. eLse iw quits —St. ‘Ihomla Times-Journal. 1n Berlin 0f Ililt Wu 1s.“ J-us ta t, 5nd it will be, soon -Brant- f0 Expositor. member of the (Chinese) govern- Chungking despiatch Atkinson to the New York Times. A your’: military peace-flute would be highly bene- ficial to all those undergoing it. It would promote health and well-be- ing, and it. would be B. measure of national self-protection. A severe oracles on the folly 0! non-prepared- ness. Yet it is probably safe to as- sume that u soon as this war is over it will be completely forgot- ten iind the agitation against any form of military training resumed 0p its ore-war scale. -Calgary Her- a d. It is probable that parents all down the ages. have had difficulty keeping up with the latest slang expressions used by their children. A young man from Fergus went to work 1n a. larger war plant 119111‘ Toronto. After a few days on the job, he wrote home to his moth- er: "I like the work fine uric‘. there is a lot. of nioe looking stuff a- round the office." "Yes." remarked his mother, reading the letter aloud. "I suppose a company like that would have some pretty nice office equ1pment.- Fergus News-Record. To say you can now gel a blood transfusion from a lemon is less ridiculous than it. sounds. Newsweek relates. Dr. F‘. W. Hartman of Dc- troit has just. reporter". that a sterile solution 0f pectin. obtained from the white peel of citrus fruits. has been used successfully as a rub- stitute for blood plasma Ln treating 125 surgical patients to prevent shock. Intravenous injections of the substance increased both blood vol- ume and pressure. It takes a ton of lemons to produce fifty pounds of the newest plasma. substitute iind supplement. Southern California's largest lemon processing, plants last week were reporter; workmg day and glit. t0 fill goieniment orders for pectin to aid the wiir effort. _ According to the Journal of Calen- dar Reform this 1s the vear 2.603 0f the Japanese calendar The Jabs have the habit 0f naming their years and it seems verv anoroprizite. For instance. the year 1941 was called the Year 0i tiiie snake and everybody admits that the Japs closely foilowec; the procedure of snakes during that twelve-month. capping it with their treacherous attack on Pearl Harbor while still making peace overtures The Yfili‘ of Mr. Churchill's speech promising their cities will be lald troops are working at their and men. it looks as if the Japanese will be the goats -Wlnnipeg Tri- buns. Britain's barrage balloons are moored to their “beds" for the duration. and so are who must be 0n watch twentvfcur h zine. Every morning the"beds" must be made. cables and generally checking up The winch must be started up. and the “purity test" must be made with a meter which registers the amount of oxygen mix- ed with the gas. Too much oxyiren can cause a dangerous explosion The fabric for punctures. and any holes must he mended. Picket duty Ls very im- portant. for a. balloon might sud- denly lesve its moorings andgo up. Members of the Women's Auxiiiiry Air Force are gradually taking over this 10b, except on island Xbere the balloons are water-borne. ing to s story in The Chicago News. 1t may mean you are a pretty fine character A blanket ed a psychologist about. these things. and the sage replied that this pos- ture suggests you problems squarely and courageously" and are ‘emotionally stable. with no inner strains praying upon you as you sleep." If you sleep 0n your stomach. on the other hand. that. too, has ‘You may be an intense nreson who works hard." the sleep-interpreter‘ said‘, "or n rugged individualist who d0un‘t have 9A much fun as he muid." Not so complimentary was curled up. This indicates, the story said. an attempt to escape from reality. As for the sleepers who ‘clutch their pillows in an affection- ate embrace, that was a cinch. To science, the story said, this means that. the sleeper isn't getting enough affection -Emc'imn in fragile containers. lacking even adequate packing. wrapping or settl- the Base Post Office 10 parcels were damaged and required cleaning and‘ repacklng because somebody mailed syrup in a weak container which had broken open in a. mail bag. Several parcels, another day, had to be reconditioned IYTIID l "pressed-on" lid had burst. open in transit. , tins has resulted in manic syrup be- ing mailed ln wax-coated‘ cardboard l contafnters, which break open in hl-ndllng mulling glass bottles and Jars which lfll‘ over and damaging surrounding ma s proof tins. with lids securely soid- ered on Each tin diouid be sur- rounded with amoie absorbent ma- terial and enclosed‘ in a strong mock-proof container -Post, Office Bulletin not a school 0f oratory. It is, at least in peace- visions of nearly-empty fruit cellars this fall. costs 4'1 cents. of which 37 cents in 1943 is also appropriately named — the Year of the Goat By the sound in ashes the United States shins and the way their crews. ours a day. relates Britain Maga- Thls means oiling the cleaned and must be carefully examined sites fuii crew consists of sixteen WAAIk. but there must never be th fewer than nine 0n duty. -Ex- change. If you sleep on your back. accord- maker consult- ‘probablv face flattering implications. report on those who sleep 8G. Persons are still lending syrups, m and other sticky substances ng in overseas parcels One dav at. because maule n a. 00m syrup tin with This year s shortage of People also are still, broken. the contents spread- Mapie sprup. if mailed at ail, houid be contained in strong leak- Mosnv TAX In Britain a pack of 20 cigarets us, it 1s sale. have decided b0 fight . can they do? It; the end for them. n0 1s tar hen Italy . A letter found on a. German sold- ier 1n Russia and addressed to iiim by n. writer 1n Berlin advlseo: “We have been given an idea t t outltne; the full lesson is still to be Al to the parlor pine of speculat- 1n; about the length of the war. one ment guessed recently that it would‘ take l. mlnhnuin of slx months and maximixn 0f n. year and a half to defeat. Germany, and then "ywo years more to conquer Japan. - by Brooks training In lesson has been taught the demo- old have seen ii good many times before pelt, and the claimants will soon school boys 1n New York weigugrai tember it would be ents of the other two boys felt elr sons were each entitled t0 i». third of the small _ took legal steps to protect their inzerests. T yard can- valssed the situation and did likel w se. that. inasmuch as among junk material when the find was made, the money not all. A GUARDIAN The Speech That "u". B’ Th’ w” Stemmed The Tide iii-mum “Th? ma»: follow- tmontie-Jfimiisi "I have. myself, full confidence that 1f s11 do their duty. 1f nothlnl neglected. and 1f the but oi‘- nsngementa are made. ll the? l" b01118 made. we shall prove of war. and to outlive the menace necessary alone . . . We shall we shall fight. with growing 0o air. We shall land whatever the We shall fight on the beach- es. We shall flsht on landing grounds, we mall fight the fields and 1n shall fight 1n the hill-s. We shall never surrender, And even if. which I do not for a. moment. belfcve. this Island or a large part of it were sub- Juzated and starving, then our Em- pire beyond the seas. a a guarded by the British Fleet, will curry 0n the struggle until. 1n God's good time, the New World with all its power and might steps forth. to the “rescue and liberation 0f the 00st may be. Winston Churchill sat down. and a tense House of Commons burst into cheers. It was June 4, i94o_ Three years ago tocay. He had lust. told the story of Dunkerque, 119w the British Expeditionary librce had been rescued naked from the beach- es and brought. back home. "We must be very careful not. to assign to this deliverance the attributes of a. victory. Wars are not. won by evacuations.” N0. Dunkerque was not a victory. But the Dimkerque speech was is victorv—peieians the event will prove it the decisive victory of the war. Churchill knew how pitifully little he had to back his fighting words- no OQUIDDCG soldiers except two Canadian divisions, no guns, no tanks, no allies. In short, no hope. nothing between him and defeat but a flbbfln 0f Sea. and a handful of the worlds best fighter planes and fighter niicts. whose exploit could not be foreseen. Yet he saic “We shall never sur- render." in captive Europe. they heard him with nWB. with delight, with new lieart__ A Norwegian now 1n Mont- ieril. who spent 14 months under German rule before he escaped, stud the other dny: "You have no teen what we all owe to Winston Churchill. Imagine, 1f you can, what it meant to us. Our own country gone. Holland anc; Belgium gone, France crumbling. and England, for all we could tell. crumbling too - for they had nothing left. Every Norwegian was faced with the de- cxsimi whether to tum Qulgllng 1n despair. or keep on fighting. Churchill k-ept its fighting." He kept us all fighting. More than that, ivithin a, month 0r two he took a second decision which the event has proved right, but Wlildlpffqlliffii a degree of courage and firmness beyond belief~ with Eflglflnd lying defenceiess before the foe, he ordered planes. tanks, guns and men ciyerted to the Mid- dle East, that Suez might be held. Had he done otherwise, had he "nlayec safe" as it seemed then, the vvui‘ lTilgllllhilYe ended two years ago in an Axis victory. Chure '11 has made mistakes. In his nolitieal career of four decades he has often been on the wfpng side. He has many enemies. and will doubtless have more before he dies, But friend oi- political foe. every free man through history must m. member that on June 4. 1940. Win- 5101i Churchill saved freedom for us confine 0f The ' Tower (London Times) Field Marshal Sh‘ Philip Chet- wode has been installed Congflablq 0f the Topaz’: tlalf Ircndon. The cere- mony o ns a ato performed by the Lord Chamberlain (Lord Clar. endoii) on Tower Green, was shorn 0f a little of its picturesqueness, but, was carried out with all the dignity BPPYODHQte to one more in a chain of events and episodes now nearly 900 years long.‘ The Lord Chamberlain carried n. ceremonial gold key on a red velvet cushion. Rifles, damascened hat; berds. and the band clashed into a. Royal Salute 1n honor of the ‘s representative who had come the words of the Court Circular) "in e ,K1n ’s name and on His Maj- estys be f" to deliver "the Keep and Custody of Hts Mama a Pal- ace and Fortress of the uwer." Then Sir John Scobell spread out an ample iirchment, from which he read aou in the King's name the Letters Patent conferring the office and place of "Consto le of our TUWGI‘ of London" 0n "our wit: trusty and well-beloved Philip al- house Cherwode." After the Nadine and the eliv- ery of the key to the new C0 table, the Chief Warder said, "God pm. “We King 690189." and the Yeo- man Warders all said, “Amen? Two 0f the Tower ravens cocked a wise eye at the ceremony, which they from the outskirts. Money In The Bag (Hamilton Spectator) Let a person of substance pus from this world, ieavi behind him no directions for the d posal of his present themselves. It is llbflg d11- ei-ent. when other hgards are dis. coylered and enter t. s public do- n. A few weeks ago three their way home from class when they passed is scrap paper and imk shop. LylnB on the sidewalk in mm: of the premises were several old cardboard containers filled with an assortment of refuse. Boyllke, they proceeded to explore the contents. One boy opened a pa er bag 1n the carton he was seam lng rendered breathless find 1t stuffed with money. He tod u; compan- 10 . and hey went .. their way The finder too the money s rnlsht to his father who timed it. over Just as quickly to the police. The latter counted 1t, and the cache totalled exactly 13,901.28. The boy was further to] that. 1f the money was not fiiiaimed by Bop. s. Then came the claims. The r- fortune, and the e owners of the Junk Their lawyer advised them the cartons were urchased by them. and were on t. eir property selves once nzan able t0 defend our island home, w ride out the stonn of tyranny, if necessary for years. 1% n0 barest flag or fa-il. We shall Io on t0 the en . We skull fight 1n trance. we shall fig/ht, on the seas and oceans. nfid- enee and growing strength 1n the defend our 015- the 1n the streets. we ant, ex-Pr only seven monthfl. the shown-st Dmw. O01. Drew shameless deal between Premier ment. Attorney- mentioned the good ualiflcattons, for the position of e:- ant. On DQOGMDQI‘ 7 under Nazi tyranny. We are proud to lottetown. HENDERSON MEN'S with this appeal for the starving Greek children, now officially launched and sponsored by the Rotary Club of Char- “lnasmuch as ye did It unto one of the least of these. . - ." 0NE DAY IN ATHENS SIX TIIOIISINII IIEAII Were picked up on the Struts —All llieil of Starvation- This is no rare occurrence in Greece associate ourselves & CUDMORE WEAR for. iiviinuiii s. Offices: T. M . . Charlottetown , 0.1.1: e NATIUNAI. EFFllB-ETIIGY In the battle against Fear and Want, adequate Life, Accident and Health Insurance is a major fac- Thrift ls vital to the war effort. Premium savings add to the mighty army of fight- ing dollars that is helping to win the war. It is a privilege of the Life Underwriter to help make peoples future more secure. Consult the Great- Provincial Managers Allison P. McLean, (LLlL-lllstrlct Manager at Summersldc Earle S. Jelley-ltepresentntivo m 0‘l.eary. Cyrus A. B. Shaw-B Jesentatlvo at Montague. Peter G. Mcliiacheml-Repruentatlvo lLVictoi-ia. F. L. MacNutb-Reprelentstlva at D S0. LIMITED Summerslde ' I Buys Montague " - n Ch"l‘own. l6]- nom on; ‘lb Ocntem - gfmonoi 5th’. m u" In?!“ But flutter tluoi m,- Liszt?’ 1 lsty p flown; SE’.'.L?ilJ‘..l.°.l-, ll“ “m”! ll so l! Ylllilflm having ll — and dlnfn “ offxpiglneln "mi-in rcfrncttu, $.53. . ATTENTION : be put. to war work now! ago. "hot money” see-HE Some crook ably tell the authorities could prob all about it, but he dare not do so. Hollywood W111 likely movie plot out of the incident, but who will receive mistely is a decision the courts must. reach. Col. Drew Is Right get mother the money ulti- (St- Cafitjftigtnes xSdlSIéIrKaB-Ttncon Th 811i, 0 011 - e appoemier and Premier for sea“? °“‘“"% “if? $33“; a ieme o . under h fire from O01. 000120 regards 1t as a. with the Nhnon and Mr. Conant highest 11ft. 1n the Ontario judiciary as a. pawn 1n e e gmie. In th makin of the appolnt- rural Ell-l‘. Cross the face of it. are the qualifications in question? Do the people of Ontario, having the hllh- est. confidence in the in liegrit. 0f kry a..." "has ‘.it...‘“°.-.i2“l3; u a. o0 s. iin bari- and disngpolxitiod em used giiticlan of the rank of an ousted emier. The business does not look right at. all and cannot be covered ust passed from hand t0 hand. And now the new Premier, Nixon, passes soineth‘ 1, else a1 0B8. ppointment b0 the a veg? blah a Onta 0 u 01a Jrhsrs iscei-tainly ground or pro st on the part. of coi- Drew, leader of the Opposition. Gone are the days in Ontario gov- ernment of the rigid rectitude of s P. Whitney. National Humility (New York Bun) ‘The statement by Roar Admiral William R. Furlong, commandant of the Pearl Harbor Navy Yard, that all but flvo of the American war- ships damaged by the Ja nneae 1n the r attack on Pearl arbor, on , i941. have been sai- viuzed and returned to service. 1s a. supplement to lust. years-anniver- sisry re rt. At, that. time the Ameri- can nu 11c learned for the first time the fuii extant of the damage done at Pearl Harbor‘ ten warships suit or seventy damaged and eight- other w damaged. It also learned then tfilt fnlny of the vessels dammed at Pearl HITOI bud been repaired and but back into was inwfuliy theirs. But that was bank in Syracuse, N Y has also ‘claiming t at. $13,351!) 0f 1b ' " mri lists ui 1n s bld for the mgnéy, mini m. a1: service within the year. Now Ad- the battleships Oklahoma, the hriet It is essential that all unusable iron, steel Ind "will W"! Quantities of this material which our trucks will haul from any point on Prince Edward Island. Full market prices will b0 paid. A. BLOCK (Authorized Dealers) Warehouse and yard — 102 Elm AVOIIM — ci-IINNWWWI Phone 768 or 144i stolen in a. hold-up two years That. 1t. was evident from the clrcumstim 1n which 1t was hidden. We Neeil at Once ship Utah and the destroyers Cassia M111 DOWNS. as the only Pearl Har- bor losses not yet made good. Sai- vaze WOrK is still oontiii 0n the Okéuprpmanlangituthe Utah, ‘payer, an a 0 y p5 pemianen y lost, as a result of the earl Harbor nt- tack will be the Arizona, Cissstn and Downes. "Nobody will question the enor- mous amount of fort that. has gone to salv tb bodies o .500 Americans still lie lock- ed 1n some of these ships. However Hell $118 Dildo taken 1n thehaound of cum that followed Pearl rbor 1t ht be u weii h a t0 think about o ounce of prevention that was lacking." Two Of A Kind (Ottawa Journal) Adolf Hitler ha; conferred post- iunoim ‘- upon Admiral Yamamoto, the -- der-tn-chief of the Japanese navy, who was killed recently 1n circumstances not yet revealed. Hitler has award- ed 1m the cross 0f n. Genmn knlsht- "in Imiroclatbn of hll merit: in the common fight of our arms. Ysmumoto is the chap who bian- nod- the attack on Pearl Harbor, and used w boast that. he would B1811 the new: treaty 1n Washington and London. He wu, obviously I man afutszitiiitileruttown heart. being socomp e n archery, r, prac- titloner of murder on tho mus scale, a distinguished figure 1n the company of international ung- lters who have raised burglary to n. fine art. It is oxqiilsftey correct that. mt- ier thus should pay honor to Yam- amoto-two 0f a kind. The propriety of this posthumous decoration be- comes oven more a nt when we t the peope who are Hitler's official ‘ tlmmtes, the fel- lows who carry his bloody banner- Ooering, Goebbels, R1 ntrop‘, Himmler. evfl-nunded traitors sue u Laval and Quialfng. the riff-ruff of Europe. the out-pouring; of the s world. It. is from this any that Hitler picks his associatespchoosas those whom he delights to honor-and that is t amamoto‘: memory. It. takes a mun like Hitler t0 In- preciato the dead admiral’: pecul- u- merits. They have that in cem- mon which joins any two members sewers of sort of ho place for Y of s be: of assassins. SUNDAY SUNDAY! Dominica was called Sunday 1s- lmd by Ooiumbus because he sigh- ted it. on that. day in i499. ‘Six hundred British naval vessels are constantly 011.61%] over 00,000 Cameron M?!‘ m. mflelof sol. Aro You Troubled ur SOB! BACK T If so we have one of the but remedies to offer. nlmtlY- BACKRITE TABLETS llll so tics, Neurlfls. Jill" Muscular and other Rheumatism which ordinlr! treatments fall to reflvll- Price 50o w B"- TNE TKO MASS 14a Great Gem-re 51""- Mnll Orders Given Pffllllll entlon. Professional Bards McLeod £0 Bentley W B. BENTLEY. K. C- _|_ a BENTLEY. K. c. Ilrllslers and Attorneys-I'l- LII MONEY T0 LOAN 1M Prince Sire" Morrelland Bomiifllll II. F. ARBHIBALB _ Channel Accountant! Intern Trust Bullllllll Charlottetown f GLASSES “FITTED zimnm (“SOMETRISI _ Corner Item. and 01ml! 5"- 0 bonito Ills’: Growl’! ____€.____-_-< n. |=. McPhee B.A., K-l-e NOTARY as. ‘Hagan soéfiggon PALMER 6i HASLAM A. J. IIABLAM n. A. u. B- BELl & MATlilliStlN MONEY T0 LOAN m‘ T!!! an.“ -__._, s mu.’ b in or chmuyb ‘e ban They leave, moi-runs», varying fifilgh: li'u’s'i‘l'},°l,§,‘lf" ' -- lhlnlc I Poo Dvrt-lvohkfidlkgmlllflv A lzumoralisti mg w ‘ggigfy: 11g Rlittarlng M,“ “t m” °’ lion one“ TlsMa, T‘ om-BJG limiting ha, - "I — consult I 1 "l"! mn thong], > appointments. G. F. llutcheson 5 I. G. HUTOHESON G. I. HUTCHESON fllatupiul t . . vll Ml NI oil flatly ninml vil sup and intoi With LUMBAGO l elective for Liilll- j fin-ml 0i All j “wt-sir Locaflon A lntmuita b 6:,“ I011 Chlrlollfllfi" nl