PAGE from TliE OIIARLOTTETOWN O ll ARO IAN Morning Dally (Founded In I887) President, LIt-ut. (fol. W. Chester S. McLurc Vlca-Prvsitlettt. .l. R. Burnett. FJJ. Secretary. LIt-ut.~(‘ol. l). A. MncKInnon. 0.5.0. Editor and Itlanagltig Director. J R. Burnett, Fol-It.‘ Asloclate Editors. frank Walker and Ian A. Bllflw scuscitirrion turns I) Ml-II In P. E. l,. $4.00 pt-r year, $2.50 for 8 munttm $1.25 fur s months. 50c- for one month- Q", Dgljvcfy, $5.1m "(If year. >100 for 6 months. $1.75 fur 3 mnntknuw u’ I! Mall In Caxtada and ll. S. . ~ P" I - luturdny Weekly. $100 per year. Sl-W f" 5 51mm“ 50c for 3 monthi. in, Strongest lllemory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink.” minus’. JULY 19, 1940. Unfair Discrimination A return ivas tabled in the House of Com- mon, rccellfll‘ ‘ll showed that every Gov- eriitiient ‘ ‘as taken on more eni- pltiw-fl-e -..r cotiiriieucetl and that the amiual coy, , iucre so is well in excess 0f gsyottytcytv _»\i cii the Cfilllllfy is sup- pniflu] 1,) p? .1, t its energies and fut- ancint 1'95 .,i;~t~ sful prosecution of g war iii -urvi . . I. closed officially that an exrraiir" Plllllllff of departmental i .e llltilllll"'\\'ll€\l(‘\'€I' to do ate co l! the country ..i' tie large increases in ~' :~ tit»,- i-iifv sign of (‘X- c\l><'il.l!lll’BS a! Flt- .\'. h. ierutinal at tawa. l ‘ ll-intrcv." ‘llflllllffl of $12,- SUUJM. ftill,‘ilg still pro- ceeqink; y i . .. ital aitliions. .\lea:i- whilt. >1 . s ti at least eipial iiii- P,,,~;;,,,,_.,. _, ,.;- wir effort is con- C€Tll€il 1' ' ‘i in districts where, are is less tioteiit. is more desirotis of l ecouiiiii_v at this isl ind; hut there is a 1T»: iilflllllllllfllltlll is at ‘Q1116 of stich important ~ to the railway ‘ iviiiclt some $259.- . The contract for the hr ~' pl‘<i_ll'i".\ as " ' wharf at l ' Don uxts \ this writ hm‘, {l ‘ harboriuiprovc- int-iii, n: i” -‘ a vital factor in the shipping if J i" . lmllllliiiF, and as stich it: inu- Utilliflllttllfill, as an have a i tiiii:tf.'t's war effort. from our produce tn the ‘wo sitccessivc ‘.\'ii -il lslzintl-Ca .liott shfpg» '3 <t .: htiltltips l - l ‘ t fen-v w» - \\or.; on the terminais has bi e "ijilihvl at a cost of sev- .:irs. and on two l.:i</‘rl and tuttfitted cral l: riccztsii ti’ - {iii- tlip r- 11'". 5 tcii over by the (inv- CYIIHIFIIT f r i-es. .\llffltl\\'l"lll(‘. an lit- ("reqsctl s l to the owners of the .<. F. i = ice between Char- lotieir-vzi in the past has proq-eil ii hicli the “hind-ls- l,-iiitl<.("qi, i» .~ iiitiiitliwl to rcplacc. Oily i z should make it their 5-1,. - i- vriit governmental 5mm - t-r quarters, this Prov ‘ ' l "ii of (‘silflllilill ptthliC services, - in w u-se of completion, on the plea. 0f - - .\iid if tuir repre- seutzttiaes ' in ive in the matter, they should be _ I ur firrvcrtiitieiit at home, by our boa s o: l“ and other organizations, until action is f » rv .,\. Request For Canadian Cheese Following the stutenteiit by Hon. G. Gardiner, U" uit Minister of Agriculture that, accoritii; ro cable advice from the United Kingdom, the l’. ' “i .\l' stry of Food is desir- ous of obia iI e iilfgvat possible quantity of cheese from w ii thzs season, the Agricul- tural Siiiipliias i‘ Iiris asked provincial de- partmentg of urt- To take whatever mea- mres iii-c ‘in ~ raise the production of Canadian cheese ' Exports of (l iadian cheese to the United Kingdom are a"i- _- lx-irtg stepped up to meet this request fwrn the llritish Illinistryq the Board poiiii- Wit. \\'ii~re.'i_s the quantities to he shipped Pircirtiiiq to the agreement recently signed were t._=~i long tons in May (2,240 lb. pcr toiil an! jtw») long tons in lune, the Dairy I‘rovhit"s l‘ ilrl Vi!’ ‘qt-d with purchasing and shippimt‘ Us» cheese under the agreement is malt-i q pr 1-. i'i'i'(‘ these quantities in- crcriswl to a t of 17.nov, long tons by the end of June. [index "Hits of the original agreement, tho lii ~ . l vi w.’ For l agreed to take up tn _*,:_<~-i- l.~~- _ i _ t... frsfltooim pouurls) of (‘atiatlxui W- i .1 Ytivi iiilicr 30. The .\lin- istr_v'~ rt» i.‘ ' !l'.‘.lll< that additional tpiztiitiliix " ‘in iil:t‘ii—-as though they has ll('l"l , ‘ i-i pvt: agreement, name- ly, on It irzY iwk pvt" pound for first . ' -,,.,i .‘ e Xgi-iriiltitrtil §upplics Boiirtl ex; i. it» ivilfctttion that Can- adian htvtt" i. " rt ~l by the Ynitcd Killgil/illl. lltvft" "i lii" n has been strictly ratiiiiiid at tWiii- 1I.l‘ll"‘~ pr ptirsi-u tier week and British i'l)ll~17 lllYl‘ li-eii l'llt'llll"flgf'i'l to use niargtiriiii- u-iil lii ‘lilcf’ tliv mutt-rials needed in its riiiiitifueiitri» ' .'l\‘.'\ll.'llllt‘ in large quanti- tiflQ l,. t;,-,._-,y lii-i Fit long :is plentiful stip- llllfls‘ of ili-. -i~ in. ll\ lire Il\"ll'tl)l(‘, margarine will ilitti'ii' » n‘ ‘ll(‘ to he u-‘cd. lii vii-iv of f.lt"\'. it is the opinion of the /\Q'|‘ll‘|llll‘l"l . .s lloarrl that farmers who can talt- of l‘ll1‘("~(‘ factory outlets for their lllill, i:‘l li~ iirutiil to do so. in the know- llflgi‘ 'l,lf it i ll‘ product will be ut-etlml fi\r,t-\.p» it. ll iriiii-rs and others intcrcsteil in llll’ (Eiiiiilau il.>iryiii;_r industry, the Board points ttlll, llll-U.’ from experience the result 0" 'l'llll't'~llt' butt’ r p» n-t-s iii’ the accumulation of any cons-tilt Ydlill’ on; lll\4‘\' of butter when there is no expoit outlcl lll fight. More. cheese and less but- ter tltts season should give niure stable prices for factory milk in general. Those provinces chiefly interested in the pro- duction of cheese for export have therefore been asked to have their dairy commissioners bring t0 the zittcutiou of the dairyitig industry, and particularly the operators of cheese factories and creameries, the turn that events have taken, and to have their agricultural representatives or other ficlilmcn tirge upon the farmers in their dis- tricts the ailvisahility of taking measures to in- crease the production of (‘ttuadittu cheese. Other provinces have been asked to see what action they might take to increase cheese production for export, or for the domestic ntarket in order to release cheese for export. By keeping tip the flow of stunmer milk and diverting a; much of this summer milk as pos- pihle to cheese production, Canadian farmers can help meet one of the needs of the United King- dom at this time. - EDITORIAL NOTES -. The British Admiralty press section, adding up (ieritian claims of naval successes, state that the Nazis have claimed they have sunk or dam- aged 2o capital ships in the last four months- five more than llritain possessed at the start of the war. It said also that t5 more cruisers than Britain had last September have been reported sunk or damaged by the Germans. They are magnificent fabricators in P-Cfllll. u u n v It appears transatlantic flights between New York and the llritisli Isles via Montreal and Xeivfottntlltttiil will be started within a month, by Airivztys Atlantic, l.ttl., a stilisitliziiy of the Brit- ish (Overseas Airways (iorporatiou. The itlanes, 25-pin four-iiiotorcil flying boats like the (‘zthot and the Crti-iliiiii in transatlantic mail service last summer, will carry mail and an tinattnouncctl num-lier of passengers. They will carry no pro- tective arms. in n n- Britoiis, who already have had their all-impor- tant tea rationed. will shortly have to go witlivtit fancy pastry. The l-‘ootl t\lllll>'ll‘_\' auiiouuces that beginning Aug. 5 the lllillilllg of iced cakcs, cream liuns and eclairs will be lmiiiieil. After that (late it will he an offcitse to place sttgttr on the exterior of ziuy cake, biscuit. liuu, pastry, scone, bread or roll. .\fti-r $cpt. 2 the sale or purchase of such tidbits will he forhidilcir ‘U! Ill Ii ll The main trouble ivith the cooperative ntove- uicnt iii this province is that it is not coopera- tive but bureaucratic. ‘hitstatitliiig examples at: the bitttci- factories, the cheese htctiirit-s, the potato growers. the cg"): and piuilti'_v circles, mil ttow the live stoclc‘ t\ good l\lll'('i'll1Cl'.'tf runs on ctipitalisiit- littcs ziutl iiiakcs a sticcess, which continues till he tiuits: a poor bureaucrat acting on thvtiry and lio-dt-ltiimvlcilgc, runs the iiitnt-iiieiit nil the rocks lii-flirt‘ lI has \\'(‘ll lii‘- gtitt. The coinicrtitive principle thcit gets hlaiii-cil, whereas it is burertucracv that is at fault. w n is at defeated this date, rt_'_(.'tiii~t linglaiiil hv The Fptiiish ;\rni.'itla r299. TlllS fleet w.'is seiit l‘hilip ll tinder t‘tiiiiiii;tii-lei' llttke of Klctliiitt Sildoiiia. ati lllPXll(‘l'lt‘ll\‘(‘il officer. The ships were llll\\'l('lll_\' and itiiili'riii:iiiiietl; the QIIIIHOH’ inferior: atiil the proiisioiis scantv liln the other hand the lTuqlish fleet was itlzuiueil with a view to a naval hzttlle. iiiiilci" .\tluiir:il lloivard, with Drake, liiviliisliei". and llriivklus, suhiii'tliii.'ite ;\il- mirals. and fin: If routed ilir Hiauiarrls, the de- struction lteiiig etiiiipleteil by storms. The failure of the .\t'ni.'til;i was fatal to §pain's prestige, and it begun the naval greatness of lrihtiti which remains to this day. n- : at 4- Not a. few rush marriages took place here. as elsewhere, to get ahead of the military deadline, 15th. Now only those men who were in matri- mony before that date will be considered to be in dotible harness when registration takes place. But this will not affect the separation allowance for those men who enlist for overseas and are married stihseqtieitt to the dead line. Ynder regulation 17 copies of the registration certi- ficates of all single men and widowers without children from the age of t9 to 43 must be seut to the judge of the district appointed for the purpose who will allocate the military category of each. n n- u a The war has cut down Etirope’; food supplies to such an extent that at least 35.000000 peo- ple will be on near-starvation rations by Novem- ber, according to Mr. lolin Xlnltii-ieyi, American Red Cross representative, who is en route home after conferring with Red (‘toss Societies and government officials of nineteen European coitu- trics ditritig the past four mouths. The war has interfered both with agricultural production and with imports from other cotuitries, I\l.'. Maloney said, but emphasized that a second dis- aster —bad weather-mad greatly aggravated the problem. Last \\'inter ivas tiiiustially severe throughout Fitroite, and evcu if thcre had been no war, there would have been a scriotis short- age of grains and fruits. m n- n- m A group of prominent New Yorlters are ad- vocating a political and commercial union ofthe Ilniteil Ftates and the nl'lll$l‘l Commonwealth, untlci‘ which a provisional inter-continental cou- gress would be set tip under the proposal. The _!_'f>\'f‘l'|llllf‘lll§ of the participating coitntries, the Yiiitctl States, the United Kititfiloni, Caitada, Australia, New Ztvilantl, Fire and gouth Africa, would remain empowered to gnvcrit at home. "in all the fields of government except the few that they expressly aqrecrl to give The Union. The Yuitiu would substantially strengthen the tita- terial defences of the llritisli lslcs, treuieutlouslv improve the fighting spirit of the people. allow thi-m to hold the fort." ticcortliug to the all. which declares: "\\'e face now not George Ill but .\dolf l.” A “proposed ilcclartitirtti of i11- terpeiitlence" is appenilcrl to the full page atlvertiseuieiit rippi-ttriiig iu the New York 'l‘imi~.s. Prime .\liui<ter (‘liurchillls rejected of- fer to France of :i union with lirilain was cited as "proof lhc llritisli etinsitler sucli a pro- position practicable and await only our invita- tion." The plan is based upon ideas expressed it: ("lrirenct- K. Sin-it's- hook, "l'u‘tin Now," which proposed a uiiiott of the world's demo- CIBCICI ‘j NOTES BY TIIE WAY In sumo ways llfe gets easier. l8 the years go by. A ixzuttutg brush, opetated by a tliuimb plcéSlllg a lev- er on the handle, has been invent- ed for cleaning teeth and massag- lug gums at. the same time. - St. Thomas Tuiies-JottrnnI. Northern Ontarlo alone could go far toward providing hotnes tor the 10,000 British children who W111 be brought, to Caztadin away from the constant danger of death by Nazl bombs. This Dominion could take far more than the quota set. now. - Tlmmtits Press. Tho latest memorandum from the League of Nations announces that consideration ls being given to the illegality or otherwise of the British action In rrmovzng British prisoners fro-m the Alt.- mark. That seems like ancient hlstory today. - (Xtlgary Herald. The Brlllsh llogun “Go To It” which 1s now prominently display- ed throughout unportnnt centres overseas, should be VZQIYIOUSI)’ adopted In this country as well. Time is IJFPCIOLIS. Every effort. should go Into the g-IIICIBXIT. ptcsccit- tfon of the war effort. -— Halifax Chronicle. Gandhi described IlItIerIsm u; "n naked, ruthless force reduced to an exact science and woixked out. with scientific precision." He add- ed that the Fueltrer was not. “giv- lng the Germans the pleasure of owning an empire but the burdens of sustaining its erttshtitg weight". The little leader of It's people tins the facility of terse and forceful texiprrsJon -- Brant-ford Exposi- or. We accuse the Nazi Government of (‘XPlOIIJIIQ the: present p0- sltion of cotiqticroi-s 1n Poland by lnfltctltig upon IIIIllItHIS of people urnc‘ ary SLIIIOIIIIQ We itcctisc e ha‘. regime of having klllrd 1.000.000 Polish civilians __ men, women and children - lyy merciless DOIIIDQITIXIIPIIL of ops-n towns and TIIIICIITIIO-gllllllllflg of detenccIcY-s per-pic frciu low-flying aliplaiics. We accuse the Nazis of having cxcctttca or tortured to death tcns o.’ ihctisriuds of Polbh inert, wo- men and children, pries:s iiiid Jews because they W-(‘TC loin-ti eat-i- zt-iis of their country. We IIFCIIFG the Nazis of having klllcct or ex- gizsrd to dtwth by inhuman treat.- mcnt. 290.00 innocent Polfh children W? ‘IPCIIFC the Nazis or lioldiitc In c. aeeutratttin camps ranking Polish IP01) of science and culture. men anti wcuieit of all tunes. the IlO\\'I‘I‘ of Polish and tlit- future of tlic ccuutr and PXP-"SIII; tlt-Jtu to the Ito s ot pli cal and uiot-ztl toriuix. We IICCIFI‘ the Nfl/ls of flJVJl" drport- ed nullzous of Pol..s, men d wo- iitcn, and of ltaviitg tit ossesscd tlicm Iii-m the" IIYITICS aux! of having trcatrrl ti in worse than animals \Ve at‘ e the Nazis of having; dis‘. p P lzsh lain lies. partctl utcn lrrtii the wlver, chil- dreii ItC-m thttr patents, rt l " ' taken yiiiui gtfl» 0t ' families naval‘ frtni iii?‘ to b“ ;t mil't.ii~_v W NiIZ if u. s: of cibcdliig c1 at- tez-iiituatv llic \l'll",’l(‘ P<ilsli race in order to create for LrEZ'III‘II"._\' an rpc living space. I" the iiiaz, Lite, “Fllllll‘[’." tl by Pole. of the Ui " _ e‘ mother, who llvrs 1n Ritslivilic, Izid , rtmtit-keil in I917. when the man who tins stampcdctt the R0111‘ ttn Ptttfy w iirmitintttiii for Pre 0t the Ullll(‘(l Sixties a5 on the trail oi‘ his brtde-to-be: "S0 your the girl Wcndellls gOlIIK to mart)?" Mrs. Willkle was talkzng to Edith Wilk, situiilsy. lntr-ltatretl. bItte-cyetl girl from Elwood, the Wilkie Iicme town Edith Wtlk st-ainmercrl, blushed. “Oh. no, 110," sh;- pro- lffilffl “It must be a mistake I've just met him. And-atoll, I itcwsr heard anything a-bc-ttt It " "No mis- take." laughed Mrs. Willkfe "Wen- dellls Rot It all settled. He's told me he had met. the gLrI ht- was gozug to ntarrl". He Bald it, would be so easv because your name is already Wilk "_'I'his was Edith \Vllk's tn- trodttctton to lite unth that manc 8lWIlyS-lI1-{I-l11lI'f_t' who, then, never seemed to KIHLW where he was zo- g. - Catiadtrtn Press. Sir Philip Antrn- bits the Itammer of the unscri- tlmeiital auctioneer Iiovcrs over Aniesbtuy Aibibey. ‘This hl5lOrlC place ls near Salisbury, and dates very far back, though It. was re- built. 1:1 1834 by Harmer, “"110 fol- Ioviied In so doing the Pallantan manslfm dcfilglls of John Webb, a lmphew of the tzrcat Inigo Jones. The “lot" includes ti mansion By order nf 0f 800d fishing 0n bath banks of the Christchurch Avon The Abbey estate was broken up Just a dutif- tcr of a_ce:it.ur_i' ago, and then divided Into eighty-tune "lots," one of which ivas Stonehenge, ‘which Canon Rawnsley called ‘the spared rampart of Salisbury Plain That is now, thanks be, U"? Property oif ‘the nations, as 1t 0118M to be. The then owner 0f Stonehenge, our most Iilstiirtc rind not least. lmlireaslve nattontil monument, offered 1i. for salt; in 1901 for £50,000 The offer ivzis re- Jectcd by the Govc-rntiient its ex- orbitant. Whc-rettpoit the titdigaizint owner threatened to 5091 the stones to an Acmrlcaii m:l1:oiin:re tor shipment across the Atlantic. On ivhlch the Chancellor or the Ex. cliequcr of that vlrllc epoch r9. piled that, on any such attempt, ho “Tlllld send a. regiment 1mm sallsbury Pinin to protect It. .. Ottawa Journal. Just haw the United States would prevent the invasion of Can- ada at any time within the next, "Well/t? mflllths. lf the Brltksh fleet were ln (‘mi-man hands, 15 ham w 599 BY 194d orl944 the Unlled States should have ti two-ocean 218v)’ and would be able to offer st-citt resistance to any sca-borng attack against. the North Anicrl. can continent. But that 1s three or four years away. - Edmonton Journal -____ How fast can n bear run." Sandy Ifetzgart says he ruined a full. gmwit hear. on the Park mad last. ‘WPK- R Ill-Wm“? of about three ltiutdrrd yards His niwcdonivtpr I‘("Tl$l<‘l'f.'d 34 miles an hcur While Mr. Briun was throwing gravel nt Sandi. his daughter ivas toottng the hnrn At last, In cxaspemttoti the hear startrd down a sand h"ll nlcmvfdi- fhf‘ reed so TESL that tie "Word turtle n.\'l rrllcd Intern ball. ~~- Huntsv lie Fcrcster. rut: cnssbgrlisjgiyig _GUARDIAN “Very Comfortable" (Halifax Chronicle) Mr, Howe told Percy 0. Black and others of the parliamentary committee on railways and ship- plng yesterday that Halifax had n "very comfortable" service from Its airport to the '1‘. O. A. ter- minus at Moncton. That In begging the question. The feeder lervlce has been improving. but the need for a trite coast-to-coast T.O.A. system still exists, The national system should be truly national. It should operate from the Atlantic to the Pacific wlth the same direction, the same responsibilities for servIco and com- fort throughout. It; should operate, too, so that It would provide use- ful Interprovlnclal communication In the Maritime provinces, and af- ford alternate routes to maintain uninterrupted operation. It Is of little use to have a feeder service operating to Moncton, for Instance, If T.C.A. planes are unable to fly out: of that airport to Montreal. There are several airport: be- tween Hallfax and Montreal. III of which can be used on a reasonable route. A choice of airports would overcome man difficulties of wea- ther and enable the service to operate with few Interruptions. 111a present compromise arrangement; s anything but satisfactory. ‘The Maritime provinces are en- tttled to better facilities for ali- mall and passenger traffic. Ferry Service Out (New Glasgow Evening News) Front present Indlcatlons, partlee who ivmit; to travel to the Island WILIIOIIL going to Tormentlne will have to g0 bv the oid Hochelaga as the new ferry service Is definitely out for the duratlon. Official Cl\'- pltiugittott is that. no boats can 1p obtained as they are picked up for naval ivork 8s soon as tlttey are purchased. Thus ends for g, time at least, a st-ltemu that saw considerable of the hard-canted cash Qt Canadjans poured out at Cai-i-Iboo and Wood islands. To date the uxpenditure according to informatlott supplied Senator C. E. Tanner by Hon Raoul Daittlurattd, government lea er in the Senate. totals half a million dol- lars Somewhat. more than SNOTTOO ivtis expended at Wood Islands and nitotliei- $220,000 at Carriboo. 'I‘liei-o remains to be expended a mere $1,000 at Wood Lslands, and $10,577 at. Carriboo on construction ivorks and $2.500 on water servicei and ticket office at. this end. AIe-anwlille the Nova Scotia gov- ernment has expended a heavy sum bttililiinz up n tlghuiay to Carriboo from Pictuu and presumab-y the same must. have been arranged by the P. E. I. government over the 30- mile mine from Wood Islands to Charlottetown. The ferry service. when first moot- ed, was nu Island proposlfion, and tirotiscd considerable opposition. es- pecially at the Sliiretoivn, ivhere It was feared it would take away the litisiitcss accruing from the old Ho‘ ielnaa. not. the best. boat In the world. Later, when the route from Carriboo was put through Flcwu, the oppositloit (lied down. but tLe infcriiintioit that experienced sett- nicn ¢f the ccast held Carribco Hill'- bor could iicvcr be kept clear of sand was never refitted, to our ltuoivlctlge. We trust the expensive drctlaiut: to put. it in shape wlll not be Inst before the service finally gets tiutl:-i' way. tom1>t£ii;,r'li_‘.' these IIKXIIIYIIS to cx-l mid nearly 300 iicrcs, with a mile i NIGHT CLOUDS Fluffv puffs of silver- Heavenlv cobwobs 0f mist- Languktfillv swimmg through the nck Sea of titght—- Teasing the moon- Tugging the radiant plumes- Bright, Flowers of Space, In dreamy beauty. Floating across the heavens, E911 Y. And pence Is supreme. _Bob Nystedt. arrived In Quebec and were wt once transport-ed to inter-mu?!“ PIIInlII-q, “in the hinterland of Can- l\(l11 far from civtltzatlon.’ need- lessly announced the blatant Cana- dian broadcasting service. The broadcasters cannot get clear of giving to things the worst possible aspect. The suweu oif nerve up- setting created 1n the Moose Rive!‘ trttgedy seems to still be the ipB/t- tem for our broadcasters — New Glasgow’ Eastern Chronicle. JULY 1H9 Lin, A The Burma Road (‘rho Ouudtm Preu) The Burma Road, which Greatl Britain has agreed to close to halt a flow of war supplies to the Chinese Central Government, is a highway which might have been conceived by u Hollywood director and executed by the Pharaohs of anclent EKYN. It follows the ancient “silk trail" traversed by Marco Polo In the 13th century. It Is l. vital part of. the 2.000-mIle-1ong trade route; from Burma's seaport of Rangoon to the Yangtso River, connecting the Burmese ratlhead at Lashlo I with Kunming (formerly called Yunnunfu), the capital of Yunnan ovlnce. - Work on the most difficult, stretch of the Brent new road. be- i tween the Burma border and Kun- mlng, was not started until the fall of 1987. when military exigen- cies caused the BrItIsh authorities to cut through a freight. route to British Asia to ship products to regions cut off by the Japanese occupation of Paclflc ports. The Hollywood setting In pro- vided by sparsely settled regions or snow-cupped mountafnl and rice-bordered plateau lakes, tropi- cal jungles of bamboo and teak- wood and forests of towering erergreens where bands of Gibbons scream In the shadows and strange blrds chatter and sing. The suggestion of ancient. Egyptian methods of construction Is inescapable. Most of the con- struction was done by hand by thousands of men, women and children with only a few crude tools. Sometimes for n steam-roller they used cylindrical boulders pul- ' led bv water buffalo. On long stretches they used large flat stones as paving. l Across a rough upland region.‘ the biulders carried on, crossing high mountain ranges as well as the great gorges of the turbulent Salween, the Mekong and numer- ous other streams. There were untold difficulties. but the work went on until heavy trucks were soon sharing the trail ivfth the heavily laden oxen and their antique carts. dressy, heat- summer §~4+§§Q~§§ How Are Your Eyes‘? If you Ire having sytnptnms or strain-headaches, sore eyes or dizziness -— consult a sinc- lalIsL At your service wfth years l o! experience and n. thorough refrartlng service, Call In and discuss your dIf- flculttes. (i. F. Hutcheson G. F. HUTCIIESUN F. O. IIUTCHESON. 0QO-§'§-O I v-v-rv EXAMINATION ‘$155-$5-"-'-'-'-'-‘-'-'-'|'-'U\'-%'-'fl Flttlng and sélpplying Glasses g to. ll. J. MABON ‘i OPTOMETRISI‘ Montague. P. l2. l. Office Hours; l0 to I2 A. M. Z to 5 P. M. I Holidays 1:10.. by appointment , Office Connected with DRUGSTORE lbflflflflflfr r- n n I 155555‘- Garbardlnes — rlch, h a r d wearing clothes that Insult the A grand group of $25.00 Fine English flannels, the perfect summer fabrlc -lt’s cool-it's dressy-It won’t crush New checked and striped patterns — - SEE’ OUR WINDOW DISPLAY shades . . . . GDRE a. Maeonmssl Momriiurrii 1 _F'ra , J ly IT-(AP) — Th: ggitythtislaiiigiiionilts. mike" 03 Chartreuse liqueur. are being al- lowed to return to their monastery hipm in the Alps at. Fourvolrle Bftel‘ a 37-year exile from France. order was founded In 1086 and lilié monks lived there until 1903 when ‘we separ§tlfltrlf or church and state e e ec ve. ' hffsgbéflll llvlng in Fbrnetta, tasty- Keep Mlnnrd‘: In the home. W" , .._...___ b. R. Bro , Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Class Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside. Lloyd Lewis 144 Richmond St. ~J\-/%\__l Wear a lighter weight summer suit i; If you want to feel com- fortable Just. IIIp Into one of these lighter weight sulfa. Style-leaders In coolness . . .. . In new patterns and lolld tonal and In every mart lult model. t‘ Wm.“ Troplcal Wanted: _. flne light weight fabrics, Ideal for summer won, are offered In a flue ha]? t1|>(l1'lte‘l'fr|s‘25noo ‘Z250 THE MEN'S IT'S COOL IN STORE '11 MIX The average a. hen they posed are hisbltuul offenders. It... ..._-u_ d’: Son Charlottetown Professional Bards ' O. F. AROl-IIBALO Chartered Accountant 140 Richmond Street Phone l‘! 9.0- Bu! 12 McLECD 8. BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY. ILC. J. A. BENTLEY. ILC. \ c. r. BENTLEY. nun. 1- Blrrfsters and Attorncyl-at-Law MONEY TO LOAN 180 Richmond Street L"! W!!! WAR SAVING‘ STAMPS y,M-LAn|£s' Y, SWIM OAPS Why not vllft our ntore Ind t Inspect our stock of Blthlnl Capt! before makfn your Pm‘- chase. We havl a complete stock nl’ ' Bathlng Caps In the very latest shades and IIIIIIIII In l price from 25c to 75c. See also our lugs stock of Sun Glasses priced from 15c l0 $1.00. . ‘- Z;%f._ 1T5, 12f." '53:“ MAC! HAIR RESTORE]. A delIcl-ttely perfumed 1R0- hc paratlon w rutofflln ilaflflllfllhilll and bnutlfles the P. l . It ‘will reltloro 5n: hllr ti: l‘: u | or n produce i-lbh lrndcgbnnannt growth 0! halr. Price 80o. a om: by mu Today. L» DR- IVAN! QTOMACII MIXTURI We highly recommend this preparation for people suffer- n from Stomach Distress A ship Ioudfloffndbrned glsipnerg; af er eating, heartburn, Acld M and sour stomach. If It. In the finest Stomach Mlxture that money cnn MI! Its Evans. Price 85c per bottle. .\ v lute two MAGS u} Or. Jos. A. McMillan has opened ll! offIce for the ractlco of Medicine and urgery In tho New Tlnton Building 152% Great George Street Ofrlee Hurst 1 PM. to 8 PM. 6.30 PM. to 8 PM. Special eonsultatlons by 1p- pofntment. Telephone-Ofllce 1733-1. Home 1733-2. ALEX W. MATHESON BARBISTIR, SOLIOITOR, ETO. mn to nun Collectlonl 0f Ice: 90 Great George St. Charlottetuwn M. ALBAN FARMER IA» LLB. BAIIIIISTII, IOLICITOI. ITO. Bank of Ont-mfg Bulldlni, swim raw/w EYES EXAMINEO Glasses Fitted J. S. TAYLOR Optometrist New location Comer of Kent and Queen Street Ito RI ' ‘ITS?! spfiiflfifi’ Phone House 1013. l ..- ALBERTON Ol-‘FICI 9w: Inn strewn, ' In worth the name If It has no flavor. fresh flavor of our tobacco Is outstanding n51} Mn," the blg reason for Its popularity. HI-CKEY’S BLACK TWIST 10c For Fig Straight EVERYWHERE The best car ‘In the world In a washout when It. run: out of gas, and no tobacco The IN PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND MANUFACTURED BY IIIOKEY 8i NIOIIOLSOII Tobacco Co. LttL, Charlottetown, P. E. I. i? ' e~/\/-\fl\-\P~/\/\'P\/\»\/\/\ feel like IIOT BUTTER? , when I hen you moody, her n- oirgnns shrink very m» pldly. Bic eats Ieal and her whole abdominal region (wit-rants. On the loses about. tmo weeks f om production each time she béflrlnel broody. even though Bxoody hens are not moemrly cull hens and need not be dir- of when found unless they