MAXIMS OI‘ A. MERE MAN Count what Is ln man. not what is on man, lf you would know what he is worth, whether rich or poor. r ________.'l"~'!l'f_______ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Read by Everybody 0 MAXIMS OFA. MERE MAN The rarest of all creatures ls the man who gets a lot of money with- ut letting a lot of money get him. Charlottetown Guardian. Two Canto, “liming (luardlan, Founded lllli? 11ft 112F111 Balls ll. S. to Declare war l.‘ any." rcnclcnt- Democratic 1111. '11:“ etiitrrial goes on:- nlreariv. The sympalirze with the llf "4 \\' n] » ‘a 1e a crlossal offence is the British to give their 11111171- ue onlv supply the Tin C! f‘ lied, "we lift the world from 011 our democratic terms, not. on Have telrns." It would be “the c2111 of doom to Hitler's unfortun- lies." | AMHERST MAN KILLED AMHERST, N. S., July 10 —(CP) -J. Alex Caldwell of Amherst was 111.2111! today when an automobile ill which he was driving left the Paint De Bute road_and piled into a ditch. He and two companions ware proceeding here from Port Elfin. N. B. Caldwellb neck was broken. The otilei- two men, Henry Carter and Arthur Loretta of Amherst, were not seriously hurt. Coming Events _0_ Bate for Notices in this column m3 cents per word. ‘fFPsiivai and Dance Ebenezer. Friday. Julv 11th. L-252-7-l0-2l "Come to Festival and Dance at E‘ ‘cr tonight. 1.1118 lYcdnu ‘flccssierve Julv 10th for picnic at v.11" ‘s Crcss L- 6 7 -7-4-lli. “Modern and old. time dancing. 111511111 llall Friday. Julv 11th, St. Awards Orcheslra. L-251-7-10-Zi. ‘fivanied to buy Strawberries. chicken. rbwl. Island Cold storage L-219-7-9-tf _"Con1e to Ice Cream Social. in Clinton l-lail, Thursday. July 10th li not line Friday. L-155-7-8-1i. "Came to Play "Nearly Hanged". ‘.1 1c liall. St. Andrews Players -. July 14th. “ll mcnlbel‘ lvlurshflcld - Dun United Church tea, Jul , irnocn Tea. on 1v. Lluvn next Tuesday. illcnd. ~ li- irt cicanl School. "\\‘.1nicd lo Silcoi) and Ve One, write f 51mm co. to social at lean Presbyterian luounds. Tuesday,- July 15th "Rtfiervo Wednesday, Jul Murray Harbor tea an 11°95. bingo and other attract Creek Cemetery evening. Julv 12th. All interested attend. A 3011. Chairman Trustees. Cub w 111w. July n. 00c V“ d 11111118111 uh mllnited Church. New dav. July 13th 730 P OIC 1on1- f. L-229-7-9-2 . L-zsa-r-n-cll St. James 1 Brinlz a L-280-7-ll-2i. "vc Thursday, July 17 for Whcntlei’ buy-Bologna Cattle. .11 Calves. all grades. or price. Island Culd . I. "S11 d I Soci l, camnoper an oe Cream churgh L-zsii-v-n-n. 16th boat ions. L-982-6-30-6i. Meeting L-284-7-ll-1i Islands 112a. Reserve Wed- lduy. Judy 23rd for Wood Islands llfcn Tea at Car Ferry shore. M. L-Qlfl-T-D-Bl “The postponed show and dance harlottctown Amateur Comedy ui be held in Bonahaw hall. 11-264-7-10-21 Canadian Girls in will conduct the sgvice in ucvs-‘v-n-n. upper and ice cream hicken s at R1 St. Margaret's Hall “W110i. Monday, July 14th, com- fnclui; at 5 p.m. Good orchestra. L-SOO-‘f-ll-Ii "Jfihnuol Parade and Ohurch flar- Me ‘>1 Kin: wllliun and Queen chfgckviiées will be held at United n 3 p: Mhifgton. 32nd: . llec ‘W2. invited? O0 U. NEW YORK, July 10—(AP)-In [my ugc editorial addressed Aden-t and the Ccn- _' the New York Poit. today is on the United States to de- wnr immediately on Nazi lrlitorlals heading stretched the f11ll width of the page. the day's news in the Pest. EVCIl- pcr which has strongly en- every move made by Pres- Rocsevelt to s1ll7p0rl; Great "rho United Stat/cs ls in fact in American heroic .11 and ivollld damn Nazrm to the flackest pit. 01n- acts of of- Lml assistance to Britain have be- beyond of pardon from a Hitler via- e this is our war. we must Tim-e is no hrnefty in ask- lives ttola. 1 is like the rich draftees of ivar days. hiring their .1- aring war now, the Post .1.-1i1- to a vision of peace-peace to Rollo Bay Tea Parlyp still)‘, July 10th L-17l-7-8-7im1or AIR E4171 CHARLOTTETOWN, canapawrkipav", JULvMii, I94 orruiilil E FOUGHT‘ 0 A Lull Descends On Russian MOSCOW, July clan-German front e battles ln which the to a standstill. A communique early toda Thursday-an eastern front “All quiet on the western front." 11- 1 Friday)_ arly today for rman division in earlier fighting, army resistance which the Soviets This German mechanized dlvis_ 1011. attempting to break through 111v right flank of a Russian posi- tion far west of Moscow. was rout- ed, the Red army communique said. leaving 3.500 dead and wounded Germans on the field. About 2,400 Germans were captured. The Russians said they also cap- lured powerful Nazi batteries, num- erous machine guns and automatic ulnis. 150 motorcycles, and other equlilment in good condition. The German division failed on 115 11151 11y to dent the Soviet 111165. $11011 threw in more reserves and succeeded in piercing the Rus. sian ranks temporarily, the com. munique said. Arrival of Soviet reinforcements. and routed the however, trapped rian (By Taylor Henr (Associated Press Stuff Writer) VICHY. lfrance. July l0-(Ap>__ The Pctuin government, claiming, that. Brltal-n had ignored a. requesti to cease ilring ill Syria and Lcbain- on. dlsuvowcd responsibility 1101114111. for continued "violence and devus- tation” there and proclaimed a. last ‘Captured soldier diich resistance. lTlte British izovemment announ- ced yesterday that Vicky's request had been answered immediately and that terms. described in unofficial sources as generous in the extreme, had been silbnliibcd to the Vichy command in Syria.) Amid the puzzling tangle of con- tradiction and talk of offended hon- which had snared. Vic1ly‘s own; proposal of an armistice. Gen. Mux-, ime Wcyzaud. supreme commander in North Africa arrived in Vichy bv plane tonight. He drove from the airfield to the Pare Hote_l—rcsldence of Chief of State Petaln-presumably for im- ilslllie€lflt€ conference with the Mar- a. The situation over hostilities in the Levant did nc-t preclude the possibility that armistice negotiations micrht be under wry even while the, allies closed in on Beirut and clm-' ilieiitucd other drives in Syria 111111 anon. i1Tonight Vichv insisted its fowcs still hold Beirut. (The German controlledwPalflis i (Continued on 00GB 7. C01 5) Russians quote 0n Nazi plans MOSCOW. Julv 11-(l1"riday)~(A Pi-The soviet Information Blueuu early todav quoted a captured Ger- man soldier ns sayllnlz a 6911111111 officer assured his imit; that the "Germans will do away with the Bolsheviks in l0 daysland W111 01119 in London in August.’ ~ In its regular communique, the bureau named the soldier as "Peer A.” and said he will the Russians he was a member or an enltineerinll unit stationed on the coast of crance for a yea-l‘ 1111116318 01°99?‘ atlons to land German troops in England. His rrroup was said to have been transported to the Eastern {rontbgwo weeks before the hostili- e an. ‘lehe ‘bureau also reported it had reliable information that the Ger man command had withdrawn all troops from the German-Swiss fron- tier and replaced them with 01d men and lnvalids." War—-25 Years Ago Today (By The Canadian Press) JULY ll, IBIS-Sir DQ118183 Hall announced cccnyletc capture of the Germans‘ first sysienl of defence alonc the Somme. 0V1‘? 8 ""111 °1 14.000 yin-cu. Austrians attempted to hall Russian advanc: northwest _ . ~ i d 109.000 bu hels, the largest 811164? ignxmoligniu gzggglmwggi? ‘ft-J 1m. and Sabout ioonoomo uni-J, c, we“... m the 10o cw- . Th!’ 01111101111110“ gave a graphic dcscrl Battlefield Red Army claims Reichswehr fought to standstill. iliPi-A lull descended on the Rus- the first time after 18 days of titanic Red army appears to have fought the Belchswehr y said “nothing o! consequence occurred" revival of the last war's historic phrase: ptlon of the destruction of a indicating the fiereenelu of the Red say ha: squelched the blitzkrieg. German salient in a. bloody battle. Scores of burned-out German éaellltlics also were reported left on the Presumabl this was the German division ear ler reported to have been annihilated in the Lepel reg- ion, at the head of the Berezina. river in the general vicinity of where the Germans a-re trying to smash through toward Moscow. The Russian communique added that the Russian air force d911,]; blows at German motorized and mechanized forces throughout the nay in the direction of Ostrov, in the Baltic area, and Novogfad Volynski, in the path of the Germ man drive toward Kiev, in the i l Ukraine. Aialzeiiéé” Stalled In Vichy Puzzling tangIFi-c-illows Darlan return from Nazi - occupied. New type Nazi Fighter in use LONDON. July 10-(CP)—A new tvpe of German fighter plane. the Messerschmitt 109F111. was reported tonight to be in use against the, British sweeps over northern France.‘ British sources identified ‘he plane as a considerable improvement over the Messerschmitt 109E‘. which cot into action a few weeks azo, although the armament is the some. two machine-guns and one cannon. British pilots, noun»: that A latest Spitfires and Hurricanes have two cannon and four machine-guns. declared the new German plane cannot be compared with them. Trainees to Be kept in Canadian army ouwawa, July 10—(CP)—Ycunll canudians gradual-in; from four months‘ compulsory military 1111 11' lng classes next, week-they num- her 4.697—wil1 remain in uniform to as members of the referve army and, officials said ‘ton: ht. 11115 means they probably will in ser- vice for Canadas defence for the duration of the W81’- Dsfence Minister Ralston an- nounced ln April that trainlnil plan graduates would be kept 111 service to relieve units which miSht be transferred from duties they have held for many months. 811011 as coastal defence. i0 Wefitmml .b d. thglitemfiniiegrstanding here is that (1115 system will be continued in respect to succeeding 01115508. 111- clnding those err-bracing men who have already undergone 30 days training and others of 21. 22. 23 and 24, year who will be called u required Record crops in Prospect in U. S. wasnmomn. Julv 10-11)?)- Reporting bumper crops pf wlmaat. com, oats, rice and 1118113’ o er conunodlties in pream- W "F- riculture deliflfimilllt! c”? “m?” lug board said today that iii-ll ai- rlgultural production in the Un- lted states should reach record proportions if favorable weather conditions continue- On the basis of conditions veiling July 1, the board said u wheat crop of 923.613.1100 bushels indrated. 'I‘l1is would be more than 1.000.600 bushels larger than last ' t. “fif-lxfrivliil corn ll expected to show the best. yield since 1920. the board forecast production at 2.548.- pre- a Taft. (Rep-Ohio). that the United Barkley of Kentucky. 111B John A. Danaher. entered the debate to that the administration was secretive. iGermans claim iSays no reason 0apture323,898 For raising BTRL-IN, July 10-(APl—'I‘11e German high command claimed tonight the capt/ure cf 323.898 Rus- sian army prisoners in vihat it termed the "greatest material and encirclecnent battle in world his- tory" on the Bialstok-Minsk front in t-he first week c-f its attack on mugesiailbut malnttrairied atlmost ccm- pe a once on e giea campaign now unfolding in the east. (The Russians have dismissed thse claims cf vast Russian losses as ‘propaganda lies") Tsnight/s announcement recap- ituiated an alleged entrapment first claimed on June 29. seven davs af- ter the campaign began. As for the current progress or the Russian campaign this was the third straight day ln which the high command made no claim. Its communioue merely said the cam- paign in the east is progressing re- lentlcssly, "‘—‘“i (Continued on page '1. Col 3) _______._.___ News Briefs ANKARA, July 10—(AP)—El- even lirench warships and armed auxiliaries from Beirut. Lebanese capital besieged by the allies, took refuge today in the Turkish har- bur of Alexandretta and all their interned, includ- ‘ l commanding crews have been in: the vice " the Syrian fleet. LEEDS. Ala.. July 10-(A.P)—Ten in ihe Acmar No 6'7 mine of me Alabama. Fuel and Iron Company near here tonight after _an explos- ion imd Herbert Jinwright, chief deputy of the company. said there was no hope of the 10 was alive. Jinwrighc said two white men. Ernest R. Etheridge and Curtis Kuylcendall, ttllct cignt. negmes ap- parently were trapped beyond hope. MOSCOW. Julv ll-(Frldayl- fAPl-n German mechanized dl- vision attempting to brook through the right flank of a Soviet posit- ion far ivest. of Moscow was rout ed and left 3,500 dead and wound ed on the field, the Soviet Infor- mation Burenu announced today. Approximately 2,400 Germans were captured. ll. S. defence Moves under Fire at Gapital WASHINGTON. July 10—(AP)— An angry charge by Senator Robert tt buildi a naval air Eaégeeiolwzlsreat Britjagin in Northern Ireland led Senator Alben W. Demo- miners were reporied trapped deep ~ conscription issue (By C. R. Blackburn, Canadian Press Staff Writer) WINNLPEG. July i0 —~ (OP)- Prime Minister Mackenzie King to- day expressed hope that his e fort-s of the past three weeks had. so far as the present recruiting cam- paign was concerned, “served to remove any excuse for raising in Canada the issue of conscription for service overseas." . Addressing a joint luncheon of the Board of Trade and Canadian Club, the Prime Minister answered critics, mentioning particularly 0p- posilion leader Hanson, declared he should have gone to England instead of touring Canada al this time. "When the appropriate time comes for me to visit, Britain I shall be able to speak will: an authority greater than would otherwlsehave been possible. of the magnzflcem effort of the can- adian people." he said. The Prime Minister repeated the warning he had given throughout the west-—that unless Britain triumphs and the Atlantic is kept. secure. an invasion of the North American continent was inevitable. He described the armed and in- dustrial effort of the Dominion and announced that Canada had made important commitments" for the defence of Newfoundland and its ports. MT- K1118 did not go into def-ail 0f these commitments but said Canadian soldiers and sailors are working together with United States forces m defence o; ma. northern outpost. T°daY3 the final tour which ieil 1y to Ottawa Berlinilakl; to Make Lomion’s Seem like playi British House 0f Com-l mons Debate Ledi By Soldier Members. i (By “Iilliam llumpllreys) (Associated rruss Staff Writer; i LONDON. Julv 10 - (AP! — T1181 British Government replied today :0’ COIIIDIaInts cf a shortage of wflflDflilSi and disuse of United $111M? bv promising to blast Ber the lncreaslnz flow of Unit and British bombers unill the 1.01512‘ Nazi raids on London seem "like child's play.” This statement came from Lt. Col J. T. C. Mcorc-Brabazua, the Minister for Aircraft Proonzllun. the second day of_ a debate led soldier members of inc ILUCAU Commons, back from active servl s planes. lln with‘ cd Slates i lieu c on , by or co 1 cram leader. to say today that he Col. Moore-Brabczon pledged the had 11° krmwledge °f such 8' d” ‘h? slgifdmseoonuliiguld allbebz» velcpmczit. The discussion was prompted by the recent occupation of Iceland, which Taft denounced as “exactly equivalent to aggressive war. Af- ter he had said he had reliable in- LONDON. July 10-—(CP)— Authoritative sources disclaim knowledge on the subject but. Britons generally would show scant surprise lf they were ln- formed snon that the United States is moving to acquire nlzv- al or air bases in Nllrthem Ireland as claimed today 11)’ Senator Howard Taft at Wash- ington. ~ Outside official circles there is widespread discussion of the possibility that such buses are under conslde atlon. formation that. a. base was b61118 built in Northern Ireland. Senator (Rep-Conn) complain too "We are not being told what the facts are," he said. “and yet every- one 0f us who chooses to can know that American workmen by the hundreds have been constructing a naval base in Northern Ireland for weeks just as they were prelimin- ar to the Iceland situation." The discussion recalled an an- nouncement. recently that Merritt, Chapman and scott. New York con- tracting firm. by the British Government to do some construction work in the Bri- tish Isles. Whether this contrac ova; what Taft and Danaher h in mind was not disclosed had been engaged Today's debate also included a "“‘ii (Continued on page '1. Col t) RETIRED DOCTOR DIES BAINT JOHN. N. 5.. Julv l0 - (OP)~Dr. Oscar Watson. 73. 1'0- tlred ncwapapermsn and phYllfllfl who had been cable editor for the Associated Press It New York for 2g years. died in hospital here t0- night. He had been A lwlDitll pl- fleni lo! ill lllt I10 is comlnz across the F’ i: = '3 g . r: 3 P >1 and declared it would not be mzlnyi months before Berlin hears 111e, sirens that will signal their attacks» “ hose famous WEflil-Esfia) ‘ Saturday nights (of London‘. r cisi‘ will be childjs nlav. compared to the raids we will aulu to nnilct- 1.11. Berlin." he declared. Already. he said. the D-24 Liber- ator bomber "is doillsz izleat service across the Atlantic." Before the minister spoke, ever. Artillery Capt. Stewart. Scottish National Liberal. had declared that in the Middle East thousands of British Tommies and 110v:- J . Henderson (Continued on page 7, Col l) Interpreting The War News (By Klrke L. SI , Associated Press Staff Writer) Pending developments to clarlfy- what seems a Russian checkmate to the German blitz. events elsewhele claim atten- tion. And not least among them. since it possib'y reflects Hitler's perturbation over the slow-up in Russia. is the con- fusion in Vichy over the Syrian armistice negotiations. Until Vice Premier Darlan returned to Vichy from Ger- man-occuplcd Paris there was no confusion. Vichy admitted that armistice terms had been asked b the French comman- der in {he Levant states. and that the battle there was in- creasingl hopeless. It was add- ed that rms had been receiv- ed and were being studied in Vichy and Beirut.’ Then Dorian got back to Vichy from further "collabor- ation" conferences with Ger- iflcnhnnlclrlclidcllt who had v U; lhdli Annual lubunrlptlon Delivered, I100 P E. l.. “.00: Canada and U. B. 85.00 UNEXEEGTEIJ visn VER FRANCE? [13 German Planes are Shot g down Six Enemy Ships De- stroyed; British Carry Air War To Italy. LONDON. July l0 —(CP) — The Royal Air Force's Blenheim bombers and their fighter ea- corts fought the hardest air bat- tlcs in several weeks over {fiance today, losing l1 planes while destroying l3 German fighters and sinking six Ger- man coastal ships of 20,000 tons. the air ministry announced to- night. These fierce engagements fol- lowed a. night in which the R. A. F. carried the war back to Italy with an attack on the Naples area. Other night squad- rons attacked Aachen, import- ant German industrial city ncnr the Netherlands border, and the pilots said factories wore set a- blaze and the railway junction was torn by 12 explosions. An- other large force bombed Osna- brurk; still others raided Biele- i‘c'1l, Muenster and the Ostend docks on the Belgian coast. (Continued on page '1. Col 5) International At A Glance (By The Cnnailhtn Press) MOSCOW — Russia reports lull nu vast war front after its trOops annihilate one German division and defeat another. BERLIN - Nazis claim that first work of war 1.111110 22-29) resulted in 323,898 ltussian prisoners taken in battle of Bialystok and Minsk. ‘ LONDON - Col. Moore-Brahma- zcn, Aircraft Production Minister, promises Berlin will be bombed luirllcr than Lnndon ever was hit. VlCllY - Fighting still goes on in Syria and Lebanon. (Brilaln‘ says Gcrmrns are muddying the‘ situation and that Vichy forces were offered generous armistice rms.) Gust of living Shows advance 1 i ynnd H. R. J. Spicer. All four are Montrea l-bouncl BomberLands i i R. A. F. school AtLocalAirporir‘ Captain H. H. Balfour, under- secretary for air to tour s in Canada; Continues flight today. Captain Harold H. Balfour, London. Eng, member of the British House of Comm Air in Britain, in company with seven ons and Undersecretary for other British and Canadian Government officials and a crew of four landed at the Charlottetown Airport shortly ilcforc dusk last eve- I ning, after a flight from the route to Montreal but fearin to reach there safely before engine, Liberator American-type bomber down airport making their first la Captain Balfour, interviewed shortly said that he was in Canada British Isles. 'l‘l1e_v were en- g that it would be impossible dark nosed the large four- on the local nding in Czlilada. after arriving, about air training matters in connection with the Royal Air Force Schools. He will visit: all these training schools tion members. Mr. Balfour, 1'. try for about two weeks, wil in the tour. He will leave here for Montreal other officials at 10 o’clock this morning Dominion on a flying , zlccompanied by the t0 see zidministra- to be in this coun- re in a week to in- "ho expects l return he spect the local training school. Other officials accompanying the Undersecretary for Air were; Rear Admiral Danckvverts. Wash- ington, who is connected with the British Embassy; Messrs. L. R. Avery, Ottawa, who has been in London as Director of Exhibitions and Pubucity for the Canadian Government; J. A. Hasler, Ports- mouth, near London. Eng, of the British Purchasing Commission; W. W. Wakefield, Ottawa, of the staff of the Iiigh Commissioner to i-lie United Kingdom; R. Rousseau, London, Eng. of the Canadian De- pnrtnlcnt of Munitions and Supply; R. Foster 'I‘111!y, Northnmlocrland. Eng. Dr. C. G. Barber, London, of the Petroleum lxpartment of the Brit-ish Government. The plane was flown by Capt. T._ of hm‘ “NEW? b°""_‘\‘“_, Tomlinson. while other crew mcm- “some cmualmeé“ Anhfl“ 1361's are, first offic y er C. Longden, radio officer A. E. G. Simmons. of Bristol, England. and belong to the British Overseas Airways. ‘ Asked about. his trip yesterday, Mr. Balfour said that it wm a. good flight but flying conditions near Newfoundland were a bit rough. Conditions were boiler near Prince Edward Island but fearing (imp- ilcss and bad weather would over- take them before reaching Mon- treal. trey decided to drop down here for the night. Although he had visited Canada on two former oc- casions he had 11f‘\'Cl‘ been in this province and ivas greatly impressed with its scenic beauty. From the air "it looked green and lovely." He ans in Canada during ‘lie autumn of 1939 in connection with the joint air training plan and visited IIGerman bombers ‘iStrike hard at ‘Great Britain LONDON. Julv P)—-Gernian xiilrht narrl at Britain earlv today in an- SW01’ 11.1 lilo Hovul Au iHu-ct .11,- talned aerial oflcnsive Tnc iicllvlrst Grammar. lauds an! ll-Qrrnridayl-(O raiders guruols on ncrtlicasl coast toivm, Itacru lurch-flying Nazis dropped nuznber caused drove ihe raiders out to sea. German nlllnes also were rcpore over East Anclia and in the vicinlt o1" a lyficilanlis tcivn, -FIRE “X-UITIIEIQ AT 80 LONDON - (CP) - Counciilzr A. ‘E. Cublson, 80-year-old liiltcliarz; solicitor, registered 11.; .1 mlunieet fire watcher. 1 C21‘ in MY BEsT LlCKS This $0111 0- ER; i-‘Zi ‘ - ' \ o-lvrAwtk July ‘O __ ,0?) _ Tm, the Dominion again last year. / l" l; | cosl-of-livinl; index for Canada. / 3/4,); (,1 \_ based on prices as r Jilne l.1ac1-, No Blackout Here , U111 p, vanccd 11 balm ' .\luv 10- ' f‘ "m 1.19.‘) m3 D.‘?'mm“m,Bw-"mt 0f Sm" At the Charlottetown Hotel. i I / r I uhiliilj- lllrlxziglhxklg- on the has“ “'11”? 111B i1'1"1\' S1191" 13119 111 "1- ' \ Ii" / ' \ i 44* i’ cf 1035-3!) equalling lob anti mu lhe Unds1==cr1vlr11'y for A11‘ rvruufli- ‘ I ‘s /, :1. I 511112.111 lflTllflit the imlva ~ shown} ad he found i‘. strand!’ to turn on 1.7:. f, _ y/ at June "an llnusun ln so K u ht 1 t h . m u" down i w, ./ "Ll 11.1s zinc voly 1.111111 to the} ,1“? “b,,n§“‘,nf";hn"Qofnflkgd on n", \’\/ 1‘ food index vhich lllflllllllvfl from ‘£55m! 51mg" "or bflknr m‘ m? ' / i/ U‘.l ; 2C1 ll » l“ u. i ~ -. i" 1 éliaiL-blyill 1b“ 1'] and table when he had tiilmvi". Snell'- ‘ substantial .111. " 11 0011i injg of the Charlottetown Airport, I . 311d M3151 111111“ Bmbmt“ M“ 11c said it was “a fine aorndromc" lesser ftdllll‘ 11.. 1 TORCITQTO. 1C1“ nil. \ 1 1 ‘ . 1nd added that the large converted and other food lo ‘ mum and n“ 1 bomber had no difficulty landing I As the War progresses. the peo- eaus. vogeiu ics prod/lice the new. Between hilly 1 and June l 1.1.1111 nruup indexes moved as iollcus: _ iucl and light from 109.2 to 1102,, ciothiilg from 114.5 to 114-9. 11011-6‘ (Continued on page ‘I, Ool It iurnnunllus and services iroln 111d‘ Lu 11:11 and miscellaneous itczirs froln 1 51 to 105.6. Reins were llllcilfldllllfld from 109.7. lbnialitls bureau report was; seen as of particular importance because it is on the ccsL-ol-ilvlmz index that CCSt-C-l-llvll)! bonuses 1o 0illlJ10)"3('5 are bnscd. The government order 511011111168 that where cost-of-llvinit 1101111595 are paid according to government scale tliev silouid be 51-25 11 Wevki to each employee for every five-l point rise in the Dominion Bureau’ of Statistics cost-of-living index Urge further Reduction in Pork consumption eastern Snsknxwhevvun . m wicrafciv a"1rn1 iarthm- 11W". o/rrawa. Jilly l0--(CP1- T110 no-jrosi. mu i0 411p» 4- rc- irom 1l1e indcx level at the outbrcuki Bacon Board called tonight for 111- out New En! . lncrca 21g of tram when it W38 100 B. lei-cased effort at culling down coll- iss an’. oni ~11 warm f-‘rl- Where elnpioyels have given W880, sumption of l>0f1< P10011615 11nd fiillffiay .~l1o11~ mid co-lcr. increases since September. 1939. 111° hams in Canada so ihe Dominion b11511 f" iitwrilllllln" °°5"°"“"i},‘“ may meet its commitments to 111s 1111.111 11111- 111‘; aflfifllvll at 12.41 1101111501 15 111° mwx 1“ ‘he “me ‘ e United Kingdom. and t marrow 111' rnip, at l2 l5. last increase came into effect- On May 1 the index was 100.4 or 8.6 paints YIIFJTCRSC since the out- break of war. ‘Die Board of Conciliation which recently made the award for Can- adian railway workers had bcnnc n rnlv [no April 1 index which was, a 7.7 increase and that figure was used in rccc-lnmenciing a bonus of $1.93 a wcck. “Increased effort is necessary?‘ said one official. "Thcrc ls a real ilecrl for cilitiin; domestic coll-slim!)- lion by 50 per cont» and a prelim- inary survey shop's we are far from that. Further. once a 5O per C0111- lednction has been 111111111190. 11 must be maintained." This official said the only point in Canada to report a .30 per con’. drop in pork consumption ln ali- sur-r to the board's request. of two 1 weeks ago. was Montreal. In somr 1 S1111 sols this cvelrinz at 746 and rises 101110110111 mornini; at 424 Last quarter moon Jilly lfi. 4.07 am Sumnicrsidc tide i8 minuivs lai- er than Charlctictwvn. SUNDAY SERVICE June 15th to Sept, 28th inclusive AWARDED TO GERMAN LONDON —- (OP) __ Wnlfgllflfl I. Plensncr. young (‘rorman refugee, won the Matthew Kiriley scholar- ship to Manchester University in rcmpetition against boys from (fecal; all over Erlcland . The schol- arship is one of the iwa highest a- [ wards made by the University this N“!- uihor centres the (lccrcasr was rc- ‘ ported at only 10 per cent, "ii Canada's contract. to suppl; 41151100000 pounds oi bacon nru hams to Britain this year is to be completed by sept. 15 as the Un- lied Kingdom desires tnsicnd of by Oct. 31 as according to the original contract. domestic consumption imust. be reduced," said one official. Leave Borden. 9.00 A. M. 12.00 nnnn. 4.45 P. 7.00 I‘. M. Leave (‘ape ' urlvu-ntlnc 10.05 A.M 2.30 P. M. 5.50 P. M. 8.10 l‘. M i \ WOOD ISLANDS FERRY , Leaves Woml Islands 7.00 A. M . 11.00 A. M. 3.00 l’ "VI muixicuue-‘cu AM. 1.00 r.M-.