PAGE, TllE BIIARLUTTETOWN GUARDIAN Morning nally Wounded In lltfll President: Licul. Col. \\- Che-ii" 5- Mum" Vicc President: J. IL Burnett. F44 Barth“... ma“; yo; |), A. Maclklnuon. 0.8.0. Edit-n and nlunalfiliil D111?!“ J‘ u’ Bwn;|""u:'::u 53504.11“: Editors: kriiuii Walker and Ill! SUBSCRIPTION RA'I‘I'JB By mini III i-.i~.-.i.. $4.00 ii" is“; $25" ‘°'n"‘_n'""""" $1.25 fur 3 months; 50o for one mil um miivery $5.00 pei w“: 5M0 Ioi b mvllill 51,15 (qr 3 months; 80o for on! NW"!- By Mail to other Pruvurccs and U. s. A. 55-99 W! 195' aaiuriuy Ncrltly: $1.00 ptl’ year; $1.00 In: b moIuQ 50o for 3 mouth: uiuu may In olillluoil ll. “Hurrah...- sauna. New Yfliii o“ Corner nun. and Wuhlniwl- _ _ U .. _ , ma Pool n. 511315., Aiffrlitfnf-julfrflil ‘sifgiliiiiitm Now- Iliuil. UIYIIIHHI cinirn-r, uni-ii... nun-- Mn" iiii-Iti- ""4""- oiui llnh n-inu-i-u alum. Miinvltln N. B» ‘ “The Strongest [Memory is Weaker than Ill Weakest Ink.” '1'“; UIJMFlUllIJIUWD liulnlfngwi {senu Akbar-y, luulh New: Akuurfl. '1‘1ll'!l.\l.').\1'. MAY 23- 19'"- Vilul Flame "flu; ill$lllllll<illS of learning: St- Dunsnns LTii .1 l.\' and Vim“: oi “tales Cili- " . - ' _. '* "tics 1i! ‘(we 1,1,1 1 . ;- coziiiiicnuiiiciit cxcrc: k o1‘ 1. l _ WW: \>’ T, st Duiistaiis 1118i‘ >0» >.i_\_\ cti i~r ~ _ . “T” i ‘ -,,-, m‘ it; founding. Prince 0f - liv 2i few vcflil‘. iii “whim? i ,_,' ,3.“ with institutions have ‘fni-iiuli tlic FTMT‘. i" ‘York of Our two hlii the 53m ;1‘il‘.li'»L'l' “Kilo.- is _\-".l". ' niciit dzutu- it‘ bt-"n ciiQ- - , u‘, ‘WU. H, ,..- iinivniziiicc to the commitnit) i“, k ‘ p, W. u“... ‘UL-mi keeping alive the ant‘ to a ~- flamc of l.:~.<.\\lt~l;t* and Christian culture. the frceiloni and demo- -;,~ J. ‘ i, .1‘ justirc. _ \1iZ\l ln“:;i,Ki‘|t{ L“ Wwlyuh- “lwavs reahze (ha: tcliinikwvi i‘:.- \--<'i‘ltl fiiiiictioii of our Liiivcr- i w .~ . _ v _ s’tv ziiid ' \\'i- wcrt- iiicliiicil to cmphasilfi \*.'~il'ii2'.‘l.’l\.’ value of a "good educa- i. MnQ-ffcct on cli:ii':ictci' which ni v.0. ll't'llllf in pi0filiite~ If lllcle . “Yo, .. i‘. ~. n l" ~li<iuhl lizivc taught 11$. ii i5 ..-i-".- »~~_" "“ . the l-L1ll.lt.‘_\' ot such a iwiiitfiliiioii- In all ill" allicd nations at war against blazistli. the vim, , H. U,‘ education is being maintained with tlii .v. 'l'l\.-: universities l1ave suffercd from l‘ ‘ cwl iziiziilwi‘ of students and staff5. l" nianv c; fiwiii rv-trictctl acconimodafioirflufi g0 the rcriu uuiiiiiig of departmental buildings, m“. cmwg-[ng of ihoratorics. financial string- wqr, rind jin-llil\lli'll‘k‘llt of all plans for dcvclflli‘ mciit. 'l“ii<: hi ‘ loss. of students has ‘been fclt in tho li=.uii:~.ui.tic schools, but the national demand for di-ttt-irs, engineers and other scien- m“ has 1a.,“ that rclcvaiit filCillll€$ hard at work with a full QUlllliiClllGllf of students. Man)’ in‘ Sti-ugmig; nuil iiffkizils have bccn called a\\'ay t0 the govsi. int-iii st-rvicc. This has ciitailcd 8- VHSY amount of rcorgriiiizzitioii, which it was. neces- sarv to do Wllllt‘ pi . rviiig at the Same time ihe esscntial puiiwist- of tiic uiii\'0i‘$ii)'~ _ In this connection, Prof. \\'. E. Harrison, of Ouccifs Tfnivci". , <irikc< a warning note in a {,T~,,,,,,i,1@; Cnntriliutivl to the cxccllcnt series pub- ipimd by i5..- tlXffiftl [Tniversityi Prcss. Citing the exaznplc of universities in the United Kiiifl‘ (loin in snorting \\'.'ll'lllll€ demands, and express- ing confidciict: that tliroughotit the Common- wealth tht- lllll\'t‘l'.-'lll(‘~; can, if need be, adapt tlicmsclvcs to an cxtcnt hardly yet drciimcd 0f i0 the national cffort, hc says this mtist be 0n one condition onlv 'l'licv~ must not be diverted from their most c cu ‘zil tasks and denuded of their humanism, wli 1 is tlic life-blood of our civilized socicty. “The organism of a university." 5W5 Biof- Harrison, “takes time to grow; it is an intricate thing requiring skilled and sympathetic handling and must be nurtured with a view not merely i0 its bearing the fruit of technicians, but to yield- ing sustenance for that spiritual and cultural well-being which is the only true measure of na- tional staturc. We ought not so to impair the life of the tiiiivcrsitics that they become part of the problcm of our reconstruction when the war is over. That they are likely to gather strength from the community's renewed appreciation of- their infinite capacities is a permissible forecast dependent upon wise dealing, but if it ever be- comes nccessauv to rebuild them on the ruins of standards, personnel and finance, and to retrieve their humanities from bankruptcy, we should have suffered nothing lcss than social disaster." The voiccs of authoritative opinion are all in agreement on this question. Thcrc is no iifv-"Iriit (laiigcr, either at St. Dun- staifs or Prince of \\'.'ilcs College, of the hum- anities being ticgicclcd. The graduates this year, as in the past, should go forth well equipped, and Pilgfil‘, lct its hope, to hold high the torch en- trustcd in tlicni. Oil Resources In view of the oil shortage which threatens to become-more and more acute as the war pro- gresses, it is a pity that so little attention has been given zit Ottawa to the possibilities of pro- ducing our own oil requirements. Spczilciiig in l'.'ll‘lllllll(‘llf last February, Hon. Mr. lloivv. Ministri- of Supplyi, said with refer- ence ti. 4i \i'liil)lllQ' .\lb':rta tar sands as a source of oil: "l have :1 very exhaustive report on the subicct. li iiiiliwzitt~< flint tlic location 0f the sands and the po-siliilitv of (l(‘\'(2l0pll1t'l1t is too remote to be of auv grwit use in this war." Yet on May i5 Mr. llrnvc, <|>!'.‘ll\'ll'l_£f on the same subject, had to make this slillvlllbllfl “The problem of oil development ivitliiii Canada has of course been changed coiisirlcralily by the events of recent months. l think most people had looked upon the, sands of Allicrta as a great reserve of oil for some {ntnri- ]i(‘l'llii'l when tlic more easily accessible oil resources Wfilllll have bccn exhausted. But today wc think of that samc arca as a source of im- nit-clinic oil production." Tlicro was no excuse for the Miiiifii" "Oi "knowing what lic was talking about last Febru- ary. llc had :ivail:ii>lc detailed topographical sur- vcvs of lll!‘ bituminous sand areas of northern .'\lll(‘l'l.’l, which tlic .'\lhr*rla gflvcrnrncnt esttm-‘itcs rmilniii lf)<7_i'i(l(Y,F)()ll_(>(Y) barrels of oil. The U. 5- Iinrmn hi’ .\llll(‘\ plziccs tlic potentiality Bi 250-‘ OOD.OL')I),()UU bzirrck. Mr. }lo\vc's objr-ction to the remoteness of the location of tligge sands is inexplicable in view of the circumstances. The distance from Edmun- ton by direct pipeline is about 25o miles-l qiiiii‘ er the length of the line which is feeding Sarnia with Oklahoma oil. Now the Government has asked for another survey, to be made by leading oil engineers and the Consolidated Smelting and Mining Company. There should at the same time be a check up on potential oil resources in the Maritime Provinces. Even in Prince Edward Island, there are pos- sibilitics which private enterprise has consider- ed worth spending money to investigate. EDITORIAL NOTES - “Marking time" may be descriptive of Russia/s attitude at present. a in m n- \Vhen Mexico enters the \Var her navy will act as convoys to tankers and other coastal trade to Canada and U. S. A. ii I i Here is an excerpt from a No. 7 district (Saint john) military order: “Recently a sergeant-major was seen walking arm in arm with a private sold- ier. This practice must cease, however attractive the C. W. A. C. vpluilteer may be." i l i u ‘ianv in the community had one foot in Heaven" the past three nights and thoroughly en- joyed the experience. On Tuesday night the Guardian called by phone seven persons who do not tisually patronize “movies? and discovered six of them were at the Prince Edward: i i ili .\lcGill University students who have been re- quired to give up summer employment to con- tiiiue their courses in medicine and dentistry are to be benefited by “liand-outs" from a grant-in aid of $20,000 from the \V. K. Kellogg Founda- tion. Ill ill l! it A Montreal restaurateur, corner of Pine Avenue and Park Avenue has been fined $100 for illegally offering to serve food, refreshments and beverages at higher rates than he had offered similar items between Sept. i5 and October n last. Lct the buyer beware! ililliillik Qiiebcc lawyers and others are critical of the Provincial Government appointing Judge Julgg Dcsmarars manager of the Quebec Liquor Coni- mission at a salary of $12,000 with a pension as Jllilg? 0i $4.500. It was explained the pension mentioned would be deducted from the salary. ili it ili it :l.‘\\'0 thousand bad mcn at Sing Sing prison lamted 3% the Sight of a hypodermic needle in the last five years. Some who fainted were ma- °l_""e'§i1iiii@i‘5. many had committed crimes of violence. The hypodermics \V€l'E part of routine health tests. This trait of alleged lie-men was r¢_ ported to the American Psychiatric Association by Dr. Ralph S. Banay of the prison. A case of hero and hero worship below par, ii i l i The Hon. \Valter Nash, Minister to \Va _ shing- ‘rom New Zealand, declares “we shall back one hundred years, if we lose." He coufg have put it more bluntly by saying “we Shari bccomp pllaves,” for it was only in r8938 that slaves “elf u i “nlaflciliaicd in the British dominioiis while France did not follow Britaiifs lcad until i848. iiiid Holland in i863. Hitler thinks we marl» .1 mistake. and must now be madg subject to German "superman." i i * i It cannot be claimed the sentiments of the Federal Parliament are Pmponderantly pro. hlbliiiliiiisi. but we are told that Mr. j. H Le- sim. Liberal. Shcfford, who himself is i..' m. dairy blISIIIfESS, got the biggest applause of the sessionhso ar when he spoke as follows: “I hold and a hwPY 0f the Temperance Advocate 6 states t at the liquor bill for Ontario this year will be as compared with 57;. bottles they need when milk distributors have to beg the glass controller to give them the bottles." w. m n- i: Sir Humphrey Davy, English chemist and in- ventor of the miiier’; safety lamp, died this date I829 ;' educated himself in natural philo5ophy and siismistry; iiivesiigaifli flit! properties of nitrous oxide (laughing gas), and was appointed lecturer imcliemistry, and later professor, at the Royal Institution in London; was awarded the French Institutes medal for researches in electro-chem- istry; after several years on the continent, proved that diamond is pure carbon; later investigated the nature of the electricity of the torpedo fish; was elected President of the Royal Society and knighted: "Man has it within himself to attain hi; objective, provided he applies himself diligently and with all reasonable concentration of his God- given encrgics.” n- : n- 4 "Georgd." (as he was farmiliarly called by all and sundry) A. MacDougall will be greatly miss- ed bv a host of friends and acquantanccs here. His sudden passing in Sydney was not alto- gether a surprise to those who knew him inti- mately. He had a heart affection and was sub- ject to dizzy spells. A local doctor certified to this effect but notwithstanding the military medical authorities considered him physically fit. As a boy George showed an unusual interest in print- ing and persuaded his father, Rev. James Mac- Dougall, to purchase him a toy printing set with \\'l‘llCl’l he long amused himself. When his father died. (‘ieoi-ge expressed a desire to become a printer and started out to learn that trade, but changed his mind and entered Prince of Wales with a view to entering the Presbyterian ministry. He became assistant secretary of the Y. M. C. A. and showing marked indications of becoming :i good ncivspaperman was offered a position on the staff of this newspaper. Had he been spared, had the war not intervened, he would have gone ‘"- tlv- profcssion. As it ivris he played a not inconsirlcralilc part in flir- political life of the communityi. being associalfll with the Liberal- (Ymscrvativcs in organization and secretarial work. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN NOTES BY TllE WAY The Liverpool Uh , which was the first circulating rai-y -n the Kingdom and is re uied to be the oldest of its kind Europe, l: to close, gf-tcr 184 years. 1m library's 70.000 voiumcs include many val- uable first edit-ions and other rare publications. The talc of the stock of has not been settled. bondon Times. A colleague who was golng t0 visit. friends a few mites out of town bought. til: ticket at flu nu- tlon. and as he was waikhig up the plabfoim read on the cardboard the accusing M1) I question. "Ls your journey no: ssary!" If. was not, and he felt guilty about ft, but having sunk ms capital looked for a seat about ‘Eff! Ifl-Cldle of this . The tram svemed w be half- empty, indeed so "mpiy that he was curious enough to walk its length and count the passengers. There were :10 passengers bu‘. h-.m- self. — Glasgow Herald. 0n July l, Vlrilnln wlll become the twentieth state to select and retain its employes by civil service. New York was the first ctvtl serv- st-a/te in i883. Minnesota cele- brated its third anniversary under civil service this mcrvh. Indiana and Kansas joined the merff 1's- bem list in 1941. Whatever fhe frictions that arise ln clvll service -and there are bound to be plenty in any system as new u Minne- lo ‘s - a growing number of states move in the same Erection and confirm that. we're on the right. track - Minneapolis Star- Journal. Sh‘: — In your report of the st. Nazalre raid, tiae incidents were mentioned of a Iflfifllrbgf of a Highland regiment receiving permission to wear his kfli and of a. wounded officer plefld-Ilg mat. hLs kllt be not cut. These frict- d€Ill5 touched me deeply, and go to prove that the War Office made 3,1118 mistake ‘in not providing a. kill for all ranks of kilted regi- ments. As ls well known from experience in the last war, our enemies do not apprac abe the "Ladzes from Hell/Q and I am cer- the same wouxi be the case in tins. 1 do think the varous so- cieties interested mould again ap- proach the War Office on the sub- ject, with a view to YEiSl-HDJSUILIQ the kilt and giving lcasure t; the majority of our ki ted regiments generaliy. -Ex-I..ondcn Scottish. —Edlniburgti Scotsman. The uncertainty which surrounds ihe fate of the men and women who were at Hung Kong Is one of the cruelest misfortunes viffch their relatives are obliged to bear. The piecemeal information wacti has ccme out has d:ne little t.) clear up the situation. The Nest fragment of information has come to Canada through the Melbourne Argus. From the recolfeeitoris of refugees from Hung Kong, biie Australian newspaper has ccmoled a list of those who were remem- bered to be alive at the end of the battle. In the nature cf thugs, a list mniiiled in tlfs way could not. bc ccmplete. 0f all the soldiers and ClVlllflH5 on the island fortress. only a handful would be kmwri to those who esared Therefore. those who had {r ends or ‘ZIHHVCS qt Hong Kong and who '.‘..m'0f find their names in the Argus lis‘. have 11o more cause for dsspair than before ‘he list was rwelved, —Wlnnl.peg Tribune Halifax has another grievance. Of course that is not nsws. If Halifax ever should need a ncw coat of arms a most apprcprate device would be a child, rampant, crying for the moon, argeni. It may not be charactertsfc cf the city as ii whole. but. there always seems to be scme voice raised fn Halifax demanding that. same- body give it something. The latest demand is for the transfer frsm Moimton to Halifax of lhe terminus of the Newfoundland air line. The argument offered in support of the dcmlnd Ls that. "a letter mailed m Sit. ‘John's, Newfoundland, this mommy, if addrsssed to Halifax, would not teach the rscipeiit un- tll tomorrow aftemcon " The urgent. requirements of all the rest of the Dominion, of the a. p and the air force, vmtet are finding the new service invalu- able, the need for prompt. despaf/ch of mails for overseas, the desirabil- lty of saving time and gasoline by uslr: the most direct and most. de- pen able rout/e, all are minor con- siderations ocmpared with the un- bearable fact that a iebtver mailed tn Newfoundland today will not reach Halifax until tcmorrcw. - Momlon Transcript. Ono of tho most deadly mem- les of food production 1n this asun- try is the wocdpmeon, a. pest against. which a. natton-virlde cam- psalsn has had to be started. He n't obviously a pest. like a rat, but n. woodpigeon eats naarly twkae as much as a. rat. It. likclgnfihat today the wcodplgeom 0i win. from dawn dark, have eaten 50 tons of food. And they keep that. up all through the War. The 50 tons they n».- tcday won’t all have been hum-an fooa, but i. great. deal of it will have been Spring 00m. And this every ain of corn will be its wegh-t ln gold. Woodplmeonl now lo to the new-sown fie.ds day after day: and later on, before the corn Ls rt e, the pigeons w.l1 be there, st ring away for weeks on end. Peo 1e have opened pigeons shot. in e oornffeld and have found the crops so full of grain that they have fed 1t to their poultry. But. the trouble la, how, as a. nation-wide problem, are we $708 0o control me wougplgeon? e can shoot them but iooikig didn't keep down the niunbsr of pigeons even fr: peacetime The real truth is we don't know enough about the blrd to control lt, and so the aclentfsts have now been called in. - London fastener. Probably the molt beautiful babies fn the entire bird kin dam an the of that. rem: able flightleu bird - the Australian emu. Unllkg moat. other blrda, the emu chicks are able to run about almost u soon u they are hatch- ed. and hlvinl no weapons of de- fence very few of ld survive but. . dress. A-t. birth they have belu- tlful and vividly striped courts. whlm blend so admirably with the long as; of the forest coun- try they nhablf. that. the young birds an very difficult. to ally when they stand mo- tionles with head erect. - a they always adept whenever an- ger threatens, As the brdii grow the stripes gradually disappear, and when fully-grown (from five to given feet in hefghh they are of q unkfoi-m greykh-brown, tf1= fea- thers being tippsd black, the neck feathers gieiyiah, and the throat. Wm’. l‘ 1 1s the world in OurDunIbAn PUBLIC FORUM quutkn l find. I‘ 5.550;» 0 Ann not o "one lb nlllfll WORDS or» CHALLENGE i “Elf-her we wln by W315i now or we lose Ind TRIBUTE T0 MR. WAR-USU Bl t-As fax-president. of the Prlnlcg mwiuu Island Aiixim qt the Britain ma screen iiw society fvrhsgmdq, and Newfound- land, 11R i0 WY "k7 m‘ but, 0g jggpecl and amrieclatm to the late Wllllam Warren. W!!! death we all KNEW 1159b"- Mr. Warren was a man whrse warm friendship was to be coveted and whose strict, abbentlq-i t0 diii? and me task on hand was to be highly appreciatcd. As Secretary of the Provincial Bible Scclety for the past four veers he Bflve his best tn service, not. from a sense of duty only, but with a martini-as and responsiveness that W15 rarely met with. It was u zreet pleasure and satisfaction to be associated with hlm ln the work of the Society, knowing full well that. its interests would be well looked ter, and to this 9nd he gave iinstintlngly of his time and best. efforts. The Society will greatly miss his genial presence, and will, no doubt. find difficulty in . some one who will so willingly and efffclent- 1y fill this offflce made vacant by his sudden passing. I am, Sir. 900.. J. H. AYERS i_____.._.__._ FLAX FUMBLE AT OTTAWA Bin-In the course of a news story from Ottawa in The Guardian the other clay, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics’ estimate, "based on farm- ers‘ intentions to plant." lnllcaies that. “farmers will seed 1,531,600 acres to flax, only 587,100 urns, or 54 per cent, man than last ear. , ." As you are aware, the ef ort was to have tripled last year's area sown to the oil-bearing cereal, as Ottawa. authorities have recently-far tco recentlyl-bcen calling for 20,000,000 bushels of 1942 flaxseed. ’I'h.is would compare with s. reduction of just 7,000,000 bushels ast year. When will officialdom learn that there is a tlmc-elemenf. ln formulat- ing and publicizing agricultural pro- duction plans, dent which, the farmer-with the best intention in the world to serve the nation's need —-ls utterly unable to flll the blll? It takes time to alter individual plans, and the precious contempt- tive months of December-January- Fébruary "clown on the farm" au- parently slipped through the official fingers. while the Japanese were using those same months to build our present. emergency in the fields of rubber and ve et-able oils. This flax fumbe is a. spectacular example of the above trend, and in my farm journal (Western Produc- er, Saskatoon. issue of May 21) while in a committee of the Eastern Manitoba branch of the Canadian Society of Technical rlculturls s it. is pointed. out that " ax acreage 1n Manitoba could be increased from 190.000 acres seeded 1n 1941 to 5'10,- 000 acres this year," 1n another col- umn lf. ls conceded that. the Manl- toba flax acreage 1n 1942 is not llks- ly to be more than 40 per cent. if the latter objective! Yes s.r. it takes time to gel. cam- paigns across to the farmers, and I consider this time-lag to be one of the central flaws in our whole agricultural technique. Moreover. seed sup lies take time to get wheeled nto sltlon, and cash o: credit require finance same. Capital resources am about ra plentiful as heirs teeth among rur- a1 Canadians. I would not blame the growers. in the circumstances, 1f they asked the Churchllllan quest- ion: "What kind of people do they think we are? Capitalists?" I am, Sir. ctc., “BLUENOSEP Toronto. May 23, Wooden Ships Needed (Monofon Transcript) ‘Ifhe suggestion is Transportation Communion of the Maritime Board of Trade that. an invest! atlon be conducted Into the feaslbilty of using small sailing ships for the West Indian and Cur- i-iboan trade. ‘The Maritime Commis- sion of the United States, ft, remark-s at lnvgstfgatfng the matter and ll: la understood that a survey Ls being made of the possibilities ‘o! con- structing suitable sailing vessel: to accommodate the traffic. 1i: la hlnh time the Canadian government was 22"" tilts“ n" “wit: e pass a o 5a g ghlpl. need ls likely to become more rath- er than less urgent before the war Ls over, and time ls re ulred for construction. If shlpbul ding had been begun when war was declared, needed employment would have Men furnished during the first per- iod of the war and by this time, ai- most two and a half years later. there would have been I substantial fleet, of wooden vesses ready to g0 anywheru they were needgd, The Maritime Provinces once lea the building of wood- en ships and, although conditions have changed since thou days when in almost every creek and cove hen its shlpyard, the revival of the in- dustry was and still la ble. Wooden craft. could not. attempt. to meet. all the den-lands made upon modern shépplfig, but. they could servo use! 1y in mlny capacities and lighten the demands upon the steam: . They would be construct- ed of materials for which there is no such demand as then i; for iron and sbeel._ Depending largely upon nails, they would not. r ufre 5o much machinery now dlf cult w Obtain. and they would not be iu- other Jvur- poses. Under ml, there woul be no sound of machinery to lead to their detection by subunai-tnea; their shallow draft. would make them less vulnerable to torpedo attack and fhev would be harder to sink. For their construction, labor would he available that ls not being employ- ed in war work. o. N. n. snowman‘ MONTREAL. .. M fl-Th revenues fgruethe all? lncluslv: gunman National Railways system. for the week ending May 21, 1042, were 86,097,000 u compared with $8,064,000 for the cornspondln week of 1941 or an lncreuo of 013.- 000 or 15 per cent. Q and neck bin-e. The emu in the world's second largest and heaviest bird only the ostrich cxeeedlng lt in an, and it. has several unusual gfiiituiés. it; has nothullhuid ‘p1!- oug eq ppQd y; n“ e bird la incapable of flight: mks deficiency, however, l; cxmpmacbed for by its exceufng awtffnesa of loot (the bird hm; been timed to travel at a weed of more than arxty mllu an houri. and by_ its belnl an expert and sgong BWIIIMI’. - Iml . made by the 1e pay tribute m the future." — Han. Burl Rowe. M. P. DON'T NEGLECT i YOUR FOX PUPS i By using Dr. ffrench’: ensure their safety fro Verml id C m the dceaielly apsules you MAYA _ w , worm menace m More fox u are lost b ne lect‘ l worms at the]: plziper time tliian agn} ciiniieio dose for By Arrangement i Dr. ffrench’: Capsules are well known to the to (“mm aomn-Ex-Enmwmview) izgllfllzil‘! in this province and they give the Very b“: Bdrm mmifrlsox Mlffflablgxmandxlfl. ’ . [h1g3]: 3%- havrflgppened, iimi Those who use them speak of their Gffltlflncy in a: {nogithiigilthiiiyeu athweotileii ‘i135 the highest terms. Get yours at. once and avoid and don't bother hlm about. ii. be- fiiiliii-iil- cause he ha: Important things to think . and anyway all airframe manufacturers have sent a letter to say they think Mr. Bell u a lovely man. ..“".‘i$i¥"é‘ 5%’? mfhfiiflllt" r o . . . s . o ‘s Directories ‘Ibruito. and the condi- tions of his em loymenf as a Dev- talker to alrcr t. workers u reveal- ed ln the House of Commons last week. John Dlefenbaler. M. P. of Lake Centre, malsted on the reve- lation, but lt. was n small matter. so don't bother Mr". Howe. He‘: busy. 30 capsules. capsules. The peo 1e of Canada might be bothered e people of Canada might we be bo cred. for the grave:- tlian a cheap a publicity man's $9.000 einpenlo account on to the Canadian tax- No. 2 Capsules for foxes months —$l.00 25 capsules. No. 1 capules for foxes No. 3 capsules for foxes under two weeks 4m three weeks to three over 3 months $1.00 for 2o Prepaid to any address E. A. FOSTER. antral uriigstoro Sole Authorized Distributors for P. E- Island yer. It reveals a great. gulf be- ween the way the ordinary Cana- dian thinks about this war and the way his paid servants think. It re- veals a state of mind ln the priv- ileged classes of government and in ustry that is as bad for Cana- da's ho of victory. as of aircraft product on. Consider the chief letter in the correspondence as tabled. Ralph Bell. Canada's dlrectortgfwsggrame a r available spendln be essen production. wrote 1t manufacturers about Mr. Hlrst. Read 1t. rememberln that. its au- thor ls the same Ra ph Bell as he who has just finished reminding Montreal airframe workers that they shouldn't kick about waxes or working conditions or organize un- ions. They should be patriots and remember they are better off than to the letter. tabled Mr. ause Mr. Dlefen ker was rude and lnslstved. In the letter Mr. Bell explained to all the alr- frame manufacturers how patriotic Mr. Hlrst ls about building up the morale of airframe workers, b" f. how "his volume Ls bound to suf- fer" if he gets very, very patriotic about ft. As director of airframe produc- tlon. Mr. Bell feels that he can hardlv ask Mr, Hlrst. to carry pat- riotism to the point. of losing vcl- ume: "If you can therefore place with Mr. Htrst your orintinz w- counf for the yea.r....so he will not have to worry" the director of airframe production will "apprect; aw Your sympathy and generosity. But. Mr. Bell hastens assure atrial; airframe manufacturers that e doesn't expect them to carry their patrlotlsm too far, either. Their percentage of profit need not suffer on account of their sympathy and genesostty to Mr. Hlrst. ‘By arrangement with the treasury. mark it well, by arrangement with the treasury. sympathy and gener- osity taking the form of cash con- tributions bowards Mr. Hlrsfs up- keep as a builder-upper of morale "are chargeable to overhead" on ao- count. of airframe contracts. The letter did not say whether the treasury would conslder it good taste iri patriot airframe manufac- them i, turers to add the usual 10 per cent. shipbuilding to their sympathy and generosity T), costs. He. left that t fty but once the there will come and this will be employment, uxfess vfnclal works. pectved that. slack out of new Pub'lc works taxu but the ployment. At a time when naval authorltfes tween German the Norwegian clashes between and west. Pacific the latest estimates on tlon. Jane's believe; ships, and some The eludes l7 construction or o! are busy on, such giants as the of the Tlrplt-z. now summer in a n d d new British L‘0n f us cob armed with nine lectlvely will determine that 1942 ls going to produce results in the aircraft field that will literally ginplze country" remained cor- a e rs. Ifvlf. ls any satisfaction to Ml‘. Bell to know 1 . he has already nch- Sh! ved hi; 1942 objective. The coun- try ta lltcraily amaud. But‘. don't ex laln why. because m. Bell can't expected t0 i111- clerstand A director of Canadian war pr uctlon who has one stan- dard of patriotic morals for Carin- an war workers and mother fcr war employers and publicity men woulnrvi. know what you were talk- ing about if you tofu him he was what. was wrong with morale 1n the war industry he directs- And tnerel no use bringing the matter up with Mr. Howe. fie-is busy with import- ant matters. Psi-n The sad thin: 1| that Ralph Bell orlty has ability. fie nu far more comfy chem w get. tnings done than the Ottawa. produced a new t average. his failure ls fn uncei- great toughness an standing, and it goes deeper than Mr. Ben to the sysicm that produc- ed hi; kind of thinking. The trou- ble seems w be that Mr. his associates tn Canada's manufacturing class have n per- mitted to take themselves boo ser- louslv too long. The trouble seems to be that nobody has ever made it clear to them that. they are not the civilization common pec 1e 1n Bri- tain and Russia and Ch a are dy- ¢ to salve.‘ gimp“ trouble seems to be that n e Canadian lndustrla ta the worm flehtlns privilege 1s printed 12 int bold def-standing of lea ca. s and the word hone: v afx mini of marine strategy 11g t face lower case. ire class have tlon as to aircraft D construction sen bower fn the Estlmatimr sea number and nowei- German is an ln Rim; Out," conditions. ever done. exports are still ref weapons. Such H0001‘! ll ed. h In! arenas. stairs" mm»- lf would be c ea er. and the Work For All (London Free Press) Dl‘ ii. Cyril arms, principal o! °ii McGfll governments largo-scale programs For it Ls hardly to be ex- Cariada can take up this the Iirlcdrlch de Grosse, cloned. Nor have we much and Japanese vessels. fng inflation tn “'I‘lma latest war by Henry J. Taylor, American inveath gator who la well informed on Euro- Mr. Tayhr for the statement that Gal-mm 1st: and metallurglata have shelffire. ‘This steel, used. in the Bismarck Ben md her fut few hours afloat gyro-- affié"u".'i.‘”..."’l' J’.f..'.‘".'.'.'l;“ $.22 He say! taken into account University, economist, gnu rfel May saw her ffraf" fund. Dr. James dec ared employment oi’ every empfoyable Canadian would tlal after the war but said nothing as to how this was to be brought about after the first su - plylng-the-deflclencles Without doubt full employment of all men and women who can work Ls necessary to Canadian prosper- boom en sack of buying has been taken up after the war an inevitable slump ln demand and production, fofowed by un- federal and pro- undertake export business. programs mean hlizh altematlve is unem- Fight For Sea Power d (London Free Press) United Nations are predicting another Jutland thu summer be- Allfed forces off coast, and further Japanese and American sea power 1n the South- 1041 Jane's Fighting Silps appears with edition of naval construc- Japan has built or ls building five 40000-ton battle- pocket battleship; United Nations program tn- hattlechlus and cruisers. Little is known of Ruskin six batfe Italian output. German shlos receive little mention ut; 1t Ls known German shipyards" or have complered Hlndenburg and sister ships ln a Norwesilan harbor, and the Bismarck, lost last the Atlantic. Nafurrllv no reference to British replacements. ere is no information about the class of four ghlns 16-inch wwither the Anson and Howe of irho nuns. nor been commis- informa- carrler bufdlng. But f-here l; sufficient knowledze to indicate a larize increase of war- fn various clam meet an unexpectzd struggle for near future. Dower these days is difflcvlt not only because the of’ shine l-s un- certain. but because of the Vichy French feet. the undlscl of the R/iualan fleet and tlon, and the quality of osed value lie dlspoal- bhe new There book f: num- of swell wt Ifnlllsh steel wondering what sort of alloy went lnfo that mighty vessel. He even suggests ft. may prove to be 2m of ermany‘; "seri- theoo together t. lexicon of Wiih Bun- POWQ!’ and OOnCGflffulJOfl. spirit of the per-sonnet. un. power. and u. all have to l: o! the big ship versus the dive bomb may change; in naval power u to decide ocurse of the war. FIRST MOVIE AT I00 PEMIBURY, En l her 100th blrlhad‘: effect. such - (OP) - Mrs. Har- movle film. chum”, o; m, Govermnt" Ad, l. private ahowlnghof war action at visor-y Committee on Post. War Re- v" m“ will“ construction, has been planning“: figs?“ "m" m’ WW" ram destined w brink iioxgitry safely thropfh the f-Ouflllfl years knmedlltely tar the war ends, pombl over a Ion period. ' view: been the House of conmioru Oommitm 0n Reconstruction and mhabtlftatlon Dr. Jamu offered Ml that of pout.- wu- nqulreniantc and oondltloru. 1h predicted a billllllfl boom. similar b0 that which followed the First World Wu, would follow this conflict. Thu meant. m nld, that deinobollzed service men and mun- d be absorbed into the Canadian _ and h “m. $51." of bulb?“ 5"“? all; Bii:=l":'i""5 . _ i, He reminded the commttm this 2|‘; 1,151, 91mm’ ' after the war tn fill the post-war boom and mhaequant. depreulon n; accelerated by accumulation of consumer ndlng power due 0o high war-t a Inge! and soldiers spending their cuh bonuses. Bu: high present-day taxes and WIIQ and prloe control; would confiscate - the Fn w us Purchasing paw- er whl exla lfwr 1M8. uvtnu would be tho only Mrs. av was wan first SIII WILL LIVE AGAIN -_.__.4 on public U) d The Gasoline Questio (Eastern Chromite» Premlflki MacMlllan. of . Scotla, and MiicNalr. of New 3r . wick, have gone to bat on the s ollne questio - Proviinces ha 5919mm , SDGCE-l punishment. over olfvrée cut. the 5 e commend the conr lenders ln standing up (Olégleigoi-figg of their subjects. Iii all the m} Canada the unit still remain; five gallons. Only in the Maiitim has lf. been cut to two gallons, Picmlgs made a. good i‘ BITY have we not bwi ting the short. end or filings forge past three-quarters of a ceiiiu Being at the front door oi cairn and on the war front SlIOuid c. some consideration from the s; folks ln the other parts or cm But it's the same old slorv, Q treatment Ls akin to that bi i oormat. Thank Heaven we can taken. NDON - (c?) - Savi groups lri English and Welsh scii raised £l5.000.000 ($67,500,000) Sill .t11e_ vyagbegan. HALI FAX.N.$. Flam u mum mm w ti" "fig" Sootiun”. 0 modern flm-nroot qtruclui-r with the hug; liq pmtactlvc If" pflanool. 170 091511454" lpflllllfbil mien Mimi i" with “III llld QIIOWG: u unjflfpflllfid clllain: Rfliiilm IQI-fflhdl oi the Dflwiii" " . wwiglly, and servidfl 0f metropolitan mndud. l Rubi m: flu"!!! wit“ ‘mama; h’ ‘mph, elim- mun; mu and Mum Itlnlffl Ell-Ilia‘ Batu from $4.99 i" M‘ All! any 0.11.3. Mimi [or booklet or wrlle: KM‘ “u, The Nova Scotidh Halifax, N. S. l uixiii, is viiiovii i... Eva Stomach Mixture i Oll- A qr, gflcctlve means 0 tllfilng relief from niisiliggfcz of u» (ll mm “rllhoildaclie. molten ed b flwd a "m, heartburn. n“ “i. imit- .‘ d duff!!- 5'05!‘ Sh!" roelgogideslleutamach troublfi- 11y“ 55¢ n bottle. uAcs 0iiiiF ,1 re- ,..“...'l:l.‘°"'.'.’ llrongthena and bfliilm” r. u will restore orev "l" ‘° m ¢rl|lnll color. up,‘ Promotes a M" m" ' u for F97“ "hfrailkibflyale- hlllni and In milk-flaw‘ ‘nil Ill In Ilfiventmxgflc hnlr lrlll- """°i»'.'.'é'é 2:221... . vii- An You TPWMM Wllh LUMBAPGU ‘ or f 5°35 BACK beli . have 0M °l u" 31:21:: w zgeirvgzgps mcxnl _ Qfl- llm other Iorrpnffl "Elf-luv which rpm“. n,“ m n Box. iii: m iii“ l I n from? mu ordxi-“nfij;