‘ “c! 1'0"“ THE. Cliélil-(Llfgltowu GUARDIAN ,_ _ _____ ,_ trustees for that year. lnli BlIMlLCTTETOVIN Glllllllllll Morning Dally (Founded tn 1887) President Lieut. Uul. W. llheatcr S. Mullurc Vice-President: J. ll. Burnett, F.1d. iecretary: Lleut. Col. D. A. MucKlnnon, 0.8.0. Editor and Managing Director: J. R. Burnett, FJJ. Auoclate Edltors: Frank Walker and Lleut. h! A. Burnett, R.C.N.\’.lf. (On Acllve Service) “The Strongest Memory is Weaker TIM the Weakest Ink." THUR$DA_1Z_AIJ—_G_L'—S_T s, 194s _ War Russia Declares Follotvittg closely upon the devastating de- monstration of the Itltltttlu‘ bontb, the secret of which is l)l)>>(‘§.<t'tl lull)‘ l>_\ tircat Britain, Catt- ada and the Lhhttl Status comes the announ- cement that hits-it has tlvvlarctl war on japan. The 1m; “but. tlikilttthl)‘ not unconnected. Russia wnttitl t ». nztpt t~ lk‘ left out it1 the cold in the final wt Kuwait with the treachcrotts laps. She ha» will .\\‘|l't~ Itvrst-lf to settle, and wit]; an --' ~- ltrvttgllt inuncasttrztbly ‘mu-tr l); [.4 . trrttiott ;tt llirosltitttzt, (. gown m; _.f/,.- l-t‘ Winttzrty; practicallv wiped out of exists-act‘ lw ttzu- atomic blast) Marshal El Iwtt- ll\'\'llll‘fl that this was the -_ for llnsda to declare her- t-rv hf‘- atrnottrtccttrcrtt pttts the final seal n lzn .3 fate. This mat)" f < l hztvt‘ tht- restrlt of bringing the war tn a. vtttttt-thatt‘ close. The JIIP Wfll‘ lords catnut: now cttncvnl the ltopelessttess of the situation front their petiple. and where there is altsoltitelv no ltltpcs, evvtt fanaticisnt must falter. lf this sTttniltl be tltc otttcotnc. Russia's elc\'errtl1-lt~:tr czttrv would he well worth while. It would tuvnn the saving of precious Allied lives. including perhaps thousands of ottr own Catmdian troops now ttxtitting for the Pacific $t.'tiitt ntav u». PSXClllll-tg. .ti m». 1' Self. ln :n"._v $peakitig Up At Ottawa Front the Llutadiatr Press suntmary of Premier lone? st .\‘!llL‘lll\' at the Dominion- Provincial Cortft-retrcc. 2t \\"<>».tld appear that he has not been deterred from xpeztkirtg out “loud and bold" about the diszttlvantztges which this Province ltas suifcrt-tl tuuler Confederation, and in critici-ttt t-f the llontittiotr proposal to pay the provinces a minimunt of $12 per capita in return for _llll'l>(ilCIl')l1 in the income tax and sttcccssiutt duty fields. This arrangement, Pre- mier Jones stated. would tnean a loss to Prince Edward Island of 3110.000 a year in subsidies and succ on duties which it enjoyed prior to wartintt- tax collection. arrangctttcttt, and even lzcforv the war proved to be irt- adequate to our fiscal needs. lt is true that the llotrtiuiotr oiier is a "rninitnttrtt" payment, and would ttrtlltilltlv he lllCYCTlQPFl to meet special requiremt-ttts: but that would mean going over again all the grottnrl cttvcrerl h_v the Dun- can and White (Y-mnnssirnw- lfrtlike some of his Liberal tircrlcct-sstlrs in office, Premier jottcs cridt-ntlv (l1't('-. ttul regard mu- Igland claims at tlttztttzt a- ",g<»t>.<e-£'_ and is seek- ing to rt-tztitt nltrtt urts wort as a result of the rcpresctrtzttirttts tirade in the past by the Mathia- son, Stewart and llacblillan Governments. The plan lll"‘lll\>(‘(l by the llontiniotr. to which. Prttttier‘ lon- s hikes vxcc]>ti<">rr. is some- what diffcrctt‘. to the plan zztttlittcd in the Sirois Report. and the diffcrt-rtce w ould not seem to be to our arl\'.'t!tt.'t11t‘. The <irois proposal involved taking <:\'<'t' ll..‘lllllltl\'llll'lll relief. discontintt- attce of lh-tttiuint sttltsirlics, with- drawal of tln- urt-vttlrc- from the personal in- comc. ttnl tnhdritance tax fields. Drmrittion ."t~~trtnp:ittt1 of nntstattditttt provincial debts. and p.'t_\‘!|tt't1t hr tht- lltytrritriotr to the provinces zttmttal "national zttljttsttttctit grants" tari~d in :|:.w»t~l;ttt<"<' with their nccds. For Princi- liduztrtl Island the mittirttuttt grant would amount to $7_;o.<j>oo, lmgfll on the Com. ntissiorrs cstintzttc of an average annual sur- PlUS ‘ll S-”"l»‘?‘?’l ‘which the Province ltavc nvvr ztrittrl < punditurts if tlte plan Ira/l been in t-fi "t dn . th-.~ pt-ritnl 1936-1939, (Al; the province» with the t-xctitatinn of Ontario, Alberta .'trd l2... (Wlunthia would have re- Ccivcrl ;trl_it‘-lt".<ttt tjtflntts under this scheme; and l! the lH-ctnicrs of the last lltttttctl m" wt». llt-ssrs, llcpbttrn, Aber- hart and l'atttti.~. uric the men responsible for \\'1'('<‘l<ittj; 1hr tort corfercttcc). To pro- vide for tht- ut-ttiangvttcv '-f chrtngitrg condi- tions the Sirtf- tut... ll.<\lltll rccottttrtcnrlctl fur- thvr that ailitt-tttttsttl Qratti; should ht: sultjcct to rctit-v." and rtti-itttt t- _v five years, altd that an independent advisory body be estab- lished to which provincial claims for revision should bt- sttbtttittwl. llaw tht- .‘<ir~i. prwptt-rtls bet-n altered ‘,0 the htrgut" and wt-ztltltitn" rarovinccs, in the now prtttnr-(‘tl h_v the l(lll[_f Government? This would 111110111‘ ‘t. ht» Premier limes‘ opin- ion. l'ntil the full text of the conference (‘lisfttssiotts is :tv:ti!.~.hlt\ it is rmncccssary‘ to say more on this point; hut the Vrcttticr scents to have tnadt- a grind job of prcsetttintf some at least of our Qt‘it*\':t'tcc<. lvtckvrl up by facts and figures which .'trt~ the only argtttncnts that arc likclv to carrv wviqltt. For this he is to be: warntlv cotnntcudcrl. lt is such a change to lee a Liberal ~polt~v<rtrrtrr stand up and fight for this Province at Ottavia that his words are bound to nmkc an impression. both on the Fed- eral atrthoritics .'ttrd r-u the representatives of other provinces, And the Premier can be as- ltlred that wht-tr Parliatncnt tneets he will have the fttll strppurt of at least the Conservative Opposition. Our Nation t" w‘- (Ni-mpg (nrtun tr; of i< ~l;&tt l’. il"t‘ suit plan I Gallery Despite intttttttcrrtltlt- ltmrtlicaps. Camden's National Art Qallvry wws al/lo during the fiscal year 1943-44 in with-u its inflttcttcr: and pro- wide increased <ct-\i~t» to the public. a which will be noted with satisfaction by those readinv tl‘c annual rtumr‘ of ‘liq hoard of The report emphasize: the educating value of the National Art gallery, and points out how necessary a national gal'ery, which extends its services to every town and hamlet in the nation, is to thelsucccssful functioning of a democracy. “It is generally agreed that democracy re- quites a self-reliant, thinking citizenry," the report states. “Our complex civilization needs people who not only undérstand democratic values and responsibilities but who can under- stand each other and can work together har- moniously. It is the function of galleries and museums to bringithis about, a task for which no school system or university is of itself wholly fitted." During the past year, the gallery circulat- cd exhibitions throughout the land as well as in the United States. Among the features of its programme have been classes for school chil- dren, exhibitions of children's work and con- ducted tours of the gallery's collections. Exchange of exhibitions with other coun- Notcc By The Way Th (hi: Repqflgp torlall on the future axle-auxil- 311mg. But dllke mo» nap‘; fir; m"? Winds on e of the man behind lt-London ‘no Press. In llflloon IIL Golf John W. Prelhs, who bad made": hole-lu- one ln 1065 and uved the lucky ball aver Mme was forced by the current shortage to take l out zine. sadly. about it," . bookkeeper eloped with secfelflry I ever had; three typlsta asked for an increase; the factory hands decided to go on strike and tries has been encouraged, and countries whose art works have been circulated in Canada as a result of efforts of the National Art gallery include the United Kingdom, Chile, Czecho- slovakia, Holland, Mexico and Soviet Russia. Representative exhibitions of contemporary Canadian painting have been sent to Yale uni- versity and to the American Federation of Arts in Washington, D.C. -EDITORIAL NOTES- Everyone seems keyed up for the great an- nual event. I f I Q The new moon on Tuesday was said to be a dry one, which is encouraging. i Premier Jones has made an excellent im- pression in his preliminary canter at the Ottawa conference-more power to his advocacy! I it ll! i i U U The first of the 1945 grain crop in Mani- toba is being harvested this week. Rye harvest- ing started at Coulter, Mam, where 50 acres 02' good quality grain were cut. i i i ll’ King Edward VII, as Prince of Wales, visited Charlottetown, this date I860; if an Is- lander bears the Christian names, Albert Ed- ward, it may be taken for granted he (or his father) was born in that or the following year. ‘ll i it i The end of the Jap war cannot be far off when New Zealand has cut her army about 50 per cent. Prime Minister Fraser says the military will be reduced from 100.000 to 55,- 000, the overseas troops being cut from 39,000 to 18,000. The Air Force and Navy are not to be so severely handled, the fornter from 25,000 to 21,500, and the latter left intact except for small reductions in personnel. I I I I Colonel Llewellin, former British Minister of Food, in his last ntessage was far front optimistic informing the British that the short- age, already great, will get worse rather than better, and that the whole world will g0 short would , for years to come. Therell be less and less until the Pacific is cleared of the Japs, while butter and eggs will depend almost exclusively on home production because of the scarcity of shipping and the demands of the men and wo- men returning to civilian life with their patron- age of the retail trade. u u r v Should the Federal Government proposals for a national old age pension plan for persons over 7O and a Dominion-Provincial assistance plan for indigents between 65 and 69 be adopt- ed the major proportion of the costs would be lmrrte by the Dominion. Costs, as otttlittctl in a table in the Federal brief presented at the Dominion - Provincial Conference. would in- clude: Dominion Provincial New Brunswick ..... $ 9,000,000 $1,100,000 l‘. E. Island 2,400,000 180.000 Nova Scotia .. 13,zoo,ocx» 1,300,000 Quebec .. .. 49,000,000 4,400,000 v- at m l- Pre-fabricated housing is being given a very thorough investigation at Ottawa, and certainly will aid, in providing the smaller and cheaper houses 0n the otttslcirts of our large cities. Probably it is not the real answer to the question of how to obtain major econotnics in building, without too drastic wage reduction-n lt scents probable that the best direction in which to go is that of developing standardized. easily assembled, part: for houses —— standardized, completely asmnbled, doors and windowl; standardized wall and ceiling sections, ready to be fitted into different sizes and types of ltottses. Individual tastes are so strong in the matter of housing that the more flexibility we can leave in this industry the better for everyone con- cerned. It It‘ A new mobile workshop has been develop- ed by an English firm which enables ntajor air- craft repairs to be carried out on the actual site of the breakdown. This mobile workshop, which was specially designed for the repair and maintenance of airscrcws, can be in operation within half an hour of arriving at a site. The it: l. whole unit can be housed if necessary, in a tent. It carries all the equipment necessary to carry out repairs on any make of propeller. lt is also equipped with nine special tools. In addition it carries a rapidly-erected crane with a 23-foot lift and 5 cwt. capacity. One outstanding feat- ure of the new mobile workshop is a portable balance, with which new blades can he fitted to airscrews on the site. This work had previous- ly to be done at a factory in a special draught- proof chamber, the plane then being transport- ed by road to the aircraft station. The work- shop is expected to play an important part in post-war civil aviation, in particular in the servicing of air routes where planes may be forced down in areas far distant from normal factory repair facilities. the office boy Joined the Navy."- Montreal Dally Star. "All aboard for Stavenger, Stock- holm, Helslnkl, Lenln rad and Mos- COW: all aboard." e much-dis- cussed future of commercial avla- llvfl Seems bent. on becoming pre- sent actuality with disconcerting sucldenness. Three alrllnes serving this citv now have authorlty to fly transatlantic routes to Europe and beyond. Detroit. becomes a "world rt, for alr transportation" and etrolters presently may be 011005- lng whether to week-end 1n Beme, Bursa, Bengasl or Bombay. It's a small world, after all. though plaln- ly not one for small airports. - Detrolt News. When a person who ll not a Scot hears lt, hls one lmpelllng deslre ls to stop hearing It. The sen- satlon lsu cross between that pro- duced by a erylng baby and an aching tooth. But when a Scot plper once starts to plpe there ls no stopping hlm. A bagplpe thrives on lts own noise multiplies ln volume and stridency under its own momentum. The best one can expect ls that the plper may even- tually become exhausted and that. tlhe bagplpe, left to its own devices, w l ers do not wear out easily. In fact, they wear their hearers down long before they wear themselves out. -Baltlmore Sun. A well-known hotel man ls re- ported as saying that the tlpplng system must be accept " as an ln- tegral part of modem management. He ls probably right; and lt would be unfalr to place the whole of the blame on the hotels or their em- ployes. Some people lnslst on glv- lng tips because they are afraid of being regarded as tlghtwads; oth- ers glve because lt ls the only way they have of showing thelr 1m rt- ance. Many a man who care ess- ly slips a quarter under a plate ln a hotel d lng room wlll plead bankruptcy when hls wlfe wants some small change, or wlll part with reluctance from a nickel when the collection plate ls put under hls nose at church on Sunday. --Chat.- ham Dally News. I happen to be the possessor of three watches of different quallty, callbre, age and temperament; but all ullke ln this, that they have completely broken down and are all ln the hands of the repairers, wltose mlnlmum period for salvage seems to be three months. Now lt ls extremely inconvenient to g0 about, the world clutching other people's wrists to see the time, and the action ls ant to be misunder- stood, but lt ls better than not get- ting the time at all. The situa- tlou ls temporarily relieved be- cause. by parting with good money whlch I could lll spare, I have just secured a watch of the rough-and- ready order which has so far kept going for six hours. My personal troubles, of course, must be borne 1n silence. but multiplied by some millions they amount to somethlng formidable. Brltlstt watchmukers. I understand, have practlcally no mcn and are short of essential parts.—Janus ln the London Spec- gator. Letters are among the most spiteful n5 they |are among the cunnlngest of inanimate objects. Glve them half a chance and they wlll post. themselves anywhere but. 1n what offlclal language might term lthe approprlate re- ceptacle. They can bury them- selves ln blotting books, to be dls- covered long afterwards, moulder- lng and gruesome bodies. But, the human pocket ls perhaps their favorltc hldlng-place. The country- rmn about to vlslt the town wlll put a letter ln hls pocket with a view to hastening It on its way by posting lt on the lnstant of ar- rival. There ls no surer wav of de- laying lt. While he jolts thither flrst; tn hls omnibus and then ln his train he bends all the powers of ltts mind on rememberlng this single duty; he refuses t0 allow himself tn be dlstrncted by hls morning newspaper, he feels ever and uu lt: aln. prom t1 ad another holel-fn-one-‘Ilgey H»; u; l vuauc rotwn I I h. trap-fi- “hunting: l."'“".......'ln. 83%.; Gunilla in: In noon- olprh cnlnun “ti: opinion: .__..___. IANER LIQUOR LAWS an, 1 notlh m“ 0v u; Willy remedy their liquor re 0mm ln at m 3' wmperflwe 6 W245i. 0f £1119 Whldh he In l. aerinon menu and Bishop Sexton ttgy that. the word “temperancefa a 5° Bpmlifrlated by certain that. lt l8 . teetotallsm. m“ 4°” "l"! Telnverance Society 01 this Provlnce interpret the word?) Th followln 15 Blfhgp Sextong sehnnohiicerpt "om "5 Nmember that fem n gradually. But plp- _ per. is the only official olgblzliuczh (f), Ensign? 0 6XCE$5 11 Zflgfgnfifld drlnklnsqtmt ls mod- And again-g PRQCLAMATION BY. llis Honour Lieut. Governor M. Barnard Regarding nntatnut up vnsstt ttt rtt: ntovtttcs In honor of our returned heroes and as a wol- come to our summer visitors I do hereby Proclalm and net aside the week of August 6th t0 All!!!“ 1115 H BRIGHTEN UP WEEK m THE PROVINCE Attention to Homes and Schools with Paint and Whitening, a Geneml Cleaning up Process, AND THE FLYING OF FLAGS will add Beauty of Ap- pearance and Value to Prince Edward lsland- and will make our Province more attractive to ALL RE- TURNING MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES as well as to those who seek Recreation and Rest. among us. Given under my Hand and Seal at Government House, Charlottetown, thll Twentieth Day of J lll!’ 1945- "Let us DUB End h man can afford modmratlon, he Girlstlan for doing 5Q_" Isnt it about tlme that we got “my fmm 711111111113 and hypocrlsy Peuard to temperance tn this Province? If a group or peopre 08111118 themselves a ‘Temperance Society do not want to drink a}. fdlwllc beverflses that ls thelr bus- Hess If they thlnk drinking or smoking ls undesirable. then bhev should not. drlnk or sznoke Bu} the? MOSt oertalnly have no right, u’ m’ l0 make other Dwble llve tho klnd of llves that they them_ selves live _M@t1 fought and dled for the 118M of free men to live their own ls steps to remedy it. the better off we will all be 1‘ am, Slr. etc. FJ’. MAHAR 3 Bavfleld St. Charlottetown. Wren’s Charlies (F. B. W. ln Winnipeg FIT? Press) Christopher Wren's churches, which he created out. of the ashes of the Great. Fire of London of 1666 and which were themselves largely reduced to ashes and rubble ln the Blitz of 1940. are now the subject of keen controversy-the problem. whether to rebuild on their original sites or w sell the sites and build where London's clllzerts now llve. Some 30 of Wrens churches, ln addltlon to others, were destroyed dllflflfi the Will‘. t1 total considerably less than that; of the Great. Fire. whlch gutted 89. But the problem faced by the eccleslastical nuthorl- tles of hls em was ccmparatlvely simple. They were urovldlng churches for the most denselv pop- ulated area ln the world. J. A. BERNARD. Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island. the sen and ulr, with daily ro- mlnders of heavier attacksto come. But the vast war-making Cfimplex represented by the industries, mines and food-production of Ko- rea, Manuhurla and North China, remains relatively untouched. This ls Japan's other empire. But the day ls not far on when the Superforts can go to work ln earnest on t/hls continental base whlch the Japanese-am umoltlous island people-have been building through me years to further their dreams of conquest. Japan has depended u on con- tlnental resources for sue essent- luls as cooking coal and supple- mentary food, and the mine-laying Superior-ts have contributed to the general deterioration of the JR?“- nese homelandfis war potentlal by] cutting this of}. . ‘ ' Wlth the ports blockaded, no ships can move freely along the familiar Japan sea. lanes-between the great Shlmonosekl gateway in] western Honshu and such I continental ports as Dalren in, Manclturla and the maln ferryflUman in the U terminus at Pusan tn Korea. lthe Russians at Also choked are the lesser lanes ‘south of Leningrad. between Upper l-‘fonshu ports llkelcelved its 15th Nllgate and the Korean m ports of Genzun and Selshln. tLlbya, and Elevsls, Even the most northerly Koreaniaizvirome ln Greece. ort, Rashln-wlthln 12 miles 0 -—~——-'—'--" she Slberlan border-has been, LONELY 1N RAIN m . Rashlnk history ls tyblcal of the method behlnd Japan's planning. It. was bullt up from a lon y fish- ing village to a modern, wel -equlp- ped port. during the last decade. The south Manchurian railway company then laborlously built. a speclal railway llne In from the west, across the rugged Korean $112 cept ln Slberla. ltary attache ln China. at. home. Years Ago By The Canadian Prcsl London after land without the authority of Forelgn Office, an employee sald he The city proper was not then as lt ls now abandoned t0 cats and caretakers at. tilgltt. It was a thriv- ing residential and buslnes sec- tlon where "the merchant prince und shopkeeper slept, each with his family. over hls place of bust-l mess-servants and rat-entices above ln the garrets and porters and mes- sengers packed away anywhere ln cellurage and warehouse." Into the beautiful and graceful churches which Wren designed poured these people on the Sun- days of the 18th and 19th centur- les. But the search for cross and garden slowly emptied the city uutll the late census showed only 10,999 ersons living wlthln lts boundar es and to serve these peo- ple, the Church of England alone mulntalned 38 parts? clturcltes. c . Now the Anglican Synod would lebulld only enough churches to cater to the populatlnn of the area. The sites of the others-wtmcng the most valuable pieces of real estate 1n the world-would be sold and the money used to erect churches London. This plan, wlilch would serm logical and practical, l5 opposed by an organization callinq Itself the Prlends of the Clty Churches. who lnslst that where possible Wren's churohes should be relrullt on their original sites. The value of these churcllz; .ad beccme, ln the years before the unr. almost. purely ltistorlcal. Scat- tered among the harsh outline of the city's commercial buildings, they provided a lovelv relief. They wen- not, however, effective as churches and lt ls debatable whe- ther an lmltatlott. empty of con- gregation and totally lacking in and anon ln hls pocket. to see lf lLs precious freight, 5 stlll there, How valn are these precautions! The burly-burly of the termlnus drives lll thouaht out of hls head save that of escape, and unless he be one of the precise and ttdy per- sons who empty their pockets at nlght the letter may repose there to all eternity. This ls so famlllnr a case that to ask someone else to st our letters ls grossly unjust; t ls castlng on hlm a responsibil- ity that few shoulders are strong enough to bear. — London Times Weekly. amm- itm Admiral n. T. 1mm.- Brohmun recentlyl gave a good lesson to arrogant Huns, who tried to put over a atudled act, of dumb lnsolence, notes The 8t. Catharlnes Standard. He. ls u British flag officer at Kiel, and was orulslng 3y. the German crulser Letpztg. e Germans ald no attention to hls pennant, ndlcatlng rank. Ho thereupon lent word to the Ger- man commander of hls displeasure, fumed arolund andlwent over the course l!!! n. v avwly, p551, the enemy shlp. Aiid the second time the German crew were llned up at the rall and gave a smart salute to the White Ensign. The Royal Nflvy ‘has cnurteay standard; and tradltlons whlch can only be broken at peril. ‘they have been built up in the centuries. The Amerlcnn Navy ls also strong on the proper amenltles, and r ltlon of rank. It does the old grltlsh splrlt food, ln ct. warms the heart, to enm that Admiral Balllle-Broh- man rput on the rlgltt. heat and at the ght time. No German oom- mander would be inept enough not to know the requirements. The lack of proper courtesy to the ad. mlrnl was deliberate, without e1- hlstorlcal slgnlncarlce. can be lus- tlfled. 'I‘l'1l.s view ls taken by a agoku- mtan for the church. "It ls an! dlsputable.” he Pointed out. "thfl although manv of these chugches played a valuable part in the pirl- tunl llfe of London, there were many more churches than were necessal for the ordinary paroch- lal requirements ln the clty. We comlder that. some of the the sites should be sold and the money dlvertedxo create churches ln the areas to whlch people are movl . There have been far too mam" cl y churches." A committee appointed ln 1941 has so far failed to produce a re- port but: lt. can expect that the move wlll be made and Wrens churches. which t/esttfled "to the spaclcua. classlcal dignity of the age and o the man w o put them ln place o their medleval Jedecessors." wrlt- ton of! u another of the lncalcul- able losses of our day. In The Pacific Bv n; JAMES n. l: Annotated Prue Stuff Writer Japan now can be thought of u two mnln emplrea-not one. The nouncement that mlne-. laying Buperforts have established l complete blockade of all import- ant Jnplanese and Korean ports means t e home Islands have been isolated and the weakest llnk lnl the empire-the sea of Jupntr-har been severed. Korea la the gateway to Jpparrs great remalnlng tower of strength and resources-Mnnchurln. CLIM- The h me ll nd th l are undoer cdngtarit. aefilastfkvelfrom-w in the sprawllng suburbs of new 5 tzgtantaultntantzuatautntatz-Jttttuinhuman; CALL SERVICE While cloed for holidays OLD HOME WEEK. we will need every inch of space to facilitate repairs and over- hauling of machinery and plant. CALL CUSTOMERS are asked to pick up all LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING PARCELS as early as possible. For the convenience of OUT-OF- TOWN CUSTOMERS OUR office and call department will be open each morning August 13th to 18th FROM 9.00 A.M..TO 12.00 NOON Phone mound uunuun Live Poultry Wanted ___.____________ Buying llve and dressed poultry daily. W0 specialize ln processing live poultry at our modern lrllllng plant ln Charlottetown. Llve poultry killed and graded the day rc- celvod. Aasureu you of prompt returns and light shrink. SHIPPING CRATES SUPPLIEl) UPON REQUEST Canada Packers Limited (IIIII/murllommall/II/ mountains, to llnk it with the nor- bhern part of the Manchurian 3111-‘ way system-by all odds the most. expensive and modem ln Aula, ex-t One of the first non-Japanese‘ to travel over this long-secret, ltne was Joseph W. Stllwell, then amll- Now com- mander of the United States 10th army 0n Okinawa, he more than once has suggested that the Ja a- nese may well fight; on tn Mane u-l rla after they have been defeated; "this War—Four AUGUST 9. lull-Canadian Navy Minister Angus Macdonald arrived 1n transatlantlc; flight The Germans advanced to krulpe and pressed S0 tskl, 120 mlle Moscow re- Gennan alr raid. inlngm. A. F. bombed Trlpoll, Bardla. enemy-held WARRINGTON. Eflfllund —-(CP) ihtamed with returning to Eng ciause there was) <;n%vow01$hgfi:' r ed woman am n . " sons)there. He WM filled £25 ("ml-ll caanmrrurowu ‘ . _ ~ | ab“ m1] 111 formed us l..‘”&‘§,“gg;;_- . . w: V011 lhefiger m‘ w °h bwuau 55111118. He Whisper-ed h V . "brook nod in young.“- “Md? ll bifiitntiiriuflilillrsfn" w“ Wu when the first rose drew hmm N0 nlghtlnz l h cl . . No love thou en ti btiiiéh a the passion past lfges shadowed your pure pravelr. _._ . . Hereafter I wlll listen It: "‘““".‘.‘.$l‘.§..."“"“ bu» 81GB 0' H15 301i; Wood-forever! —Norma IL Bmlth, l "n, lan Poetry Mtiigaztnf C‘ i-_i______ tor“ cnrlv "W l0 make with WARTIME CREAM S _. $122311‘; ll."._.’°" "" I24 Dominion 8mm lul flonlrut, no. ________________ MAGS FILE OINTMENT ._..___. uh and efficient "m, Internal and extemt ma. Itlamld; onlyufu" but all-lily lnlfbdlfllll Winning remarkable 111m. pent-lo value for this put-pm, t clrrlel out its benellclal effect In three ways. 1. It lub- aflllflihi. g ls astrggclakl, I00 ¢l 9t I tu y Prloo oeutu. A for the liassy Stomach: Relieved A guaranteed remedy for mtomleh cnndltions such u "u!" Dyspepsia, Sou Hblrtburn, Gastric d many num- all- lnvntl peculiar to the atom-t 56h, a preacrlptlvnl which we _aell under tbl nun: of "Dr. Evlna Stmnach Mixture.” We alone have the uh "'.'."'...:"' "v.21. t".:"'"“"' lll QI [Q llVQ IQ- odved nnnemu lextlmnnlall tllflod llurchlml. Prloe I50 per bottle. TllE 2 MAGS 140 GNU! George Street Mal! Order! Glven Prom) Attention Professional Cards _____ ____i___;- Public Stenographer Mlllflitlphlng card: and drill“ oorrupondenoe, lypllll I114 bookkeeping. mss nznutv omnsu l Telephone 1890-1. l x 45S. Api- Nl. l McLeod 8 Bentley w. I. nnmn. t; 1 l. A. utvnu. I. 0- llllhten and Mia-DWI“ [Aw lll Prhoo llrlfl .1 uwtwwzw-t "fir?" l5EE E EEIEIEJJEIIEIEEIEIEIEE-ifilfilfilflfifilfillfilfillfillfillfilfilfilfi ll. II. Buns 8 50- nnuna mantel" I Grille: llnfl- filllrlofldwfl Ike-av W" luunwm-lu-vl- Harrell and 60mm! B. F. AIIBIIIBALII India mu M41" Killian I