PAGE FOUR THE l. IIARLU TTETUWN GUARDIAN Morning Dally rFonnded In llfll President; ueuL Col. W. UIINW l lid-IN yr“ frelltlenl»: J. B. Burnett. IJJ. Baum-y; u“; uni, u. A. aluminum. 0.10. ' Edit-n and uauulnl Ulrsvwf- J- 5 "mlm- F44- Aswclnte Editors: l-rlmk Walker and Ill L lilflll" SUIISURIPTIUN HATII a, mu m r.1-;.1., nun nu yew 82-50 M I will“! $1.25 tor 3 months; m In: one month Ulty Dehvery $5.00 per year. 53-90 N!’ 9 WWI“. 51,75 m; 3 months; I00 (or on loath. B) Natl to other PNlVl-IJCEI and U. S- A. 554W Dll N" autumn; n eeku: $14-00 w w"; Sl-W l" t “will 50c for 8 month! ‘IIJQ Charlottetown Guunllun may b0 obtllntd ll llutnuui‘: News Agency, Time: Uuulfl. Roi York! m. auutu new: Agency, Corner lull and Wuhlllllfll. “an...” Alulrupullltln nevi- Ann-w. l“! P"! ‘k Montreal; J. Hue, 3M Buy 52., Toronto; Nun Mull. Uhuhmu Luurlrr, Ouuwui Hulls’: nun Qllld. Bndhury, 001i llub rat-law... chop, QIIIII\'IUII u. 5.. ' ‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker flldll 8M Weakest Ink.‘ , sarcnnar, 1111.11 4. 1942- New Zealand’: Example Loyalty to him, personally, and to the Liberal Party is Mr. Blacltcilzie King's idea of _what con- stitutes the virtucs of a Cabinet hllfllstfl‘; Pl" there are other and more hlllmrlant 1°Yall'e_5' The .\'e\v Zulllitlld Labor Government, recogniz- ing this fzict, has expanded into a 6081mm‘ lllfUtlQll the addition of five nlen t0 form a W31‘ fllllllilllsll'itlll>ll of lllil'l(‘(‘l'l illcnlbers. Four of the gttlpOilitcics are lizt-lllhrrsyof tlle oppoiitifln, 1n- cludiltg ll. Ii. llollalld, leader 0f the National Partv The fifth is a trades union leader from otltsfitlb Parliament. Mr. Holland i5 alSO adClCd f0 ti“. ‘m, Unmet which is available to deal prompt- ly with \\1ll- rplcsiiolls on a “day to day basis." lit aiiliiilillviilq the changes, Prime Minister Fraser said Mr. llUllilllil had been appointed M _ter of \\'ai- Expenditures and Deputy Clllllflllllll of tho ncw zlditiiliistratiotl. Another war cahillt-l ilii-nlhl-r, former Prime Minister G. Coatcs, lJCC/JIIICS Minister of War Co-ordin- ation. The procedure followed by Prime Minister Iirascr is the common- sense one of picking the best men he can find, rt-gardlt-ss of party inicrcsts, Alas, one finds it inipos~ilile cvcll to iiilagine Mr, Mackenzie King doing that. Citing the Record SCVCFZII Liberal speakers in the House of Com- nioils ilave referred to coltscription as having been imposed iii the last war by a. Conservative goverllnlent in ()l'tlt'l' to win an election for a party which, in thr- words 0i the Al. P. for lhntizlc, (which, had “lust the last vcstige of the collfidcllcc of tilt: ilctllllfi." So far irolll conscription in 1917 being "im- posed" oil the ilcoillc, says the Ottawa Journal, a huge nlzijlirliy of the JICOIYIC did it, themselves. .\llil it \\'.'l>' iillilvr a Lillian tjovernnleilt in which tllt- hl-s; of iht- Liberals of the day co-operated, except Sir \\':Tlfrid Laurier, And so far was the Conservative party from being discredited previ- rilslv, or (Iii-Frill; support, that the proposition fiir bllirllt tilivcrlililctlt came previously first fioill Ill» lvalll t'- like 5h‘ Clifford Sifton, and leading Idltt‘ ii papers like the Winnipeg Free Pres; and the TXJrllllto Star. Conscription ill the last war was aHHOHHCEd a5 his l)t'JllC_\' by Sir ltlllir-i-t Borden in May, 1917. I\l(‘.'lll\\'illl; l.ll><‘l'1ll~ had proposed tinion, includ- ing ilillliltiilli of Ullll>T\'l'l[tlil'lll, Borden xvas joined by the bis: Liberals of Canada, excepting Sir “llfritl Lauricr. Ill October, the Union Cabinet took office, including nine men who had been 111110112 thi- lwulvrs of the Liberal party previous- ly. The nine Libcrlils who became cabinet min- isters iicre N. \\'. Roivell, Hugh Guthrie, Ar- tllur Sifton. J. A. Calder, T. A. Crerar, F. B. Carvell, A. K. MacLean, C. C. Ballantyrle and S. C. Ncivbllrn. There was also an Independent Labor illan, G. D. Robertson. All of the Lib- erals had railkcd high previously in the party councils. Under the aegis of this Union Govern- ment the general election of 1917 resulted in a tremendous majority for conscription. The popu- lar vote ill favor was 1,057,793, the opposition "m? 74-134‘); and of the latter, quarter of a mil- lion votes were in Quebec. Elsewhere, the vote was nearly two to one for conscription. Treacherous Al All Times Everyone ill Alaska is said by Dr. Stefansson to know that the Japanese know far more about the Aleutians than do the Americans themselves. Tiht-y may very probably know far more about the Ilfllidi Qollilllbia coast than is known to Can- ltiiaiis rcstiililsible for that military intelligence. It would not be unusual. The Japanese are still better informed on the north and northeast coasts of .l\ustl"alia than are the Australians. The whole of lllt‘ bfllllllWCSl Pacific seemed as plain to lhc invading Japanese as were the fingers on their hands. In the last few days of the capture of Singapore, the Japanese showed they knew, the island of Singapore better than did its white dt-fcildcrs, and they nlovcd with certainty to cracks and ililvts from which they advanced against ltiigt resistance, Nothing those facts, the Winnipeg Free Pres! points out that the Japanese have been accumulat- id}; kiiolvlcvllri- of the Alcutians ever since the llil-sians \\'Ill. Tlicly have stored it along with all the ilaval illti-lligr-ilcc they gleaned from the coast- line; off which they have gone fishing for ptarlS or salmon, 'l‘helr cram to make soundings and take plllalllflfillllls ii-zis ~o laughed at as to be al- loiveil to go lllllil'lll("~lt‘ll. lt was all done, smiling- ljr. as a llizillrr of inconscqucnce while exercising QQrvllfillli.‘ rights gl-aliictl as international privi- ligw", iii-ll, pearls, what not —the industry 0f gutiilr- ihcln clliiccalctl the cunning to learn hOW tn <ti-il.~ Jli ihi- iill-"llsiir-cting country. 'l'll' ,\Ilili?:lli. must he semi by the Japanese ll'i\\'t't‘ll this continent and - ri defunct‘ fringe practically ' l l" n mimtlillt‘. as is shown by - than those (ll'.'l\\'l'l lo thr- lil, lt' lhr- Japanese mean to invade - ";ill’ Si‘ JIN‘ L"lll\'lll(‘f"l they mean l, i" i‘ illl; ilill-i ¢~p illc fliiiv of supplies and Bid 'l""‘l‘ ‘~ :1 h; l' \"|\ ' v ,. ll|il 1 l‘.'l"illl tu (I0, from North America. The bridge to bewatched is that over the Aleutian islands. If, though, the more flagrant demonstrations of belhgerency against this continent are any indication of inten- tion to attack North America, the inlets and hide- out; arid lines of approach within the Aléulla-HS will best serve those who best know them. It may be, however, suggests the Free Press, that the Japanese have got all they are likely to get out of their Sllfllk)’ bcaclicotitlting. They have spied and pried, and it has brought them gains, But the lid is lifted. They may strike here or there but are watched. They made some lucky strikes, but have not been so lucky of late. They knew every indent on the shores of the Coral sea, but had to flee out of it. They knew every in- let in tiny Midway but lost a good part of a fleet there. They plan to strike again but have good reason now to feel they cannot be sure of what will happen. They are no longer getting away so easily or so securely with what they could do just because they knew every detail in some coastline. _____.i__________. .- EDITORIAL NOTES- n- ix w n- Canadian airmen say there were fires in Bremen as the result of their it looked for all the world like quilt. so many raid, that a patch-work #- v v v- Under an order of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board women's shoes will be restricted to seven colors~—town brown, golden tobacco, turf tan, boue tan, boue jacket, k0na red, black and white; men's footwear to five colors, and men's work boots to two. Leather slippers will be manufactured in only six shades and babies’ soft soles in four. n- lr a n- “This war will be won ill the air, This is your hour. You have an important and glOYiOIIS job, This is you opportunity, grasp it and ‘make the most of it," Air Marshal W. A. Bishop, V,C,-, D.S.O., .\I.C., D.F.C,, told a class 0f graduates at No. 5 Sci-vice Flying Tiraiilillg School, R.C.A.F. l! After completing their visits to Scout centres in all the provinces of Canada, the “Blitz Scouts" are spending a short period in the Un- ited States, where they are receiving the 5111110 enthusiastic welcome tllc_v received throughout the Dominion. About the middle of July they will return to Canada for a well earned vaca- tion, during which tinle they will make only a. few public appearances, =o< =l< >t= r >0- C01. Alan Cockeraln, D.S.O., who vacated his seat in South York to taernlit Mr. Meighen to contest it, has been rctircd from the army ullder the age limit. Ilc is only forty Sevcii and wan- ted to go ovcrscas hilt ivas told he could not. He thinks politics more than age accounts for his retirement, but the Minister of Defence gave him the option of service in Canada. =t= >i< ti =i= Indcpcmlcnce Day ill the United States, so-call- ed after the Declaration of Indclmndcllcc, I77_6, by which the thirteen original States broke their colonial allegiance to Great Bfilflln- ThOHl-“Ih the Declaration reads as "Ill Coilgrcss. July 4, 1776," New York's atlhcsion was in fact not voted un- til the 15th, and it was not until lllu 19th that the document was ordcrctl to be ellgrvsscd and signed. l!!! .__.... * i, * * A return tabled in the llouse of Coillimms last week for All". ll. R. Jacknlan, M. l‘., tells a sad story. It 5ll0\\'5 that ill 193i) we sent Japan 46,886 tons of scrap iron ollt of a total of 93,- 837 ton; exported. In 1938 we let them have 41. 003 tons out of 85,122 [OHS exported, and in 1937 46,948 toils out of 143.977 tons, The export of scrap nlctal went tinder pCrnlil; regulations in September, 1939, but as late a5 1941 it was leav- ing the country under old contracts. Ii 1i Ill There is a terrific retail bccf shortage i" Toronto due to farmers and producers resisting a move on the part of middlemen to reduce prices, The position and feeling; of the pro- ducers and livestock brokers is illustrated by the action of one of the brokers Thursday. Ho had five loads of cattle and rather than hold on to them he determined to sell them for the best possible, though reduced, price. He spent sev- eral hours offering them to various buyers, in- eluding the Wartime Food Corporation, but bids iverc so low that he had not sold them up to late afternoon. Illi Nrflting that American commentators have blamed bad leadership for the collapse of the British Army in Libya, the llrooklyn, (N. Y.) Eagle sagely remarks: "\\"hcncvcr we are tempt- ed to get critical about any of Our Allies. it 1S well to remember that,’ had-"wenot been caught napping at: Pearl Harbor, the \var might have gong otherwise than it did in the Pacific. It may be idle speculation now, but it is probably certain that, had we been awake at Pearl Hal-or, Singa- pore and the Philippines would not have fallen- Most certainly they would not have fallen so quickly. And had the Japanese not had such easy sailing ill that part of the world it is possible that the situation in the Mediterranean area might never have deteriorated a5 it has. a a l: n- A lot has been said about Prime lllinfstcr lilac- kcnzie King hilt llotl, R, ll. llansoii made the aptest comment when hc quoted. apropos of MT. King's speech in the conscription debate, lllfi following lines from W. S. Gilbert: A complicated gcnllcmait, allow me l0 pre- rail, Of all flm arlr aml faculties Ill-f‘ lcrirc embodi- mcnt, Heir a great arillinieticlan ‘who can demon- strate tvflh ear: Tlm! mo and Iron are Illmr, or firm, or any- llllllfl you filrntr; An rmfnrnl loy/irlun trim (an nialrc it clmr l0 1'01! T/ml lllnrk 1's 7('lll./r"-'~7i'llr‘ll lnnlerrl n! from fllr‘ [irri/irr [in/ill ri/ rival: fl irmrrirllnu.r flrlloliu/la-l who'll nn/lvrlnl-r l0 rliow Tlmf ‘I'm’ ft lit/l imvIl/rr ulirl n llmlrr for ‘N0.’ form THIE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN NOTES BY TllE WAY Surgical Instruments for the battle-meld and for civilian hos- pitals are Lean; nlade mutln more quickly to-day by new ml-‘lhode worked out 1n a. Britten factory. While surgeons knives and spec- ialised delicate tilstruinents are still hand-forged and receive tn- cllvidnat treatment, most. of the essential instruments at present tn us: are standardised, espeoaily as nearly all or the-m are for the British and Russian Governments. The many varieties of surgcal for- ceps can therefcm be made from drop lorgizlgs. Uniformity 1n these stampulgs is the aim 50 tizat. the instruments may be maclutcd and set, and, after minor aulustcnents from a skilled operator, turned out with perfect workmanship, Apart from B. conszderabie reduction 1n ccst, production 1s now ten tames as QUICK, Instruments fcr Russia have a special coating of copper as an additional protecton against ccrrcslon. British mdilsmes Bulletin. Portable radio sets for ships’ crews which do no. give away post- tions lo tne enemy are 210w In use In Britain's Royal Navy. The Navy has received more than 15.000 sets and {£5,000 raised by subscriptions has b" "s, sloops, submarines and torpedo-boats are among the sntall craft- whose ship's companies can ncw ltsten In when off duty. As the sets are “screen- ed," they do not; re-radate, andso do not disclose tile ship's p.slt10n to the enimy, The manufacturers tn-acle several modifications V in a standard portable radio, giving 1L an exceptionally strong CAbllWlZ and fitting up the ‘chassis’ so that the set. would be able to stand 11D the many hard knocks likely t0 be received under Service condi- tions, It has roughly {O0 separate parts. No nc:umt1lniot' ls new 'a'.y and the battery gives 240 luurs’ service. The makes have lxen able to issue frsttl bstttcrtls lit the rat/e of 1,000 a week, and 10,000 valves have been sent. out 1n use last twelve llltlllllli. '1‘.:e Royal Air Force (ms b en supplied with 5,600 sets and the Azuly has had 8,000. 'I‘(1c,v are bdng vssd in many re- mote districts of Britan as well as tn Iceland and tine M.d:lle Eas-t. The manufacturers curred on producing the sets throughout the "blitz" a‘ to sy and ivsrktlic-ps were actullly razed to the grcund and many assent/at parts and machine Vc-l; destrcytd. Despite thee difflc: les, they have been able to carry on, and there are now mcre than 160.000 of their sets 1n use. - Robert Williamson. Thousands of pairs of white leather glcv:s for Russ as ski troops are balzzg made in Britain under the drcstlcn of fcur Czechs who owned Eurotels biggest giove factory wisen the Nazis marched on Prague, T112 gicvcs are nlnde frcm British cow “belly” Ens, “trim in lite natural colour i; buff but is treated with 63's’ Niki l0 Dmilic? the white camouflag:d effect. The Czech mailuf-aczurers were estab- lished 1n Pra time they prc-rturcel fclm 40.00 to 50,000 dozen pairs a yea ' of all kinds of leather gl t . .5, a . , y :1 -‘ d rcrsshlile and fabric gACV-‘S of simpex mesttea and irt silk. The g and- father of the pre ent .~ ., .6 dlrxtors trd . cclfcticn of .' . T ey iiizltidtd a pair of Naltcieus uh ch we e the Ills‘, glcv s, as dis irca fioin mit- tens, ever made, ad oti ers wcrn by Kin Eai-ara VII, G"-EI.IIPTESS Zita. 0i Avstria-Hungaly, Po Plus XI and Presdtt Masalyk of Czrchcslcvzilzil, When eafrbitlng on the Ccntlitent bzfcre tile war the firm was affixed a pa 1" 0t‘ glcvrs by Muasclinl Thy wcri da- clinsd The dieoors caire to Britain Just before the Nazis 1n- veded tttrlr count: . Stwtlng afresh with little but. their exper- ience, the four experts hive train ed a stiff c-l abc" 250 British “ljifkllfcpilz, Tc-dj. 1:1 aclffllon to gloves for RPSSI‘ . Arc gn rlscns. they are ticlrlrg the uiar efforts on Britain's lacuna frcnt with "metal string" gloves for WOYIKBK‘; twnlng out shells and guns in the mun’- tlon factories. Fg-ct; frcm England. An Invention nrtenled In 1893 bill: stllborn because It was before its time has bren prcduced In a. mcdemfsed power-driven version elp on Britain's agricultural frcnt, It ls a tllatttl-makhlg mn- ehlile uinicti enables rlcks to be covcrcd at half the crst and on.- tth the matt-ltours of the old metlacd and is be rig made tn hun-" drsds for Britain's next harvest. Straw fed Into the matirfne ls stitched lnto n ccntlnuous mat, which ls the: cut- into csnvenlent lengths generally o1 9 It or 1g f; The mazlufa-ctiizttig cost. l5 ago“; 3 1-2d. s, yard (wit/a ivneateiled MTHW Bl 4.10s. a tzn) and the production rate Ls frcm 2 yards a minute, although one farmer claims thit he can make a mile 1n a. day. The Jab can te dc-ne at. any time of the ‘ear and the miittng stored ln 1‘:‘1s until recruited Country Agricultural Ccnimltiees are find ng that. e machines solved many of Brltrln‘; w rttme problems. Unskilled labour can be ther on t/ae farm or in the committee's centir-l dep: lengths of mat-tin and dlsirl‘ 1 abetted immediately they are built, for there are no page to rat out. and the normal sinking only pulls the stitches tighter, saving tPe use of rick covers and avcidirlg the risk of weather damage. v.11 1r- he rick ls settling the thatch Ls cannletely gale proof. - Loxdon Information. Twenty of Lmidon’; glam p". senger blues will 50:11 be ‘railing bellnd them miniature anthracite furnaces so that thy can run on producer-gas msierd cf petrol. In their mlllon mlfes n veer of road service the 20 buses will save some- tl-llnz like 175,000 gallons of pPtrol; a d, 1f th h B00 Lon- . for the eo-srn tankers will be tire Jo‘) of calrylng gallons c-f petrol a. year, But this ls only one ltrm ln Bri- tain's camcnlgn to save Nady 1.000 vmrnerclzl burning prcducev-gas, and (quip- ped with the system, which will save 30.000000 "aliens of petrol a _v"ar. Th:- launchlng of lhs great fleet of vehicles produtclrg their own carbon monoxlfe gas ls the SIICNEP-Sllll result of contrnuoiis re- search into fuel llfrtlllfmg since the war began Thr- ffist ]ll‘OlllI"PT-K.Y! unit was matl- by an FIngll-tlman dur m: the lat war but silbicnuent dove opment has been Principally In Fuscwl, w‘cr.~, (forever, lt- c"n- trad rntli-r ilpan "a" c'-arccal lllel to be had there rather than on the e in 1882, In reace- lnbe l” OQ-bbfltlfi. for exrmole, The Dehydration Industry In War - Time __myu_nuui_ or_ Canada __ Dehydration In fi-IIMII During the last few months the canaatan Government has been qeively encouraging experimental work tn the dehydration o! vege- tables. It L: only fair to any that this work ls backed by n larger basis of research than exktc ln most countries. Fer nearly twenty years, that ts since the formation of the "Dthydratlcn Committee" by the Department o! riculture ltl 1928, experiments have 02:1 car- rled on to determine the beat methcds of dehydrating Canadian app-lies and the experience gained k now being applied to the dehy- drapticn of vegetables. One point “Inch has been emphasized con- sistently throughout the work of the Committee l; that inn qual- ity and fine fevcur are essential for fgult or vegetables to be pro- oesse , During the past winter the Can- adian Government. was Informed that the British Government was interested In dehydrated vegetables to an amount ct approxmnately 1,000 tons. While the Canadian m- dll-Slrv was not equipped to handle on short notice such a immediate steps were taken ln the establishment of tat. plants and the speeding u o! experunenta- tlon. At that lme representatives frcm the United Klngldcm pointed out that no ccmmerclal samples of dehydrated vegetables from any country had been considered en- tirely satisfactory from the point or vicw of nutrition. The Can- adlan tests indicate that dehydrat- ed Vesetebles can be of fine flav- our and retain from 50 to ‘f5 per , he Original vitamin con- Ftve experimental dehydra- tlcn plants have been operating to: stme months. processing po- tatoes, carrots, turnps and e111,- bilge frcm the 1941 crop. These are b81118 held as a. reserve sup 1y for the Canadian Anny, On fire basis of these results. Canada shzuld be able to supply large qliatitltles 0t hIgh-quakty dshyrat- ed vegetables. Dehydratlng Procgggeg The actual m tlo . e drying ‘or fruits. Many of these, su l1 as dates. firs, raisins are dnea in the whole state; otters, aprlcsts for example, are halved and pitted, while at les should be peeked, cared and 51cm, Cut fruits, suth as aprcots and apples. are treated with sulpur dlcxtde, which acts a; a sterilize;- and prevents dlscrlcrlzaltoa, such " ts must be ‘ccc-ked before using b..°£‘?éi2.‘%.%§‘”? ‘ti’. "r mph“- ru wltlhput scakln ca? med m: _s ure ts remcvezl b t. drying In tine sun or b; aiilriiigi dehydration pro- evaporation. Mangh of! the cerses e n t‘: ’ln| r ~ teflmo-‘usv, but en rslatcrt cskeiicllimrj)? the prfnclnles involved may b; or _ attest. ‘Hie dhydratlon p-cces; 1n the case or vegetables in. .ves careful cleaning and cut- tln- into small places, ‘ flakes. These nr: then 'blaactrd" . lng wit‘ w . of 3 to 5 per ass has a‘- lzl research lnto of the vegetables, shculd be potatos ln in salt ava- v fointfnuing, , ryln o’ the Yrlrctabes ard particulzvlvg a5 to the prriprr svge which dehvdrlvlon placiblso rig-I, P98 a es ifcla wn-dv m. “brfus- ha" Drodured sztlsfactory results. SCtl, ff1]1‘s_ such as ms,» berries or shakwberrlxs, are reamed I" a Dull). sf.er the prelmlrarv demure and "bhmchlng." m. d 01st tlwrr a heated n rv m: ls com- ‘et- ks scmelblre like “o"I0'1)lX'?d "EDP Dar-er." This flmy laver ts broken into small fragments for picking and stoua e. It, 1s react-ted lhfll lhe original t‘ avour and cclouz of the fruit is well maintained, . The handling of mlk which are very liquid 1n their orlgnal form requires a dlffgpgnt recess. After testing and pre- imnary stcrlizaton, tine llqizifd 1s slmlled into a. drying chamber where hot alr ln csnstigm may“, reduces lt to a powder which fall; to the flcor. Although dehydrated focds can be kept under conditions of ordin- ary storage. they _do require spec- ial care in packing. Metal con- tainers are unnscrssiry, cartons must be impervious b0 moisture, to changes 1n temper- ature and to the attacks of Insects and rodents. Oaradlan experience “Pd? bcen mrda the pre-treatment "blandaed" in s ‘eam, also indicates that removal of the 7 3 21 oxyzen 1n the czntalner and its re- placement by an inert. gas, such as hydrisen. prevents any recurrence of chzmlcal chan. retains ge and flavour for a cor: derably longer period. - Poet-War Prospeeh ' The acceptance of any product war-time, even for dvllian cen- sumptlcn ts, cf czurse, no proot of its contlnuec acceptance under normal condlitons. Bhcrtages of 811111111’ and tthle ex encles oit the situation necessitate avenge lub- stlturlons, Stmefmes these are pert ad this only substance or to replace It. But. occurs when the new material has intrinsic advantages andmcan compete on o. basis at qua y. Many of us can rrmember the reaction in Great Britain acalnst Canadian bacon after the last war, res tin; frcm war-time ab! merits of a. type and ualtty to when the British were no arcustomsd. Long years of effort were necessary to break down the pre udlce against Canadian bacon wh 1 was built up at that tlnle. rn the present we: Canadian bacon Ls being prepared to suit. the British palate. Blnee deh rated focda have not yet, come 1n o general war-time use t ls Impossible to prophesy re 1rd- tng post-war markets. but seem are a number of interesting side- llllhts on the situation. One of the industries hardest hlt g m; lit glgvglasefrlggs 12:‘! mbllnufrcwro cg . w been Egy- coke or anthracite used b Britain. ‘The present, suocem of British chemists and engineers hu there- fore been nClllfVfd from an entirely fresh start London Pannier I Tzansport Board. JULY 4. 1942 1 “You vmir T0 rut WITH THE gr. rust-gs. WORDS OF CHALLENGE l gluu\iflflupiucruvx JOOOOGUUUUD g Laval, Nazi Slaver ' (Christian science M0111 t0!) It Ls something more than a month since a Nazi decree increas- ed working hours 1n French factor- ies. That. decree foreshadowed the move now made by Pierre Laval, Vichy Chlal o1’ Government, to send Fzentch workers Into Germany. By increasing work hours wnen there was already insufficient work to go round the Nazis caused many Fxe n to be thrown out o! their Jobs, thus enlarging France's labor surplus and causing many French workers to face n. hopeless future. ~ After several weeks o! this "soft- ening 1p" process, the Nazi mouth- piece, Laval, steps forward with an "stapes." to Frenchmen to separate themselves from hcmeland and families and orfer their services In Germany to the would-be master- race of Europe. 0n these terms. the Nazis are to return scme Hench prisoners of war. Laval must know a: well as any- one else that he ta adding one more betrayal to the many that the French peo e have suflered at his hands He nows he ls merely ask- ing civilians to become prisoners of the Thlrd Reich in the place of soldiers. H e “desires a German victory." This, he says, ls Mr fiance's salve, to prevent France from beln "cheat/ed." Such a re- mark mus produce ironic laughter among Frenc en. It will not pra- dlloe many voluntary French work- ers for German factories. But It. ls obvious that meal‘; of compulsion were being devised weeks ago 1n the Nazi prcgram or sabotagmg French- menis jobs 1:1 France before offer- ing them slavery in Germany. “I Am A Canadian (Vancouver Province) Nctthlniz in the conscription de- bate at Ottawa has bern more re- markable than the contrast be- tween the attitude o1’ the three de- ' fense ministers (all veterans of the Great War) and their collcrgves tn L1 Canada ls that we have too many or the men In oflloe who Mr. Klnfs cabinet. Major C. G Power, alr minister. following Mr have been party political“ before the have been Canadians. Maodonald and Colonel Rslston, has ranged hlmssl-i’ with them. Professional Gard: The three men chanted wi h the XLESPCIISHJIIITY fcr the armed serv- es of Canada are consplouously not. the ministers who echo the McLEOD a BENTLEY l says t double talk of the Gtrdners and the Thcrsons, the men who s-ttll W. l. BENLEY. l. 0. J. A. BENTLEY. l. O. ' say that conscrlp-tlcn may nct be necessary and that no political Barrister: and Acumen-n- LII ION!!! T0 LOAN party thinking about its future will 1M Prince limes talce the ch~ia_n_c_e_s o: impglggjg; lng rapidly In the DYE-WE!‘ years. Th-Ese manufacturers have been the first to produce dehyratsd p.oduct.s Morrelland Company ' II. F. AIISIIIBALD to be sold to the general public, Chartered Accountant: truly a case o.’ "trying It out on the dog." while we do not etierrlpt Intern Trust Building Cllbrlotlalowl to dralw any analcgy bet-went dog biscuits and food for human COItX- o PA ER 8i HASLAM A. LLMAELAM LLB. But Lack the Required Education? NOW YOU MAY D0 SO-lf you can learn and are willing to study. AN OPPORTUNITY T0 TAKE YOUR PLACE WITH cannons AIRMEN No longer ls It necessary to pfoflucg certlficaees of education. If you are be- tween the ages of 18 and 33 and physically fit you can he tested for ability to absorb Instruction . '1‘ If found suitable, you will be l Inecfallzed educational course pflolifnl: training as:_ —AIR OBSERVER-AIR NAVIGATOR _. WIRELESS OPERATOR AIR GUNNER~ 'AIR BOMBER-PILOT. ROYAL NADIAN-' AIR e RCE Apply personally or in writing to:- Commanding Qfficer, No. 15 Recruiting entre, Dominion Public Building Mane-ton, N. B. The transparent honesty of Mr. Power's statement makes short work o! all that sophstry and he will be honored for his frankness. Particularly he sweetie away the particular sophutry of which Mr. King himself has been the prune author, that the plebiscite was not a vote about conscription. Mr. Power‘ says he dcesn’t like coercion and he doesn't like ccm- pulston but. "1 am a. Canadian be- ore I am a uebsoer," He that the o e of uebec have voted aga at. oonscrlp ton but the peo le of Canada "as a who‘; have ind cated their desire for action. . ." Afld he says tn erfect that he 1s willing to resign is t portfolio t! his own (South Quebec) disapprove 0d’ course now. Mr). Power Is a. Canadian be- fore ho ls a Quebeoer. the whole purport o! his speech ls that he ls a Canadian also before he ls a. party rrlltlclan. The =ent trouble with the conduct or e war Summer Toilet Specials sumption, it will be inter. .5 svatm the results of tt1‘s €Xfi€Tl~ mcnt Dogs are certainly not 1n- terested in eating things that are gocd for tlnsm regardless of flavour and ll’ our canine friends accept the new preparations it. will at lmst indicate that. a. palatable pro- duct has bEBn obtained. ‘Ihe palatiblity of food can onlv be rlelerlnnea in usa It is feared, for example that dehydrated vege- tables would bend to becmne mono- tonous in constant use. General consumer Interest has, htwever, been arcused by the wide publclty which has been given the lrldurtry and already ccmmeclal dehydra- tors in the Unlfed States are studying the pmstbllities of clvf- fan markets ‘The future of th's development would appear to de- pend upon the assurance or! equal- ‘QLQPIIWPUTT Fl slmllillq Derny’: 60c Bottle Petal Tone Emu do Toilette and 80o Box Del-ray’: Face Powder, 90o value lor—----- 68c Dane“ b lhmldell In e use Jar n! 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