l" “Ly 4, 1942 THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN PAGE FIVE STOCK QUOTA nolvs u . I Advertising llatcs»— Payable In Advance ' m ‘mm charge for All! Advertisements u Collin 1| so word: Weotern and Eastern loom ' mi Gum“ h“ ' o C min; Events 3o per onl: fl‘- r~= '"==#l-‘°'""" "' ~= - “Y- ~- new Ylilllf srocll 3% ma] dug?‘ (Jud; on. oe name: Letters oi um" "“' tin-r l-“Lidnhnn a n “druid l.'r°'r‘r"ur'rir'.'h’r°l . , "n: lo cents pa; $1,‘, on or 4o word. um of suururlpilunu Apprggtlftaflelrllmch‘ Add,“ m; tattoo 81.00. Other rates on OI! fbpgjgptloli- —--- -j (Canadian Press) For sale To Let stocks Clone my», 23o FOR. RENT - DINING noolvl. Am c and r- 25 1-2 m; saw d- “R- C" 5-4-31. furnished, at Stanhope. Good Am Tel Tel 111 a-s clurlberian. business proposition. Phone Anaconda 24 5-8 ALE-BABY PMM IN 4,, 5-2-21, Baldwin Loco 10 3-4 r011 5 l, Phong m. 5-4-11. Bendix Av 32 1-2 300d Yep“ ' T0 LET-Z QB 8 FURNISHED gem sgee], 54 3.4 u“. __ 1931FARGO TRUCK rooms ‘for’ light housekeeping. mes Q1110 __ “fifinflrnl. Eirlc Pendergast- 151E251,‘ APP!!! ‘T’ Guardian. 5-4-31- Chrysler“ 54 1 4 lk. ' - congdon 13. l°%;. Male Help wunlou 51;; 55;; w- g; FOR “ to freshen first . a user 1mm‘ . woman - MAN oa nov roa 0w Melon ill ‘1-8 ofufllllw- Apply Gwen“ 5-2-2i. farm work. W. Younker, Brackiey Gt N01‘ P14 33 1-3 - ——-———————-———- M as - OUT“ Point Road. Kenizecott d 2B il-tzi FOR SALE l1 r911, Pgiigiinnulori. MAN WANTED - WITH SOME N”?! $3.‘... 1 3-8 Coeécéh. 11:6“: 5 85350.00. willards experience in buttermaking. Nor Am co a grey-vice StiitiOn, Winsloe. 5-3-21. Apply L60 HUBIIQB, gill] PataCo i}; 3 4 . . _ m, . 10R, some — Rlifielaiflf,“ “v2 Std oll u; s: 1-8 Clydesdale Marewgw 5.4.11. Personal RX“ Corp - ~ " H“'é°‘l.i.‘.§. t: r: T—-FARM AT ASTHMA IS A JOY KILLER- u r ' FOR 5A.“ o“ “N i 1 d. "n vi ' Asthm Re a " 7895 is 11 S St C0 46 3-8 Cvmltlila-rm’ fiesuffefhtzrlcrfugirgd. Joya orslnger. c: dog: inn su l; vanadium corp 15 1-8 A“. is“ J S Parkman, Brack- of Vitamin "A" only $4.00. JQIXE§II West Union 28 Bdligalélgs ' ' 4-29-5-2-4. Pharmacy. 4-22-1mo. west} Elia 6'7 OOWDI‘ —— ‘f , CZ ll“ ""‘°“rs>'rl.‘?.°v'“<§§.i'£§§ E nnitmiornililfi. ‘inflfirifnn’? iiillgillggfdqglmii Bug, ygmrly, Free geved n mggalvis’ Pruritus Booklet. w to‘ ‘lliillllirlllllglle Bfflif“ angel‘; this. 60c. SLOGTTXIEYbiBuK M0111’ fédl Cllfb Hllwilery- 55'“ ’ ' for $1.65. Follow enclosed det- Zf-éswnurr‘ volt SALE-ONE COCK _ "10" tl-actoll pmdiricanilal-rrbaz: one set tandem c ' 1-33-1310. Female Help Wanted (Canadian Press) on the premises of DOMITIEN GALLANT OYSTER BED BRIDGE WEDNESDAY, MAY 6tli l O'CLOCK P. M. IMPLEMENTS Manure ‘Pmdil. Cort, Truck wagon, 2 tort wheels, Seeder, set of Ren- des barrows, set light horrows, l"! plow, single plow, engine, "m"! machine, circular raw FM" lellfillltor, Ford tractor, 18 Ford Car. $TOCK — Brood more i400 Pmllli. 8 years. Brood more ‘°° nuunrlr 4 years. slr niildl m": 0nd purebred Guernsey "i, four one year-old lioiters, 21:21:’! yfari-old steers, calves, S o arrow, seven pigs, {with Also boards, llay, straw, '"'"P$. etc. .F“"l1 for sale listing of TERMS or rent, con- “Aiiizres at Cynibria. — sums up to $15 22353101‘ tliot amount 8 montlu M °" lllloroved ioliit notes, ' 2"" ott for casli ll , ,,, zmjigwovér. lollowinq line a A v LEX MCRAE. Auctioneer °“° ‘mmsecbion letvertharrlgllsl; WANTED-MAID r0 u Sum“ mo” - -b ltom rac or P ; R GE ERAL ll? tilt-Die“ :,'"'3“‘§.."’.‘Le§?;. “we litre: firs" i: er, also pure re OI‘ 1 - - , 1 _ . s old, and couple —-—j———-——-—-—-— Beauharnoia os-s ill l“@%¥“§*mm°~ "cl:e..:lll2..e2re§r2r:- n" c. l: 2-: Fr town. - ' . ' ' ' 111D 7 -B Farlanf,>*f€ V lottetown. - - , mt Pete n 34 Miscellaneous WANTED DAILY MAID. MORN- lugs 9‘t0"12- Monday to Friday. KING EDWARD HOTEL. GOOD Apply ‘T. Guardian. 5-4-3i. B k meal-r '2'_.: WANTED - cnu. FOR uousn- an s an- work. Apply cluurolnn. 5-4-21. ,_ _____. y r ' w Wright. MOHWEUQ- 5km‘ pggni 17$; Md 0:23;‘: Stocks Close n nousalmr-zrrn ron FAMILY Canada _ ' Se g tug? tin city. Apply gxvg" flomintrfe 1441-2 uar an. -4. on rea lao ' Nova Scotia 273 KINGS 001mm! Royal Bank m 1'2 AT NEW PERTH,» I M v ... Tuesday. May nu. rl l r- M- n emoriam _ _ 1- "“‘n'.".l".f."€l.“.r ——- Mllllllg m. lglsfndty;noic,thfiacgglu w n“ Mn. mamas conmnv e . . _____ -___ ll."rllr'llrrti‘°“él‘r‘-ri“ lll»r"'-‘-l‘-=ll‘-‘ echoes“ ln smear-u: rm l _ l 1 _ mills “d Mmmm ‘neon mcmd Dlflire at the Charlotiieibwlci Il-Ioséliii- ' y illlr- m tdlludbiérlns git? coéitrtseedog lalsst week slnolru Close K__] 5 years 0 W_ muc reg!‘ y h many (islliiggey) duocawfreshen in June: frzends. He leaves to mourn his Aldermac 9 i5 hem (Plymouth Ruck); 1 more. wife, two daughters, Mrs. Des- Anglo can 3a 105011», work anywhere and I001! Rpches and Miss Dcrothy of this Ashley 31-4 A"“::.l:' ware? 9: , ___ ;‘b ttltonl - 6 '-' B59 e nrr-"ir crrm°uz ‘tiilfilfi 2.11s? §“n‘°'5‘fi . , '- t. ni . 3 - t Pfggj; fig“ . ..r.."fl”“éi.';‘ii§€l‘ll..§f°.nr“£°°fii§’ 350mg; l," IMPLE — Y -_ ' a binder (Massey Harris); l fiikéhll- telimlf‘ ihfmiiiemiadas iesbom m: Co Pfd _ 261-2 ; ‘ - * r. . Iggilzcrplawiplkeshllllgtlllffflxiowf wtiell in brick and gin-m whrk andmcicur- gggt Igfigamc 825 llarrow- thresher and cleaner coin- his life time fulfil ed many impor- C l llineil (null; wood stand uud saw. tant contracts in mu and the 6333311,, g2 H - uk a on light. driving neighboring Provinces leaving ‘camp bulk liilagrd" wood sleigh; many monuments to his skill and Davies 12 {bulging ‘driving and work; 11B)‘ ability as a master mechanic- he D°m s“ B 8 gnrkesnh r-npe- separator; 101'!“- was a consistent member of ' the East Malarm‘ 137 llliivrls and lroér. galhclgoclllitlurrhstalgi tthe, go» Egg“? f? H FURNITURE-Z bedroom suites; ~'"“~‘ e Y ° , ' “"5 a“ s" Gods Lake liar e cupboard and writing dillf Se“ andgwa’! W‘: present Q" “'3 Goldale 6 5-8 , . u, a, rvices. e was a quiet, un ssum "m" "d? “mm; "huh ‘the; ming gentleman who earned the G°°dY°IY “'9'” ‘ind sflm“! an“: ‘r respect and good will of all who 911111101‘ 0°14 71-3 w“ numerm“ t° m“ an‘ knew him. To the bereaved fa-mily fell?‘ Agd E4135 Terms of Sale-All rural up to we tender our most sincere svm- 8 8 S 0T0 00 t.'i nth: paihy, Macassa 206 gigdiFgnmgipigxaafiirulgil not-e: fl -—i-ii—-——— M11011 Q3 1-2 per cent discount for unulr. CANADIANS 0N roun MacLeod. 112 W fl- BEATON LONDON (or) Six dav nit/ling? n1 i: . v - - - , c nze Alllli-"Mu- tours of Britain at four shillings (90 Mining qpn m0 cents) a day are being arranged for Monem 23 14; *-»-w-l-~- S.“.'.‘."‘i§?.'°i£’i°.';i all: “mg; a _—_ CBIlM-IBII privates took part in a ggliynjekzal 621': "test. our" and were entertained by A" Scottish cities gnfifiq", k 1 ‘l H ' ___'___ __ l'l 0 e 13 q _ Pacalta 21-4 CONSERVE MEAT Jl CB4 58mm" 1d 1055b: ‘_"_ "L g erron Go “'50 be sold by Public Auction on jugelszooélhzvtilivblgifllaiéseadiercams; PM cmw m MARKET gqunlm flame Ls to place the meat in a fry- Plllneel‘ 140 ing pan instead of 0n the Kl‘ ~ P°W°11 43 WEDNESBAY- M" “ll Juices of course will remain in the Prentlier 1% f n n and ay be more eu- Pres on “T m" "w" 1.235.513; than i": allowed to drip San Ant 14a an prngert; of the ‘Into Percy Yea. into the broiler. ggscioee g8 , i t I 50 - a 1'1 rru3"n.uZZ.nfr“'$i‘.f-“F- ‘i ‘m’ Slave Lake 1 a-4 W ll BEATON I sheep Bnonii‘; 13g - - I Uchi o 9 SI 9 u Cda o1 Ho 4. Auctioneer. vgghife: a1 a 1 z . verm g g - Wendigo l4 lucucll SALE E.?“%’....%i‘,‘°“{i". *.':..:::::l::r2.~:*; uruuu 1' - - of May i042, at the hour of 12 o be sold b)‘ Pubhc “um. o'clock ‘noon all that. parcel of gals] g3" 78,000 no land situate in Lot 30 in Q1169!“ County bounded and described as follows: Comlnencinl 11t- 5 stake set on the south side of Caruo brook at its function with the Rhylney River said brook - lnl on the western side of the said river and at or about the distance o! one mile southwardly from the mill occupied by Jame‘ Dollar thence southwardly WWW’ ing the various courses of acid river such a distance as will make YORK SCHOOL Honor roll for March and April: Grade x-I. Mabel zeiau“. Grade Ill-i. Verne Watte; 2. Ruth Nicholson; 3. Irene duppell. Grade VIE-l. Helen Lewis; 2. EdisO W . Gralila’ iIsI-al, ghlrl%r°(il%oke; 2. Mary a ; . Ia . G de . Be lah vessey; 2. ra l-l u rt Veasc i 3. Arthur . five chains at a rectenllo I115 Raid, yum-i, Marguerite from these two oomtl 1111111“! Vessey; to Lewis; s. Aleulu duo west such a distance as to in- 3mm, cludc fifty acres rna bolus ti" Grade 1v lsr.) -l. Christine northern moiety or half part. of Pmud;]_ mm, grown; 3 Bernice a farm of one hundred ecrea de- _ mired by an indenture of M!" Grade IV (Jr.)-1. Dem Wlttli made the first day of selitembfl a, nloilnrd Doiron 1854 between Robert. Bruce Stnw- Grade II (BrJ-‘l. Donald 0100i- llrt of the one pert and Joesph t. G555 of $113 Quiet part. Grade II (Jlfii-I. Freda NOW- ‘rhe above me is made under “m; g, Marina Watts. and by virtue of e PW" OI "l! contained in an lndentllrd 0! Mortgage fillkd the 25th OI NO‘ I N Ex ma. . gglgeest Avgragels: Buelah Vol07- o0 per cent, and Marguerite Venn? r vember 1m lino made between ill oer vent- L99 cgfl-gghgr of Bonwell, Lot Perfect Attendance for 80 and Mary Can-uglier his wife months: Irene GIIPDG i _ hi ley Cooke. goitliiadnuirekgisfgwifills ;’l'°“d~ 5"’ Brawn. Rut!" "'5"- Emil‘: vouev. Marguerite W81"- 5,2” uwls, Alethl Brown. B01111“ u, m", wgttg, Prado Newman. of lilo one part end MIIY Alice Devine of the other port Ind nW vested in the undersigned, de- fault having been made in Pl?" mgnbt of prlnfiipel lindvingruéc . . r Wm m wine! Bonk Building, Charlottetown. P111100 mum nlglliA MAY MoALnlIl. '“"“"" °‘ “lfi-iffr: Llllikqvémvia, Norman Brl-‘Ml l" O vex r0wn. Principal; Vivian Hewett. Assistant: Jean Gordon- d with ell lite pueenlnro but MONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE (Canadian Press) Stocks C10" Bell Tel 144 Can steamship '1 1-4 Dom Bridge 23 1-4 Int Nickel 29 3-4 Mtl Power 20 3-3 Nat Brew 24 Noranda. 43 1-3 shawinigan 13 st of can 59 St of Can Pfd ' - Grain WINNIPEG. May 3—(CP)—Al- though there was e. report that. l. substantial quantity of export wheat had been worked to a neu- tral country Saturday there was no confirmation and transactions in the wheat cit on Winnipeg grain exchange included minor purchases by Canadian and United states mills and local trades. Wheat futures here remained unchanged May 'at 89 1-4 cents a bushel and July at 80 3-8. Chicago wheat 1-8 higher. Shipper interests were after No. 1 rlcrtilem in (he cash wheat mar- ket while mills were after Nos. 3 and 4 northern but. no large vol- euéne business could be confirm- Markcts At A Glance (Canadian Irena) Toronto-Imlustrials and base met- als slightly higher; golds lower; junior oils unchanged. Montreal-Utilities lower; groups unchanged, New York-Stocks closed higher. Winnipeg-Wheat unchanged. New York-Cotton slightly higher. other Produce Prices MONTREAL. May 8—(CP)— Canadian Gcmmcdhy Exchange. Butter spot: Que and western (92 score) 35B. spot: Eastern A-large 29- 2a 1-2; A-medlum 2'1 1-2-28; A- pullets 23 1-2—24; E-B 25 1-2-26; E-C 23-25 1-2. To arrive: butter, unquoibed. Futures: butter, May and June 34 l-a; eggs, May 28B. MONTREAL, May 3—(CP)— Produce market prices here Satur- day as reported by the Dominion Department of Agriculture follow: Eggs: graded shipment selling A-large 29 1-2; A-medium 28; pullets 23.‘ B 25 1-2-26; C 23. But : first grade creamery prints, jobbingbgrice, 36-37; first grade solids, Jo ing pTICG 35 1-2- 36 1-2; wholesale. Que no 1 pas teuriud storage 35, no 2 storage 34 Cheese: current receipt, western, white l0 1-4-19 3-8, colored 19 1-4 -19 1-2 for factory shipping point; Que wilite and colored l9 5-8 de- livered Montreal; wholesale, west- ern and Que white 20 first grade April FAs Montreal. Potatoes: Que whitEs no 1 1.65- 1315: no 2 1.25-1.50; NB mountain no 1 1.00-1.85; PEI mountain 1.80 1.90; whites 1.83-1.85; Man. whites no 2 1.55-1.70. Sea. For Convoy 9 In N avy’s Gare Smooth As Silk By ALAN RANDAL Canadian Press Staff Writer A BRITISH PORT. May I — (CPL-Shipboard shorts on a con- voy crossing: The way the navy takes care of things a trans-Atlantic jaunt with a troop convoy is as orderly as ll. peacetime cruise . . . About the only difference-for travellers - ls the need for close watch at night to see that no lights are visible from ilre sea or air, the dull grey battle dress of the transports and the constant boat drills. . . The navy takes care of other worries .. On a recent transfer of Canadian trouops and airmen from the Dn- m on to Britain the ca, riciolls old Atlantic co-operated to e ex- treme for the travellers comfort. . . The sea was smooth as silk . .. At that there was the odd case of sea sickness but- not enough to make anybody miss meals. . . The troomhips and their naval escorts plowed the seas unmoiestcd . . . Only excitemen was a mludge otf smoke on the horizon day . . . It turned out. to be from a neutral cargo boat, guaranteed safe passage by all belligerents. . . she passed cose by, her all-white superstruct- ure gle in tlhe bright- sun- ehine. .. . oops rushed to the reiltowaveGodspeed. . . Fora couple of days in mid-Atlantic the weather was summer-like. . . ‘hoops s rawled on deck, soaking up sun-sh ne. . . Bolt Drill Welcomed Bout drill. instead of beinl l bother. was welcomed as a means ofbreoki uptheday...fl‘0 these exerc es, Canada's top soldier was classed as a civilian and Bot quite a tuck out of it. . . He wee Lt-Gen. A.G.I.. McNaughton, Canadian army commander, travel- ling beck to Britain with Mrs. Mc- Naughton. . . He could have stay- ed in tire smoking‘- salon with the regular civilian lwellere- there wee onl a handful of them- in- stead o standing on deck et boat station: vrith the troops. . . ut he didn't, end neither did Mn. Mc- hton. . . “We might mire ", said the generll. He stroled the decks each dov d the trip was a good lest elm e strenuous time in Canada , , , But got down to heavy work the last couple o days . . - general vna e in‘ al. tayzrritte ,. cuierly with hi; lifeboat’; company when they lined up four deeil for drill. . He was as friendly 13s an old muffler and was oonalnually getting out d lino to diet with l. War ribbons. E. M. PROCTOR who has been epi>°l11t°d 11°“ “I the new Scrap Rubber Division ll! the Department of yiunrtlons and Supply, with rubber shortage one of the gravest problems of rho hour, Mr. Proctofls job will be an important, one.. .I'h0to—Publlc 1n- formation. ST. PAUL'S CHURCH At yesterday morning's service in St. Paul's Church the sermon was preached by the rector, Rev. A. LeDrew Gardner. He chose his .ext from the gospel 0f the day, John l6, verses 8 and 9. “And when he (‘rite Holy Spirit! is come he will reprove tile world of sill, and of righteousness and of judgment: 0f sin. because they believe not ill me.‘ I11 $1115 Passage Our Lord speaks of the work the Holy Spirit, “i111 do in the world. He will reprove the world of sin, righteousness and Judgment. We will consider these three in_ order ‘in preparation for the coming festival of Whit sun. day. Today, let us take the first or these-sin. The Holy spirit will hold 11D sin in its true colours, so that: We may grasp H5 full ellorlnily, Tho world today is already convinced 0f 5111. so that pal-t of the work of already accomplished. dmany and l n? hi?” var ous loso ics to get rid of this sensepor Sig). At, first many of these 5.51am; p,-O_ mlsed well but with time they all failed, as they will fall and must fail, since there must first be o, true diagnosis of the evils and troubles nlllch affect mankind. Today we see the frightful blotches and sores on the body of human- ity. 8nd we know that there is smlleihilli; Wrong, but we have no} yet diagnosed evil in the blood stream of humanity. Who 1's the Physician who can do this for us? The Holy Spirit will not only convince us of the root iiltence sins and evils flow. He will uncover the evll in the blood stream of human. “Y. Anti the great evil and sin 1,; this: ‘They believe not on me," God says there is one sin greater than any breach of the Ten Com- mandments or other of his law; and ordinances, and that ls the sin of doubt and ullbellef in Jesus Christ and in his saving grace. Ami there can be no cure of fro many sores and blotches we srcon the body of humanity until this great sin of unbelief in Christ and his missioyn of salvation is purged from the b.0od stream of the nations. We have placed ill positions of responsibility in the state p-Bolflp, who are guilty of this great sin of un_ belief and yet we wonder at the dis- ease which is rife tcday in the body of humanitv. And just a5 (rare are Persons called by Physicians dis.- case carriers who, though tllev an. pear well themselves spread cDnfzl- lon to others. so there are mmlv who seem fit and virile as far as the eye can see, yet bear in their hearts the germ of unbelief ivhlch they spread to others as ‘Jre evil contagion of sin. But when we be. lieve in Jesus all his power is zip- glied to us, and the disease of sin purged away. Let us remember "He Will re- prove the world of sin because they believe not 0n me." And before the work of the Holy Spirit is finished every soul in the universe will ‘oe- lleve and acknowfedge Jesus Sim-t. a5 Lord and Master. Every 1mg in the universe will have this ".'lli‘.'iC- tion, yet. they will be in two groups, those ill-ho follow, love and adore ilre Saviour and those others who, like the devils believe and tremble because they had rejected Jesus, the only begotten son of God. FIRE !JAPAN’S GREATEST FEAR FROM AIR FRIED F. LINDSTROM By sVlvEriitea for NEA Service FIRE! That i; what Japan fears from air raids. Its clues and towns are built, of inconcelvably flimsy and inflammable materials - ex- cepting the most modern structure in the key cities. Under a rain of bombs, they would burn e8 fierctiy as a Christmas tree B1110- Frcm their experience with earthquakes (some 600 are record- ed each year), the Japanese know llih-at fire can do to them. As a direct result of the Great Earth- quake 0i September 1, 1923, about one-fifth of Japan's national ilrcallh was destwyed and up- wards of 250,000 persons (the un- official estimate. denied by the government) lost their lives in the flaming inferno. An im lessive parallel‘ celn be drawn bcween the terrific effect of earthquakes and the man-made terror that is loosed from the sky. in the Fire invariably follows wake of both AIR RAID PRECAUTIONS ARE "PATHETIC" rald- l ted flres, Nippon ‘s ll!‘- rald autions are pa ltlei-ica lly purpc and iIllZdCQUBIE. Iln the first place. the government. has not had the funds to expend tor air-raid shelter csnstructlou. Another fact: Tokyo, with its 7,001.65) inhabitants, Yokohama, Kobe, Nagcya, and the enormous industrial city of Osaka are all of lilcnl partly built on Zffllllld DYE- vlously reclaimed from the sea. So even shallow digging 1:l many important localities soon meets with rising water. The Imperial Hotel, in Tokyo, for extmple, is silllfliéd on ground that is as scg- gy as a wet sponge. The guilding of air-raid shel- ters presents an engineering prob- lem practically inllpcssible of solil- lion, Tcky/o has only a single subyvay. seven mllcs lnllg. But even this subway lilculd prove cf no value as an air-laid shelter- because it is laid just. underneath the surface. Most of the details of a typical Tokyo air-raid drill, by night, con- ta sist; of A R P. wariens run-hing around and ordering the excited populace to turn off their lights. In modern aerial ularfare, night raiders drop a great many flares before they commence unloading their ‘eggs!’ However, the Japa- nese seem to have failed utterly to take this into consideration. Somehow, one cannot hefp gain- ing the ulllpresslon that the ma- jority of Japanese fecl that lhe darkness of a. blacked-out carries full protection against sudden death that may rain from the skies. And yet ne-ilher by day nor by night do they have any kind cf adequate shelter - such as the rcck caves qt; Ctlungklng - where they might hide. Japan: air-raid drills also in- clude the spectacle of men in rubber suits running hither and thither, sprinkling white powder n-ilere imaginary bcmbs a-re gup- pcsxl to have landed. Factllally, in case cf real raids it would be just, "every man [CT lllnlself." ‘Throughout Japan, oil storage tanks stick out. like sore thumbs. Practically all of them are situ- ated in surprisingly vulnerable pIEZCQS Aimrst invariably they are smack up against cities, most cf which are built cf vrood and pl-zster and PGDPI‘. 0n their rcofs they have hellvy tiles that. in seri- ous earthquakes cause more cas- ualties than, pelhaps. any other agents. When roofs buckle, these tiles come down in an avalanche. Japan's ar als also. most of them, from Mazzllru to Ot-aru, are placed dangerously near to resi- dential and business areas. Only Tokyo and Osaka have o. few do traffic arteries, ssin event of a holocaust, should be fourd ineffective in ai- fcrding a speedy evacuation of a populace that readily flies into a panic, anyway. This I have seen with my own eyes. LACK OF ROADS FOR EVACUEES Therefore, in a great crmflagra- tion, following a terrific, bombing, the congestion in the streets would know no bcunds. Bot Tokyo and Yokohama witnessed this sort of unbridled confusion followed the Great Earthquake. Rioting broke out. People com- clty 1 RAIDS thumbs»... "Nlpponb air raid precautions are a typical air raid fire drill in Tok- irig on a flimsy bamboo ladder. menced killing each other Wild looting went on ullrcstlzlireclly until the blllejaclcets were .a ‘led at Yokcilanla livhezl it was gelher too 1am) and idfiffilg Inlperidl Bcdyellalwls D. stltuicd martini lzlv: ln T Kobe, my blxl foremcst port city, up from the harbor, and crowds upward to tflie very tree-line of the nloun- ns. Here, in event of an air l-cmb- lng, the populace ‘ would be found fazl"; most frigtlliiul. Fir in this over-crotvzlsd lllfll‘ wllil the narrowest of would set the pine-clld mcu to inflame, spreading a furious forest- lre. Such a, fire could svceep ininllci \ - far into the up farm vll‘u_'_s n< it progressed. Krbrflq rir nlzlllg \l'.'li{'l‘ NStEVOJ-l‘; are situated in lilo wfin ‘i. hither nnll thither, sprinl ling lvllltc are supposed to have lllnllcd." ‘Illc trial city. SC mountains, directly back of the city. Moreover, tires: reervolrs, constituting Kobe's entire water supply, are ringed w tire most inflammable ullrfczl El imagin- able, and more ta‘l .. .. And next to Nng._aki_ Ko-be is the seat of Japan's most important Shipbuilding industry. A wide areapf tfle perimeter of the har- bor is reserved for dickynrds; and beyond this. and a bit rf c. e coast- llflt, ls am‘ hel- van. area holding various lads in -No. 7 boat. out where they came from how they felt about things. Showed special interest in some New Zenland navy men comiriz h: Britain for flying training. . . The generals mdc. Lt-Co‘. E Rodger of Halifax and Ottawa, was the smillcat man on board . . Certainly he packed his lifebelt with more dash than anybody nine . . Officers in charge o! lifoboats were Royal Austrllllrl Navy sub- lieutenants. ellroute to Brtain for training with the Rove: Navy. . ‘They were the lustiest gamesters aboard and tossed a lfi-pound medi- cine ball for hours at e time. With Airmen 0n one transport ailmen far out- numbered soidiers and nus-ed the time nrning about 'l~.elr training and eir hope for this or that ting in Britain. . .90. Johnny orrig of Powell River B.C, re- called how scared he'd been aur- ing training at ni;l~t flying. . . Now he wants nothing else— "It's the best fun there is." . . . His big-listed pal. Ken Warner from Portland, Ore., agreed wth him. .. Scattered among the army men were officers wearing first Great r One was Ca . find and 0.1a. Coutts or Winnipeg's Fort Garry Horse . . . He was anxious to get up to hie home town, Aboyrle Abel-deenshkie. . . Best - known ling. . . He was ship's orderly sergeant and had IO make several tours of the boat from top to bottom each day. . Nearly everybody got to know him as "Silvy." Pte. Steve Demeter of ‘roronh ranked as the but barber aboard and did a fiouririllna bilsincss. . One of his customers was Pie. William Thaisen of Vancouver, who had hfs haid cut sitting on ‘he ship's main staircase. . . That iras Demeter‘; regular buainesg "stand." NAZI CIIUTIST ESCAPE!) IRISH DUBLIN, April 30-(CP)- Irish Dollce are still hunting for a my:- terioug Gereman parachutist w-l») escaped from Mountjoy Prison in Dublin more than a month ago with a woman's fur coat and o large sum of money. Their latest. move is to offer u reward o1 [500 (about $2.250) for him. The nursing mrln i.- Hans Mal"- szliner who, according to hi; own story, work-ed ill London as a Cilulll- 1st. or four years and was on his way back to British by way of Eire with a portable transmitting up paratus. He landed by parachute in county Wexford six months ago but when he tried to get a lift to H76 nrurest. railway station. the - truck driver brought him to the police barracks. Police searchers found £1,200 (about $5,400) in Bank of Eng and notes on his person. He was taken to a wcst-of-Ire- land jail for medical treatment anrl on his recovery wns transformed to Mcuntjoy He. escaped bv cutting the bars of his cell with a, hack- saw. An inquisitive warder found a stuffed figure in his cell bed during the night, but Marschner already had made his get-away over the 20-foot pl-lson wall. It is believed Mar;'*"ll".'.-r is s: _ in Eire, being harbored by the Irish Re ubllcan Army and possibly disguise a; a woman with the aid of the fur coat. As an iniernee, he was allowed Pt to spend I50 (about $225) on the coat because he said he needed it to keep him warm and wanted to take it back to his girl friend in Germany after the war. __i__________ CARPETS AND IIANGINGS Even if your carpet is not notic- eably dirty, it needs a shampoo new and again because grit cuis the material and ‘IIOII/CDS its life. Make a lather of aoapflakes and w-zlrm water and add a tespocrl or . liquid ammonia t. ceach quart of water Go down on your hand- and knees and scrub the carp-t gentlv in sections, scrublfng harder whm lhsre are stains, Ffnirh each sec- tion by wiping it with a cloth wrunz out in warm water, gm00th- ing the pile in the right direction To remove fresh grease stains ccver will-l blcttlng paper and Dress with a hot iron ' A sprinklinz of bran brushed in ilvilli a clean. stiff nail brush will freshen n high-colored oer-pet. Re- moveutnlgremiains of the bran with u a vacuum cleaner. A hot iron used over a damp clcth will successfully rout nlcllls. If a carpet or mat is frayed at the edges, bind it will c-l web- bing SQWII cn with herring .lll;: Do not baclctilch lil- hurling as this is liable to i-fnl‘ away from the edge of the carpet. When you have walled your cur- tains, be sure to pllil lilcm silzmqlll by pulling the lam: . 1611‘ UP!’- I-Iang them cvcl" a Llie ollgtllivoys Par/rail 0/ a Hoarder! pathetically Inadequate”. Above, yo, with a bucket brigade work- oil-siorage tanks. . RIVERS AND CANALS ‘ ARE ADDED HAZARDS Accordingly, the people of Kobe, in nn air alzark, coulti 11nd no sniezy in il.g.glli. :0 iili: i’ili Ta do s0 oration. only possible exit open to the terrified DP-Dulace would means of the K be highway. Jallllre“: could Wallid (110311 (fillilJl .l1\".fl< ~ that sin-lb he two calms. key city on lfle Japanese train bland of Hon- dc is traversed by rivers, as well zls by men-made canals. So. in the ‘ aerial at- . s 0i the ' Jared from ' so nlany islands. nd" would be burn- ing‘; pyfé, uling happened all 4 i i 4 This awful w... which’ navel-ah “Air raid drills include the spectacle of men in rubber gulls runnln| powder where imaginary bombs one above is in Osaka, great inaus- Tckyo, during the ‘i023 earth- nuake disaster. Fuz‘ r, traffic . t river. the Slllli. y‘ "(:1 he- cause {W01}. a f s-tenlfid eventually to c ch firs. In one open "IILG -and I saw the dreadful signt m.\'S"‘i— 501130 34,000 persons were tr-lppul and bilrnrrl to d" in_ where they had snilfill safe" Will all that they ilrlcl mandrel to SAIVBBQ "0111 their wrecked hzutes I Toke a tip frcm the Scotsman, and serve your hot porridge with a sllrinkle of salt and 136M161‘. and llrlub of butter. Unlm! Rolicd oats Qqrtflg like popcorn! Porrid being Ill silgrlr Cl‘ other _s_ puflfll-j)’ or 101" liliVtll. y. -, ~l Ellrasan P317117!" i“ aDri-Jcll East I‘.<il(‘5 l1 Cli a-l 300100. . ___.---~-—-— — >‘_' Two I'll oucx Aclross Tilt $TREET AND ORDER AvleTi-KER Sull‘ FOR I m5 AKES MY V’ FouRTil oRoERAF sue-AR "rllls wsncl. Dozen HILL LAsr YESSIR PIEPABIO , I'M-NEU- Io! ANY smokes! Wllil their cily aiire, lhe '