.:- *":1€.=*::a._ai,,";;1:‘l.;-'_::;;:{‘;:‘T'; ' PHGIIIOUR {A ruLcrgiyizcrrrrrrovvu GUAlQDIAN TIIE SIIARLUTTETUIIN GUARDIAN luruln; Bully (Iouudod ll lll1) Broulrluni Llout, Col, W. Churn l, IAILIIPI m». ki-auuni J. u. Bun-null, v4.1. loureluryi Liam. Col, l). A. Aluclsinaon, 0.8.0, ldllur um] lunuil | Dlrwtvl’. J‘ 5 uillwi“: 7-3-1- hloclalo hdnuruzi Eruau Walker. lllll Uflll. Ill l Human. II..O..N.V.B_ tUll Alisha ion-vim) SUBSCRIPTION BATII l, lull n. r. m. i. saw iwr 1w“ "M l" i I'm“ 51.2‘ fur 5 mouths; Mn lur olu month c", gun“,- ".00 pa: your; $3.00 for l inuuthl $1.70 for 3 mimtlui 00a for uno month I; lull to other Province: lml U.I.A. “All [III In: luturduy Weekly: 82.00 pol‘ your; ‘L00 lo: I monuu, we lo: 8 month: Th0 Charlottetown Guurdluu may be ‘ohlnllnil it Born-uni‘: mun Akollcy. ‘Pinw- uqunn. New Yorki Ola loulh New: Annoy, Corner Milli and Wnhlngton Buuioli Metropolitan Zwwu Axum-y. 124! Poul 8L Aluntrenli J. lino g4 u" us, Turunlfl; Nevin Stand Chnusnu Lnurlary Ottuwui \Vul|s'u New: bland Suilbury, 0nl.| llub Iohlcru HIWD- Alonctun. fi- u- "Tlie Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." THURSDAY. JULY 8. 1943 Election Rumors Straws slimy, liiiw the \\’llltll1l\>\\‘S,3lltlTlWTEI- tcr iii itvlutlc- 1\\[\t‘ front a rclialilc correspond- cut may llii "1 - that a provincial general clec» no“ ,5 H, pm .,i'i'iii_i_;_ The join-s tiovcriiiiicnf have antiihcr \\'.tt‘ lll gt», but iii view of thc tact that the l-Ril ial clcvtiiiti is lll\l‘l_\' to lic next fall, l... lltilllll l‘riiiic .\liiiistci' King it“ "CIT 35 ll“ lllllClllllt‘ u; tuiawa would he dcsirons of finding out how ptlltllillf‘ opinion stands with regard t0 tlic priiviicial lcgiUttttircsl Lllltlvll- \\'<Jl1ld l_10_l be a dirzirist- ii. a. a setrticl to his recent viSit t0 t )tt.i\\.;i, l'i1'iiii-.'i' vlltllts had decided to work with lll\l\‘lltl iii against the machine. .\t ilu- ~:i:ii<- time ii is surprising to learn that My, t), \\‘. Campbell, who was seconded for stirvicc from the (lld Age Pensions department t‘, 1... ;,_-1-_,,.\. \sslsiitlll Provincial Secretary“ ilrrsisitrt 1'. wlllltl lie ;t~l.cd ttvrctttrn to lltS 01'1- gniial poetitiii. ulicrc the acting llpptIllllFE has been \l'\\‘ll(ll" i u the duties satisfactorily" for thc lircc yca s. _ _ - ;._ i)! i'illll‘.~'(‘, no excuse for briiigiiigon ivy poltical ciiiitvsts iti wartiuic. Prime .\lllll.\lL‘\‘ lxifug iit...iiatcd tittly the other day thili the next fcw iuiiiiihs would be critical for Ctiiiatlzi, that \ictiir_v would not bc achieved with- out llt'.l\\' sac ccs and that the whole cfforli of t-ur ]ii‘<ipli* slit-tilt] lug CilllCCllIlYllCvl‘ on stip- porting utlt‘ scriicc fiirccs in the lllCld. Are pryliljQjll contests ldiely l-) be conducive to tlns I‘('~lll'.? There is only one answer, and that is in thc ncgatite. Potato Market Situation Refcrcnce was made iii the Ilonsc of Com- nlllll) the otlicr ilay ti» the contradictory’ part played by flit- \\':iriinie Prices and Tirade Iioard iii ‘the potato sittiatiiiii in recent weeks. Up to the prcsciit the lliiartl has been paying a‘ subsidy on American piitaiocs entering Canada m order to tlldlllillln caiia-lian price ceilings. The Ot- nma C,.,-,<¢_<p.',n.li>|ii of the Toronto Tclcgram rc- ports Food .\iltiiiufstrator Kenneth Taylor as stating that this stibsid_v has been made opera.- tive until the end of vllll)‘. Government, says this ctii'i‘<‘.<[>0t\dPY1Yi “PPEJK l” hftyg {tiilruvcil a puliq pf iliijltg the right thing at the wrong tiiuc, and vice versa. _ The SilttZiUOH. as otttliticd in Parliament, is a5 follows: .-\: the height of the potato shortage in Canada iii recent w-ceks the Board pcririittcil nineiqqiq fflfltlafl§ of certified seed potatoes to be shipped to the litlitcrl States, hoping that it would get tivice the quantity’ of ‘new American potatoes. \\'hcn pricvs of new iintiorted_pota~ toes and other fresh vegetables went soaring in the spring the IO per cent war exchange tax and the} 3 per cciit spccial excise tzixcn im- ported articles were retained. Now’ with new Qmnrio, (‘Quebec and British Columbia p0i8l0¢5 coming on the iiiarkct. the Government has rt!- ruovcd these taxes, making it easier for Ameri- mn prriducn to compctc. According to Mr. Ilatficld. .\l.l‘._ w ho is .1 processor of potatoes in New Brimsuicl; and Maine. the new crop in the Cnitcd Siziics has been about one month late and rccrtitly all the growers commenced dig- gilr; {lit {i- cziip. tlicrcliy throwing an excess stip- pl)‘ on ,..c .\uicric:ni market. .\los_t of the states llil\f' plziccrl fliitirs tinder ill?" P013“) pr-"Qs, ll'l .\l:iiii<~ if is $1.90 a bag. In Olhfl’ ..: cs it is StiYlliWYlllli. higher. The sudden r0511 m‘ .;il<~. ilriiit- ‘il\‘\‘> dtiwii in these floors and the govtriiiiiz~i:'. ftitiiid ilwlf ]\t">~<‘>5f‘<l "l him‘ ,1...“ ,,,' ,,-,,_.,;,.l_- p‘ Wiiuines for which it had H, ,,,;,.-t..»i_ _\l; llnifir-lilk argument was that the l‘l‘ll"i\.'tl Ji’ this pai-tictilar time of the im- pol‘ l.t\ nilil-ii-iii ti» tlii- suhvid); llll iinprirtctl pottiloes “fin-ll i. l.t-iii_ paid by thc Prices Board will be bad for the Canadian potato industry. H6 Qnulil the ii<‘\v \'.ltf‘l'l(‘Illl potatoes for 50 (‘(‘ll‘~ a big. llt‘il\‘f'l‘t‘tl in (iflllilflil, he stated. lbth .\l‘ llziifii-ltl iiiid .\lr. Crnicksliank, niciiilit-i" fiir l'r:isiit' \':illc_v, llf. atlctitpted t0 iliawis. the iii"t't~i" with Agriculture hlinifitfif (i'li‘tllllf'i‘ aiiil \\'t‘l'\‘ lll(‘l with the statement that ‘ti’ \\.'l~' not iiz-rpzircil to talk about itat the pre- scnt llilll‘. .\lr. Mir-liner also rcfllsfll l0 db" m..- lll.‘ l"lII||\Ill of the exchange and excise taxes lllllifisvtl Ill] vegetables. holding that it (lid not affect his ili-partnicnt btit the Finance De- partment. ’l"lii< may be lCUlllllCfllly correctybut “H-(iiy; n.- _\li|ii<lf‘l‘ of .\Ql’i(‘l1lll‘ll'(‘, .\lr. Gardiner i-niqlu lmn- \l]|l\\'n mayo concern ovcr a matter of sticli itiipiirt:uicc to our fHrmCYS- Commnmnzh-Tlh and Empire lii :iii llldllllill-IY descriptive phrasc used by .\lr. Churchill in his (iuiltlliall speeclP-"thc British (Viuiriioiiivcalth and Fiupirc"—an Ameri- can (‘tlrrfislillllllfdlf in London finds "far-reaching iniiilii-iiiiiiiis." \\'hv, he asks should .\lr. Chur- chill ns.‘ the word "litnpirc" as wcll as "Com- ui-iiiiivrilili"? .\lu~t not thc answer be that fhi‘ lvitKli l‘ri-iii~ \liii.\trr. an “liiii|iirc man", has iii iiiiiil ~oiii<~ iii-iv court-pi of Imperial post» war vxpiiisiuii? There is Dakar, and Tlttiisia. and Libya. The lloard and thc ' _ rfiCflnCC. ..ii lttl.lltil'\ coining into Canada. 111' _ All of which, suggests the Ottawa journal. is nonsense. If Mr. Churchill used the word “Empirc" ~as well as the words "British Com- monwealth", it is because the British Empire and British Commonwealth of Nations are not the same things; not constitutionally, at any rate. The British Commonwealth of Nations consits of the United Kingdom of Great Bri- tain nd Northern Ireland, and of the self-gov» erning Dominions of Canada, Australia, New Zealarid. and South Africa. The British Em- pire consists of the Colonies, Protcctoratcs and Dependencies, and of India and Burma. That is what Mr. Churchill undoubtedly had in mind; and that is what his phrase described accurately. To find “far-reaching implications" in his use of the word “Empire" as well as the word “Coinmonty-ealtli" is a perfect example of what can happen when somebody takes pen in hand about something of which he knows less than little. - EDITORIAL NOTES - The great fire ivhich partiallyi destroy-ed .\lni1- trcal. this date, i852. ti‘ * l? ll A school for instruction in tuiiftirm nicthtitls of grading and judgment of quality drop in the dchytlration of vegetables cipciictl at the Kent- ville Experimental Station. The ctiursc- will be attended by government dcli_vdi":itioii iuspccttirs and factory control iiicu. The ilchy-tlraiitiii school is one 0f three iii the Dullllllluill. The others are at Sunimcrland. 11C, and at Ottawa. ll >9! >11 i‘ Fulham Palace. for eight cciiturics the resid- ence of the Bishops of London. in future is to _be divided iii t\v0———0tie—lialf of its 5.4, rooms to be retained by the bishop and the other half to be converted into a hostel. Dr. Fisher. the pre- sent bishop. has applied for his palace to be con- sidered under the incastire whereby thc ecclesi- astical commissioners can take t.J\'L'l' a bislitipric, discharge official cxpcnscs and pay lltc bishop a reduced salaryx An advisory committee has already rccomniendcrl that because of litith his- torical association and the iicctls of the (ll‘lC<‘>\". the bishop should continue to livc at Iiullizim. iv v v i: Development of a one-man piclc-tip hay baler. described as of entirely new design and llllfiltlCil lo COHVCYI a large crew job to a titic-niati. fain- ily-fariu operation, is illllltlllllCCtl. The iicw baler will be put into production "as soon as machine tools and materials arc zigziin avail— able," the Allis-Chalmers Rlziiiufactttriiig Coni- pziny‘. tractor division stated. To operate thc new baler, one math-thc- tractor drivcr-hziiirllcs both tractor and baler, which opcrzitcs ziiittiinziti- cally. The hay is rolled into a. tight. compact bale similar in zippcarancc to a rolled and wrap- ped strip of carpet. (yliiidrituil Slltil water and reduce ill)F\tl']\lll>l'|, thc ctiuipiiii- said. and thc ordinary liindcr twiiic tiscd to ltllltl tht zii costs less than wire and is less daiigtrtitis l'\ livestock. In field tcsts, thc new lisilcr has d:- monstratcd a capacity equal t.» or ' r than that of compression typo bah-rs \\‘i‘ll or four-man crews, thc company" said. 1K i Ii I1 ll.'ll\‘\ The Guardian is iii rcct-ipt of an interesting: publication. the viral/fun Xttlitriifiirl, litillctiit tif the Natural lll~'[l1l'_\' Socicty of Nciv llrtiiis- wick. The Sticicly. foriticrly l-icatvd in Saint vlolm, did not publish a bulletin for iuan_v years. It recently has been tnovcd to Fredericton and revived in connection with the University" of New Brunswick. The former bullctin was pub- lished bctwecn i882 and i914. Some 3t iiutu- bcrs were issued, and these are today collectors‘ items, and valuable works of reference. lii reviving the publication under its present naiii»: the promoters hope to embrace tnattcrs of sch-n- tific interest to the whole llaritiiiic Proviiiccs. .\ promising start has bccii made iii the isstic just received. I U i I The British North American Act is to be amended, so as to postpone contcnliotis redis~ tribution of Commons seats until after thc \\'ir. While it would be hard to find any bctter for- mula, there may be complications from picking a date “after the cessation of hostilities xvith the German Reich, the Kingdom of Italy and the Empire of Japan." T0 lic noted. says the Letter Review, is that all nccderl 10 altcr our Constitution is a majority vote of our Parlia- ment, after which legislation by the Parliament at \Vestminster is, and ever will be, a mere formalityn Both violent Nationalists and some sensible men used to be much cxcrciscd over the imaginary advantages and disadvantages of this proccss-—\vliich is really of but slight signi- In reality, Caiiada—like llritain — can and will amend the Constitution by vote of Parliament, whenever the Arliiiiiiistratioii is cou- fident of an adequate majority in the House. arid docs not fear rebuke by the nation at the next gbneral election. a w a a Ferdinand, Count Zeppelin, frttliPr of German areonautics, died this date i917; after retiring from the German army with thc rank of General, he devoted his talents to the practical study of aerial flight; he had served in the Franco-Ger- man war of I870. in which he bccziiuc convinced that the day was not for distant wlicn “live hail from heaven" would take the place (if military conquest by horse and foot; his study and experi- ments culminated in the Zeppelin airship for which the Kaiser conferred tipon him the Order of the Black liaglt‘; a mass Zeppelin raid 0n Britain took placc on Jan. 19, i915 and the last in the Great War on April i3, i018; these air- ships penetrated as far west as Liverpool, and as far north as Edinburgh and Aberdeen; six were brought doyvn and destroyed; of It air< ships which set out to bomb Britain on Oct. 20, i9i7, only four returned to Germany, the rc- niaining seven coming to grief of their own ac- cord in France and the Xleditcrrancan; the first (lay-light Zeppelin raid took place on December 2.4, iqi4, and the last nu _Iuuc i7. tot-S; from then on the lluns secretly l)lll'§ll(‘(l their acm- iiatitic experiments and study. the t"ll1<(‘f|l1(‘l1(‘(‘S of which ivcrc felt disaslrottsly at thc out- break 0.f thc ]ll'('.\l‘lll. conflict. ' ' Notes av m Way Detailed mapiv lhowl-III r111 113d communication linu in Scandinavia and en route from Finland w U01"- many. have been seized by Swedish authorities. Probably Just. for the use of those ‘tourists’ who have been flocking into countries marked out. tor invasion-Windsor Star. . Sir William Mulock veteran lor- mer Chief Justice of Ontario. has made un out-standing success of planting trees. Many years ago he sun-ted t0 plant black walnut trees on his farm near ‘Toronto, and he has now u stand of’ 45.000 black walnut. trees. some of them well on their way Lo maturity, when they will be worth a. fortune. It ls Ill-st g, little instance of what can be done by reforesiration 1n the denuded sections of the country-Charmin News. A dressmaker who was found at. the Whitehaven and West Cum- berland Hospltal to have swallow- cd 2 pins was given a. series of cot.- wn wool sandwiches which envel- ope dine pins. She recovered “with- out. any pain or one drop of blood being shed“ says Dr. Richard Faw- citt, in describing the case 1n the British Medical Journal. —Br15lo1 Evening Post. Recently the publishers of The New York Times notified their ad- vertisers that. owing to the increas ing ~ sis of production, it would be necessary to raise advertising rates on May '1. some of the bigger stores promptly withdrew their advertising as of March 15. However less than three weeks liiter the ads. of all these firms reappered. The incident; offers its own explanation. Advez" Using is essential in business- Rvanrford Expositor Women in unifonn-Waiwa, Waves and others-are helping this war along toward victory. So are many women whose uniform 1s a kitchen apron an ordinary street dress. These household soldiers are the salvage infantry-dime grease engin- vet's, the IIITCZIII armored division. Women in industry and out of it are wort-zinc on committees. doing volun- teer bond solicitation. The wife 1n the same ls usually the key R'?1‘SOI1. the ClIlCf of staff who decides that Ihe budset can stand a regular de- duction for war bonds. Her sacrifice makes the 1O iic-r cent payroll deduc- tion possible. Women recognize that ivzir bonds are hope chests for the ftittire. -tI<‘i-om the Chicago Dailv Titties). The authorities are looking kindly on tlin experiment of a Surbiton hoiisrwifc who had turned her louiiite into a utorkshop where 40 women neighbors, working part- Fme. :-!' ' ' Other Surbiton are coin: to do the same and ii is hoped that rhe idea will be copied bv women in other resi- (i(‘lllll‘l arms. The notion. as often ll"f7;it‘lI< wlvrii housewives tackle a thine. is bsffi ingetiiotis and prac- l‘c"1l. It also tins farireachlniz nos- l‘t.<~.=. It is difficult for many t v housewives to travel to a fac- to.v milrs nvrav. and a scheme of , officially organized and uraged. may solve many prob- I ‘i. indeed. be the onlv use to n drastic call up wlfch WQHlFl hit thousands of wo~ iven very hnrd.—London Evenlnz News The reason why nylon has sn many different forms and uses is that it is really not one chemical. but a whole fatiiilyi of related chem- ical compounds. As a chemical It has a family relationship to silk and nnlr and wool to the proteins 1n mcat and In sova beans. Besides varying the chemical composition, thc chemist can do startling me- chanical tricks with nylon. By con- trolling stretching. temperatures and mClsturcs. for example, ft, can be given a permanent crimp or twist. which i..- the ’U21lll'._V that makes wool woolly alid provides warmth bv re "lining air. It. is even possible " ‘e a nylon spring. as fine as a or us thick as an electric light wire. How long it will h: before these various new forms of nylon will im- uear on the market is hard to say. Many upplx-atlons will require ex- haustive industrial testing. Much Ere-aim‘ plant capacity both for malr ing Ltie basic material and for making various semlftnldied forms will have to be built-S. B. in Wall Street Journal. Reason New York Times Corre- spondent Frank Kluckhohn was Jailed for ten days 1n North Afrtca by the British Army was that. he impugned the motives o! Brlzlsh military leaders relates Washing- ton Merry-Gofinund. He tried m send a service message to his paper in New York. nor hr publication but for the editor's information. t0 this effect: the British are uslnz other troops to do the dirty work in North Africa. so they can march up the coast. to victory. It is suspect.- ed here that. Kluckhohn heard this talc of criticism from some dis- grttntlcd French or American sold- iers and sent it on for the informa- tion of his editors in New York. But the censor caught, it. and refer- red it; to General Montgomery, who is a rigid dlsctpllnarlari. Incensed and infuflated at the "utter falsity" of tho story, he is reported to have said, “They call me a martlnet; well by God. this time I'll behave like one." So he threw Kluckhohn 1n the clliik for ten clays. Note: when Montgomery commanded the 3rd D1- vlslon tn France. before the fall he called it the Iron Division, and look great pride in the ability of’ bLs men to do all the dirty work of’ war. Comrades say he has the same feel- fnr: about. his Eighth Armv. A kite-string of glass yurn is used with the box kite that carries aloft the antenna of the radio transmit» fer developed bv he Army Ali" For- ces to summon help for fliers forced to make crush landings at sea. says The New York Times. The comnleto transmitter includes the sending set, an ordinary cloth-imd-wood- frame box kite. an antenna consist- ing of very flne copper wire wound around the glass kite string. two balloons and capsules of compres- sod hvdrogeri. The balloons. Inflated with hydrogen, am be used to carry tho antenna aloft in the event of s. calm. Glass is used for the string: be- cause of Its strenizth in proportion to its wolizht and because ltwlllnot rotor otherwise deteriorate from lhn effects of salt water. ironic run- llzlit. raln m- d-iimpness. With a hand crank to generate current the transmitter automatically grinds out. thr- SOS slzniil on 500 flocvcles. _ the international dlsmass quency. PUBLIC FORUM nu mun a own III l" (hunch: I1 ocmlilllll" 9' question it haunt. Th Olnllottnvwl Gard-In ha: III uncut!!! ulna In OIIIPFII d tunnel ELECTION SIGN S? Sin-I understand that Mr. O. W. Campbell, acting Deputy Pm- vinclul Secretary Treasurer, has been spending considerable 1n the First. District. u! K1085- Osteiisibly he lgatfons for Old Age Peiwlrms Act, somthing he has not done w any extent. for the 1H8?- 19W ears- No doubt there will be 001W a" addition to the list. of _Old as; pensions Ln the souris District ul- ter Mr. Campbell's visit. Eviden- tly he thought. Mr. Irving Mc- Laren or Mr. George MacLiellan, who have done nearly all the work for some years, would not be as effective as fiimself. They would lack the astute personal touch of the muster, Probably we next step will be an increase of $2.00 1n old age pensions as was demanded by the Opposition or the last. meeting of the Legislature‘. and likely Hon. Dr. _ kfacMillaiis pro- phecy thaf. the increase \\'lll come on the eve of the provincial elect- lon will prove correct. Is it possible that _ a provincial election is in the offing and that Mr. Campbell l5 to be a candidate in thissection of the country. a5 it. ls united that he has been hunting for a safe district? One evidence of n coming elect- lon ls the many meetings the Liberals are holding in several parts of the _Prov1nce, and that they are beginning to call their conventions. Again, though it near midsummer, I notice a great drlve being made on lung-neglect- ed roads of the province. The nexb step may be the 1s- suing of the writ. I am, Sir. etc- ixrunilsrisn. TRUE EDUCATION Sin-S. F. Scovll says “true edu~ cation ls to know the God in nut.- ure and revelation and then to fashion the affections and will, 1n~ to harmony with those laws." I heard a noted preacher in Boston one time. say that any stud‘ ent. who made a diligent. study of the Bible, beginning with Genesis, through to Revelation. wand at- tain the highest cdticatlon poss sible, be able to speak perfect Eng- lish. and Wfilllfl be a tvcll rounded man. mentally and spiritually. DJ... Moody or Charles Hndden Spurgen never went to College. yet. they were highly educated. They were two of the most. powerful preachers the world has ever known and could attract the largest aud- iences 1n tiibernaclcs and church- es because they preached "The Word of God." They also founded trite educational schools. In America we have the largest school system in the world. the most expensive educational bitildlnus. and America hits izlven to its teachers the most. cherished thlniz~the minds of nur youth. What a tremendous respouslbllibv! ’I‘hcy may have learned n great many things. and yet not be edu- rvih". Tht" miiht be able to name every star in the Heavens and still not. know thc "Bflilllll Mornimz Star“. Jesus Christ. the Son of Q°d__.. They may be able to master Bot- any so that they can name every flower yet not know the “Rose of Sharon" or “the Lily of the Val- ley". They might know all about the rocks rind mriiuiixiins yet not know “Jesus Christ the Rock of Ages."- Who founded these colleges and halls of learnfnc? The Church! Secular education first divorced morals from ethics. God deliver Canada and the United States from professors and teachers vrho have "no definite convictions" about: re- ligion! Secular cdttcafloti has turn- ed upon its founder “The Church." As Jesus once drove the money changers out of the Temple so should those professors and teach~ ers who are poisoning the minds of our youth be driven out. and re- placed by “God fearing teachers" so that our youth would came out at the end of their school days with minds intact and faith in God. I am. lr. Mo. MAY EATON. Pasadena. California. Bow Bells Ring Again (St. Thomas Tlmes-Juumal) The most famous bells in Lon- don ncxt to the cliirncs in the clock tower of the British Parlia- ment, the major bell of which l5 "Big Ben," are the Bow bells of Cheapslde. Bow bells. the bells of the Church of Si. Mary 1e Bow, al- most a stone's throw of the north- east. corner of st. Paul's Cathed- ral. were. 1n common with others silenced by law, intended to he rung only in event of invasion. For a number of years th had been used by the British road- castlng Cor oration as the fntier- val signal n home and overseas broadcasts. But on the night 0f December 29, 1940. when the City of London received its worst bomb- fn . the Germans tiearly put. the beTls out of business alto ether, St. M ‘s Church was busted and bom ed so than nothing was left. standing but. the walls and tower. The bells were found lylntz rlmvnll the debris. but were not, seriously damaged. The tower itself him been repaired, and Ls reported to be as strongmas It. was when the church was lit. 1n 1680 by Sir Chr1sto~ pher Wren. The belLs have been fixed u so that the are again being used by the B. . C. During the ntcrlm a. brass quartette has substituted by playing the three notes B. B. C. The Bow bells are immortalized in the story of Dick Whtttfngton. the discouraged youth who found no success in London. and set out for hL; native Gloucester accom- anled by his cat. As tie rested at. he top of Hlgate be hem-d the Bow bells ringing, and they seem- ed to an to him: "Tum n aln Dick hlttlngbon, thrice rd Ma or of Iondun." He went back an did become thrice Bord Mayor of London. Hts first, was In 1397 ltheusltagcond 1n 1406 and the third n The original church was erected 1n the eleventh century. destroyed tn the Great London in 1660. The Present bell! may not be the ones Dick Whit- tlngfon heard but the rector. Rev. F. C. Baker, believes they are. Another claim to fame that the Bow bells has Li; that. anyone born within their sound ls a Cockney. a slang term applied hundreds o! years ngo by rlvincinls to the supposed supcrclllous dwellers of London. The metropolis was not very biz than. and Bow bells could l- Vital elements supplied by canned salmon incTude calcium and phosphorus, essential to sound bones and good teeth . . . also more iodine than is found in any food of land origin. And today, in this moment of supreme trial, when every quality of nerve, bone and muscle is sfeeled to the breaking point, this vital seafood is selected to nourish and susq tain the Empire's fighting millions. i. . . a fact worth remembering in times of_ CLOVER peace. Vancouver, Canada PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND — NOVA SCOTIA FERRY SERVICE VIA WOOD ISLANDS, P. E. l. — CARIBOU, N. S. M. V. “PRINCE NOVA” “The Connecting Link Between These Provinces” (DAILY—SUNDAYS INCLUDED) Siartln Ferry Will Leave Wood Islands 1.00 nan. 11.00 u.rn. and 3.00 p.m. July 1st the Nova South-Prince Edward Island ervice will operate three round tirips per i187- Will Leave Caribou _ 9.00 tun. _ 1.00 p.m. and 5.00 p.m. LUNCHES SERVED NUKTHUMBERLANU FERRIES, LIMITED CHARLOTTETOWN, P. s. l. be heardmiallziiverfThe itermils gen- erall applied heard over a very small part of the big city; the environment being enemy offices which are desert/cu at. night. MARY MMKINNON OF RED HOOK DIES RED HOOK. N.Y..—1VI.L1.s Mary 1". MimKlnnon. 63 who had operated a farm on the outskirts of the vlll- age for a number of years. died Friday in the Northern Dutchieas Health center, Rliinebeck. she had been ill only a brief time. Miss Mac-Kiimon was born in Bedque. Prlrwe Edwiird Island, Canada, the daughter of the late Frank and Mary MacLellan Muc- Kinnoii. She had been a resident of this vicinity for 20 years and was a. member of St. Chflstnphefs church. here. Surviving, are three brothers. James A. MwKlnnon, Prince Ed- ward Island. William MacKlnnonw Moncton, New Brunswick and David ' MacKlnnon. Wayland. Mass; several nieces and nephews. Solemn Requiem Mass wag equ- ducted at St. Christopher's church at. 10 o'clock with burial 1n me 50¢- red Heart church. Bairrytown, un- dei" m» direction of Burnett and Rockfeller. _ LEM-ON EXTRACT CASE MONGION, 11.3.. July a-(om- Lemon extract, Ls both Lritoxlcutln and drinkable. Magistrate W. F. Lane ruled today. The question had been raised by Defence Counsel in the cse of Gladys M0110“. charged with keeping intoxicating liquor for stile. The case was adjourned until Friday. Information reaching Britain in that saibofcurs blew up, alfost. at. the same moment. the ffliree principal glaectrlc sub-stnt-lom of Saint-Grout, e80. and wuv HAVE ital.‘ SORE g9» yrrer? 1gb"! 5 an Irkutsk, East. offensive astrlde the Somme ad- vanced slightly. One d the most beautiful hamlet; in England 1s to be sold by aimhion. It is the hamlet of Blalse. in Ham- bury parish. four miles from Bris- ml. I1, consists of 10 stone cottages erected about 1811. of ltnln " one or dlnlnen — consult u i lpeolulllt. . to all natives of 1011 on today but. actually the w Y sound o! theibells can only be Ago Today (By Tho Canadian Prels) JULY 8, IBM-Strong oflenslvo opened by Italians near supported by you! the passage of Vol] a. Berni Alabama; I Czecho-Slovaks Siberia. v1 in l " ".'-:..:.~...::.'""..: Al your nrv-loo with ~ you: ' ol oxperlenoa uni u thorough wtructln: cervica- Cull 1n Ind dluun I. G. IIUTCIIESON G. F. IIUTCHESON OPTOIIITBIIT Montana. P. l. I. Offlco Ilium: l0 to l2 n. ll. Ito! P. M. Holiday: eh. by appointment i Office Connenlad with DBUGSTOII and French tallans, British monitors, use. - oocu led Ausrralan . "u dllflcultlel. Wrlk or Phone for i appointments. SIBGEANT PILOTS PR5 Almghl find ll . Bbo f; the npralitretiisexirt ‘Elf.’- . The: Ludo not. ask mbattle hour r any shield to cover me. The vast. unaluraible wa , Rom mob the stars db no; P May not be tumed ualde to m, The bullet flying to my bean, 1 ask no help to strike my I seek no petty victory here, The onemy I hate, I ow, To Thee is also dear. But thin I ray. be at m ta When deaai is drawing lingo e s . my God who also died Teac mine the way that I sho c. - rodle. R. A- F. Sergt. ' . a uently killed returning from Germany. 10g’ Mourners at the funeral of O. $85 m the Merchant Navy Comfo. Service by request. in place of ft ers. A German refugee brought landon u pl-lr of spectacles eXpe. have been seeking for 50 years. l frame is a brilllat red born a, the glasses were made by the Niii emburg Guild In 1663. i MATS HAIR RESTORER A delicately perfumed pre- paration which restores . ggg-gnglhgng and beautifles the hulr» Restores Grey or faded hair to ltu original shade whether Bug}, Bmwn, Red or Aub- um. Prevents Dandruff and . stops falling hair. Price 85c . Bottle. ov and lhrilllnq - A Maw“- u um 1w lat-Iv w! canine hunflhi‘ $1.15- ruu Pmvdu m and fl-ll cum Painful 0J0- r=i= bee. SUNBURN A, i. p-otectlon awn“ lunburn use: s Kill - — ———,-s5°§ Derny‘: "8 SWIQW “ .____5t)qund30c. s Ta Oil Tone “goo an: 30c 500 _T_u_nIel---——'-"' TIIE rwo altos 149 Great Georl! "H" (1 Given PIBWP‘ M.“ or erfkttentlon Tun Oll Petal McLeod Cd Bentley w. E. BENTLEY. x. c. s. ii. BENTLEY. K. o. Ilrrlsten um! Attorneyl-li- Law MONEY T0 LOAN 1M Prince Street Morrelland Company D. F. ARGIIIBALD Chartered Accountant: Illtqrn Trust Bulldllll Chlrlnlteto .- ‘rvrs EXAMIIIED GLASSES FITTED J. S. TAYLOR OPTOMETBIST New Location Corner Kent and Queen Sta. 0 polite Bu’; Grocery Ivan n b A polntmenll Phone ca! encu 1013 _______ , , __ H. F. McPhee B.A., K-C; NOTARY &0. BABRISTEB SOLICITOR lllley Building Charlottetown! PALMER 8i HASLAM l. l. IIASLAM. B. A» LL B- BARBISTE ETC. Bunk of Nov: Sco In Chm-MN" °"""‘i‘i‘€‘°-r'6" Phone aim!‘ ' r. o. im 11 BELL 6. MATHIESON MONEY T0 LOAN Cameron Block Charlntuto" P . nd M. ALBAN FXRMER l. L. LL-B. BARRISTER, SOLICYTQR. ETC’ Cunullun Bunk of Commerce Bldl" --_“°'5‘»'- T9=¥Q$Il==<= ALEX W. MATHIESUN BARRIBTEII. BOLICITOR. ET?» om“: oo arm Georlr 51"" w‘ loan to Lon $01M“