the lira THIN -1 ' quo n=u ("lir- (‘h aha .1; no PAGE F-WUR TIIE BIIARLUTTETDWN G IIARII IAII MDflllIIg Dally (Founded ln I887) President Lkut. Fol. W. Chester S. McLuro hcc-Prl-sliient. J. R. Bllfnfll. FJ-I. Secrciary. L" L-Cul. n, A. flacKinnon. 0.5.0. Edllor and allinliging Director. J R. Burnett, F..I.l. Associate Editors. hank Walker and Ian A. BIrlIfl-l- SUIISCIIIPTION RATES By itiilii in P. l-J. l. si-vv 1m rear. W5" h" 8 "mm"- 5125 [or S months. 50c for 0119 millim- cuy Dulivcry- $5.110 iwr row 539° l" 5 “'°“'-“" $1.75 fur 3 months. By Mall lnljnniuln and U- S. A 55-09 l)" Y "turd," “11.K|y1 5-1011 pPr year, $1.00 for 8 5 for 3 months. Olf- lllfllllhk ‘The ‘EJ171519 Jlltnlor-y is Weaker than the Weakest Ink.” MONDAY, JUNE 10, I940 T1111 ltllllgg. Problem = a-ii-diig —aclidciiiiczilly .;' providing aid for a por- _c1'< driven from their _»,,,t tfiqnil-c by iicriiiati bomb- al11iig ilic highways as ‘ e Frc-nch and Iiritisll 1 ilzcir l)('S'. to assist these Qliicrititii . _ Vimim-S U, 11i1-iii1z_v, but lll€lf hands are <vfllt'l\\l~ 1 _'1lf_'(‘(l at the present time '1‘,1._,- Q,.,1,!;1l.; ' ~‘i».-,.1» iriiigccs is heart-rend- inu. 'l“ii11i-1- :1 , millions of them; home- ii-w iii-Z ~,1~ 1' 1 .‘ -,-.:. 111 iiicrlns of transporta- 1- 111 lay tlicir heads. Though ~ ~, tllcy are subject to all _ ' _ are still pouring in a iimrq ziie French roads. And, iii-111- a; Pllinfyll .,11- ‘~11; 11:1; newspaper correspondent, m“ pa. w; ‘ ' p1~ril lll£‘iIlS(‘l\‘€S; they are a fjiiigr-r . :irii:i1-<, which can riot be innit»! 1' i-Hivn 11111 i-nqids are congested with dv-zftiire 1111i! 1l1 fidllil? tieople. $iich a-Tl as 1511- lircnch and British can pro- vilia can bi- 11,:l\1 i1-iiiiiorar_v. llut the problem is mp “liwl- i. :1ii1.i111r;ir_v at all. It will last [5 1mg :1. 1' 1- 11.11’ 1.1.11.- aiid loiigcr. IIQYQ. l1 1 . 511-1111, <i11_-1_11-_<1cll, is an opportunity for (‘a . z llfziiis have been roused dur- ing the I t for.‘ ivccivs liy the crisis which has com.- m ll inl-l- 1,1115 llriiain. Th6)‘ want to do Qfilllclllidfl. avid f1-11l llt‘lL)l<‘iS and exasperated be- ffillri‘ IlICW.‘ >111~1x. l"1lc they can do. \\'li_v can- not (aria-la offl-r an asylum for the duration of tlic war 1'11" l~\!‘.‘_(<‘l' m as many of the refugees as it i; plw-lifil- 111 lulu: to our shores? There is laiizrcr, i1 1,1 \.t‘l1l, n1’ lllhzlffllifill of enemy agents qmrliig l <c iwfitgccs. but this danger, Sllwl)’, ~an bc rliii (c1! by official vigilance. A \Vorld-\Vi'de Conspiracy t Tlicre \\'Ii- ncivs from Washington the other clay that in l‘.l11~.\:i;11r1c:1ii circles, the possibility was bring dl-cii-sctl of common action by the l'i\'Clll_\‘—<1‘lt(: 11,11il>lil"< to sever diplomatic rela- tiliiis \\1il1 ll.1ii1.;i1i_v_ The suggestion, it was stati-il. l-zliiic iiaiiii 51111111 :\lII(,‘FiCZl; and the piir- P1151.’ l1clii1i1l it \v:1~, by this dcvicc, t0 get rid of Nazi lliiii-tcr. and tj-iiisiils who conspire cease- lc.<>l_v against the govcrtuiicnts of the countries in uliicli llzcv arc .~:.'11i11iicd, Tlicre is in the cur- rctit l>~ll(‘ 11f Tilllt‘ a dczailcd account of hoiv Fifth Lloliiiiiizs iloiiri-li iii all the South Ameri- can countries undcr the lipcn, aggressive, ar- rogant l(’1'illlfl\llll\ of paid officials of the Reich, who trcat \\'Z'.ll t‘i'll'l'l‘lillll all attempts at control. “The people 11f \\'11~1cr1i Canada," says the \\'innip11g luv-e lfic-s, “can readily understand this situation hiiicc it is not unlike the state of things that prevailed hcrc before the war. Af- ter the K111i g1-vcriiiiiciit came to power in Ger- many tlic li\‘!"l‘ll'l!] 1~-lii'-1il:1tc hcre, especially dur- ing the rcgiinl: 111' \\'i!li.'iiii Rodde, became the head office of an intc-iiilcd Fifth Column for this C0l1l1tr_v_ hcfci-ciiccs to Rodde‘: activities were made in the fllliia1lzzln Legion convention in IUrlnim-il bi- T\li-. Walker of Calgary, the new head of the Lcgiliii: and what he said was well within the mark. .\'o German of any standing in \\’estern Canada who had connections with Ger- many which enabled pressure to be applied es- caped Roddes atieivinn. They were expected, urgcd and commandcd to take part in activities dircctcrl against tlzo (‘l-lllllry that had given them a home. 'l'li~r1= are Germans in the internment camps tvho are there because their original in- tention to bcc 1111c good Canadian citizens was canccllcd iiiidcr ordcrs from Rodde and there are others. still frl 1g \-.‘;111 arc undcr strict surveil- lance. The ZlCli\...L‘§ 11f llodde are duplicated all over tltc llPllYlTil iv11rl1l. ivhcrcvcr there is a Ger- man coii-ulatc, 'l'l1.1- Nari regime, as these ac- tivitics mrikl- cliar, has been from the start a conspiraljv l’lL’1'!:ll'~i tlic- pcacc. dignity and il'l(l\"- pcndciicc 11f all frcc- muntries." Trade And Scandinavia The cc11il11iiiic 11iiccis 11f ilic severing of trade bctwccn tltc §c:iii1l11i:ivi:iii countries and the out- side \v11rl1l 11111- il‘1~1'll.-'~\f'l in tlic currcnt Monthly Review 11f ilic lLliik of Nova Scotia. The Rc- viciv 5llll('\ tlizi: .\'c,l1i1li11:lvi:i is faccd with a trcinciiilous :il:1l .ll1it11.~t ill~I1lillllC problctti 0f rc- atljtistiiii-ii‘. i111‘ 11111 1' ‘Wu-thirds of its forcigti trade ivzis iviili t"1llllll"-' < which can no lotiger be regarded 11- ,'i1"1~1»-il1l1-, lt adds that however anxious ii1'l'lli.'1!l‘1 iiiay bc to absorb the exports of 1110.9 iilirilzl-rii \"1lIlll“i1*‘-' slit is not in a posi- tion to ]\l'II\l1l1‘ iii.lii_v 11f ih11 imporicd materials, such as f1-=-1!~1iif1'< Jltll |i("ll‘1\lt‘lll1'l, which are iii\('(1_~~;ii"_\1 iii flu: ll!Illlll('ll-'illt'(_‘ 11f tltcir CXpOfl it'l- rlu-tri . llriiriiii, lllt‘ l1"ll'L{1'~l iiilirlu-t for Scaurlinavizfs cxiwirts, i.- akli i1l1~1 1l iiitli a prnlilciii of re- adju-"iiiii-iit, but Il- :li1- llcvit-iv points nut slIC has lost 1i111li'ii-_1 1': 1 Vflllllltl d1- witliout or get !|c~,.\\1],,-r.1 lull ;,.1- ll1~\('\' iii imports are un- lil\(‘l\' i1» u1;1‘11 ii li i v. 1' i-ffort. lu oiic impor- illlll" r11\p11.1, l 11!. lll-iiiian aggrcssiou has illfl‘! ii~1ll ili- ' 11,111 p11tciiti.'il, for tlicir |lll‘!'1’i|l'llll 1111i ,- tlz- lsiijcci‘ by St‘\'(‘T1'll itiil- lilil] iIl]l\ 111‘ !Il 1l ~liii1pl .\lili11ii1-‘i 1.1il1- it’! 11f l .'liit'< total imports :.~iiii1- ii-111i1 17-1- Flniiidizriviaii and llaltic (‘liitti- tTi|'\_ il,|.1- 11:1 1 v.1-i1- ciiiifiiicd to a small iiuiiib1 1- 111' 11-111-1. 11 , {11- i111- ivlvcli lll(‘ arca w" l I liar-hm: llililrcc of supply. Half or more of Bri tain's imports of bacon, eggs, fish and soft-wood lumber, almost all of her pulp imports, more than oiie-tliird of licr butter and paper purchases and about one-fifth of her iron ore and scrap imports came from the tiorthcrii countries. The Review points out that the necessary readjust- mciit to this loss of imports is being facilitated by govcrutiicut macliiiicnv for controlling war- timc trade and consumption: indced the gap left by the cutting-off of Scatidiiiaviaii imports is in iitost cases bciiig iuct more by curtailing coit- suniption than by drziiving upon alternative sources of supply. _ For butter and bacon, the two chief foods concerned, consumption has been sharply cur- tailed by rationing and other means. At the same time increased supplies from Canada have been provided for under the Bacon Agreement while the butter supplies of Australia and New Zea- land have also been assured by contract. It is in pulp and paper that the supply problem is iiiost aciitc. Nearly two-tliirils of Britain's imports of paper have bccii from countries which are no longer accessible, and licr large domestic paper production was mainly based on imports of Scatiditiziviaii pulp. Canada is the greatest alternative source for a number of the leading exports of Scandinavia and has already been called upon to provide larger supplies. Tho Bacon Agreement, the large contracts from the British Timber Control, re- cent purchases of newsprint and reported nego- tiations for pulp are cases in point. It should be remembered, hon-ever, that llritain is also re- ducing her consumption of these commodities and that this country is rcquircrl to provide for only a limited part of the supply formerly coni- ing from Scandinavia. In the case of bacon, butter and cliccsc, for example, there has proved to be little justification for the optimism shown a short time ago. ___i_________ - EDIIURIAL NOIES - Andre Marie Ampere, physicist and mathe- matician, dicd this date, 1330. His fame rests on his physical rcscarchcs, especially on his de- velopment of ClCClfO-tlyllfllllitil and dcmoii- strations. ‘ u n1 n1 n1 Fokker who designed and manufactured the war-plane of that name for the Germans dicd recently, and has left in the hands of New York bankers surpluses upwards of $500,000. He left his fortune to his tiiotlicr and sister in Holland, and because of the invasion of his native couu- try hy the country he supplied with planes, his cxccutor in Ncw York cannot close the estate and have the moncy transferred to the heirs. * d‘ >l< 1F One of the greatest mass movements of gold in history is iiow undcr way, the niovcmctit 0f rcscrvcs of Ilritain and France to Catiada v1ia. Ncw York tOgClllQl‘ with Ncthcrlziud mid Bel- gian nictal for New York Reserve Bank. Art estimated $286,720,000 of gold was received at the baiil; 1.11 one day, an iinprcccrlciitcrl daily ai-iiiiiiut. The glilil ivas sliippcil from London and Paris to Canada uitdci" licavy convoy; some of it presumably being carricd on warships. The actual niovciitctit to the hcscrvc- Bank began last ,\loiida_y1 night. l-‘lrlscrl on the individual truck de- liveries, it is estiniatcil that close to $500,000,- 000 of gold arrivcd iii .\'c\v York iii two days dcstinctl for Canada. 111 a1 n1 1o- Four large branches account for 6o per ccnt of the production of the chemical industrics of Canada. The largo-it of tliqsc is medicinal and pharmaceutical Iircparations, with tiaints, pig- ments and i1ariiishcs a close sccoud. Tlliftl place is held by acids, alkalics and salts, and fourth comcs soaps, ivasliiiig compounds and clcaniug preparations. The lair-st rctiirns for tlicse indtis- tries (i938) sliowcd a ciiiiiliiiicrl output value 0f $87,573,000 out of a preliminary total for the chemical and allied group of $145,074,000. The consumption of chcmicals in Canada for the same _vcar —-prorluction plus imports minus ex- ports—totalcd $160,784,000. Both imports and exports of chemicals recorded gains in I939. 1a- 1o- n1 1r The elimination from British commercial life of all traces 0f (icrman imports and busiiicss as- sociatcs and associations has brought t0 the Sup- ply Ministry tlie fi.tll rcalizatioit of the rlicaniiig of ‘peaceful penetration" in directions other than those taken by fifth columnists. In arrang- ing for mass production 0f many vital picccs of war equipmcitt it has hccii foiitid that tiiinute parts or tuacliiiics nccc. ‘y to tiiake thcsc parts iii any ciuaiitity are exclusively in (Jcrman hands or are ntaiiufzictiirc-il abroad by firms imdcr (jcr- man control. Ilcforc the war small instrument makers, oftcn working iii siuglc rooms iti i1arious parts 0f the country, were able to supply the military, air force and naval departments with all their requirements on a "custom-built" prin- ciple, but when the departments suddenly dc- mandcd itistrumetits by the thousands the manti- facturcrs rcplicrl that iicitlicr the nccdcd prccisioti machines nor skilled labor wcre available. n1 a n1 n1 The Boston Traveler rrrcr-ivcd a lctter from Kurt llolimc, (lc-rman Consul in Boston, saying: “The coiisulaic has l'(‘1‘lIl tlic uliturial ‘Lct Ls Ilc Realistic‘ plllllifillfYl iii your paper of May 28, in ivliicli the licad of a nation, with wlintn the United States of America entertains diplo- matic rclatioiis, is ittstilatcrl ill such iiiicivilizcd (‘X])l'C§.si(>llS, that this coiisiilatc- in the future must l'(‘ilI.<(' 111 give _v1>ur piper any information in whatever matter it may he." The Traveler's editorial had said: "This creature Hitler will ncvcr bi- bcatcil by the ‘rulcs of civilized war- farc.' Soincbody‘ has got to gct right down in the guttcr with liitti and fight tlic ivay lie fights, only iiiori- crit<1ll_v. ’l'lii< is no time to prate about liiiiii-iiiiuiliaii illt‘1'll\'. The .»\llics arc lcalitig with a wild bcast. Ycs, worse; tic-tiling with a mon- sti-r lill('l‘l_\‘ lacking iit principle. llis word is no good, lll\' lll(‘llllllls arl- satanic. In tlic night he Illllriltlfll lll-ligiiiiii ati1l Holland. llitlcr is mcrc- ly an 11x-g1itt1~i"~iiipi1, a iucdiocrc- little iiiau with :1 iiii-diilcrc iiiiiill, :ictiug just as any fatiaticzil, suli-slatidard pcr-liii \\'<1ltl1l act if givi-n iitirc- strictcd use of iiiildl-rii iitstritiiiciits of scir-itcc. \\'c sltrliilil sct l'\lli<‘!'iC1'lll scicttce to work devis- ing the nillst lil-Zli-li illslflllllClllS of defense the - ' VI niind can GOLKCIW- (i; ,1 w NUTES BY TIIE WAY we may assume mo unneu States sect-czar) of the nevy, Charles Edison. spoke in the lull kriowleuge 01f this wars naval sane when he told a. Senate committee in Washington that. lie couldn't concelve that the GJlmflllfi "will be able to damage sericusly the British fleet." The battle of de- stroyers in the narrow Norwegian Ijold agalnst. German aircraft working from land hams was nct, he said, “truly representative ot the real poilver of sea power against air power." and battleshfps would OOIIUIIUG to be the tzrst line of Am- erican defence. Rear Admiral Woodward. commander o1 the Tlurd Naval district, backed up I118 chief. He said flatly that‘ ‘no batltle ship has yet been sunk by an a/irplane." Destroyeis are me patrols of the navy, nave to take grcat. risks. They are fast. and H2119. but lightly armed and trian- lyvarmored. Fewer than B. dozen British destroyers, how-ever, have been sunk since the war began and there are about 160 atfll in SflV1C6—-plllS ships finished since last. August. Battleships and heavy crufsers, with tncir thicker armor plating. have proved almCst 1m- mune to air attack. One stood a dlrect. lift from a heavy bomb, sus- tained only minor damage. The opinions expressed by the United States navy department are ln- dependent evidence ln behalf of the battleship. confirm tllie polzcy of Ilondozi 1n mazntatnmg and cle- velc/plng this branch of lts naval defence in the lace of many pre- wiar critics who insisted that the bomber had eticled the day of the heavy ship, it. ls evidence too, from a neutral but well-informed quarter that there is no truth viliiattver in the bcmbnstic German claims of British warships sunk or destroy- ed. - Ottawa Journal. The Russians have a serious nuisance value for us in the case of war with tlliem. 'I'helr air force is not to be despised, as the Hnns have found to tlielr sorrow, and our ollfields round Mosul and at the head of the Persian Gulf can be attacked by Russzan aircraft. A Russian mechanized alrmy could Invade North-West Peixia and threaten Northern Iraq. Russia has submarine florillas at Vladivcstck, in the Baltic, and the Black Sea, The BBlllC submarines could be lent to the Germans. The Russian sub- marines in the Pacific would nave to be countered by convoys and patrols. An expedition into the Black Sea wculd need naval vesels, troop transports, aupply ships. oil tankers. We have none too many of these, and certainly none to spare. The Iraq oilfield: can be defended by mitt-aircraft guns and fighter aeroplanes. We may need all our resources in antl- aliicmlit defence in England and France before this war ls over. It is Hitler's game to embroll ELLSLB. 1n war with the French and Brit- fsh EIIIIDLTQ. If he succceds, and no are attacked, we will fight back; but delzberately‘ to seek a quarrel with Russia would be rash strat- cglcallv, while politically it would remove all remaining hcpes of de- taching the Russzans from 0.1x‘ principal enemy—Nazl Germany.- Reynolds News (London) On an evrnlng ln the month 0f Mar. with spring 1n biict and bush, and earth and flown, i-ha vaciio station, broadcasting iv».ir’s latest bulletins from Europe, dis- tributes suddnely tlhe sound of an air ra.d siren. heard even thnugn t-ne closed unndcws of the Paris st-udlo. Men and women and lit- tle chilccen run for shelter from the men dealing them deal-h. The news ol tine some evening, as ft comes frcm the prntiig press, tells the story of how tour young deer, in the forests of Yugcslavla, saved the lfe of a five-yezir-oltl baby. Afttci‘ b-sing lost in the woods on hzs war home frcm sledding, the Child told tins to hzs WTQIIES. WlIPII on the following morning they found him, and startled into flight has gentle plilectflrs; that as he was crying IIICTILV the dtcr approached 1i m, and pressing tliccr bodfts cloe to him, K€~pl1 him wnm through the fbiéght. -- Chrtstian Smence Mcm- r. Punnfng is an art at which I have never been adept. SIme- Limes I think It isn't an art at all but. an inborn propensity, like blue eyes or curly hair. Born punsters seem unable to control themselves 1:1 this respect, some of them commit. double and triple puns without anv nimarcnt effort. The best. pun I ever heard was that used by some concern which sold buckwheat flour. They called their product “The glut) tmz makes the butterfly.” It IS ham w beueve that this was thought 111p, Pfllllslfllflllkly. by some adverbs- ing cxipert. It must have sprung full-termed to the up; of 1:5 crrator without any conscious effort on his part. He had ornu- ablv said it before he reiilizrd that he had perps-tratrd a master- gzece. - John O‘Ren tn Baltimore un. What filth-r plcdgts one day he cynically disregards the next. H5 propaganda chiefs invent lies so preposterous that the whole world aughs at them-and by repeating and mpeattng them thinks to 0on- vlnoe his own people. Perhaps he can. But what. a tragedy for the human race that one of its great DPGDIes should be thus blinded! Here is not simply killing and waste, but. the denial of faith, of honor, of human aecmicy. The ls- s1ue is not. VLctory or defeat in a. military sense but the abasement of a, continent cf a civilization, beneath a tvrror of “’hICh me vast cruell-"Ies now dispersing and extermiizatrlng the Polish peaple are the sign nnrl symbol. - New York Herald Tribune. No interest. has the right under any ‘canditlcn to pnralyu the com. mull-t? by depriving it of an es- sential service such as gasoline. ff these methods are perzmittetl. tlwo or three men, controlling large public utilities could suddenly plunge the community into chaos. 'I'l~l:s happening fs unthlnklwlt. Mr. Paltullo ls quite right. when he says that. the law must be obeyed and he is right 1n sniyirlg the com/panics should have announced their plans before suddenly enforcing them, w"t-h the obvious intent of taking advantage cf surmise, and gt p h- lstc inconvenience. - Vancouver un. There ls ulwlys n “humln In- terest" torch to "Conscience Money" which. frcm time to time. trickles into Domtmon txz-fflrs. A slim of $57 vms mcelved from n resident of Saint John, N.B. 'l‘tie aocomlpnnivnrig note, unsigned, remit "Enclosed please find $57 betnq duty which should have been r-ald on L fur cant brought Into this counmryq‘ .- National Revenue RMIIGI . q - g _ v u JONAII AND TI-IE WIIALE He urted roundthe water? WW1!!- m; wlchk oll wan g. gloomy wavelesl Wlthlnfltlie waves. Affrlghtened au- men hurled ‘their weapons in lit; foaming wake. One 01d corroding tron he bore which journeyed tnrougn his 11cm but yet; 1.1141 not Found out his life. Another lance he wore Outside his pricking In a tender 590i. Bo distant were hi; partl that Q10? Sent; but a. dull lain message tlo his rain. He knew not his own flesh, as great kings may Not know tho farther places where they reign. His play made storm In a calm sea; His very kindness slew what he might. touch; And wrecks lay scattered 0n his angers lea, The IVlDull rocked to and 1Y0 i115 watery couch. Hi; hunger cleared the I881. And w ere He passeo. the ocean’; edge llfted its brim. He skinimeu the dim sea-floor to fin if than some iaiclgn liau its harvest ripe or tilm. But in his sluggish brain no thought Ever 3105s. rlls law was instinct I] . No thought or gleam or vision ever rought. Light 1.0 the dark of his old dream- 165s mind. Until one day sudden and strange l-Ialf-liintsof tknowledge burst upon i his sigl , Gllmhses he had of Time, and Space and Change, And something greater than hi5 might; And terror’; leap to imagine sin; And blinding Truth half-bare unto his seeing. It was the living man who had come in. . . . Jorialrs thoughts flying through his being. —Vlo1a Meynell. Gandhi’s Faith In Britain a (Stratford Beacon-Herald) Mohandas K. Gandhi has only flo crook his little finger and the masses of India will obey his will. He mav not be the OIIlClflI head c1 the Congress Party today. but lie ls in the position of the Scottish nllfllsler o! 1111mm it was said that wherever he sat was the head of the table. Gandhi has the pea-pie of his country in the hollow of his nan . If he orders them to flglit or to engage lti passive resistance, at‘ if he tells them to have pati- ence, thev will do so, Writing in his own paper last; week, Ivlr. Gandhi said the British stand m no need of sympathy from l1 Subject P601919. for they already have that. The British, he de- clarcs. are a brave, proud people and they will not be demorallzcd bv half a dozen setbacks like Nor- way. “We Indians," he added, “should make n. timely, human ges- ture when Britain is up against a laorbarous aggressor. The great- est gesture of tlihe Congress is that it. refrains from creating trouble in India." Like a lot of big talkers, Gandhi ls a realist. He knows that the worst; disservice his people Qould do to India now is to take ndwtntaue of Britaiirs desperate occupation with the warvto stir up trouble and ccsrco the British Government into granting them complete self-gov- Bfliluem To embroil Britain in an- other Indian mutiny on a national scale would almost certainly cause B_ritrtln to lose the war. And if Brit- ain 10s‘. the war and lost India _. which she governs wisely for the good of the Indians races-it would simply mean that instead o1‘ India llfllmriz her independence front BAOKACHE OFTEN WARNING Blchcbe any b0 Ilia finl lign of Kidney Mublq- When your bull aches look l0 your Ii|l_ineyn._ Don't fail to heed t in warn- ing-it i: loo important. Talia prompt action to correct Bncltlclie, or ih uule. Al the fin! sign of Bncklclie turn onfidenlly to Dodd’: Kidney Pills-for over hllf I century the hvoritu remedy for Kidney ailment; m; Budd's Kidney Pills l SEMESAN BEL l TIIE NEW IMPROVED QUICK DIP SEED TREATMENT FOB SEED PUTATOES One pound will treat. from i... to 80 bushels. One pound lln - - -_ _ $1.80 Five nllnd llu (300 in (U0 bus els) - - — — - $3.70 jwii‘ :3; Y9 I $5 l. _ 1' CERESAN NEW IMPROVED .1 DRY DISINFECTANT FOR WHEAT — OATS — BABLEY One pound tin - -. _ 1,00 Flvo pound tln -_ — — $3.90 *~ 221"” \\:-_— n,» PIG WORM AND TONIC POWDER Mlwl Pl: Worm and Tunic Powder will thorough" "m. lah all trace; of wonm and Lmlpiovo the health in your Q One pound pooh" — -- 35c HORSE CONDITION POWDER ll Pays to Feed Mm Condition Powder The Condition Powder u“; ' purine; the blood IIIII gfvoa the animals ma! n fine tony MAIL ORDERS REC ‘IVE IDIIEBYIIIOC. It tones up the system, rem- edies ll skin troub ea nnd II l s lend d crndlcalor of worms. rice per pound — - - 50a .._..____ PROMPT ATTENTION P. 0. BOX I15 TIIE two nlics i ‘L. . "This Phony War" (New York ‘Mme-v This ls the wu. let v5 remem" b", may nmny Americans l-sotnlfl of them in high P180951 Bl efth“ few of them in the Senate o t? United States — were 6min? B‘ "phony" war only a short time a- go. It was atrue descrllmlill m” sense that the War b68811 “m, a truce on the Western Front while the two conflicting forces felt each other out. It was never true in the sense that the cynlcs meant. ft. For it was never true that there was no deep moral issue in I116 wax; never true that Hitler iivasatl bottom merely l: good German nho would be content to re-establlsh the Fatherland in DB" 0! Pmafldi never true that the Allies vien Into the W8I‘ inwildine vnly W make a mock nhow of rests a-nce, for the record, and then to n98- otiate another Munich. To the inst cvnlc it must be clear by this time liow untrue these lmflllcflmlns were. For the "Phony" “'3” m“ began 1n Poland has now witness- ed successively the brutal Cflllqlle-W bv lGerman Imperialism of Nor- “fay, Holland. Luxembourg and Belgium and the truce in t-llf WPSI- has yielded place to furious attack and a sickening spectacle of blood- letting. As the war has changed. Am- erican oplnion about the war has also changed. We can find one measure of this change in i110 wholly objective studies made b)‘ the Princeton Public Opinion R0- scarch Project. through the fact finding machinery of the AITl-‘ffl- can Institute of Public Opinion. ‘Three months ago these studies led to the conclusion that 58 percent. of the American people hcllcved they would be pcrsoiiallv alfcctctl in some way if Germany won thc ivar; by mid-May. a IPW days af- ter the German invasion of the Low Countries. the figure had ris- en to 65 percent, and there crin- not be the slightest doubt, after Hitler's victory in Flanders, t-tiat it. is higher now. Three months azo, when Amcrl- cans were asked if they thought we were giving too much help, a- bout the right help. or not enough help to the Allies, 50 percent. an- swered "About right"; oniv 15 percent. said “Not enough" and i3 percent. said "Too much." Bv mid- May only 20 percent. said "About right". onlv 6 percent. said "Too much", and the great majoritv o! '11 percent. said "Not enough". 'I‘hls, too. was before the German victory in Flanders. American opinion has changed, swiftly and impressively, ivlth a clear realization of the character of German aggression and the con- seoucnces of a Gcrman victory. It will chance more. ___________ Britain she would lose lt- to Nazi Germany. India's new state would be a. thousand times worse than at. pros-ant. C. N. IL.‘ READY FOR TOURIST TRAFFIC MONCTON. N. B, June 9 -Nev- er has Canada been so well or- ganlzcd and equipped to handle such a large volume of wiuist traffic and convention biishicss as this year, stated M. F. Tompkins, regional traffic manager of the Catiziditin National Rliilvlvays here. According to reports from the United States railway agciictcs, he believed that the possibilities for a splendid tourist season were ex- cellent. "The cordial invitations is- sued by the Prime Minister and tho Dominion government to Am- erican visitors, coupled with the excellent arraiigcitieiits made by the customs and immigration de- Dartments to facilitate entry into Canada at. i111 ‘points, have crcatcd an idea! situation and “'9 {@111 sure that these nrrnngcmcrits wit] be UIOTOUEIIIY apprcclatcd by tourists from across the bordcr," . Ml"; TCmDklns added flint ivhlle B lfllgevuliime of tourist business l5 allllflpfllfld. lt. must be rcnictn- bercd that. the’ actual forecast. must lone of mixed nossibilitics, the vo time depeiidlngdarglv upon the Course of international cvctits and 3,150 "Don trcncral WOT-ll?!‘ condi- tions during thc stimmcr. I-Ic pointed out WHY Hgencirs iititl travcl report unusually licavi- an ‘the manatzement of National Railways merit have prepared "filly heavy season, 9. 311i:ralwkxssci-k-lcullal... JUNE 10, 1940 Larges] 541a in fieMaHfibzes/ IA allélllil. GOLBIN omou ALI HON! GINGLI "a UM! 111cm . Quintin»; Lmoullp; MID I figBo/f/e - lfervea Eve JVawl5¢ n om IN MONTREAL men of afiairs naturally stop a! the Windsor because of its repu- tation for dignified comfort and unobtrusive, courteous service, its convenient location-and be- cause the Windsor is recognized as the proper place for business and social meetings. ilifilffiilsnr ON DOMINION SQUARE J. Aldule Raymond Vicn-Piuldeui * '-'~°-°-'t-=.'---'v-l.-i.-i.-\.-i.-i I? EXAMINA TION “m”! ""5 §éllfllllying Glasses 0c- i i i ll. .1. MABON i OPTOMETIIIST Mvntaxiw. P. |-:. |. om“ flours: l0 to I2 A, M. n “d 2 lo 6 P. M- o a 1| em, p, OfIlce Connicieljaiiogtllllnenl _ DBUGSTORE fiJEuVfl-‘l-‘E-‘l-‘l-‘l-‘fl-‘ff Renal“! A ’ i 10c PER HICKEY o» NICO LS TOBACCO C0. LTD" CHARLOTTETOWN ‘ml’ m 7' ~——-————————--‘--_. h. R. Brow & Son Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Class Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown 144 Richmond St. WOOL WOOL Ship your wool freight. collect or through tho appear below to the sheep Breeders’ Asaocla n Charlottetown Cash ivlli be paid promptly on delivery on the basil of twenty-KW rents 12211) per ‘pound fnr unwashed wool. Fleece; lhould b; kept scpuratc and lie with paper twine secured from the undersigned or until common woolen yarn. Do not use binder twine or other kiniis of string. Pack In clean bran bags or, better atfll, In a sack trfiazllc of blzan bags and ticket your name both lnsldo and 0W5!" o ia sac . “loot will he sold through the Canadian Co-operltlv. Wool Grow- ers, Limited and If any further amounts are lecured In mnrketlril through the excellent salesmanship of this organization, this will be rehafed bark tn each patron u; a, patronagg dividend, Lin; year, this dividend was five cents (.5c) per pound. This l; your organization. said your wool to ft and receive every cent the market will pay for your product, nfentg who“ name! l 0 The followin are our agents: W. J. Reid, Agrleult u] Office, 0'Lear_v; L. . Ilockerby, Agricultural Office, MontuueiuP. A, Mac- Isaac, Sourls; George Marlnnls, St. Peter's; W. D. Rosa, KIIITOSL Wool vslll be revolved up to July 1st but the Big wool Week will he from June 10th to June 15th. W. B. SHAW leer my, P. I. L Sheep Breeders’ Aessoclatfon. For a. Delicious Cup of Urange Pekoe Tea Mr. Tea Poll Says: Use BRAHMIN Full flavoured Tea island F“°‘“' I\ FIG