PAGF. TllE OIIARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Morning Dally (FBIIWNI ll u“) President: Lleut. Uol. W. UIIUWI 5~ Mae". Vice Presldelll: J. B. Burnett, IJJ- Secretary: Lllflll. Col. l). A. Mwlilllll"! 9-3-0- 341“; mud Managing Director. J. IL lillflfll-i FJ-l- Aisoclute Edllurs: I-‘ranls Walker lllfl llll L» 5'7"" SUBSURIPTIUN KATIE a; mini u: r.i;.i.. smu per rem $2M l" i 11°F“! 51.2.’: for 3 mouth»; m for one month um Delivery ssuo per year: $8.1m wr 6 m“!!! $1.15 for 3 monuu; I00 for one Month. By Mall t.» other Provinces and U._S. A. WW N!’ Y!" sauinuy Weekly: ssuu per :1": Sl-W l" I IWIIKII- 50u for 3 month! Th. clllllvlkulinvu uuuhllln nu: be Oblllllld n autumn hows Aluwl. Thane run-m. Hcw hrlu 0i! loath Now: Aiuucy. Conn: lllh And Wllllllwle Bunion, Alolropulllln bum Lin”. l“! P01 5k uuulmul‘ J, “m, s54 u” 31., Toronto; Nun Ilul. Qlmhmu Luui-li-r, Ottilwui Wulfoi new: Bland. lldhury. Out; Huh TIJIJLMTWI hhop, aunt-con u. 8.; ' “The Strongest Memory is Wenlwr "Ill ‘l! Weakest Ink.” THURSDAY, MAY 21st. 1942- liitelligence Tests dducationists will find food for IQflQCIlQT! l" a Statement made yesterday by 515W" Gefmfal Young. Chit-f of the U. S. ;\lr Force Training Cm,,n,;,;u1_ “hi; is in Ottawa attending the air trziiiiiiig conference. It 1s to the effect that flit! h5g1, gchoiil QilliCi-lllOn required of applicants f0!‘ enlismv-iiy in giir crews iii Canada. does not apPlY ill‘lll_\' nir force. Intelligence tcsl5 to the lv _ are .111. qiiitwl for educational standards. AP‘ ‘ ‘ . II ~ Pliny“; n.1, ..;._-.>n .1 “screening test WhIClIICC tcrqpnh. tmt.» {r1rr-lli"(‘ll(‘(‘ abilitv and suitability A . , _ .. s . . . . _ ‘ _ _ l rrqpnpw‘ U, y... pllllCflllfill- and. said Genera" V,“ v _ If,“ _ i. <iiritrisinglv accurate- i ' ". . - - - . 15nd,...‘ p". ,,i.1 .~_,_ .ii_ flhfillCfllllS for the H" an“ v , . ..,..;-..i m 1v» the equivalent of fWO “m? r7nii(~i»llvi»(\ 'l'he ititellivcnce tests elimin- i nl- i hnl been “stibiected fir fixllosfll i qly-ifltqfc: n-ithniit having tlifi‘ thcv admitted ll105E l‘Y \.;-_,~.-1i~;,i1r.iv_ -- \' _ ivltilc fit for llvv is», “find {ni- economic feasons could W, C»... p. mlfleqc. ’l'li<- new system ‘RYECOQYIIZEd .. ,. "I‘*‘1I]'fl11 and intelligence were ' ihir Vlllli‘ thing." (i170? not mean that education simply a recognition of the .=l\-.1-~:n.~_<~s have not been fairly .\'\ v-ihicntiiwiial standard is worth)’ ~iio which iloes not develop latent iri- Government Responsible nee was made in H1058 C0llll11l15 illlltlalLtll indifference of the autlwrlllfifi .- ltriiiuigziiula which is being broadcast daily {yum lhris and Yichy for the benefit (P) m‘ the French-speaking population of Can- add. This mutter cninc up for brief discussion before the llWll-C of (Toinmonsradio committee vt-sterilitv. .\lr. llrucc Lilaxton (hlifintreal-sl- Laurence) llShCfl n-hat action the Canadian Erosidcnstiiig Ci)l']\4_)l‘(1ll0I1 was taking to coun- teract this menace. The reply H0111 MT- Rene Morin. rfiairiii-in of the CBC Board of Gover- nrnw. “'11s ilvit the nnitter “had not: been consid- ered" hv ilie llii-iril. It raised the qll€5li0n 0i whether the CBC was going to be an instru- ment of propaganda on its own initiative 0r whether illil’. “'11s the ftlncliOn of the Govern- mcitfs llvpziriiiii-iit of Information. Ml". hl0fin’5 opinion wis that it was a matter for the Gov- eminent. This puts the problem the King administration. squarely up to Nazi H Defeatisls " Shot The Russian news agency Tass reports large- scale executions in several German cities of de- fcatists and “pczicc-inongers" in the civilian population. Quoting Stockholm reports from the German frontier, Tass says that on May 7 nine- teen persons were put to death in Hamburg "for expressing flllIl-\\'.'ll‘ dcfentist views." Numerous other German citizens, Tass alleges on the same authority have been arrested at Hanover, Sch- werin, Braunscltiveig arid elsewhere "for voicing discontent at the war." In order to cope with the ominously growing popular (lisaffection with the war, the Nazi au- thorities are said to be establishing a nationwide organization. Over 1,500,000 Storm Troopers, one of these Stockholm reports alleges, are being called home from the Eastern Front, and these, together with new units recently recruited, "are receiving intensive training in street fighting, and are being zirnicd with machine-guns, because of fears of serious internal disturbinces." While there may be some exaggeration in these reports, there is no question that the Hit- ler regime is now organizing, along . drastic Nazi lines, to bold the masses of the German people iii control, in the face of impending mili- tary developments designed to shake the nation- al morale to its depths. The Germans are not the type to take what is coming, and Herr Hitler knows it. Advertising Possibilities It is the opinion of Mr. Hugh A. Mackenzie, Director of the Division of Simplified Practice under the Wartime Prices and Trade Board, says the Gazette, that “with some exceptions, advertis- ers do not realize the duty and opportunity fac- ing them" in this war. Mr. Mackenzie, by rea- son of the close ititimacy with business in all fields which his nfficiril position gives him. speaks with plenty of knowledge and authority. He talked to the Advertising and Sales Execu- tives’ Clubin Montreal and probably amazed his listeners with his story of what is being done through simplification of standard as a means of conserving needed materials. "jack Canuck," he said grimly. "must strip to the waist to win the war. Sn far, .-ill we've taken from him is his rlntiblc-brenstcil suit." Tbrit is the foundation of the argunictit. The! itietbnds suggested by Mr. MncKeuzic are specific. He would have custom- ers informed in newspaper advertising of i! I changes made neecessary by the war effort, 0f why the changes are necessary, and of how to take care of the goods that are available. He would have them told that “waste is sinful and that hoarding is treason." would have them taught a philosophy of saving, taught that if we are to win the standard must go down, told what they must do without. “Repeat" Mr. Mackenzie proceeds, "the marvellous iob that you did in the Second Victory Loan, only do it continuously." Many advertisers are doing now what Mr. Hugh Mackenzie would have them do. His lesson is for the others and it is more than a course in patriot- ism. There is definite promise of long-range benefits in it, and business is like a nation in that. without vision, it perishes. = EDITORIAL NOTES - Growth has been marvellous the last ten days, and farmers are working late and early to get their seed sown in time for the next rain. w u a u First it was the round-house crew, now it is the accountancy branch, next it will be the su- perintendency and then we'll only have the threds and patches of our P. E. I. Railway left. If we stand for it. u u e a The embargo on rubber is going to curtail the use of bicycles considerally. Conservation could be effected by using shoe-leather when going a block's length, instead of getting astride the new hobby horse. t i i i U. S. farmers are basking in the sunshine of unwonted prosperity, and are paying off old debts, montgages, etc. Last year farmers repaid $i28.7oo,0o0 of loans, half of them before ma- turity. n- 4r e e Notwithstanding the distractions of war con- tracts, Detroit automobile manufacturers have pretty definite ideas about the car of the future: Scheduled to appear about a year after war’s end, the new cars will be streamlined into ladybug- like lumps. Using aluminum, magnesium, other featherweight metals. they will weigh 1,200 lb. (v. 2,700 to 4,200 lb. now). Aviation gas (ioo octane) will power lightweight engines, mount- ed in the rear. Wheels will be smaller (I3 in. and less) t0 save rubber. permit a lower center of gravity. Bodies will be of plastic, tops will be of transparent plastic such as is now used on bomber noses. Best feature of all: prices as low as $400 (if the dollar doesn't fall through the floor). So why ivorry about what is to become of present day models and tires? n- : 4- u Archibald Philip Primrose, 5th Earl of Rose. bery and 1st Earl of Midlothian, British Liberal Statesman died this date i929; succeeded Glad- stone as Party Leader and Prime Minister in 1894 but because the Rt. Hon. Wm. Vernon Har- court, leader in the House of Commons con- sidered his claims to leadership and succession to the Gladstone_ mantle had been overlooked, d is s e l1 s i o n 5 arose in the _Party resulting in Lord Rosebcrys retirement in I396; preached imperialistic ideals, attacked both socialism and tariff reform; vitally inter- ested in education and was elected by the stud- ents of the respective anniversities lord rector of Aberdeen, Edinburgh. Glasgow, St. Andrews, and Chancellor of London university; keen sportsman, winning the Derby in r894, 1895 and i905; a brilliant speaker was known as the “Qrator of the Empire." wrote lives of Napoleon. Pitt. Peel. Cromwell. Randolph Churchill and Chatham: “I must plow my lonely furrow alone . . . . It is beginning to be hinted that we are a nation of amateurs.” Iii The laselingering doubt about a Canadians duty in this war has been blasted by the tor- pedo that sank a couple of ships within sight of a Que-b?! Vlllflge. Maj. the Rev. George G. D. KllPalflffk, 13-5-0. principal in the United Thwlfll-Zlcal COIlBgc, declared in address on be- half of the recently mobilized 2nd Battalion of Tfhe Black Watch (R. H. R.) of Canada. If, geter two and a hfilf yearsof wrir, there should 3")’ dwbt left in Canadian minds about what we are up against, the torpcdoing in the 5h Lawrence should bring it home to us. It i; m longer a. question_ of a European struggle or ‘vai- in the Far East, it is the enemy at our gates the 3am"! lgllht of Hitler within sight of our own $_ Ores. or the saving of our homes, for the liberation of enslaved peoples and for the re. covfry 9f frficdmn’ "fry man is needed. "We lcang wiri this war, we cant put an end to Hit- f" Y “mPlY defflldlflzmur own shores. De- flslllc? new’ W9" ‘llyfhllftl but a lawsuit and s is no awsuilt-qirereflin lifegnd death strug- glewllh eveYYl-“lllllg we hold dear at stake." l‘ i Ill I With reference to what Mr. Grattm O said in his broadcast about the terrible m). running th ‘Leary _ we are China withnfliileghfallure to supply Russlia m’! tract from a rrimftlys of war, ihe following-ex. sometime a - ur-nlo". W9"<"= km!’ r°c¢lv¢d ' N _ E0 is illuminating: Working in this are the real reasons foi- war industry faces. Men do 't ' ‘hell’ Wfifk. and work only forgtllifee lii-(iiigdklabout check and the next raise. Different dgpggty ggcnnlis ggepartment head's‘ in ‘the last analyses) f 19°11". saying thats their (the other fellow s) look out." Sex rears its ugly head glfgzilfilfda Pmty girl walksdown a line of ma. amen "th °""‘ 8°“ Production. Strong dislikes he": B met; for other men and women in an ave irsu ted _in untold losses to the com- P X“P¢°P¢ "ifuslfll to take responsibilitv, 9355""! "18 buck. faking the work time cards; hetc., all] of which have nearly put our plant ti" a roe s, how-eyer. improvements are noted I "5' ml "5 Ye! If! the production of output. see fps difference it makes in Iiere when I men men n character and honesty and singeriiy of Pllfltose. Their work is taken seriously; there is a lmmmllm "l zfllrfllllinr. their production is 200d with others of a different stamp the op- posite is true." run CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN NOTES BY TIIE WAY lie- f ll ' us‘: uivnkbep a. 11:11: 1'54 fully tmfn- ed Civil Defence Service. Weill“? om. It, u n skfiisd and exhclent army numbering millions of lnfll and wcmexi. This 8"“ “my l" maths: and bored. n s!“ f?“ l" naunccies waiting for air ra-ds Q1‘ invasions from which for the m..- meny“ 11 only for the moment, we UBLIC FORUM WORD§ OF I“ $3,. .13: CHALLENGE _, c " '1 Egan‘?- Jofntfingnnor for n. FERTILIZER sIIORTAGI Bun-On account of the shortage of labour in the fertilizer Plims- Mr. King And Ill ltgfiierdeifoliiiee tglafd cflbebhfwlvlres/fl we are tied for ferfllllfl- o“? . \ ' factories. There t-ney cm do 1 Department as been informed Mr. (Jardln rea m-vioe, ready for instant. 1110b“!!- tion in emerBemy- A skeltqn forfgfl. a, “cue and maintenance P1138’- om keen the equ-Jmezit. and Be. mlnlstratzon up to the mark. - d this a finer workroom-b liirnoiim gll our office! mi atom would exact. tahoumndl o! m" 1nd fft noufli for acllxiig gggvllge‘ in the field. They would be drafted at. once to Inc fighting services, without. fear 01' favor. Their organizations can and must. keep going without them. Thug thin must- be dOM. Ind ‘hue 5mg‘ as, personll and Dub‘ 11c must be made. Wll-Ylfilllql-"m we’ cannot win the war. Withwl tine spirit which they embody We may go down. Cowl-TY, ind- 19ml)"- man, wcmim and child. W dew" “id ignominy and drstionor and extinction. Sunday 3191""! London. Brlflsh soclal custom lnyl In" unphssis on the obligation of $110 5on5 of privileged families to serve the state with distinction. This mu. which may be svmmsd “P l“ the phrase “noblesse Qbltgf." l5 the 501g justification fcr privilege. If privilege is aflwPl/Ed B5 scmethx-n! which lays a spwlfll vblifimm 99°“ its pcswssotrs, it ls not unqualified priviiege. but merely We 8N1“? o; special advantages in the ex- pectation of better results measured in yams of public service. In ware; time Britain the butcher b0)‘ a“ the civil servant. the bank 6167K and the scion of art ancient. hcuse each is pulllns his we-Bhf- F°E some reason or other it ecmes a; a surprise to people on the Nsrtin American continent, that. the s0H§ Q1 “me idle Ind mannered rim, or the "decadent. aristocracy’. should distinguish themselves in the dirtiest Jobs. This surprise 1i due, peifmps. to the deck of a powerful national tradil: on of pub- lic service and the failure of the opportunist. rich to infillll lfl~° their off-spring a recognition 0f the trustee nature of‘ wealth and privilege. These refectlons are pygmptcd by recent reports of the distinguished service rpenderrcd by such men as Lord Louzs Mount- batten, Lord bovat. and reoenhy by young Max Alt-ken, son of Lor Beaverbrcok, who Ls a wins 00m‘ 1- mander in the Royal Air Farce. Wing Ccmmander Attken has al- ready won the Distinguished Fly- ing Cross and on Thursday Tl 81l- led the fighter sqiiiidrun Whdl chott. denim four out o-f elBhl Q91“ man raiders and sccred a’ P3111151 victory over a Dormer "E01 — TQ- ronto Globe and Mall. A new method 0f factory lay- out. which has reduced cutmll- delays from bcerrb damflgfl ‘ mugh as 50 rcent.‘ has been evolved by British smeaittsts 11nd engineers Called the vrv1v¢§~<>n lattice." factor-es ejngagied on sm- us; work are not. d spsrsed all over the country but are grouped 0111,59 enough together to 9Y0" d9 5W1“ fntercommunlcatfon If there are. say, four processes in each factory. the bombing of m. 1 nrows 1“ one works means that Ncs. 2. 3- imd 4 prceesses there can 59111 be supplied frcm another faccryi while lf l1 N0. 2 process is PW m" of action the No. 1 output can g0 through No. 2 prccess lesewh-re and return to its own Nos. 3 and 4 To swp output. completely, the enemy must, put: out of actlsn the same process in each factory pnd me mathematical odds against this are immense In fact. be- muse of these Odds. tlte more an- curste the bnmbln! We 8115i“ the neletlve advantage 0f the "lattice", or ores-cross of prcduc- tlon lines. Under the dlscersal system. factories are badly placed to assist aach other and wtteneyer one process ls put, 011i; 0f Ml. On the whole output. of the fact: stops until this has bserrreririedle . With the "lattice" prlneple, how- ever. practlcal examples have shown that. in severe attacks u b0 one-half the output. rate for n. g ven section of industry may be saved, --Brltlsh Industries Bulletin. Tlnlu IIQ now being carried by "Invisible" routes to Brltmrvs ports on spacial waEfms 1n train- loads of 24 at; a. time. Production is so arranged that. batdies 0! them are ready at, night, when they pore ‘gender! onbthe triaitlila andeaeilg ports y spec mu s u ‘t’? arrive there 1n the dark. The res t fs mat. very few 1e 1n Britain have any lnkllii! 0 fhl! "invisible" traffic. The new “rec- tim-k" or flat wagon on which two heavy Valentines tanks can be cur- ried, ls a special feature of these tank trafns. Where there is not n. loading dock a ramp u used. but, thg tanks can if neoecaiéy, climb aboard themselves. Work out. by the mllway operations experts in d ment and went; into effect on July that there are cars of fertiliser al- ready rolling toward the Island‘. but, it l.s lmfipsslblaew know 1M ‘viii’: liidaviii ‘lNadrrDllll-Wl to leern whether ft Ls assistance from (Judft-h Robinson. la News) “The quality of a. man's love will determine me nature of bLs deecs; occasion may present tin opportun- Dk ity. but character none WU-l roccrd the experience . . . m! ortal pertinent In 1rd $0 11W"! 1°!’ mu: comes when conduct, n. o. week or ten av: in the fertfllaer last rises to the level of aim and plants. Everything ls being done that the ideal nndii its fuiflllment in ma; can be done to assist the pie- actual." the realm of the sent serious situation. Til-E BECK-Ell’ Or‘ HEROISM. I ism. Sir. etcis by W. L- hif(6é!gen% ) _ yr . M,,,,_,,,,",,,“A~,fif,§§,,; Somewhere between ism and 1942 the author seems to have lost the eopyrlaht and mlslnfd the secret. It. couid hardly have been heroism which inspired the assurance offer- ed the don. J. P. A. Cardin last Monday by the Prime Minister of Canada: den: Cardin . . . You will recall that in my broadcast . . . “My dear Cardin . e ton pf the Cabinet TRAVEL RESTRICTIONS 3113-111 The Guardian of May 19 an editorial appeared rezflrdln! W- strictfons on travel between the United States and Canada. and re- ferring to im editorial which w- pearecl in the Globe and Mall. This editorial stated that. "is real- dent. of the United States seekfna to "“"“ ilmifidl‘. mlili ‘iffiiillilg ‘i332 c en s gfrllve ‘forms, and for people who denote any change in Government live outside of Washington there is nqllcy- - - . no uarantee that it can be received MY d6" CB-fdin . . . I cannot w“ in thiryy days after the appll- but feel that; you have given to the cation 15 med;- decision of the Government a algnl- ThLs restriction refers only to ficenw "5 f“ HEW!‘ intended t0 Canadians residing in the United hi"? - _- - States who have not taken out their Qwas-On may present the olpnor- third fialmtullzlltlon paper. nv “my but chi-reefer alone w l re- Amerlean citizen can travel to Can- 9°"! $119 QXNYWHOQ- ma just the “m, a, he always The record written May 11. 1942. could. provided he has some idenn- shows the Prime Minister of Can- flcatlon papers, such as birth cer- tificate. voter's certificate or some other document to show that he 1s a bone, flde United States citizen. Canadians who are living 1n the .- adws character as twenty-six years of careful successes have shaped it- somethlng undersized for the oppor- tunity. something short of the hero- ism required in a man who must United States and have not secured 1W1! the wreckage his own mistakes their third naturalization viiper hm wide and <> a brave and hon- should obtain what Ls known as I. 945 1111118. Re-entry Permit. which Ls referred 14°“- .P- J- Arthur Cardin. to 1n your editorial. It Ls true that "Om his Lelider and his ft. does take a little time to secure 59 0K1 9- 901M 0f honesty toward this Re-entry Permit from Wash- l»! Own People in Quebec. proved mgtom we wish u, make 1g cm;- himself several levels nearer fulfil- thatz United States citizens can come menl-lfl-the-rcalm-of-tlie actual or to canada u “may the ideal so fully protected by copy. In connection with the fact that. l‘ hi U906.) Canadians who o u» the United t will be I fortunate thins for us states must obtan B. passport, this I11 l! Bll-Sh-speakfng Minister; regulation was not made by the find We fifllmlle l0 Drove f“ k8 Canadian Government, but was B5 11°55," 811d lflyal in service to made by the United States Govern- 091184185 11096 01’ freedom u Mr. Cardin has proved himself in service glmQllebeCs tradition of isolation- Mr Cardin has always been a realist. He has known how far s politician can g0 on blufflng his sup. orters and where he must stop. He as never crossed the line. He ha: known-who batten-what keeps the Liberal Partv fn power 1n Qug. bee, and has never pretended not to know exoe t on the usual occasions 01 Public ypoerisy. He has chosen tqserve sma 1 ends fnsbead of great, at n. moment when the choice 1m ehfrepxdom éOT us all. But at e . choice plan? c oaen and made h; No one cfin fall to understand artfrg abtnet 40. This was not ut into effect by the United States vernment. as a discriminatory measure against. Canada, but apnlles to everv person. from any country who wishes to en- fer uie United slates imri they de- mand from each person a Passport from the Government of the couri- try to which they belong. Another point ls that Canada at. the present time needs every Unified States dollar 1t. ls possible to obtain in order to pay for our large war purchases 1n that; country, and for that portion of war purchases that Canada ts financing on behalf of Great. Britain. I hope every render of your paper will urge his or her preservation and protection. CARVELL Distributor: FOB. SALE EVERYWHERE C-l-l. PAINTS FOR LASTING PROTEC Oil. Resources (Moncton ‘rranscrlpb The announcement that. the fed- eral overnment. 1n co-operatlnn with e government of New Bruns- wick was investigating our oil shale deposits is welcome news. The value of these deposits has been dee fmpressed u on those familiar w them, and t ere have been many urgent appeals to the government. through the press and otherwise, for their development. Action. to the extent at least of investigating, at. last is being taken, a resul no doubt of the fncreastn difficulty exper- ienced in import rig oil supplies 1f the claims made on behalf of the ofl shaies are even partiallv cor- @3- frlends in the United States to what P. J LLI‘ Cardin means r t. Albert co t could furnish come to Canada this year for the when he says that: in view of the efibugh oil to 132Gb, the greater part above reason. Prflmlses he, as a member of the of the requirements of the Maritime r am, Sir, etc" Ceblflet» made to the people cf lle- Provinces. ~ B. GRAHAM ROGERS bev, the deletion or clause from What action. if any. lll be taken Supervisor, P. f-l I. Travel the National Resources Mnhl "- wlll -‘ ‘ on the result. of the 1n. Bureau Act makes it impossible for ll m to vestlgsllons now being made If the fiéflfllfl l member of the Cabinet. facts revealed by the survey; should Boluenecks |n lone but a mental contort onist be at all favorable, the won of de. , , 13°" d POPE to find out, whs Mr. velopment should be undertaken as Nazi Production fifyrsqlne I-eadei- means when m soon B5 posslble- Obtaining oil from "In lfleulfontiggliafienitzssued ‘£5 ii,“ many? How many planes? How 1_1 Guess“ f many submarines? How fast can peg afioe btlpeiqdiariiolzlfig silly llgdfé- she replace them? Here Edwin ions. or even the appearance of any Shank; elf‘ thAes foignzexé Bepilln btg- raestrlctlona,‘ (in fir!» power; o; the eiiuo Te socae esgd- overnmen oeet ttlflf. closes the Nazis’ struggle to keep 1°? will W" - - - llllyaiiegraCaidliil: up the battle of production. After I “mm” W?» 1691 thrill you have giv- five months internment in Ger- fgflnif (if; gfclelvnapf the Govern- many, shanke is ln Lisbon through n w“ new izggwad a, gtznlflcancg, an exchange of Axis and American e 1 ,"°- - - - nationals) determgl" flay of a mans love will my Edwin shank“ ASSMM“ a e nature of his deeds. P SI fl W ll. n q Hitlerkrbi-bblem no lronegldr fs one Lack CIPQTdIHatIOII -_._. (Halifax Chornlcle) of ate ahead of the allies‘ war output, Now he has n. struggle to kee up with it. One of the most unfortunate u- eels of our war effort to date has n the obvious lack of co-ordlna. I've serious bottlenecks stand tn his way-the chronic and growing 3211:“ ébxeigween members of use gov- shortage of raw materials, 55b0- tage and lack of manpower, depsrtments at these repea (How miuiy tanks has Ger- traxisportatlon and electric power. Production figures, naturally, are state secrets What, meagre hints or official indications that get out, are open to suspicion as attempts to mislead. An estimate by a source with access to reliable information. however, has put Germany's ctr- plnne production potential tween 2.200 l-nd 2.500 planes a month. Her total of planes ls be- l lfeved to have risen from about 10.000 when the war started to about 26,000 now. Yet, the need for airplanes grew so urgent. last fall that Goerlng ordered to the eastern front. all planes reserved for testfnl and ex- perimentation. Aircraft. engineers f d announcement at: “ylu-ffif ffgiteflélovesbilftns: £42321 of lIhQ War- ine m wmiii m“ this source would help solve the tanker problem, now rrowfn more acute, and every union o tinned from the shales would to that ex- tent reduce the necessity of risking lives in transporting ll: through sub- marlne-lnfested waters to the south. ___________i_ QUEEN 0F FESTIVAL KmNTVIL-IE. N‘ 8., May 1B- (QPl-Joan Blackwood, prnclpal Professional Bards ‘ McLEOD 8i BENTLEY W. B. HENLEY. ll. Q l. A. BENTLEY K. O Barrister: and Attorneys ll- LII MONEY T0 LOAN 1M Prince Street Morréllandllompanyi ll. F. ARBIIIBALII i Chartered Accountable lufem ‘Inns Illllflllll Charlottetown we to believe Howe k o conjunction with the im- Of- Who had been working on new de- viliat he l; nu n w flee, these “rectank.s" Allow the signs were immimii w oonoeu- Donald coriioiiiin§$$b§ii'v',°"7‘- ..; all width of the railway gauge t0 trate on boosting production. better Informed chm m, mum, o; used no that wlth the llreer from one plant alone, ft Ill Munitions md supply? Moat ls tanks there no only inches be ma, one of every four engines would pmbebi prem- u; M, firs. - British Industries Bulle- was bolrig turned back for 0v"- 1mm’, ward o, p, but ‘meme, - . hauling after only a few flights. these contradictory; a manta S‘. Though some of the oronlrers whfl were damaging the national war effort have found it deafmb est their words and protest. that they did not mean what. they said. we are not yet. at, the end of the harm they have done. It, was well that, 10rd Halifax should speak of the realities in America. l-fcwever reckless the slandener of the serv- ices and their commanders ho spreads hi; awn fears and spite and sows n crop -of unruasonlng mistrust. The higher efflrency cannot be obtained frcm fghtlng men. whose equipment. training, lenders and comrades in the other All‘!!! are publicly delumed day by day. urea t, oossflfe out. put. ol our lnduatrfes will not. ed while irresponsible continually flung at. workers alike. The abuse is mansgzrs and bu! lood of tépe cromkers has made o. good deal R trouble hero at heme; but. shroud they have done much fleet- ei- damage Mr. Brendan Bracken remarked recently that. the prime aim of the Aids prepayments ls to pplson the relations between Eng nd and America. If the cronkei-s had any some of refit they would have known that their clmvslgn was bound to provide Nazism with uoflsonoui materlsl. -- Dully ‘Itdegraph i Post (Londcn), The he! of the miller In flu! we Canadians are going to have to beecme rflllnrd to dolrg without s good many things that. we rke. and Momlng y decide whet-her Submarines slid from the wlyu at n rate estimated at 15 t0 l8 I month. But Germany is not bulld- cs ital ship; because, lay naval 0 floera. she cannot and still lfneep up other needed naval bulld- 8. Her only aircraft, curler, the Graf Zeppelin. is said to be lying ll lls in Gotheshafen harbor only 00 per cent, nipletcd. With unlimited msnpowor Ind raw material resources, nlval ox- perts believe, Gummy could gm. duce 26 to 28 U-bocts s month There nu no reliable utfmues on tank production but Nlll dif- ficulties are indicated by the fut. that two tank dfr‘ ' __, cgmqu. flalgd with desert yellow for Afr-cl. had to be repslnted over- nlsht and sent east lust, full at the helugllii: of the 1N1 campaign in harmful and oonfus . F-‘Xflflnt for the most mutlne mat- ters there ls every reason "u"; {Inigo l Epvgenmenttglftflcluls noun . s m“ mpmvociiu . of public contra , . mllzlyoglsltigyio hast thing in theta-gill w e . ormnent exists. N mpomm. l” ls s What Ottawa, needs badly clenrm of p blf In! . u ‘of; ormnt-lon —thlt h . 1h Plrtmcn Then should be no dal homo Not. s (flaring or lei-elm or domestic eoiuumpiod fer-mic l,“ £33 “mm” ‘w; statement; of men: can be carefulf checked f sofa and v latencies.“ iimgli u i '°‘""' distance from the lovmtudzglhcbf In ado l ‘on “lbtrgvatalmlsr course of ect- ogggn w n» hl halt u: of ima. ,. ____ - What we ought to do we austere life whim stares m face ls just the klnd 0f ' we hive been am r. or whether It isn't. minty impleusnnt. and svmf-‘lhlnl to net. good 1nd mad 111011!» Mid with the Germans 6nd Jim. when: delight. in all sorts p! giffflvllffiufi‘ evlltries ha w"! u! pm. - Halifax Giranlcle. f house I arnment and do to let n c101 bouu l fn m” "III n Wm: nan --_-________ MANSLAUGIITII CRAIG! nounuox. N. 5., miy 19.. (CPl-A manslaughter churn was lodged will! nnfnst Ignatius Mc- Irvvrc of Dominion in connection wlthjhe death of Lawrence Gou- lllt. ‘fall's "‘°"..i°....‘ ' ll In root Ill". ~ PALMER 8i HASLAM A. J. lfAslléArnlgl. an: hi: um emu» uninsu- Chariot In. P. l. I. NONI! T0 LOAN Ill 86 _ P. 0. In If MucGUIGAN G TRAINOR MARK If. , o. n. cnnzlfihgiirib: E 3 Bntrh ton ouiéwlifl. J.2.i..‘.‘i’.l"m lllchmo fun Charlottetown l-l. F. McPllEE 1A., KC. NOTARY Co. IAIRIBTII IOLICITOI E lg OIIIIIOIUMII IELL 8i MATHIESON IONIY ‘I0 LOAN m: IXAIIlIIED BLAQSElinFITTEB ......'r ....- ,.. £4. O If you are building or repair- ing this Spring, take your C-I-L Paint Dealer into your confidence. He knows scores of‘ short cuts to save you time and money and the C-I-L Paints he sells will look better and last longer. Your C-I-L Paint Dealer is an expert in home ‘a. colour sheets f9’ x i2") m, 5i visualised through f0 llparul trnnspnren Four Colour over. ‘nun of‘ homes. BROS. LTD of schools at Hantsport, ti. s1. 5 was announced tonight. HALlFAX.N.$ When ln Halifax stop sf fir! “Non Scoflnn”. a modern firs-proof structure with ill Intent fire protective IP‘ pttanoeu. 170 splendid’! Qppolnted guest mom l" I'll-h hill Ind shower. In * ' ' lQfllflI IOI-fOOdA of the Pfllvlff‘ " g gpcdllty, Ind seruce i me , lltan standard- libml mi! railway Iwl" connected by lfvmki "m" hinting fall and bafilm” tnnnfm charges. mm mm $4.00 w W- Ask any 0. ihly- AW" for booklet or write: NU" agcr, The Nora Scotw/i. Halifax, NH. ./_—_—r. . w. (,-\NAI)I_~\N NATIQNAV ' _ | , 1 liarmofll’ 315i ii‘i'""i.:i:::‘ ' tone, i m glogtxnllactor i’ Ho"? wood to flatter the p1}!- unlbeaugyofyours llL ‘a O | l a u I l OOeIuIJO oJAv ll rout!" -. ii: rvo mics 1011a“ am:- 5