PAGE FOUR THE BHANLIITTETOWN GUARDIAN Mornhq Qllly (Founded In I811) t Col. W. Ch for B. MOI-IN "wilfflir-Iéifiii-"nt. J. B. Bllrlfl". IJJ. 5‘°'°""‘ um‘ 0"‘ n‘ A Hugh?“ 33%.: t. ldflor and Manllllll - ' J" an‘ I ‘A Illofllllc Editors: Frank Walker and on u: Burnett, ILU.N.V.R. (On Active Service) T], 3g pages: Memory is Weaker Thu e r the Weakest Ink." TUESDAY. NOV. 1a. 1948 -__. The Canadian Committee An urgstttizzitioti kuOWn 35 illfi Cillladla" cmfl‘ mime 13,5 inn cottclutlctl the first year of its Mtit-itit-r, liavmg mostly coitceutrztted _on the intmediattc tilijcctivc 0f assisting R.A.I'. staff pcrsotutcl in this co-.uttr_v (as distinct somewhat from students llluft: l1"n .ctttly in the country) to obtain wider ltnowlctlgc and better under- slatulitig of Canada. That is, ltowcvcr, the nu- tllgglifllt; objcct of thc comtnitttc, nvhosc ulti- mate ltllflltbc is tlic establishment ot “file Cau- utltt l-titttidatitnt," a national body ntade possi- blo by a priuttc zuul attouyntotts donor in Great Britain. autl ultosc purpose is “the prontotloti of cultural rclzttititts between Caitztda and the lfttitctl lrhigtli-tti." So far as thc _v<:tr's E1Cll\'l'.'.€S o1 the Cana- dian Committcc in relation to R..~\.'F. person- ncl are cottcertted, they ltave been based large- [y an rctjtillllllvlltlllllttlls comaiitcd in a report prop-aver! by .\lr, .\lichattl lluxlcy, an English diplomat and journalist, who framed sugges- tions after visiting the R.A.F. here and cott- sulting witlt the~relevattt authorities. By us- ing the facilities of existing organizations, the Committt-c tnrtttagctl to provide films; lectures. laoolts, tottrs, and other tueans suited to inform- ing R.:\.I'. personnel better on Canadian life Ind affairs. When the Canada Foundation has been dc- velopcd it will perform functions resembling some of those performed by the British Council and the Carnegie Institutes. It will be directed toward encouraging Canadians to gain a better knowledge and understanding of their country and of its position in the family of nations; and, in the external field, the foundation will en- deavor to project the Canadian national person- ality abroad, exchanging cultural achievements and opportunities with other peoples. The activities of the Canadian Committee are presided over by Mr. justice Joseph T. Thorson. Seasickness ;1 Many interesting sidclights were discovered in the research work which resulted in the Royal Canadian Navy's scasickness remedy, an- nounced last week. It was found, among other things, that an easygoing or fundamentally stable person may get seasick as quickly as an unstable, neurotic individual-but probably 25 per cent of all unstable persons get seasick sim- ply becausc they think they will. .A pitching] motion, obtained in driving head-on into a heavy sea, is worse for most persons than roll- ing. “Up and down" motion, as in a very small boat riding high waves, is worst of all. Scasickness answers no definite set of rules for all persons. Some persons arc affected only by one type of motion, get sick 0n some ships but not on others. Contrary to popular belief, the seagoittg man who has not been thoroughly sick at some time or other is rarely found. Many seagoing men suffer constantly from seasickness in rough weather, but most of them set up an immunity during their first two days out. Many get sick ‘for a couple of day's every time they go to sea, are not bothered again on that voyage. The basic cause of seasickness is the failure of the balance organisms to compensate for con- tinued rapid chattgcs in position. Consequently, the tougher the wcatltcr, the ntore violent the changes and the ntorc likely one is to get sea- sick. Conceivably anyone could be made sick by sufficiently violent motion. “Scasicltnc"s" can he caused artificially in “crazy ltottscs" in ainusciticttt parks with lllll- rors attd other tricks. In the navy’s experi- ments an attcntpi was made to make persons seasick simply by having them sit still and watch a itinvic of a violent sea storm, but the results of lltis wcrc inconclusive. Some per- sons \\":rc ntudc viulctttbv sick by lifting and dropping them rapidly in a high building in an ordittztnv clcvattur. The rc-cztrcli cxpcrts agree that the old navy - EDITORIAL NOTES - On the 23rd inst there will be an investiture of Royal Honours by His Excellency the Governor- Gcneral at Ottawa, when the Holt. Dr. Mac- Millan, O.B.E., and Mr. L. B. blaclliilatt, hI.B.E. will be among those decorated. U U i U We are forging ahead all right as a. young and rising tiatioti. \\"e now appoint anlbztssa- dors to other capitals, and they in turn send ambassadors to us. \Vell for a country with a population equal to that of London, it in- dicates we are going some. v s v- 4 ~ In Great Britain, an allocation of three egg per week is ntade to infants between the ages of 6 months and t8 months, and ceflain classes of invalids, for the period from September 1st to February 1st. This is a much larger ration than that allowed to the general public. l! I i 1i In commemoration of the "Battle of Bri- tain”, Trinidad has raised £19,000 ($84,360) in response to an appeal by the C0lott_v’s “Witt the War" Association. This stun, which exceeds by ncat'l_y' 300 per ccut the urigitial target set, is for the benefit 0f the R.A.F_ Benevolent Fund. Sir Stafford Cripps has sent his ap- preciation of the Island's latest gift of £7,300 ($32,412) towards the cost of bomber aircraft. ll‘ i ii 1k Congratulations arc in order to .\Ir. Morris W. Wilson, president and ntauagittg director of the Royal Bank who has been appointed to the high and responsible position of Chancellor of McGill I.'ttiversity' in succession to the late la- mented Sir Edward Beauty. Mr. Wilson ltas many warm friends and atlmircrs here where he used to be on the staff of the local branch of the Royal. i U l Under an agreement between Canada and the United States, 500,000 tons of fertilizer is expected to be available to the Dominion for the spring-almost double the quantity used a few years ago-—.\Ir. Grant Peart, fertilizers administrator, announces. Mr. Peart said far- mers should be prcparctl to accept deliveries during winter months. "Early delivery is the answer to the question of avoiding peak labor loads in fertilizer plants. preventing overload- ing of transportation facilities and relieving the shortage situation," he said. “'I‘lte dentand will probably be the heaviest in our history.” I i i ll i The Federal Sales Tax is producing a size- able revenue which would look big in other IHTICS. In the first six months of the fiscal year 1940-41. the total sales tax revenue was $78,000,000, tn the next fiscal year it was $107,- °°°.°°0. In the following year it was $113,000,- 000, and tn the first stx months of the current fiscal year, that is up to the end of September the total was $137,000,000. This steady rise in revenue from the salestax is a fairly accurate measure on the expansion of domestic business and industry and also a reliable meter of the growth of national incontc. i ‘N #1 1K l!‘ William Frend de Morgan, Iiuglislt novelist and mventer, son of the fantotts itiatltettlatican, Augustus dc Morgan, born this date 1839; i11- ventcdpnew processes 1n lustre ware and built up an unportaitt business, both domestic and ex- port; ert the age _of sixty-six he wrote his first novel Joseph Vance’—‘— a long and leisurely book reminiscent of Dickens and containing in the elder Vance one of the most humorous fig- "YCS m English literature; his other novels in- clude “Altce-for-Short," “Somehow (iood " “It Y . - v- .. ~ ‘ ‘ l\e\er ‘Can Ilappctt Again . \\ hcn Ghosts Mom Ghosts , “An Affair of Dishonour”, "A Like. ly |Story"_: " ‘As they lsakc, so will they brew’ phtlosophtzed Mr. Challis)‘ i l‘ t a: Que commendable characteristic of Prime Minister Churchill is his willingness to recon- ftruct lllS cabinet whenever he thinks the public ..ervice requires it. During the past two years he has had three reconstructions, and tho om rccetltly reported is the ntost extensive inmlvjng some half a dozen changes of portfolio ltolders Mr. Alfred Duff Cooper has been "laid off" rd receive an important position abroad and his f place has been taken by .\Ir. lilrttest Brown who has been more or less a ‘ zle as llittistot- of llealth. He Will he succccdcd bv \Ir illcuty 3- \Vlll"ll<v_ a distinguished lawyer, who won a l8 fflputatton lll handling the honteless in the London blitz. Lord Wooltoti, Food Minister has been named to the itcw portfolio of lllinis- ter of Rcconstrttctiou. being SHCCQQdCd b;- COL I- I- ll-letvelltn, resident Ilinister at Washing. ton, WlO, in turn will be re l * d b - maul)" M“ Be" Snlllll. forntgraizixi difivlgiibdiili navy boxing champion, parliamcittary often idea is ~till thcbtst lrlltf—'_'l\'l‘.' the ticwcuitier a to lhc .\l. iqv-y- m" M, C, - a n“ wtfzcfiretary ]Ull ltl-tltl but m the tic=h zur and keep llllll will be filled by Licut. A. 'l'. Lctiviov auicilfloév lJll.\_\'. ll hcs going to be a tough scagomg type._dition to the Govtcnnnlentl ' " n “ a ' . -..__ . ondTronts by mmpanwm _ __ Notes __ York Tlmes New _ -'—-I- Two ..chievements have Some day Allied planes will be Lord Vvoolton, Bullish minister of Ilurmutg over Tokyo. and the peo- ple of Japan WllI realize that. the Rlslng Sun has not much of ltu candle power. —l>familton Specta- tor- food speaks anus food. warned a Scottish audience o! farm glrls at Dumfrles worldwlcl. food shortage ls develop- lng When the Brltlsh minister of keen clted as redeeming Mussolini’; empty career from utter futlllty. He made the Italian trnlns run on lme and he drained the Pontlne mlrshes. But now Itallan trains have practically ceased to run a}, thlt l. t‘ to a British audi- Lct people think lrss about. the fun they arc going to have on Sat- urday night and llllllk more about. ways to increase ixuductlon and buy mor; bonds. -U. S Treasury Secretary Morgcnth t Winnipeg Trlburt. says there‘: a vagrant. whisper around Ottawa that Canadian income taxes wlll be lowered next year. One of the meanings of “vngranfl i5 havlni “no vlslblr ll‘("!|l.‘~’ u.’ support."- Sutlbury Dally ' are there on the —Br.tttt.’nrtl Ex- lor tfenlcs that a pulr o! 1 (Ill rt IIIQV l-i n Vir- m tisctl t» bt- tiers. Of| hav n; ltxd ""§SOI' SUIT. cnce lt ls well for a wider audience to heed what he says, for u ubvl- ously affects more than the Brlt- lsh —Ott.awa Cltlzen. In Great Etritaln In the first nlne months of thls year alr rald deaths numutheu z-ttu and uaatns by ve- hlclcs on the rcads 4,079. On this contlnem there were no nlr raids, but the traffic deaths are ln the tens of thousands. After the war. the problem of “‘_ way casualties wlll remain to be solved by the authorities concerned on both sides of the Atlantic. -Montreal Gaz- c te. The Germans have no doubt that there ls a second front. They are fighting In Italy with troops that were ln Russla In propaganda to lhclr own people they are saying lhuL the effect of Alllrd bombing of lnctustrlul cities ls more disastr- ous than the losses ln theEasterti retreat. Their great fear, ln short. h; of a third front. Greater stlll is their fenr of azreeme ln Moscow. To each this accord isso much the oulckcst and easiest. way tn end the war that all fronts seem sec- all and his German friends have flooded the Pontlne marshes The Fascist fiasco seems about oom. Flew. ——St.ratford Beacon-Herald. In the Journal of the Amgflggn Medical Association. Drs. Roland M. Klemmfi. R Dean Woolsey and Nelson T. de Rezende wrlte almost enthusiastically on the results ob. tamed when nerves taken from Cvfbses are used to make repairs. 11193’ ""2 a new technique. The severed ends are glued togethe wlth. acacia. One patlent recovered "10 rower of movement and the sense of feeling: n second ls re. Cvveflfll; the same function; judg- ment on a thlrd must be deferred. There ls some f-lllr of carrying the idea of national registration cards o'er lnto peacetlme- No very serious opposition to the proposal should be encountered lf Ottawa wlll agree to two changes: Flt-st, lsstte new cards to all hands on o. more durable paper Second. make them larger. but not too large, no that more red marks may be stamped on the backs thereof. an for lnstance concerning unemploy- om, disavow. teroww. cvanvlm» F a Th; Dr» Shook His Gestapo In Argentina (Hamilton Spectator) ' ted of ‘fnilfllll tendesiacle: g ea power y palltlcnl stroke. the regime of President Pedro Runlrea of entlna ls now un adopt- knu m: ways pa!” Npzl Germany. It as se up g, rs orzanll- stlon whlch bu Ill o of the Gestapo. its d tawrshlp Ls total authority, and lts repressive llcles are carecwa upon labour unlons, foreigners and the Jews. This. at. any rate ls we word which recent visitors to - em San o. o. Ill autluawhave ‘£00k!!! d South Amman cities. The man whom Presldent Ram- lrea has chosen s: hle “Hlntrnle bears a notorious mutation for brutality. for beln: d-ly bro-NHL antl-Semltlc and antl- IIIOVIIIR toward violently United States A short time D0101’! hle nwoln cut u "Person d z,‘ by Argentine newambers to ha" been dismissed as supvflnwnlllll" of a boys’ reforrnatory 090M150 charges that. he had tortured the inmates. He ls allotted to have de- vlsetl‘ ynnmtnunan up m hog: pom ca 9r soners cur g e s mllltarv tezlme of General Urlburtt ln 19.41. The terrorism whim marked that government caused such an outcry of lndlHflHl-lofl m“? Urlburu was overthrown.’ ‘that is now ominous ac spokesmen for the Ramirez refll-YM have frequently boasted that lt Ls I contlrluatoln of u revolu- tion against democracy, For the present. the new instill‘ mo"; or rUpreSSl-Jll ls operating only ln Bucnos Alres. where one thousand police offlclals have been selemed to work under the com- mand of Ramirez! persona] aide. but nus ls believed u» be onlv the nucleus of what 1s to become I nation-wide secret police Organiz- ation, The police department of Buenos Alres has been rellevi-i 0f its political tnvestlgatlon dlvlsloa. and the presidential press offlce announced only a few days I180 that the Govemtnent woulc. svtpl create four vice-ministries, agan etflarge governmental jurlsdlctl 3:5,‘. various sectors of cl ll on vl an e. , din to tn- Tnlfiftmiothliiéi. hggwiaeetf‘ dlvlderl dlstrlct-s for house-to-house polloe espionage under assign“: squads. surprise searches. 1mm“ warrants, have already betlll". Wm‘ Jews, trade unlonlsts and allens lb: victlms. Counter-espionage 11861115 "foreign espionage rln s ls taken to mean that. the lute 1189MB 5"‘ vlces of the United Nations wlll b6 embarrassed, lf not. DEFSWI-lted- The jails of the capltal are IBPOTIBd $0 be already crowded with 1101mm ers. What. ls nawenlntz 1n élllenllll“ ls dist to Argongrlfls demo- cratic nelgh rs. on vlygttahed closely by wssinnrwn and n on. 1n me oplnlon of observplils. Ramirez ts not swlllfl lllsthanot 3r South American éeagppltllonpéwlgpxui v B. Tthtfgiislfniliittgo leri thes New World, and ts co h th t: is loath- mme m Nut 05.1mm Lzhleve l1 ends. _€.__-—- Alli-RAID CASUALTIES 49,000 B ltlsh men. wcgigxfte aiftlndhlldxen weie killed in enemy alr raids up l0 July 31- 1943- More than 59,000 were lnlllml ment insurance. Wlth these changes the day may come when this one card may well take the place of umpteen other cards which the average clilfen has to carry around with hlm at present. -Wlnnlpeg Tribune. One of the minor problems nf the armchair war strategists and of war news readers generally wlll be keeping straight on their Cunning- hams- There are now two of them ln top-ranking poslllons in the British Navy _Admlral of the Fleet Slr Andrew Browne Cunning- ham. Slr Andrews cousin, newly appointed commander-ln-chlef of the Allied Fleet ln the Mediterran- ean. And just to add an extra haz- ard to the risk of confusion, es- pecially for those who get their news by word of mouth over the radio. there ls Alr Vice-Marshal Arthur Conlngham, commander of the Northwest Africa Tactical Atr Force. —Arnherst. News- You can walk along any street ln London and see shops and offices to let tn all directions: flat seek- ers. on the other hand. flnd things dlfflcult enough We are going through verv much the same ex- perience that. home hunters had at the end of the last war. To =ave answering lnqulrles, estate agents even have notices ln their wlndnws announcing that they have no flats to let. Rents are more or less eon- trolled, but there are whispers al- ready of premiums belng demand- ed, and apparently you can flx anv rent you like for a "furnished flat." provided you leave a few sticks furniture behind ln the rooms. Nottingham Evening Post. All over America today educators are speaking wlth alarm about the crlsls In educatlon. It ls indeed n crlsls. The Immediate cause ls the war, which has taken from educa- tltm many of its best teachers. They have gone lnto flihltng servlces or war industries. But. the crlsls un- fortunately goes deeper than that and wlll not end with the war. In peace-Mme educatlon was deterior- ating, as illiteracy among army recruits indicated ln many places and as the general state of our society proved beyond doubt. The experts have vsrlous theories s- hout this and about the best me- thod of improving our schools None of them doubts, however, that. the main trouble llcs ln the teach- lng professlon. The teaching pro- fesslnn has been ln tlecllne because ft. does not oflfer adeutmu op- portunities to lntelllgent young men and wome . Foitmrftitrrr coutntrr out Wlul I relief l0 settle ion h l Iul ‘s f)» .; wvffti-itflfua i T“ Joy's. T at nu “fifth. "llllwlll mlnblto ill Budd's Kidney Pills bran u“ outfit-n Institute of rriiarnntlonl-l o; todu lhll; 1° responsible only to Ramirez “l0 to pl ls relates to the Food In The Futurei tome. m ignore Y!" Not l0 Affairs the mu 0n asrwulwe "- volved around the 116W W!!!" °l present mltles and 01°35" future demands. The outstandlnl feature of the discussion was the an mtem t ul without challenge en m e t. u the futon could be envfsaled, there would be a. relative over-all scarcity of airl- cultural product; wlthln two years An attempt was made to ell-soul! the altutst on ln three stages-P"- sent, short-run future lad Ioni- run future. I O I Hesent: Wheat received most attentlon. We have ln Canada on apparently vast surp us. Is there. or wlll there be. n market. for It? The answer was Yes. The world, or n. good N" 0f it, 1:. urtder famine conditions. But. so great, ts the strain upon the Canadian economy that there ls good ground for bellevlns that transportation Ls today llle ¢l1l¢l llmltlnz factor; and ground, too. r the bellef that n measure of the trouble! lies not ln marltlmo transport, but ln internal candl- lions. We are reaching a. stage ln the war when the responslbllltles upon the United Nations to feed the liberated peoples are upon us. North Africa. ls hungry. Slclly wltn its 7,000,000 people ls, ours. We advancing up the Itlllan peninsula. Tomorrow or the do!‘ after we Illl h: marching into the Balkans 0r lnto France or Norway. Every day of advance wlll release hundreds of thousands of men. women and chlldren who must. be fed. But, at this moment, thouflh shlpplng on the high sens ‘ steadily easier. Canada ls not able ace at: seaboard much more foot-l than she ls contributing now. other asmts of the war effort are straining our transportatlon re- sources to the llmlt. This ll a prob- lem of priorities which runs back to the attempt of this natlon to take on everything she was asked to do wlthout too much retmrd for our capaclty. What. are most. needed todayl Our munitions? Our men? Our food? At Washington there sits the Joint committee on allocation of resources. Xt alone has the facts. But there is responsibility, too, on our government; to make our war plans flexible. Bacon came ln for some discus- slon. It was stated that, one reason for reducing the slze of the new contract with Britain was a com- ing scarcity of coarse grains. This. having regard to farm manpower, ls a factor whlch only specially bountiful crops cpn remedy. O Short-Run Future: This period time when the war l; over, or praetlcally so, and when European production has not yet got back lnto its swing, There uhould be an lmmedlate market for all our wheat, though the term: of payment, lf any payment ls made. cannot, yet be lnld down. Emphasis was lald on the fact that lt would be important to shlp to Europe not only food but the tools of agricultural production so that Europe could, as qulckty a5 pos- ptlbllef get lnto productton again for se . A fact little Jmown generally was brought. out: The Germans have not, destroyed theh herds of horses, cattle, pigs. ‘They were beaten last time partly because of such shortages. This time they have kept the herds up. Ir was stated that 1n Denmark today there are almost; as many pigs as mere were the days before the Germans marched 1n. But whether this ap- plles generally, whether the agrl. culture for Instance of Poland has been similarly kept up, was not gone tnto. o o o Inns-Run Future: These dls- cusslons centred upon tne findings of the Food conference at Hot Springs where for the flrst time really representatlves of the ex- port-surplus countries met. with nu. trltlon experts ln the m: Import- lnB countries (to name only some chases of the delegates) and dls- cussed the general over-all picture for the long-term future. What was discovered there was that. granted purely polltlcal ctr. cumstnnoes dld not. lnlervem and sranted too that. a. freely-trullng world could produce the necessary purchasing power, there was no need anywhere to out down sign. cultural productlon. Hungry people are there, and wlll he lere, m eat ft; and as nutrltlonal standards rlse. expanding markets should be nvggsblmm e v 0n Wu nllur even $ll°ll8h the obstacles atiiamfonnld, o; able; but lt was emphnslred that. for once. an lntematlonal confer- ence had met. which envisioned not an economy of but one of abundance. The l-lot Swings "Mines ma remaln little more than a nobe aspiration; but, ff conclusions, and lf economic na- tionalism ffldee from the forefront 0f the scene. they can become practlcal realities. Two Men Fatally Injured At Sydney svnu-nzv, n. s, Nov. 14 - (0!) — Two men were fatally injured Saturday when a loading crane overturned at. the scrn yard of the steel plant here, wppln n repair crew of 19 men onto a pl e of scrap below. The vfctlms were Ell Howell. B. Sydney, and Nell Maclbtchorn I. Sydney Mines. Howell was l. f - man rlgucr on the crime The new Army I-‘felfl llatfon l. cnslsts of three units, one for eleh mfll. Dlokazed ln boxes slx Inches long, four lncbes wit‘; and two Inches deep, says The New York Tlmes. The boxes Ire impervious to water. chemical warfare agents and vet-min. The three units for the day's supply consist of canned ham and egg, canned meat or flsh pre- parations, two types of blscult. I. chocolate bar (whleh melts at a temperature of 1:0 degrees l" ln- teld of 05 degrees l‘ ls ordinary chocolate does). n beverage (sol- uble coffee). bouillon powder, lemon powder, malted milk-dextrose tab- lets. sugar, chewlnz gum and cl;- ereta. The whole combination weighs 2 6'! pounds per man Instant! of 5 4a pounds for Ration 0 and 11.32 pounds for Ration A and re- there ls a. wlll to effect tltelr major . ‘YIIIIAIIIIIIZ Head . . . ‘the wasted little body of this British boy must have milk if he la to survive. But there just isn't any, the war has cut off the supply! Like manna from heaven came the first shipment of Kinsmen mllk from Canada just in time to save this boy's life. That was In 1940. The chlld is almost fully re- stored to health now but there ls the danger that he may slip buck to ill health lf the mllk does not continue. THIS MUST NOT HAP- P71.“ THE CHARLOTTETOWN KINSMEN CLUB are now ln the midst of a campaign to raise $I0,000 to send milk to Britain. Prince Edward Island» must go “over the 20p.” We take this opportunity to endorse this campaign. HENDERSON 8t GIIDMDHE T s \ v. s s s s s x l b \ x t l \ I; VIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIII i A Strong Testimonial The Hon. Adelard Godbout, Prime Minister: of Quebec, has this to say about Life Insurance: "In war as in peace I am fully convinced that Life Insurance is vitally important to the pro- tection of our men, women and children. It in one of the bulwark: of society Despite the heav- ily increasing demands on our purse we Can- adians must not forget the many rssential bene- fits of Life Insurance.” The Great-West Life man will plan a program. HYNIIIMN 8t G0. LIMITED gladly help Provincial Managers Offices: Charlottetown, Summerside, Montague NOVEMBER 16. 194a ~ ______.__ ___ IIDI: TEYIIII Yes. thou l-rt pp! and 101mg“ In ever-nenrlnl Olmle m“, m. e. I no her vell draw soft mo" m, I fesluowlv ohllllng 1mm, mtasefu y: upon life’; he“, The fact less brvtgnvt w meet In The hea-rtnltzvss boimdlnl at em. And no . on' wuflfd. 1 wmmrlngce again. u. w“ And lone the way when-s, which seem so short To the unpractlrd eye of llnlulng youth- And high the mountaln-topr, 1|; mm — co“ tallririvps wher 1| u, tlfirone of Truth. e a life's h Unbresdffable the fort 0f ulfiakllwfbll/RIG world wllfu w . And strange and vafn the earthly turmoil BTOW-fl. And near and real the charm d thy repose. And night as welcome as a friend would fall. -Matthew Arnold. REASON LONDON -(OP)~— Charles Lem- on, m, wasn't brought to court for two weeks after belng arrested on charges of thefts from houses. Pol- lce salt-l the reason for the delay was he swallowed two spoons when arrested. FOR. DELAY Evans’ Stomach Mixture t Every person who ls troub- led with no In the stomach and bowels should act a b01- tlo of Dr. Evans hlonulch Y0“ Mixture and See hllw utllvklr lt wlll relieve all rllslresslns symptoms. A recommenlled remerlv for lndllesllun. Dys- nepsla. Sour Stomach, lleart- [hum and all stomach troub- es. Don't delay. order wlll‘ bottle toflny. Price 85 c011!!- MACS BLOOD FOOD TABLETS Fur Pale and Thln P0011!!- A eomblnutlo cSlIF-‘lall! 1-21 Bv filled Produce Prices like: Graded shipments quoted on spot 50 1-2 for A-large; A-med- tum 48 1-2: A-Dullets 45 1-2: B 45- 40 1-22 C 43-63 1-2. Butter: first tirade creamery brtnts lobblnit urlee 36 1-2-37: first grade sollds, lob current riled Montreal. wholesale Que. DBISUH- zed f . No. 2 34 1-4- Oheeee current western bort Potntoe 1 Que. 1. l: 1., l ‘l PRODUCTION ACUElER-ATBD lndustrles 1.500 tons of bombs were hours lt took ln 1M2 to flll 1.000 mhu. st. IUI OUT "RID ICHI. ‘"35 For Fout~hiIusnts l-l. J. A. BROWN. D.P. GHIROPODIST A, l _ price 36-36 1-2} receipt Que. No, 1 pasteu- 34 5-8, N0. 2 83 5-8, delivered rash andstor e No. l 35-35- reti-efpt, e. FOB: Jggblnn western MK’- Que 1-1-21, current sale for s: New crop 15 lb. hBP No 604.70: NIB» 1.65-1.75; P . 0-1115. March, 1943, in British war in the same number of mim- HuARUS ‘LINIMINI CONSULT v Orthopedic Ill Great (hone Stroll UIIABLOTIITOWN. I'll. nulre: no equipment. whatever nt- mouzh not water mnv be desirable for tbs bevel-ole and the bouillon. How Are Your Eyes? If If '»'v'ul."-"' an, so" lllor dflfnm- consult n specialist of experience l "l: do": "m an n o u Olll In u! Alums you llfllelllf . oliolnsmtnsrfl” u n“. m‘ 0. F. llutcltoson IIIIIIDIOK Al you —__Q_Q_-llQ_ -'-'-'-'-'-'-'v'-'-'- - - - u u u u u u ur-w AND SON 7- u IIUTOIIEION 0. I. IIUTCIIISON NAIROE POLES 1N A ‘HATER DUST PR FRICA I - _.. Polish refugeesigrgin ‘Mom 11000 ated ln Tongan ow nccommod. yika. Ummda and North m R11 (1951 the wily w Klényal‘! and more are on WELLNER Ixelflnqly beautiful- lbafl w b of ‘ b‘. In the treatmen t}! those diseases where the" orfgln l: lrlceahln to an un- poverlshed cnndltlnn of the bum: Price 00c per bnX» MACS AMMONIATED BRONCIIIAL COMPOUND ' Coughs, Cnltli. Bronchl s If taken at (he stflrl 0f cough or cold ft wlll all“ check any spread of the ln- fellllon. Prlce I0 cents l"? bottle. THE TWO MAGS 149 Greet George Street Mall Orders Given Prowl" Alf-Gullah. __._. Jlrofessiotial Bards McLeod £4 W. B. BENTLEY. K. C- ’, r Bentley j fgflufi l. a nunruzv. 1c 0. mafia Barrister; up!‘ Attorneys-ll- Nm 1M Prfnc: Street J c * - ‘ $60 "offflland company 32151212‘ e321,: ll. F. ARGHlBllLll 5&2?“ Chartered Accountlnts THEY PREFER A QUALITY WATCH! PROCYF‘ OOF‘ SHOCK PROOF ANTI-MAGNETIC‘ N. W. Vlsllnor Ltd. Jewelers Since 1868 Euler-n Trust Bulldlnl Charlottetown -1 ecu. a MATHIESON marsh." '° ____'-..'~_7_-»— n, F, Mcl-lhee B.A..K-€~ die. ukpanangitifcnysoalllgfigfllefll, ‘ m-‘YKFQFFKMTW L s. IIASLAM. a. A. LI- l EYES EXNMINEH eussrimrtnrn J. S. TAYLOR OPTOMETRIST C ner Kent and OIINII 5"‘ lgenlngs bv ADI"I"""°""' Ph l9" Phone ogieltlence Ill"