Om TODAY - ROBER I “What llext, Corporal llargrove” Hews and Disney Cartoon Showing At 2:30 - 7 - 9 q - PRINCE so WARDE i Coming - MON-TUE-WED um reserved for new» of local lumen‘. but advertising at a newly nature wily be Inlefled at live eeuh e word. strictly per. able In avenue. UONFIIDEBATION LIFE IN- M tague, will be 14ft? to Jan. 21st. POWNAL CHARGE - United Church of Canada, Services, Sun- day, January 13th 2:30 p m., Mill- vlew, 7:00 p.m. Pow-nal Rev. E R. Macvicar. Minister. 1 - 12 - 1i closed from ant Sale at Sportin Club, Tues a . evening, January 511.1, Hundred); -9- 12-14-31. Cyrus include two suits of gents B ‘Electric Vacuum Cleaner, Choco- ,lates, Cothing, Fumuture, etc. 1-9-12-14-31. NORTH RIVER PASTORATl-L- Sunday. Jan. 13. Services as fol- lows: Fairview. 11 A M. North River, a P.M. Kingston, 7.30 P.M.I Ycu are invited to these services as q ' we enter upon the New Year. Let “Cad YOU!‘ fus worship together. Rev All)», hearts, boys... road, Minister. 142-11‘ CORNWALL PASTORAL CIIARGIL- Services Sunday, Jan. ' 13, New Dominion 11 a.m., King- ston. 3 pm Cornwall, '1 p m, S.' School 11 a m Annual meetings Cornwall Jan. 14, New Dominion, Jan 16. Kingston Jan 18th Rev. J. R. Skinner. minister, 1-12-11 A GREAT CAUSE. — That men and women may learn to worship God “according to the Scriptures,” they must be made available in every land so that of them it can be said, “We do hear them speak in our tongue ~the wonderful works of God," This is the sole object of all Bible Society effcrt. The P E I. Auxiliary or Branch solicits your support in this great work. —MJ\LPEQUE And Kensington Presbyterian Churches, Services, Sunday, January 13, M-alpeque at 11 A.M. instead of 2:30 RM. and ensin tc-n at '1 P.M Morning constant naut- * liinmii iouin an! Annual \ I l Tuesday. Jan. 15, in Freetown at 2 P M. and Kensington at 7:30 P M. and on Wednesday Jan. 16 Maipeque at. 7:30 P.M. Rev. J. A- McGowan. IVI-inister. 1 - 12 - 1i TI-IE KIRK 0F S. JAMES -'l'.l'ie Morning and Evening Diets of Divine Service tomorrow at The Kirk will be conducted by the iiiit Pillllll. nun lllllllll Service IMWMAXINEK- Illlllll Jltlidiytllllltllll-linlifllllllllll CAPITOL Tm“ .”€h“‘“§£;.‘£i“° meet:- H» es S, . ,, _ _ MON. “MY PAL 3112 alfi prieach the “Sennhdnswlfg WOLF" °'2.*;.:...;:."~ .33; TUE. Plus Shorts Evening ‘m "Wasmd 9111118?‘ ‘Fne Shows 2:30 - 7 - 3:45 l) "UN MERLE! 511111611 and th Bibi be of asalofns i%£.‘,§,§‘;f',‘°* fig Death and Zacchaeus. n sarcasm SOLDIER narmms Gunner J. Patrick Murmur,’ ily/Irs. John T. Mm. nume on the troopusrrcgloribucirzlrrived Bedford" on New Year's Eve 82%;‘) spending the past four and o er mill Years overseas. Gnr Pat “i; loined the am“. late m ' m after a few months spent THE COOPER BRAND OF ROMANCE! SAMUEL GOlDWYN . ~ B!‘ Ellrvllean countries. Hewgg ' i """" XaXfIdH-(Sjfllgllltd this ‘(IJ-Erisatxfffa V‘, 1th“ a . ' 5 pas . ,.< G5“ [mine oglpship en route to on v - C O O P E R so... ° h“ °"° "m" "mues- .~ ~ - c .Aa former member of the ,1 MIIL! ' F" ‘EWWH. and <. qsanon W’ "it on 30 days’ leave Visiting his parent-s, 1 ti ms Drovgcz. ves and friends in su- TheuSac- dispensed at both the mgfrffin‘; I“ “he m°mm8 itfiemllfxiffigtyerlgflll gfiliver the sermon suited to the mmiu Servioe. In the .1» ursv xmv - WALIII IRINNAN ' rum‘ FfllOilT-MAIII. rope. "m" "m" l ;_‘ _ lng he Will 5k "s1 evan- t PLUS. NEWS . someones?‘ Afmthe £0335 COMEDY - lilléiwhlf §.;'i',§"“'--.§.“i." or m Lonely Pilgrim's Heait" if; u" l » T‘ . ‘ willnlgd effigmgwdflinnqen’? . . ~ ' , s a o a so EMPIRE or» 1 1» mm- €?.““st3““~ :1 u» ~ ' Seventy species of maple occur ‘aft 1 - The Melts Double Quar. arc-DA Y throughout the world, e w 1 also be heard at the ev. Shows 2:30 - 7 - 8:45 w: 1i hklfYfl/M "4 iowlifm/ LONDON —- (CP - . families in need (ff flllglgwlbfgdlgfllf rece e b ta ti the (lsoldsléoistn al supplies from i “ Little Blue Books ” ‘I4 PHYSIOLOGY OF 515x up]; \V-|:“) :- V 10 “wfshlp at the Sunday services iillvl€sé’“él‘°él’é”fen"iiéfif "°”“*"" MOVES T0 P. E. I. CHARGE _ A call from the Margate charge 121 WHAT EVERY . of Prince Edward Island, tq thg MOTHER SHOJE; Rev. Gordon Stevens of Sunny cs4 wan any YOUNG 3"“ "mted Church. was consid- MAN 530g“) KN ’ ered and voted favorably upon at t" Wm. Y» o ?.‘;‘°°i’éi“ rave Per- IIOU i‘ e e ne a. It . U56 AT Ln KNOW‘ derstood that fbgmyMr. is u“ t who has been at Sunnv Brieevtelgfl C0038 for Photographs. i euaancs. l OFFICE of Dr. Preston McInt e, DON'T MISS Gyro White Ele h-, of useQil articles to be aiictioned. ' 11s. ladies new silk stockings. Le t i-HARLQI l t iuwu TijaflrnntrcuiinauniAlTn PRQGWiM, f0“ PROVINCE 0UTLl;;~;ED BY ADVISURY CQMM Outline of a poltwur ihealth rogramme for Prince m. ward land occuple; g promln. ent place in the Interim Report .of the Prince Edward Island Ad. visory Reconstruction Committee which was prepared during the legislative recess and is to o; sub- ‘mitted to the Legislature at its - next session. This section of the report was prepared by the public health and welfare sub-committee under the chairmanship of Dr. J, P. Lantz, Other committee members are Dr. A. MacMillan, . A pubhc rrr-zms T0 an sucnomsn by|‘1,jr_ A_ _,_ Mumhfjg,“ 34% Sterns and Miss Katherine Mac- long been considered." says the report "t at an ade- quate public‘ heath program can- not be married out with an ex- penditure of less than 81.50 per capita." The minimum requirement of e public health staff to meet post- war needs ls set forth es ,fol- lows: (a) A full time Minister of the Crown with a deputy and an as- sistant deputy minister. (b) Three full time health of- ficers, one for each County. (c) One nursing supervisor and a total of nineteen public health nurses. (d) One sanitary engineer with headquarters in Charlottetown, but whose Jurisdiction would extend over the Province. (e) Two certified sanitary officers for the counties of Kings and Prince. (f) Six senior field clerks, a stenographer and a senior clerk for the Vital Statistics Branch as well as two assistant clerks. (g) One full time ‘properly train- ed physician to hea disease control de artment, a secretary who keeping ability. Institution: The following recommendations are made with regard to adminis- tration of the various institutions: (a) The Sanatorlum Commission to be responsible to the Minister of Public Health and Welfare, in- stead of to the Executive Council as at present. (b) and (c) Falconwood and In- firmary to be placed under a Com- ’ ‘ responsible to the Minister of Public Health and Welfare. (d) Provincial electrical inspec- tion be placed under control the Department of Public Works instead of Public Health es at present. (e) Medical care of patients at the Infirmary should not be the responsibility of the Superinten- dent of Falconwood Hospital. (f) Some qualified member of the Public Health Department to be appointed “to inspect period- ically those institutions providing welfare including hospitals and also homes or institutions where babies and children are boarded." Other Recommendations That the Provincial Government increase the grants to hospitals to an amount that will give the hos- pitals 50 cents per patient day for4 all patients. The establishment of a Provincial Laboratory at the Sanatorlum un- dei- the direction and supervision of a qualified medical bacterlologist a d pathologist. That Dr. I-Iarold Blfiaw be released from the army to take this position. This would also require one senior and two junior technicians. That contagious disease units be established at various hospitals or a central contagious disease hos- pltal be erected ln Charlottetown and Summerside. That an adequate supply 1f sera be kept in the Health Department and that the hospitals be the ills- trlbutlng centres. That all serum: for the proven- tion and cure of infection and contagious disease be ‘ free to all patients. Compulsory immunization against diphtheria as well as compulsory vaccination against smallpox. F ee diagnostic‘ examination and tr tment of all tuberculous pnt- ients, including the travelling unit for mass x-ray survey. ' That drugs used in the treatment of venereal disease be free, and that the doctors treating disease patients be compensated. Premarital certificate of health be required and to include en x- ray plate of the chest and a blood as some book- O n A- examination. Veterans’ Hospitalization “At present," says the report, "our hospitals are greatly over- crowded, many beds have to be set up in basements and corridors. "The average number of beds fer 1,000 of population for Canada s over 5. In Prince Edward Island the average is about 2.6. "With the proposed expansion of the Department of Public Ilealth and the increased interest oi’ the public in both prevention and care of illness, e greater number of beds will be required. "We therefore recommend the building of additional hospital at: commodetlon in Prince Edward Is- land of 110 b0ds at about 06.000 per bed; this number. toinclude I) beds for war veterans. the venereal ' Th with rmitted GUAIRDIA \ Hf serving a sentence 1n jail gm] the training of mental rlefeggg (higher grade types) who can be. come useful citizens, especially a; trained domestics, and in other mental work not requiring a high degree of intelligence, especially in these times when labor of this type is so difficult to secure." County Unite Suggested (f) Decentralization of the one lar e unit and establishment o! res dences in strategic points in the Counties, es at Montague, Charlottetown and Summer-side, would eliminate overcrowding, lessen the danger from- fire, as in n large unit, and keep a large majority of the patients in closer proximity to ther relatives and friends, and help provide employ- ment i.n th e areas, and in the wider dispe sal of funds necessary for their maintenance." {The report recommends the en- gagement of a properly ualified nutritionist by the Provlnc al GOV- ernment; also establishment of suitable scholarships to assist reg- istered nurses in taking post grad- uate studles; assistance to young women who are unable financially to enter a nursing school; a potntment of a public health nurse to the Normal School staff Prin e of Wales College; consid- erat on of the possibility of es- tablishing medical, dental and nursing services in rural areas; a study of sanitation in rural area; with a view to assisting rural townships to provide some system of sewage disposal. Fllconwood e texts of several briefs sub- to the committee are given in the report, including one * on mental care and hospitalization by Dr. J. A. Murchison, superinten- dent of Faiconwood Hospital. During 1943, Dr. Murchison states, the daily average in Falconwood numeberd 2'14; patients admitted during the year 96; in 1944 the daily average of patients was 274; patients admitted during the year The minimum standard a; set by the American Psychiatric As- sociation in i926, and since n1 dopted by the National Committee for Mental Hygiene (Canada) is not less than one physician to 150 patients in addition to the medical superintendent, and to the num- ber of patients admitted, not less than one physician to (0 admis- sions; at least one full time den- tist: and there must be a staff of consulting specialists at least in internal medicines, general medi- cines, general surgery, organic neurology, diseases of the eye ear and throat, and radiology. During 1943 the daily average of patients in the Provincial Infir- mary was 173; cases admitted 49. ients was 177, cases admitted 86 In recommending decentraliza- tion of this one large unit an’! es- tablishment of residences at stra- tegic polnts in the Counties, Dr. Murchison said this would elimin- ate overcrowding, lessen the dan- 'xzer from fire, and R9813 alarge majority of the patients in closer proximity to their relatives and friends. "The most important field in psychological medicine," Dr. Mur- chlson states, “is outside the men- tal hospital and in the communiiv. This importance ls due not only to the bulk of the material, hut also to the fact that in this field there ls the greatest hope for the success of preventive measures. It it here that a travelling mental health clinic will play so larze a part and should be closely inte- grated lnto the community health program." Tuberculosis In e brief submitted by the RE. I. Tuberculosis League, it is slated that in 194" the total receipts from Provincial Sanatorium patients. a- mounted to 823.663. Of this, $10,- 200 came out of the patients’ or their relatives’ pockets. The. rest. $13,424, came from the Depart- ment of Pensions and National Health and from the Federal Gov- ernment for the treatment n! In- dians. In 1944, $10.81? was paid by the patients out of a total of 5'20.- 831, with the remainder from the same source as in 1948. ‘Tree treatment of tuberculosis." the brief emphasizes, "is absolutely essential before we can stamp out this disease. No doubt exists in our minds that tuberculosis can be made as rare a disease as small- pox. but the one and only way to do this is to get the 100 per cent cooperation of the citizens of the Province." Also strongly emphasized is the importance of rehabilitation to Lb. patients, and of additional extra _ rural help for patients and their cpendenta. The $12,000 granted for the latter purpose lathe Iegls- lature for the year 1 is insuf- ficient. The highest allotment paid at t-ha present time ls I80 per month. There should. it ls sungt-st- ed be graduated payments of $50 a month downwards. Other briefs include two from -r11ral communities, emphasizing the need for doctors. 0 . Essex, lhgiand —(O‘P)—'1‘.‘l-e Britta want his the war, James 'I‘um r, ’ the national n“ cs1 n nvsnv Madman tea Church for ta t e last fourteen I w, WOMAN ‘SHOULD KNOW, years. expects to take up hi; new \‘ \ . | , . 69o MVXglVIANS SEXUAL LIFE. duties at Mai-gate on February 1. _ ,. _ m” s SEXUAL LIFE Rev. Dr. F. E. Archibald, was ap- COMMON SENSE 0F pointed Interim Moderator of the Sunny Brae charge. The appreci- atlon and felicitations of the Presbytery were extended to Rev. Mr. Stevens by Rev. . A. M. Earle. of Dot-cheater. Among those present were Rev. J. H. Freestone. chairman: Rev. A. Moore, secre- mv: and the Rev. L m. c. n". ‘§;"n=-“J.3“°§.l1l“t ‘Fl. "omit" °’ ton Times. ' ' m F‘ one. noun nvoamt c6, PM. M. P. o. Box o2. Station r. Toronto, Ont. 1-12-11. i line's Welcome llellet Fmll ‘w * ' . A new stand ls new e at the » ,_ » corner ei Eaton and sis. Putefew ofve-he-tielvblflb City and CDIINIV service. We nostril end eel it go to t would appreciate vol: patronage. when miner! ll . ram mm m: ma, 1m. '§'ii§':'.'?'r“¢“n" " I-"P vmmm l-l Mental Hygiene Primary I for development of a mental nygieno program in keeping with other ,g:rtts of Canada and the United e en are: l» m Construction of suitable buildings to provide lnecelee , ec- lcommodatlon for ents end for an admission and treatment cen- ltre; adequate qulrtefl for the the: ltel uteri; provision for encu- onel therapy. social-service, and other feature: necelnry for s com- plete psychiatric lervlbl. " ' ' (b) A travelling mental health ciinifi, lCmzbé-illllflglf brpeyKcliiutr-iu peycoogs, soc mire en clerical help, to care-fer the extru- murel ugect of this work. (c) lie blishment of Ylychletric services in gen ll tell. (d) Comideretonj tevhton o! the legal formeltlti» the cont- mitmewt of pellet! ‘ " “(c neioguri mitten-la Q m ll I ' idiopathic indlv 1' "uln tifeue groups," til x e I many hown 1 lnellotc mi .1 it of m induntrlql; celainy protect! . M er "will": ‘ Rqqucst 5 Pcriouiizuitt veu noun. n: um venom none: _ arisen BURNS a. ALLEN alums, moans litlll “EQVIILL; V‘ e possibly Souris and Alberton. ‘This Ibo atdln In 1944 the daily average of pat- him coming it posts _ . couldn't say, “Oh, I'm aor- ry—but you eee I'm e married wo- men. My ibend Bheputonthetweedsiaitwith thesoft grayfurthotMikehad insisted on lowing for her in New York. She fastened at the throat of ha" blouse the clip Mike had to her lap that last mom- ing. "Present for e. paietty lady.” It wee an expensive clip with four anall diamonds set in an ori- ginal nu ngelnezit of eled grapes. Securing it firmly, she ‘W’ h" “a emit“: f agrim a prlinNewYorkwmohed crim- She refined to let herself consider the fact that or iihe girl, it might not have been end ‘not till the mbnrpt shock came of learning Mike had mar- ried aomeone else. "If she clung it was her own fault." There might be no truth in it anyway; it. might be merely the malicious invention of a man whom Mike hated. At any rate. the clip was lovely, and the cool feel of it against hei- skin was Ike a caress from Mike. And the little gray halo that completed the outfit looked smart and sophisti- cated on her bright hair. Bruce Gamble roee from a sofa in the lobby to meet her, admiration evi- dent in his . Without hat he looked e. little older than she had thought to be, the strong wave of his hair was definitely graying, and at the temples it was white against the dark tan of his akin. is fine," he eeid, "I was dreading the long evening. ‘Tomorrow I'll be at work and the hours move along a little faster when you're busy " He pulled out her chair and ar- ranged her fur, sat down opposite, and smiled at her. ;"Nloe of you to invite me diown, she said “Otherwise I'd have bad an omelet on a tray, and written e few letters-" _ "And then you'd have gone in bed at nine o'clock with a maga- zine and wondered how in a city of half a million peo 1e, one room could’be crowded eo ull of ioneli ness ' "You've been tnvelins a long time, haven't you? I'm very new at it. I wouldn't be here at. all except that my lady employer broke some bones, and very ly I'm scared to death." "1 don't go round with an or- der and a collection of bar- room stories," he said. "I'm sort of liaison man- between the labors toriee and the mmtcmers. Right now I'm anxious to see_t‘r_1eee r.'.~.1........".~, t...’ ‘ ‘a n ' that wheat has to_'be washed. ll: couldn't . , M» I Jmuanif T12 1545' IIIITII , about V, “M5 ""59, wnear A Radio Tall; by Mildred Mae McKenzie g . ' zwmssamueonunneouooql-euu-v-qno want to talk to you today about washed wheat. Now of course everybody knows I ..;-£::'..'-. possibly be used for food the way it comes from the grain fields-The dust and impurities thabwheat‘ collects must ‘ be removed if a pure flour is desired. Now, what about the method of re- _j_'* ‘moving these impurities: The ordinary method usually followed is to wash the wheat with cold water. Well that may be all right as far as it goes. But it's not good enough for QGILVIEI Wheat must he really clean, absolutely clean, before Ogilvie will put it through the milling process. , .. So QGILVIE has a special process --one that is not used by anyone else in Canada. QGILVIE washes the wheat if first with hot steam, and then again with f warm water. Then the wheat is scoured and dried with warm air. And believe v__ me, this exclusive OGILVIE system gives " results. The grain is absolutely clean. f That's one reason why QGILVIE FLOUR is so good, so pure. So when you hear about washed wheat remember that QGILVIE, and OGILVIE alone, has this ‘system to bring you a flour that is immaculate. , humor n... "WW g"; in: _ 0 G I l.Vl E F I-Q ll R MILLS COMPANY LIMITII. dsmonstrations of our ve. It's supposed to elminate dint and iias mnd several other danseroue feat/laces of other mining eorplos- ives. I'm especially interested in this ftormula because I helped work m, I . “I," Virginia eeld sell nioe old ladies the idea that their lives will he incomplete until they've seen the sun set behind Pelee. And I convince retired brmlneesmen in Nebraska that they should take t‘eir wives to Iake Iouiee oir uda. I collect tired school teachers and suede them that emonthina 08101189 list-Vim‘! will bring romance and glamour into their frustrated lives And then I sell th_e hotels and camps the argument tnat can tube these people at. a certain raw, so that our bureau can show a of profit. Tomorrow I'm seeing a hotel beeper near Pike’s_Peak and e transports oomplm’. and the next day e dude ran owner near the WY mine bolder. And the da after " ' o thit- ieiire on Sunday "1 have e voiwmwlni Bulday. He l ouessved a l t; snubs? 1o oft-i. I I And The Now m‘ . w.c.T u. l kins Ziwonovs nossr ‘ “'7 a ‘i n I kill the poor,.I kll t e 1'0 l t in the d Iiiynlyfimtingiéffliffina milk and b bit? d I ee I make the, college students drunk So in exams they're sure to flunk. The Nation's war jobs oft float One-fourth‘ of them not the" 1° °°=l°l?~313!éll'.'.'.'_“l<'P-" ‘this: mm official sources we learn that there ere in Holt’ fivod 91nd yin tolflthir- T"? m" be fed. en the? Amen of. 5 ~ f ell n tftuforoth M“; lites? Jl $1‘ ma?” ._even' the cmdrefl nerve. a =h=%"*la~ ‘l . l lo rent elsewhere. ' The British Eduard of Education in ltl Offclll; Syllabus says: .-.. “Beer, Winn and Bpirlts- these” things are not. of real use to up because they cannot make us Brown nor keep 111% body from wearing. away. and t. ey cannot make _, strong or werm....They are u‘. able to help to nourish the bony... That is perfectly true, but th , grain used lrrthe manufacture a - . ‘alcoholic liquors mi ht he turne ' into immense quan ties of Izod, materials. What is almost value u when turned into Drink can be or tremendous worth when made e’- vallable for food. _, Thousands of people in Greet Britain have declared their will-y ingnese "to have their rations c if thereby alone men. Women em whlldren, of whatever nationality. may be saved from intolerable eufg ferlng." Such was the instant r . ., sores ftch flp’ wives until they're dead: I shiialf. ' f h ti o late to wor ‘\ rfgglngfegsmldltffgtheir brains i vote s onse to an a eal by eight wei - 1 fixed ‘the general! I“ the 11"‘ klfiown ubllc plgures which in"; While JIPI "P0" P"?! “m” eluded r. Sidney M. Ber Y. l“ crept Rev. Henry Carter, the B shop _ ' 1 made the aunnerl 1M9 l°° 1°“ Ohichester, Victor Gollencz, Prof. While JIPI “m” d°wn “d m” Gilbert Murray and Eleanor Rattle Ho bone, . ' 011i: wlllfih me mule the Army ho" ha“ John Middletonfllifurry writes? ‘ Where nerves end ear "The er is over. All the crulll cost the most; ties and abominations that l And I'll continue on my I P" inflicted ln the act of w i‘ ltee will be forgotten. Hen‘. IIIIO the . selves to be victims of a commol! dhnteramlut the crueltlel that are lnfllctedwhen war is over e never forgotten: They felter lull an implacable hatred. For tin-v at’! inhuman. This is‘ the moment when f ‘gmerosity wipe; out thehorror 61 wer ' ~" , . I (Oaltllltlbd on PIC! 14) .. _ . t‘ EUIOPI I! STAR-VINO! “rape millions lg wenderlni. food sufficient must. be fed now. the! millions ere MM” children, tin! tote who l" any e b g jm-opeen situation » It Cling! ‘be us“ _ c tens a . . millionth: e