fl ~ DTTETUWII Glllllflllll ’lahilhgl\lllytlbuniulnllfll i no m} Hun-Col. w. chum s. mu.»- v-bm 1.1.: mus. M. mun-cu o. A. fill... n.a.o. leer-cur! 0n. filler and Mona; J. l. Burnett. IJ-l- s MI’. r mum balm. Inuit Walker- Q SUBSCRIPTION “:55 u’ c" . ' In d l II 91V " u:“»='i'§¢Ii'l 111E138)“ mllleodvto P E. Inland $5.00 per year lln advance) mulled to Canada and 0.8- Meiubera Audit Bureau of Clrulllltlons ‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker "w" the Weakest Ink." TUESDAY, ‘JANUARY If 194° Three Wa r Stages The difficulty of “seeing the wood for the trees" in following the daily war news is be- roining apparent. This difficulty" will increase n5 tho strugglc ilcvclops on laud, _air and sea. What is llJNlCLl is a incutal chart of lhc gi'ziiliizi— zitcil sti-ps aunt-d at in tho stratcgiczil policy of lllc .'\lllt‘:. Such a churl. happily. ‘has llvfl" furnishctl and is both simple and enlightciiui". l; i; gilllllllllttl in a .\lill(‘lll(.‘llf made by Lord uhillflflll, lil'lll.~ll hlinistct‘ of Dcfctisc Lo-ordi- nation, on I)(‘L‘t'llll)l‘l' l3. Lufd Clllillileld Slllfl in i-fftrt: Tlic .\llit-s have lllfCCI objcctivcs. mp1 wit] "in 1,; ~\\'il\‘L‘(.l from achicvuig ihcsc in tlic iirilci‘ in uliicli thcy" ltavc licctt sct. First, ilic .\llI‘~‘(l aim is to "rctain command of the swi." 4 Si-cond, ztnd partly coiiciirix-ittly, to giun coin- iiiattd of ilic itir. _ 3nd '111.-n_ gqsgllfffd of those commands, to “win it hi]; battlc on lztntl." g Elilizit lllllllt‘ will bc of thc making and at thc tinting of tlit- .\lllc~. lt ilocs not inczin zuiy of 11n- lnittlt-s that iuay br. and liltcly will bc. forccd on the .'\llll.'.<. lt will bc thc battlc forsccn Ill .\|r. Cliztni bull's ilcfiitiiitin of Allied stratrgt git-u] iut b ptcntbci- :0: ‘the conccutrztiion of a‘ dcrisivc forcc :it a (l\‘Cl.~l\'C [Xlllll zit a dccislvt- uionicnt." \\'ith this outline in vicw, the British naval succcsscs of rccctit wccks arc sccn in trite pcr- spcctivc. The cncniy SlllllllilflllC nicnacc has bccu lnrgcly ovcrcoiiic. 'l he blockade has bccu llQlllCllfll. The safe couvoyittg ol rciiltorcc- nicnt troops has bcgtin front the ovcrsczis Do- minious. The (lcrnizuis have been pitilcssly rptlncqtl to scuttling thcir own ships. These gnugcsscs are not sporadic and stidtlcn. although good hick lcnt a lntntl; thcy arc the ittcvitablc coiiscquciiccs of plans wcll laid and stuck to un- der the strategical tilan adopted by the .*\1lics. The Winnipeg Free Press, to whom we are indebted for falling attention to the importance of the three-fold .»\llicd plan, says that the first major stcp, tliztt of rctiiinitig command of the scci, has already been practically achieved. Gcr- man shipping has been swept off tbc seas, and the ignoniiny of the defeat of the enemy awed the world, niadc the ncutrals pause and the Al- lies to clu-cr. Sporadic cfforts at enemy minc- lziyiiig and torpcdoing may be continued, but the issue of supremacy on the sea, four months aftcr the outbreak of the war, has been deter Illitl(‘(l. What next? Battles on land may intcrvene. but command of thc air ivill be the coining stra logical problem for the .-\llics. That control must be won, that supremacy attained, no niaucr how long it may take to gain it or how much wastage it may involve. Only then will the way be opcri for the Allies to stage that ultiinati- battle on land which will be their “concentration of a dccisivc force at a decisive point at a de- cisive moment." There is the possibility of a revolution in Germany before the final stage is reached, but we should not bank too much on that factor. What is important is to realize that the ivar is not being waged haphazartlll. but with deadly deliberation, and that already British sea-power has achieved one of the major lims of Allied strategy. The Bacon Agreement 4| his year-end review of farm activities, published in Saturday's issue, Mr. “YR. Shaw, Deputy Minister of Agriculture, stressed the increase in hog production and the importance of this factor in Prince Edward Islands contri- bution to the Empire's war efforts. The point is well taken, and is a reminder that Canada rc- cently contracted to supply Great Britain with 4.8oo,000 pounds of bacon every wcck. It is also a. reminder of tlic failure of Canada to take full advantage of the opportunity offered by the Ottawa agreements of i932, under which the Dominion was allotted a quota of 280,000,- 000 poundsd a year. Now the British marltct is prepared to absorb up to 5,600,000 pounds a week, which adds up to the impressive total of 29i,2oo,o0o pounds a year. The Montreal Star recalll that, at the time of the Ottawa agreements in I932, bacon h0g5 were selling at tlircc and a quarter cents per pound. Within one ycrir following, the price had jumped to nine cciits. Since then the avcr- age pricc, your by _vcar, worked out as follows (pcr hnndrerl lbsji: H134, $7.85; 1935, $8.21; 1931i, Sbbot); 193;", $8.110; i938, $9.l5. It is esti- ntatcd that this inarkct obtitincrl by the Bennett (lovcrtimviit has bccn worth forty million dol- lars pcr ziiuitun to Czinridian pig producers. The pflCt‘ fixcd for bncnn and hams under the now agreement with (ircrtt Britain works out to about lllnc cents a pound. live weight, at si-ubnztrtl. Tibia l:- ii bighrr pricc than tlic avcr- zigt‘ frir tlic piist six yciirs and, inorcovcr. it is the gtizirantccil utiniuiiiiil. The Star says it is 3 \'(‘l'_\' good price iudccrl. and “if the farmer is not satisfied. he (‘Cflillllly ought to be." llul our lloutrtwtl (‘(llll('lll|)()l'.'lI'_\' tzikcs no account. nl the ipti-stiou of fccd priccs, which must also bi‘ controllcd if a iiizirgin of profit is to bc rctainc-l. Also the zuinotniccincttt from Ottawa says noth- ing about the grades. If tlic price is to be flair on all grades. what cffi-ct will this have at the close of tlit- ivar on our grading system? Tlic-"c and other factors enter in thc question, and ziivait explanation. Prince lidwziril Island as the chief bacon-pro- ducing province of the lllaritiincs is vitally in- tcrcstcil in tlic nciv agreement, and our Depart int-m of .\_{l'lk‘lllllll'(' mu scrvc no more. uscful i iinfiirmation from Ottawa as to the term: and conditions, and continuing its efforts in promot- ing production. - IUIIURIAL NUIIS Remember to date your correspondence. re- summer mil’ b0 bill"!!! ceipts, ctc., 1940 l u a a a General James \\"olfc born this date, 1727. llis fame rests on his brilliuitt victory and tiohlt- death on the llcights of Abraham in the Quebec expedition, 185,9 I l i Tlic business prospccts for thc iicw year were‘ never bcttcr, it being prcdictcd that the first six mouths will be tuost prosperous of any your within iiicitiory. .\lay wc obtain our full share, which we can only do if the Government insists upon our sharing in war's expansion policy. i I? l! * “As wc forgive our debtors!" Dr. C. O. Tliicnhaus, .\Ill\\'2llll\L‘€, bcstowcd this Christmas gift by fll.’\V5Pl1|)L‘l' advertisement: “Wishing all iny patients a .\lcrry Christmas and a Happy Xcw Yczir. .\s ll ClIYISLIIIZIS gift, I ltcrcwith canccl all my piuicuts’ bzilaiicc indcbtcducss to inc unto datc." U U U U Dr. _lt)S(‘|)ll 17.. Yolkcr, a research worker ini biochciiiistr_v, statics that rcccut cxpcriiticnts with fluorine niighl proixiilc thc key to prcvcntion of’ decay iii tccth. Fxticrinicntiiig at thc Univer- sity of Roclicsict‘ School of .\lcilicine and Dcn- tistry, llr. \'olkci~ uscd tlic institution's cyclo- tron to honibatrtl waicr and change thc oxyflgcil coittcnt to rzulioziciivc fluorinc, This spccdcd thc rcsczirch by l'C(lllL‘lll;_{ tlic chemical stcps nccdcil. ll thc i-xpcrinicnts wcrc sticccssftil. dentists and physicians itiiglit bc able to trcat tcctli ilircctly with a coiiititiiintl coutainittg flit- orinu which \\'i)llltl make thc tcctb rcsistant to dccziv, hc said. Tht‘ ll\‘llt‘llt's'lt’l‘ biochcntis: think.- hc has ilcnitiiistrittctl that fluorinc can b: contbiiieil locally with ihc lccib in tbc itiotitli. TJllllCT lllllll ltaviug to ho zibsorbctl through tlic blood 1s long as ihotiglit IIUCUSSZIT)’. l i‘ >61 >'1~ ti Now lll7ll (‘zuiailu is tltc cctitfc of military‘ ztii‘ st-rvicc for fllC‘ ITnipirc, it is obvious an .\l|' .\lini.<tr_v is C>><‘llll<'ll. lt is not a nialtcr that can he lcft to the hzuids of any dcputy lllllll$l(‘l' or group of ilcputics. Tlicrc arc ministers in the (lovcriinicitt dculitig uith matters of far lcss inagiiittiilc and urgitiicy, itiztttcrs which in litany iiistaticcs tiiight bc lcft in abcyance until thc war is ovcr. llcrc, liowcvcr, is an tuidcrtalcing of tratnsccndcnt iiuportzinco to the succcss of thc .’\llics iii tlic \\'2tl.', tuid (‘ziuadzt is rcspousiblc for it, Tho soonci- it passcs undcr the direction of an air minister, a strong administrator encum- bered by no other departmental responsibilities, the bcttci" it ivill bc for this country and for the other llritish nations with which Czttiada is as- sociatcd in this ziir training project. The bcttcr, also, it will be for the Allies and their cause. i 1 i 1i The 125th annivcrsai'y of the signing of the Trcatyt of Ghciit, which cndcd the war of i812, has just bccn tiasscd, without cclcbrzitioti, for the YCZISOH that Canadians and .\incricails ac- ccpt the pcaccful relations that have prevailed so l0ll as a niattcr of course. The war of a hundrcgil and twcntyv-fivc years ago was not a vcrv wickcd oiic, as wars go. ln the Maritime Provinces tlicrc was little hard fccliitg bctwccn the Maritiiiicrs and the ticoplc of Maine, and it was inuch the sztnic with rcspcct to thc pcoplc of Quebec and tho lxirdcriiig statcs of Ycritiotit and New York. Lianztdtt was disappointed with sonic of tlic provisions of thc agrccnictits that followcd the conflict. Tihc nortlicrit part of Maine wcnt t0 the United States, but this ter- ritorv is frcclv accessible to Canadians and thcre arc rcsorts thcre ivhich in the suniincr are as much Canadian as Aiiicricziti because of the hosts of visitors who go thcre from Montreal and other ccntrcs in Qucbcc to holiday. The New York Tinics, in dcaling with the I25 years of peace, states that the “undcfcnded frontier, 4,000 nlilcs of land and watcr, is a common glory of the Dominion and the Lluitcd States." The two nations have lived peacefully together; “peacefully they have disposed of subjects of debate between them." Tihcy are better friends than ever because commonsense has been suc- cessfully applied in tlicir international dealings. In consequence, good relations are tnadc and - ‘t kept wi bout force; ‘ ‘ I‘ Rt. Hon. R.B. Bennett must be “cliiicltling fit to die” at time's revenge. llis most bitlvr newspaper opponent while in office and at tlic last. general election was the Montreal Gazette. It practically hounded him to defeat at the polls, charging him with all sorts of political sins of commission and ontission, chief of which ivas his allcgcd inclination t0 socialism. Judge Mr. Bennett's surprise thcn on Thursday when he opened his Gazette to find a. double column large type front page editorial headed “R. B. Bennett Needed in Canada.” Our Montreal contemporary, with whom consistency is not always a jcwcl, gocs on to say: “.\lr. Bennett, who is to address the Royal Empire Society hcrc today, has bccn quoted as saying that be has no dcsirc to rcturn to politics but that if he did so it would be in Canada rathcr than in (ircnt Bri- tain. The prefcreiicc is a natural one and tlicre are some vcry sound and compelling reas- ons why the former Prime Minister should be urgcd to excrcisc it. The Gazctte was not. always able to scc eye to cyc with Mr. Bennett l in regard to his doincstic policies or in regard to ccrtztin charztctcrisitics of his leadership; nev- crtltclcss, it docs st-e, as many others must do, an opportunity which, if Mr. Bennett can be in- duced to take it, can tncan tremendous service to the Dominion and to those nations Wllll which Cattada is associated in tlic [irosccutioti of this ivztr. If lic has defects as a politician the vcry prcscncc of thosr dcfccts qualifies him in great- cr dcgrce for a ivork in which no political con- sideration should bc permitted to play the smallest part. llis proper place in these critical (lays is in the Parliament of Canada, assuming that the nttitndc of the present Prime llliuistci cxcluilcs him frotii direct participation ln thc govcrnmcnt of thc cOuntrv." Which would be all-right. of course, ivcrc it not for the insinua- tion that of two part)’ lcztdcrships, tlic Gazcttc "MFHOSC at prcscnt than by obtaining the fullest would yirrfi-r llll‘ ivist to the prcsctil, damning the prcsciit by tiraisiiig thc past. t . i irons av TIIE vmv The famous democrat In which Klnl George V1 and Queen Eliza- betli made their tour of Banff m: another couple into Calgary any day now. I um told. It seems that. the dem- ocrat. following its use in the moun- taln resort. found its way down to the Saroee Indian Reserve, lust south of the city, later ln the sum- mer. In the IIIGBIIIIIIIg it, has been brilliantly painted In royal purplo ""1 801d- Now It f; the proud pos- session of an Indian brave on the reserve and is parked outside his cabin. So any clay now the "Royal Carriage may be rolling into Cal- gary; bearing B. stolcal Sarceo ,brave and his squaw through city streets on their way to market. — Calgary Albertan. If ls forbidden to have good fortune In the world without Stalin. The Communists are afraid that prosperity and well-be-lng wtll re- turn to capitalist countries, for .they know that the moment that things go well undcr that regime. their cause l; lost, Therefore ll: ls necessary that. things go badly. Hid they do everything ln their power to see that thlnes do not. go well. One scarcely needs to be a psychologlst to fool. among the friends of humanity, time Shivers of Joy each time that, a misfortune hit-opens to a democrncyt. "I to‘d you so!" they gully exclaim. With such n ivsoosltlon our Commuirst; are unable to C0llflb"l‘t\fn siticertfy in thr rcvival of our ocmonrv: they wish at any price that Karl Marx should havc n finger in it. V Mon- treal Le Jour The enormous sum: which the Cmadlan Gwvcrnirtctit vr-ll with. draw from trtxvs flPfl lcatis will be spent In tho ('Ulll1'l‘_\‘. mid tho war contracts of ill" IIllf)E‘l‘l.'\l Govern- ment will nour nut (-I‘"lfi'fl lumi- Pflfi of millions of dollars. Thls rllstvihlttlon of nriw" in"nov will notably spec-rt tin iniii-s-iryi and Com- niorcc. It l1 liu-‘os.~‘h'n to fm-psqg even airirnxlniatl-li‘ ivhiit dErrcPrJn ll‘f"e funds will f"‘l'r-\\' in th- CMITSI‘ of a vMr Blli l? ls corp-in that, tho total revcnu- of tho nation will be nuittncnti-d to n lnrrt" prgpny- firm ft ls aovu-nic, tli"t‘0l"‘1'0_ m await the result of these vast operations bofort- aftu-minq ili~t tile Administration will take an- nually thirty ncr cont of tnmqp w- tal rcccints for ordinarv nnd ox- traordlnnrv purposes. And when the conflict is ovcr it will be by CDmURTlTIZ thc tiotontitil of the wealth acquired with tho total pub- llc debt that lt will bc Dossibr t,0 say exactly how much the war has cost. the nflllDfl. _ Le Solcll (Quebec) It wlll be remvmlsert-d that lrst year a precise and dorutncntcd re- port revealed to us that Quebec possessed the unhappy national record for contagious rlzse s. It was even proved that where dph- therla was cotter-rust‘. we were worse than the bi: Asiatic citics, which are nevcrthclcss formidable centres of mlcrc-be culture This year the Bureau reports tltnt we have lessened the- cascs of dpli- thcria: it is measles WlllCll l5 now increasing. Thts l!‘2l'll(' blillfllblll evidently arises from STVIITII crus- es, of which t-hc tirincunl on.“ is n1- ways the lack of individual liy- glenm-ttie criminal cilrcle sncss of certain heads of families who put. off from one unit to the next the trouble of taking their clutch-on to be immunized; nnrb-aga-n accord- ing to the cont-‘usions of the 1938 report-there is the evcrlasuig question of money. For our part, we have never undsrstood how It, could be that progress could be re- tarded on the pretext. that it is ex- pensive. Everything that can be done to improve the hygzcnzc con- ditions of a. cit-y, or to spread en- liglttenment among the masves, cannot logically be c0ll5ld€f€d as R11 expense. I'I_\'§Zl‘.‘ll(' and educa- tlori are the capital factors ln the life of a city, We shall have oltlz- ens Who are capable of accomplish- lng useful work in proportion as they are educated and healthy, _. L'Evcnement-Journal (Quebec y In company with others. we he- lleve that our Province should be dlrectcd toward the organization of a ctvll service commission. That. ls, In fact. the only way n) withdraw the ctvll servant from the Passions and hazards of politics, to assure the State of I! personnel as ado- quote as that of business houses, to enable members to do something mors than promise and promise again and hnnd out pcslllons, f:n- ally to put an end to the most. oontcmptfble form of electoral cor- ruptlon, the sale of the man's vobe In return for o position which wlll be taken a/way frmn an adversary. In our opinion, this ctvll servloe commission could set up in llmg it svndicallst formula which Wfillld make a profession out of the ctvll service like any other one,—organ- med, havtnu ln vlcw competence, devotion nflllll honesty, profrsslonal Justice and the security of the fnmtlv. Whv. we risk, should the State be worse scrvcd than tho leaders of roinmvrc" and Industry? If anyone deserves to have good employees. surely lt is: the body politic in flip D(‘l‘.<flfl of its govt-r“- ment. The prvscitt systrm of the distribution of nrovinnlal employ- ment was not born on rcasoim hut of the electoral impolite. Therefore. why be astonished that fl ls so bud? The efforts of even the most con- scientious governors cannot. hope to make anything ofln rcrzlmc which ts as fcccund tn flip can-cs of ad- ministrative decadence, —L'Actlon Catholtque (Quebec). A lrialron has written us n shaky little letter telttniz about. an ad- venture she had last wcck in Cen- tral Park. She had gone there pro- vided with a bsiz of nuts. to feed the squirrels. and had attrncf-d a stmnble groun of them, Thev were all busy snatching at. the nuts and clltlflll them Wh0n suddenly their enthusiasm was mvstcrtou-ly dam- perctl by the arrival of another BflllllTPl. quite, a h‘: 01V‘. If» flxcd the assembled squirrels with l run (IHARLOWETOWN- GUARDIAN And Now The “Smellies” (Halifax Chronicle) Inventors, not satisfied wl glv- ln: u; plcfures that move m Qpfllk now announce the can give u: ple- tuns that small. tlrm word l: used llternlly and not. in the crlt-lu’ manneré. “Tgo SW1? tltiniigntors are sup e Ive o e disposal 4, cljlflfld and "recorded od- ors which can he released Into an “lffiiimf? °° '°€i.“°‘°.§»‘“..i“""°‘l§ r so ng on o p ur acres . The idea. conjums us all sorts o! possibilities. Western films wlll b0 redolent with the scent of the sage- brush. Delicate perfume; wtll ac- mun scenes of the . oae bits of dlnl ln the millionaires study, doub can, will have as their ent the delicate fragrance of l Corona.- Corona, But the" dinner table scenes wlll have w be ed with re- straint. The azonlzlngly tempting odors of a well-cooked dinner woul be enough to send a late-afternoon audience dashing from the theatre. The Big City sequences. we sup- pose, wtll carry wlth them that mix- ture of lino fumes, smoke, and carbon oxide that ls typical of l. metro . Pr ucers wlll be lookl for scripts that offer fragrant perumes. The story need not include singln for Nelson Eddy. dancing for Pr: Astaire, or historic blckxrounds for Charles Laughton. So 1on1 u It af- fords an opportunity to introduce some exotic perfumes the script will have a ready sale. Introduction of tho "smellles." however, should forever klll a Ly lc- al piece of cinema advertising hat is already nearly dead. That ls the sort. of lyhoo that. used to ac- company tlie "spectacle" plc urea Do ou remember when produoers woud boast; that their reduction contained "l0,000 came , 35,000 horses, 8.000 elephants"? They wont make boasts like that about the “smellles? Another roblem s sts itself. What abou those unfor unate peo- ple who are allergic to this or that, odor? can the hay-fever vlctslm, for instance, dare to go into B, theatre irherg some of the scenes are [flayed tn fields bordered by blooming gold- cnrcd? Can he risk seeing and rnlelllllg close-ups of luscious flortl banquets? Dare he vlew a picture called "Four Feathers," The "smelliea" wlll require care- ful handling if they are to succeed. the odors of changing scenes wlll not lnzcr bevnnd their time as pungently as did the gunpowder snlclls of some of the old blood-and- thuitder productions of the legiti- mate stage. THE POOR. MAN'S PIG Already fallen plum-bloom stars the een And ntJDlc-boughs as knarred as old toads‘ backs Wear their small roses ere B, rOse ‘s 16811] The building-thrush watches old Job who stacks The bright-peeled osiers on the surl- ny fence, The pent sow grunts n) hear him stum bolt and ping by. And tries to push the scnnlpcr thence, But her rnged snout still keeps her to the sty. _ Then out he lets her run; away she rno In bundlltisg gallop for the cottage oor. With hungry hubbub begging crusts and orts. Then like a whirlwind bumping round once more; Nuzzling the c108. making the pullets IUD, And sulkv as a child when her plays clone. glildmund Blunden. feverish red eye, and they all back- ed away nervously, leaving the nuts on the ground, He procseded to eat the ones that; had already been rra-ckced. while the benevolent lady looked on, considerably be- wildered. Just then tzwo urclilrs p855€d by, and one exclaimed. ln an awed voice, “My gosh, lock at lhal lady feeding that. rat!" —Ncw Yorker. W-ARNS FARMERS WASHINGTON, Jan. l—I-Ienr_v Wa-‘lace. United Slates Secretary of Azrlculture. warned farmers to- dav that unless they preserve and strengthen governmental machin- erv for crop adjustment, peace ln Europe would throw American agriculture into n new depression paralleling that, which followed the First Great. War. uor bottles iwcumula. ifnx hotels. ln a. week than In hotels 1n Charlottetown in a ye In the week just. passed In Scotia and New Brunswick, I seen more empty and full bottles, than I ever dld before in n month. Drink- In there ls not oonflnedtothe back - ale s near as much as on the tlon private houses. Why 1t: ls common occurrence for any person more persons under travelling om the train to telephone drlnk In ahead to the Government sale Storo either Halifax or 8nd be met at: the train by a useless d , 't.l ' , It l5 to be hoped, certainly, that sales stcrtzpgmisiloiiirlestilivlifwiidors one knows that strong drink PUBLIC roiwn TIII‘QIIIIII 1| up” r" g3.‘ IQIIIOI by OIINIDOIIII" 0| of Inland- ‘Ibo 0hr- flnndlu Ion In lo- "llll"! Illilbrlo Illa lplnloll I! wrrupondello. ONE: OBSBI-VEB T0 ANOTHER Blrz- I have read the observation of W. G. rounding his sin-called rare sight on Great George st. on Saturday. which evidently was a rea- son why he rererredtfoprohlbttnn as n farce. To those of us who have t-ruv- no rare sight but instead a quite c0111- mon one to see persons lined up (without scrim) or any prctenfie of being slck. T ls too drunk to get. to the store litm- self, he sends some one else to get It for hlm, or her as the case ma be. It. does not. take any more effor for anyone In the prov nce where gov- ernment sale Ls practised without at vendor to get; quarts and cases of many varieties. than it. dues w t a. few obatoes tn the clty of - lotbe own, let. alone the unfortunate fact. that. It l; no disgrace to carry liquor on the trains. busses. and tn our car when ln those provinces. y there ts more em by hard ll - In the H - the u. OVI lan . Drinking on the mainland ts carried on in the trains, those VGS. l5 any CNXIIL to our great country of Canada to have such great sales of OI’ every- has than good. I agree, have to always to - Professional Cards McLEOD & BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY. K.C. J. A. BENTLEY. K. - j}. F. BENTLEY. LL. . Barristers and Attorney-at-Lau MONEY T0 LOAN 180 Richmond Street ll. F. AROHIBALD Cllflrlflrfd Accountant 140 Richmond Street Phone 47 P.O. B02 l2 MucGUlGAN & TRAINOR MARK R. MacGUICiAN, K.C. C. ST. CLAIR TRAINOR. B.A. Barristers, Solicitors, Etc. MONEY TO LOAN Office: Ova-r Provincial Bank, Richmond Street, Charlottetown H. F. McPHEE B. A. K. C. NOTARY, 82c. BARRISTER. SOLICITOR Riley Building Charlottetown clone more harm that you don't Professional Fumigaior T And Exterminator Guar-inlccrl Extermination of all Vermin, Rodents, ole. GEORGE C. WILDE Phone 55 nr Write 141 Great George Street, Charlottetown, P.E.I. PALMER & HASLAM ' II. .I. PALMER. K.(7, A. J. IIASLAM, B.A., LLB, BARRISTER. ETIY. Bank of Nova Scolla Chambers, Charlottetown. I’.E.I. MONEY T0 LOAN Phone 85 W”, IEO. Box_I2 CUTCLIFFE 8i ANDREWS FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EMBALMERS Hunter Llvcr and Bradalbane Day and Night Service BELL ffitiruirsou MONEY TO LOAN Cameron Block, Charlottetown, P__E Island “NEBVES” SHE CALLED IT Losing inlnul- , ~- Io|in| lriun In ( mo: want out any non-always too I MN II hml. lbou III—IIIII l! her Eiilmya. Ibo fillcu of lur blood, that nude ' s it ' i Plla The llllwdvid adieu a luv “burial”: "fl"! "f! blind Ilfilfill and ucou lcldl. Flhguu, hull luchdp, In} ol energy, diuppouad. | Doddfs Kidney Pill; How Are. Your Eyes‘? If you are Iuvlng symptoms n! sfrnln-Jlendmhel, not; eyes or illnlnean — consult n spec- lllllls At your servlco with year- of experience Ind a lhoroul’ refruollng service. ClII In and discus: your dif- ficulllu. G. F. llutchosoii G. F. IIUTCHESON 1 I‘. (I. IIUTCIIESON. .- _ Swine Breeders Attention Now ls the time lo agalnst. PIG-WORM by using t c most effective remedy on t e market. MACS PIG WORM TONIC POWDER ll will thoroughly abolish all traces of worms and Improve the health of your herd. PRICE J5 CENTS PER LB. We carry-a completc llno of Cattle Remedies . Gassy stomachs Relieved Every person who la troubled with gin In the stomach and bowels should get n bottle of Dr. Evans Slomach Mlxturo and nee how quickly It wlll re- lieve nll distressing symptoms. Dr. Evans Stomach Mlxlure taken at meal time. not. only , prevents all bad efltclg from flu. but it romoles 1h: func- llonal uollvllv of the stomach. nsslslo dlgesllon and Improves the uppeltlo. Dr. Evans Stain-ch Mixture ls sold only n the Two Macs at 85c per bottle. | Gel Your Bottle Today. T|lE 2 itucsl guard IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII’; Is- sick to get ascrlp ln P. E. I. et my owervatslons of the effectsii _ theatres. Government Control I rinks. and other places not to men- have seen enough to doubt any per- a son who claimed that. they ever saw Pef- Sflles In the former icoelvcd a. great gfany ifstggigficursllrit a load w the rall- boost Since mobilization began, so who dld not. have time to can 5L me sale store t-hemcl travelling why faults that, can be corrected should We be against; it? tlons smile. I cant believe that fr €l_7_l_l-ld_l’l(_)b_bB__B£8qlCBl€d_ll§I'§_JQQL by 149 Gnu! (icorge Street. A Naturalists Calendar i FOR Prince Eduard Island l A carefully pre ared series of notes of Meteorological an Botanical observations made In the period 1910-1937: and includ- ing a shortlist of common insects. By BLYTHE BURST (“Agricola”) Brackley Beach On Sale at THE SCHOOL SUPPLY CARTER AND CO. MARITIME STATIONERS WOOLWORTI-IS TRAVEL BUREAU GUARDIAN PUB. CO. Price 25 cents per copy CIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIZI in r the people voting Government, Bale, o If the consumption of liquor la not; checked by Prohibition. It would have nothing to check it at all by Government sale because young of peo 1e would have Increased oppor- ln t ties to buy and drink it, and tho The YOU!!! DQODIO of any nation or pro- vince are most; important In defer. mining what. a country wlll be in future yt-ar» Tlii- lar r the r- centage of the papilla ton who on’: drink strong clrhik, the less dnink- personally influence Charlottetown than Moilcbon. because Prohibition has a few For if we are a.- I regret that. I do not ee the ulnst. it. r t t - - - joke which W. G. stutcss should nLrol? h§oii§g§§rsf§leG§lfi“§$§‘y‘f fidfglhigfidfill, ‘flag; g"-§,,,l§f§‘"“°° make Lh-s readers of his observa- lug on in Halifax and bootlezglng I am, Sir eta, Tlléll-‘l-IJIE. ;“‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ “ ‘ “‘*‘ ~e~v-vmw ‘ . 1E 1P Fox Farmer: 5 Cash advances and quick sales tire the combination you want. II (P 4 Please express, mull, or bring your furs E lo 110 Kent st. , 4 4P W. BIIESTER S. MBl-"RE I CIIARLOTTETOWN 1E g , l g ‘ II Check Your Bearings! We travel last on the journey nf life, slrlvlng to reach a haven of Independence, before the evi-ning of old a“ w" likes us. The New Year comes. another milestone, and blds us pause ta check our bearings. The road to Independence ls plainly marked — the hlghvvly of life insurance. y take an unknown road? You can obtain a Great-West Life Pviislon or Endowment ll. age 60 or G5 by investing your savings for large or gmall ;Ill:gilcl"l‘liia.n' It. protects your family loo. Lcl us send you I I llYllllMAN & 00., Limited PROVINCIAL MANAGERS Charlottetown Summer-std Monhlllo 11111101111111): . vIII/IIIIIIIIIAQ VJIIIIIIJJIFNJIWIIIIII For Vitalitq alwaul uSe BRAHMIN OANGE PEKOE TEA ALWAYS IN SEASON ALWAYS PERFECTLY FLAVORED AND ALWAYS PREFERRED BY ISLANDERS IS IIICKEY'S 10¢ PER r10 l- KNOWN ; T0 ISLANDERS FOR MORE THAN FIFTY YEARS IIIBKEWS BLACK TWIST GIIEVIIIG Manufactured By Hickey 8i Nicholson Charlottetown PER FIG